The Michigan Daily - Sunday, August 5, 1984 - Page 7 Va. men's college prepares to go coed Alumni of Washington & Lee Univer- sity, one of three all-male private colleges remaining in the nation, are receiving letters explaining that their alma mater has decided to admit women as undergraduates. Two-thirds of alumni at the 235-year- old university-along with the same ratio of students-had opposed the COLLEGES decision, made formal by the board of trustees last month at the Lexington Va. school. The board voted 17-7 to begin co- education in the fall of 1985. The trustees rejected the same idea in 1969 and 1975. "In conducting its study, the trustees were, of course, mindful of the continuing decline in the number of the nation's high school graduates," Ballengee said in a prepared statement. The board also considered the Election '84 Veteran cops seek county sheriff s post (Continued from Page 3) Gilless' main concern with the current department is that there are too many sub-stations in the area which he says do not create jobs, but instead take patrolmen off the street and puts them in administrative positions. According to this candidate, that is a move in the wrong direction. "My main objective is to eliminate desk jobs and to put officers back into the patrol unit," said Gilless. Democrat James Spickard also is a financially oriented candidate. He said that his experience in police work as well as his current job as director of safety at Washtenaw Community College give him the financial expertise to make the budgetary decisions of the sheriff's office. William Zsenyuk, the fourth Democrat in the race, now serves as the police chief of Manchester. Zsenynk wants to introduce new crime preven- tion techniques and better controls over juvenile offenders. opinions of students, alumni and staff, he said. Polls showed that 80 percent of the faculty supported coeducation, while polls show students and alumni opposed it 2-to-1. Students staged a sit-in at the president's office to oppose it. Bumper stickers saying "Better Dead than Co- ed" appeared on cars, and a statue of George Washington was dressed in a banner saying "No Marthas." Wilson says he anticipates as many as 100 women could be offered places in the first year of coeducation. Washington & Lee has 1,700 students, including more than 300 in its law school. The law school has been admit- ting women since 1972, and the un- dergraduate college allowed women as summer students during World War II. Officials at the other two private male colleges-Hampden-Sydney in Virginia and Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Ind.-say coeducation has not been a big issue on their cam- puses. Virginia and South Carolina also have publicly supported, all-male military schools. -The Associated Press Prof charges OSU with racism in tenure case An assistant professor at Ohio State University plans to sue the school over the denial of his request for tenure, charging that his race was a factor in the denial. An attorney for Prof. Nkem Nwank- wo said the Black Studies professor "was qualified for promotion but it was not granted because of consideration of improper factors, and because they did not give due consideration to his achievements and reputation." After Nwankwo's tenure request was denied, he appealed to the University's provost. Before the provost could in- vestigate, he wanted the professor to agree not to sue the University regar- dless of the outcome. "I am prepared to go through with (the litigation)," Nwankwo said. "My purpose is to establish a principle that people can't get away with racism in this University." -The Ohio State Lantern Stanford prof loses suit over 'Mickey Mouse' course A federal judge said Newsweek magazine's description of a criminal law class as a "Mickey Mouse" course was merely an opinion and did not im- pugn the professor's ability or standar- ds. U.S. District Judge Robert Aguilar, in a ruling released Thursday, dismissed a libel suit against the magazine filed by Stanford University professor John Kaplan. Kaplan, a nationally known authority on criminal law, sued Newsweek for $1 million over an October 1983 article that said his class was "recognized as the easiest five credits a Stanford student can earn." Kaplan said he would appeal the decision. - The Associated Press County commission race has little interest By DOV COHEN Pratt said his goals are to "keep government local" and Ann Arbor voters will not get a chance to vote in the "do what the people wish," but he said he has no concrete Washtenaw County Commissioners race Tuesday because The Board of Commissioners' primary responsiblity is none of the city's four districts offer more than one candidate manamnoftC on'pgtand tesoperati for each party. management of the county's budget and the operation of In fact, voters in only one of the county's nine districts will county offices and services. The board is currently be voting Tuesday. The Democrats have no candidate for the comprised of seven Democrats and two Republicans, and seat in District 1, which covers the southwestern part of the observers expect little or no change in that ratio this fall. county, but Republican incumbent George Merkel is being Of the four commissioners who represent parts of Ann challenged there by Ellis Pratt of Manchester. Arbor, only the two Democrats will face opponents in the fall. PRATT SAYS he is running because people have told him Donald Duquette (District 8) is being challenged by Richard Merkel has not always voted in the best interests of his Chesbrough, while Ray Shoultz (District 7) faces Collene district, but he could offer no specific examples of such Conrad in what is expected to be the most hotly contested battle. actions. County voters Tuesday will also choose between two Crediting this to Pratt's lack of experience, Merkel said, Democratic candidates vying for the chance to challenge He's just barking in the dark ... he doesn't know what the Republican Dan Bicknell in the November election for Drain whole deal is down there (in the commission)." Commissioner. Lawyers vie for juvenile judge nod (Continued from Page 3) IN HER announcement of candidacy, Saline attorney Pamela Byrnes said that "while detention must sometimes be used, there must also be alternatives to detention. Diversion, a method of identifying troubled youth prior to ac- tual arrest, is a technique I support." Donald Kenney, a 51-year-old Ann Arbor attorney, said substance abuse is a leading factor contributing to delinquency. "We have a generation in peril, with the misuse and abuse of alcohol and other drugs occurring at ever younger ages," he said. Shirley Burgoyne, a soft-spoken local attorney, focused much of her attention on imprisoning child abusers, citing a child who expressed relief when he found out that his father would be get- ting 40 years in prison for abusing him. John Minock, who at 36 is the youngest of the candidates, has been. involved in juvenile law since graduating from law school. He pointed out that the probate court is a "highly specialized court" which deals with juvenile law only. Minock has been a volunteer at juvenile help centers, and claimed his hands-on experience gives him an ad- vantage over the other candidates. John Stanowski cited TV violence and substance abuse as major causes of juvenile delinquency, and he said he was outraged that the movie The Joy of Sex is being advertised on TV. In order of popularity, the Washtenaw County Bar Association lists the candidates as follows: Wood; Conlin; Byrnes; Kenney; Minock; and Burgoyne and Stanowski (tie). HAPPENINGS Sunday Music - Medieval Festival, 1-5 p.m., Arboretum. Performance Network-American Buffalo, 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington. CFT-A Hard Day's Night, 7:50 & 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Monday Course-"Filing & Information Retrieval," 1:30-4 p.m., 130 LSA; "Grammar: A Modern Review," 1-4 p.m., 4051 LSA. Ultimate Frisbee Club-meeting, 5:30 p.m., Fuller Park. CFT-A Hard Day's Night, 7:50 & 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Education better, study shows (Continued from Page 1) "SCHOOLS ARE getting better, in areas ranging from the basics to discipline, and the survey reflects it," Kopp said. President Reagan has claimed credit for helping initiate the reform, which have included nearly all states moving to raise high school graduation requirements, improve curriculum and boost teachers' salaries. The survey found, however, that Americans believe schools would be in better hands if Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale was president instead of Reagan, who has pushed federal spending cuts in education. Send announcements to Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.