The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 19, 1995 - 3 Alieged armed robbery in E. Quad A man was the victim of an armed robbery Sunday in his East Quad dorm room, according to Department of Pub- lic Safety reports. The victim notified officials at 9:32 p.m. He said he had been robbed and struck in the head with an unknown weapon. He also indicated that pepper spray was used. The Huron Valley Ambulance and the Ann Arbor Fire Department met with the victim, who refused treatment and transport. The suspects allegedly entered the room and took $160 in cash from the victim's desk drawer. Information about the suspects has not been released. A different kind of auto vandal An apparently vengeful person van- dalized acar Friday in aparking lot near Palmer Field, DPS reports say. A caller said he found a "threatening note" on his windshield at about 3:20 p.m. He also discovered one windshield wiper was "forcefully removed." The caller indicated he believed the incident to be the result of a Thursday dispute regarding a vehicle that parked "too close" to his own. Weekend theft roundup Some unusual items taken during the weekend in alleged larceny and rob- bery incidents: U DPS reports indicate that a West Quad student will have problems see- ing the next few football games after tickets were stolen from his room. A caller reported the larceny at about 8 p.m. Sunday. The season tickets were taken by unknown persons. Couzens Hall was the site of a robbery late last week. DPS reports indicate that one or more mail packages were stolen from the front desk be- tween Thursday and Friday nights. A caller reported that "pop cans" were taken from a closet Friday in the Medical Science Unit I. About $5-6 worth of cans were taken. Police said there were no suspects. Female victim left with shorter hair A woman has shorter hair as a result of an incident reported to DPS. From the Vera Baits II residence hall, a woman called DPS saying that two female subjects threatened her and forced her to cut off some of her hair. She called from the Ziwet House sec- tion at about 1:40 p.m. Saturday. The caller stated the woman was sent by a friend whom she had had an alter- cation with earlier. The incident is under investigation. Fights among incidents on Diag Two officers were busy Friday night on the Diag: At 8:35 p.m., the officers, while on foot patrol, cited two people for posses- sion of alcohol. While requesting a rou- tine warrant check on the subjects from DPS dispatch, it was learned that one subject had an outstanding warrant is- sued in Highland Park, Mich. Then, in an unrelated incident, one officer observed two individuals fight- ing. DPS took them into custody for disorderly conduct. Then one officer advised DPS dis- patch of another fight in progress else- where in the Diag. No arrests were fhade in this incident. Finally, at 9:27 p.m., officers noti- fied DPS that during the fights, their patrol car had been damaged. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jodi Cohen Mayors urge negotiations in Detroit newspapers' strike DETROIT (AP)- The mayors of Detroit and Sterling Heights yesterday called for around-the-clock bargaining to end the two- month Detroit Newspapers strike, and they accused management ofdragging out the talks. The leaders emerged from a meeting at Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer's office with a call for both sides to compromise. With Sterling Heights Mayor Richard Notte at his side, Archer urged the two sides to "engage in good-faith, around-the-clock bar- gaining" starting with the scheduled resump- tion of talks tomorrow. "Good faith means not trying to break the unions on the one hand and not trying to destroy management rights on the other," Ar- cher said. Notte added, "The only way the end will come is for both sides to compromise." Sterling Heights is the site of a Detroit Newspapers printing plant where pickets and police have clashed on recent weekends. Six unions representing 2,500 employees of the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News struck July 13 after management said it would no longer extend contracts that had been in effect by mutual agreement since they expired April 30. The papers published a joint edition until yesterday, when the News and Free Press appeared separately. The mayors criticized management's deci- sion to cancel last week's scheduled talks. Detroit Newspapers officials said they were tied up with answering Justice Department questions about alleged antitrust violations. Some students return to newly separated News, Free Press By Carly Blatt For the Daily For the first time in nine weeks, Chad Readier is able to read his morning newspaper, The Detroit News, without having half of it made up of the rival Detroit Free Press. The News and Free Press published separate editions yesterday for the first time since the strike against the two newspapers began in July. During the strike, some readers have boycotted the newspapers while others picked up the combined edition. With the return of the separate papers, Readier, a second-year Law student, said he will begin reading the News again. But some students said they will continue to buy other newspapers, like The New-York Times and USA Today, in support of the strikers. "Detroit newspapers cover state and national issues in greater depth, which is what I'm interested in," Readler said. Although the strike: bothered Readler, he said that he would likely be pro-management if he had to take a side. Chris Metinko, LSA first-year student, has read the combined edition regularly in the past weeks. When he recently arrived in Ann Arbor from out of state, he wasn't familiar or concerned with the strike. "Not having a TV, I have to buy a paper for news," Metinko said, When the papers came out in separate editions yesterday, Metinko purchased the Free Press, since he believed it was the official "morn- ing" paper. Others dislike purchasing what they called "scab" papers and con- tinue to support the strike and boycott the two Detroit newspapers. Chris Bailey, a second-year graduate student, hasn't purchased either newspaper or the combined edition. Bailey continues to read The New York Times and said he has no plans to read either Detroit paper even though they have separated. SARA STILLMAN/Daily I got rhythm Harmonica master Little Sonny performs Saturday at the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival. Michigan State course aims to help single parents cope EAST LANSING (AP)-With a 12- pound bundle strapped snugly to her, June Wygant ambled into a basement cafe at Michigan State University to attend what could be her most valuable class this semester. A 22-year-old theater major from Oakland County's Bloomfield Town- ship, Wygant joined about three dozen other single Michigan State students with children at the five-hour weekend workshop at the Michigan State Union. They got tips from university coun- selors - and each other - on how to manage time, money and stress. The presentation was the first of its kind on the campus. "Allthisstuff'shelpful,"said Wygant as her 3-month-old son, Christian, wriggled quietly in her lap. "Yes, it's Child-care center works to keep college an option difficult having a child in college. But it doesn't have to be this terrible, god- awful thing people perceive it to be." Pat Lowrie, director of the university's Women's Resource Cen- ter, said college wasn't even an option for young single moms until recently. "In my generation, women who de- cided to go on with apregnancy dropped out or stopped out," she said. "Now they're saying, 'I don't have to do that. I'm going on with my life and bringing my child with me."' Dawn Hecker, director of the university's Child and Family Care Resources, said school counselors and administrators pushed for the work- shop to respond to growth in the num- ber of single-parent students. While Michigan State does not track such students, Hecker cited a two-year- old survey by her office that found about 1,300 of the university's 32,000 undergraduates and 1,600 of its 8,000 graduate students had children. There is no way of knowing how many of those students are single. But Hecker said many must be because Michigan State, the state's largest school, mostly enrolls traditional un- dergraduates, ages 18 to 22. "And we think the number of single parents among them has increased be- cause we're seeing more and more stroll- ers and baby bags," she said. "And profs talk all the time about how more students are bringing their kids to class." Anthony Ewing, one of four men at the workshop, is such a student. Citing the high cost of child care, Ewing said he frequently strolls into class with books in one hand and his almost-I-year-old son, Anthony Jr., in the other. "I've even changed his diaper sitting at my desk," said Ewing, 22, a junior computer science major from Detroit. LaRonda Brown, 22, a senior and family services major from Highland Park, recalled taking her infant son, Marcus, to class her entire first week. But recently they both missed five days of class; Marcus, now 5 and a first- grader in East Lansing Public Schools, contracted measles. "Every week, it's a different drama," said Brown, who started a support group, Single Parents on a Mission, last year. "It's a little easier now that he's older. But it's still tough raising a baby alone and going to class. You feel overwhelmed, isolated." Brown said Marcus' dad was gunned down outside a Detroit party store last year. Wygant knows that feeling of isola- tion. "I feel like I'm at a different plane than most students here," she said. "They're thinking about 'Who am I going to scope out at the bar?' I'm thinking, 'I got to go home and give my kid a bath."' Student says college's tuition break is 'racist' DETROIT (AP) - A white Albion College student has objected to the school's tuition break for black stu- dents as racist. Jeff Schroder, ajunior, said he would propose the Diversity Award, which gives $4,000 each year to each black student, be eliminated. "The only requirement to receive the money is that you be born with black skin and check a box on the admission application that states as much," Schroder said. "Everyone else pays higher tuition because of it." The Diversity Award at the 1,650- student school amounts to about a 20 percent tuition discount. Schroder told the Detroit Free Press that he would ask the Student Senate to vote to urge Albion to get rid of the Diversity Award. Chris O'Connor, Student Senate president, saidthepro- posal would be assigned to a commit- tee. The award allows greater numbers of black students to attend Albion, said Leigh Willis, executive board member ofthe Black Student Alliance at Albion. "And by allowing more students to attend college with African American students, their education is also being enriched." Why should a rich black kid whose parents are doctors get $4,000 over a poor white kid born to a single mom on welfare?" - Jeff Schroder Albion College junior In a statement, the college said it began the award in 1993 because black students had been underrepresented his- torically at the school. According to statistics cited in the Free Press, 2.5 percent of Albion's student population in 1993 was black; 4 percent is now. Schroder said he supports efforts to diversify the student body. "Why should a rich black kid whose parents are doc- tors get $4,000 over a poor white kid born to a single mom on welfare?" said Schroder, who is from Northville. Cordially Invites Students of All Concentrations to the 1995 Corporate Presentation and Office Hours Tuesday, September 19,1995 Office Hours 12:00pm - 4:00pm in the Michigan Room - Michigan Union Presentations 6:00pm - 8:00pm in the Vanderburg Room -Michigan league Refreshments will be served Learn first-hand from U of M grads about exciting full-time and internship opportunities in the U.S.! Representatives from: Brand Management Market Research What's happening in Ann Arbor today GRouP MEETINGS Q Amnesty international Mass Meet- ing, Michigan Union, Wolverine Room, 7:30 p.m. Q Huron Valley Group Sierra Club, general meeting, call 994-5456 for information Q IMPAC Auditions, Michigan Union, Anderson Room, 6-10 p.m. Q Israel Michigan Political Affairs Committee, Hillel, 1429 Hill Street. 7 p.m. Study/Dinner, 764-2915, 716 Catherine Street, 6-8 p.m. EVENTS Q "FORUM Registration Sessions," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, 3200 Student Activi- ties Building, 12:10-12:30 p.m. and 2:40-3 p.m. Q "Free Mumia Abu-Jamal Coali- tion," meeting, Michigan Union. 7 p.m. Mass Meeting," sponsored by Career Planning and Place- ment, Angell Hall, Auditorium A, 6:10-7 p.m. Q "Renee Emry Speaks on Medical Marijuana Case," sponsored by Law School's Prisoner Legal Ad- vocacy Project, Hutchins Hall, Room 132, 12 noon STUDENT SERVICES Q Campus Information Center, Michi- I