The Michigan Daily -Wednesday, January 23, 1991 - Page 3 pactl may 'bos mnoit MVY complains of office break-ins by Jay Garcia Daily MSAReporter by Shalini Patel taily Staff Reporter In order to boost University minority enrollment, University 'resident James Duderstadt and WVashtenaw Community College (WCC) President Gunder Myran signed the Alliance for Minority tcholars yesterday evening in 'the Michigan League. The agreement, born out of informal discussions between of- ficials from both schools, is in- } tended to increase the numbers. of African-Americans, Hispanic Americans, and Native Ameri- (ans at the University and for- imalize a relationship with WCC. "I think it will provide us with an opportunity to attract ,some outstanding students; Stu- 0dents who for economic or aca- Olemic reasons chose community college," Duderstadt said. ' "We're planting the seed in students minds about education after college," said Dr. Robert Holmes, the University's assis- tant vice president for academic affairs. "Our hope is to bring stu- dents to our campus." Under the agreement, coun- selors at both schools will im- plement a system designed to identify, encourage, and tutor students who see the University as a possibility after graduation from WCC. Academic advisors will also inform students about which WCC classes transfer to the University. WCC students have trans- ferred to the University before, but under the alliance, they will "now be part of an identification program," Myron said. In 1990, 125 students trans- ferred to the University from WCC, one-fifth of which were students of color. Director of Admissions to the University Richard Shaw said he hopes to see that number increase. with the signing of the agreement. Holmes added that not every high school student is ready for the University immediately after graduation. WCC could serve as a path to a University education. Students enrolled in the pro- gram will receive an early de- termination of the admissibility and "preferred consideration for University President James Duderstadt signed an agreement with Washtenaw Community College yesterday that will facilitate the transfer process for WCC students coming to the University. admission" to the University upon completion of the agreed upon WCC curriculum. University schools participat- ing in the program are LSA, Business Administration, Natural Resources, Engineering, and Ar- chitecture and Urban Planning. While the University already makes recruiting trips to most community colleges in Michi- gan, Holmes said he hopes the frequency of those visits will in- crease under the agreement. While the plan does not call for new personnel, Shaw esti- mated the cost of implementa- tion at $30,000. Advisory com- mittee members are still ham- mering out the details. The alliance was signed in the spirit of the Michigan Man- date, Duderstadt's official com- mitment to a pluralistic and multi-cultural campus. Similar alliances have been formed with Wayne County and Jackson Community Colleges. Last year at the University African-Americans comprised 7.1 percent of the undergraduate and graduate population, Hispan- ics 3.2 percent and Native Amer- icans 0.5 percent. The second break-in to the Michigan Video Yearbook's (MVY) Union office in a month' prompted MVY members to com- plain at last night's Michigan Stu- dent Assembly (MSA) meeting about the assembly's room alloca- tion procedure. MVY shares the office with University Students Against Can- cer (USAC). The stolen items, both be )aging to MVY, were a new poi able stereo and a petty fund be,, with about $20-$30 dol- lars in ; said Maurice Lotman, Creati: Froducer of the yearbook. The '-.S incident showed no evy idence of a break-in. After the sec- ond in"Aient, there was a small chip on the office door and the closet door was pryed open. Members of MVY say the rob- beries may be related to the prob- lems the group has had with the MSA's room allocation decisions this past year. "The first robbery was obvi- ously done with a key. I have to assume it was done by either someone in USAC, MVY, the cus- todial staff, or building admin?stra- tors," Lotman said. H. Todd Kirby, MVY's Business r Producer, along with Lot~man,: claim they "were never notified of: the November decision to place USAC in the same office with them. They estimate the size of the room to be about 12 x 10 feet. A third group was to be placed in the room but it did not receive MSA recognition. "MSA allocated our room to two other groups and never even told us. I question how they they. make room allocations," Kirby said. Both Lotman and Kirby said they wanted USAC moved to a dif- ferent office. MSA Budget Priorities Chair Andrew Kanfer, a Business Admio istration junior, said he was no&.. certain ifr re-allocating the room," would require a vote by the as- sembly. Robert Guttman, founder and president of USAC, said he would have no problem moving his organi-, zation's headquarters to another of- fice in the Union. U' abortion foes, opponents mark Roe v. Wade by Purvi Daily StaffI Shah Reporter Abortion rights' foes and propo- nents marked the 18th anniversary yesterday of the event which shaped their battles - the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision. A Students for Life held a rally on *e Diag at noon, while about 100 anti-abortion activists from the area participated in a candlelight march from the Union to the Washtenaw County Courthouse. The vigil remembered the 26 mil- lion abortions pro-lifers estimate have occurred since the landmark icurt decision. 1, About t30 members of Ann Ar- bor Committee to Defend Abortion nd Reproductive Rights (AACDARR) held a counter- demonstration during the anti-abor- tion candlelight march, parading in front of the pro-lifers and shouting slogans defending a woman's right to an abortion. Anti-abortion activists com- plained at the Courthouse that the AACDARR members were threat- ening, spitting on, and jostling them. AACDARR tried to disman- tle the sound-system while the vigil organizers spoke, but the anti-abortion activists kept the sys- tem operational. The crowd dis- persed quietly after the speakers were done. The day accented the differ- ences between the opposing groups. "We're for child-care as well as abortion rights. Choice is the is- sue," said AACDARR Chair Re- becca Barlow. "If motherhood is used to repress women, then it is (harmful to women)," she said. Anti-abortion advocates said that abortion does not liberate women. "Women are the biggest vic- tims of abortion because often they're not given the full truth and often have a hard time dealing with what they've done," said Rae Ann Houbeck, chair of Right to Life of Washtenaw County. "It in fact liberates men, be- cause men are free to act without facing consequences. Women are facing these consequences all by themselves," she added. Students for Life Officer Susan Derengoski agreed. "It's ironic that many students on this campus call themselves liberals andsupport abortion when abortion doesn't liberate the woman or child," she said. Right-to-lifers rally on Roe v. Wade anniversary WASHINGTON (AP) - About 25,000 right-to-life demonstrators, told by President Bush "to keep this issue alive," made their annual march upon the Supreme Court yesterday to decry the decision 18 years ago that legalized abortion. Bush took time out from moni- toring developments in the Persian Gulf war at the White House to speak by telephone hookup to the gathering, which assembled on the capital's Mall in sub-freezing tem- peratures. "I'm pleased that my voice is part of the growing chorus that simply says: Choose life," said Bush. "I'm encouraged by the progress which has taken place," he said. "Attempts by Congress to expand federal funding for abortion have been defeated and the Supreme Court has taken welcome steps toward reversing its Roe vs. Wade decision." "You, the volunteers.., must make it your goal to keep this issue alive and predominate in the halls of Congress, the courts, and in the minds of the American people," Bush said. Officer Dan Nichols of the U.S. Capitol Police estimated the. crowd at 25,000, far fewer sup- porters than last year. The National Park Service and the city police department concurred in that figure, compared with an estimate of 75,000 at last year's march. This may be due to fear of war and terrorism. ' I Correction 'A quote in the Daily yesterday saying Martin Luther King would have opposed the Gulf war and condemning the governments' position on Minority Scholarships should have been attributed to Bunyan Bryant. Wa hTHE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Undergraduate Philosophy Club, weekly meeting. 2220 Angell Hall, 6:00. VIA Hillel, bi-weekly meeting. Hillel, 6:30. AIESEC (International Association of Students in Economics and Business), weekly meeting. B-School, Rm. 1273, 6:00. Undergraduate English Association. 7629 Haven Hall, 7:30. Michigan Video Yearbook. Union, Wolverine Rm., 7:00. Asian American Association. Trotter House, 7:00. Volunteer Income Tax Association, training session. Hale Aud., 7-9:00. Consider Magazine, mass meeting. New staff starts in February. Union, Pendleton Rm., 8:00. UM Students of Objectivism, Win- ter Reception, with a showing of "Introduction of Objectivism" video by Dr. Leonard Peikoff. Union, Pond Rm., 8:00. Speakers "Grass-Roots Anti-nuclear Activism in Kazakhstan," brown bag lecture; Matt Evangelista, speaker. Lane Hall Commons, noon. "The Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s," weeklong lecture series; Dr. James Forman, speaker. RC-East Quad Aud., 3-4:30. "Nationality as Choice: Baudouin de Courtnay on East European Minorities." Jindrich Toman. to include: "Conferencing in a Wri- ting Course," "Role-Playing Simu- lations," and "The Confer I System." Chem. Bldg., Rm. 1706, 3-5:00. "To See Feelingly: Reason, Passion, and Dialogue in Feminist Philo- sophy," Helen Longino of Rice, speaker. Rackham West Conference Rm., 4:00. Crawford Loritts, Jr., National Director of Here's Life Black America, speaker; sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ. Natural Science Aud., 7:30. "Testing theta=0 sequentially," Hans Rudolf Lerche of University of Freiberg, Germany, speaker. 451 Mason Hall, 4:00. Furthermore Safewalk functions 8-11:30 Sun.- Thurs. Call 936-1000 or stop by 102 UGLi. Northwalk functions 8-11:30 Sun.- Thurs. Call 763-WALK or stop by 2333 Bursley. ECB Peer Writing Tutors avalible to help with your papers Sunday- Thursday, Angell/Haven Computing Center, 7-11:00. U of M Shorin-Ryu Karate-do Club, weekly practice. Call 994-3620 for info. CCRB Martial Arts Rm., 8:30-9:30. U of M Tae Kwon Do Club, Wednesday workout. CCRB Martial Arts Rm., 7-8:30. U of M Shotokan Karate Club, Wednesday practice. Call Ravindra Prasad for info. TM Blde Martial Arts Man stabbed, roommate bound A man was stabbed as his roommate was tied up in the back bedroom of their apartment on the 1900 block of Plymouth Road Sunday night. According to Ann Arbor police reports, at about 10:30 pm Sunday, a stranger walked into the apart- ment through an unlocked door, and threatened to kill the man in- side watching TV. He then de- manded to know where the money was, and then tied the man's wrists with a scarf and forced him to lie on his stomach in a bedroom. The intruder then ransacked the apartment, and stole the man's wallet, police said. In the midst of the suspect's plundering, the man's roommate returned home to find the door to his apartment locked and chained. The robber, hearing the roommate approach, turned and ran out of the apartment, pausing only to stab the returning roommate in stomach with either a knife or a screw- driver, reports said. Police said the man was treated overnight at University Hospitals for his stab wounds. Woman assaulted A woman was assaulted while walking in the Tappan and Hill area at about 9:00 the night of Jan. 14. The woman was walking south- .tt. n nTnnnn n nnnn Hop-In clerk A man trying to sell a conve- nience store clerk an answering machine assaulted the employee and stole his necklace last Sunday. At about 4:00 a.m., a man sell- ing an answering machine entered the Hop-In store at 601 South Main. When the employee refused to purchase the machine, the sus- pect grabbed a gold chain off the clerk's neck and then fled on foot toward the Wolverine Deli, Ann Arbor police said. Police have a detailed suspect description. Hillel reports break-in The Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill, reported to Ann Arbor police that two office desk drawers were pryed open but nothing was stolen sometime between 7:00 p.m. Sat- urday night and 8:30 p.m. Monday. Ann Arbor police could not identify the method of entry. Daily Classifieds- they work! dean nears by Henry Goldblatt Daily Administration Reporter I The search for the new dean of the School of Business Administra-i tion will reach its final stage at the end of the week, when the search committee announces the finalists for the position. The committee hopes to have a new dean in place by the end of the semester, depending on the schedule of the newly-hired dean. George Seidel, professor of Business Law, and head of the search committee, is in the pro- cess of inviting a group of final candidates to campus for a two- day interview. The committee met Monday to narrow their list of candidates. Minimum standards for the po- sition include a doctorate, or the O final stage educational equivalent, a com- mitment to affirmative action, ex- cellent leadership and communica- tion skills, and a commitment to complete at least one five-year term. The selective criteria include a. commitment to enhance a diverse research and teaching environ- ment, and a visionary ability to lead the business school, Seidel said. In early October, the committee' hired the search firm of LaMalie Associates. "The search firm has contacted a wide number of possi- ble candidates," Seidel said. "They have contacted business leaders and academic leaders around the country to decide who are the best candidates. The search firm has over 500 contacts." Search for B-School ... .. .. ..I. >:;:::;: :......::> : Health & F-ltnes$4- r I Something For Everybody r *Swimming -Nautilus -Raquetball *Basketball *Aerobics -Dance *Free Weights *Martial Arts *Yoga *Pre-school -Child Care Center oFamily Activities And iust a short walk from central campus C'