GERIATRIC PROGRAM See EditorialPage Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom 4ir WISHTY WASHY High-39* Low-20* See Today for details 1 1 s Vol. LXXXIX, No. 120 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, February 22, 1979 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Foreign TAs: Language proficiency questioned By GREG GALLOPOULOS Indiana University un- dergraduates were tired of instruc- tors, mostly foreign graduate students, who could not effectively communicate in English. When their initial complaints to Indiana of- ficials brought no results, a few irate undergraduates, who were later joined by the Indiana University Student Assembly, prepared to bring a lawsuit against the school But before the suit could be filed, the university admitted that a serious problem existed, and promised' to correct it. The Dean of the Indiana Univer- sity Graduate School recently for- med an ad hoc committee to deal with the problem. The committee will be responsible for ensuring that all graduate teaching assistants at Indiana University are competent in English. THE PROBLEM of graduate teaching assistants (TAs) who can- not speak English so that their students can understand is a com- mon one in some departments at the University of Michigan. Many University students tell stories about an unintelligible TA. The majority of complaints in this area focuses on the, more technical departments where verbal ex- pression is not at a premium, with Mathematics and Chemistry most frequently mentioned. Non- technical departments, such as Romance Languages, however, have been criticized as well. One Literary College junior, asked about his experiences with non- English speaking TAs, sarcastically remarked, "Korean isn't listed as a prerequisite for Calculus, but it should be." A Statistics major commented that "many of my teachers have real trouble with English." And a perusal of the teacher evaluations in the Student See FOREIGN, Page 5 U.S.s ays Soviets } won't' attack China From Reuter and AP A senior American official said yesterday he did not expect the Soviet Union to take retaliatory action along its border with China because of the Chinese military incursion into Viet- nam. The State Depa'tment's top expert on Soviet affairs, Marshall Shulman, told a meeting of news editors and broad- casters there were no signs of any preparations for a Soviet move against China itself. HOWEVER, THE Soviet Union charged yesterday that the United States connived in China's attack on Vietnam and signalled its displeasure with Yugoslavia and Romania for their neutral attitude to the new round of fighting in Southeast Asia. The Communist Party newspaper Pravda, taking up a theme launched Tuesday in the official media, said it was no coincidence that the Chinese at- tack took place after Vice-Premier Deng Xiaping (Teng Hsiao-ping) 'visited Washington. "No propagandistic exercises can help conceal the responsibility of those cir- cles in the United States which directly or indirectly inspired Peking's action," Pravda said. THE GOVERNMENT newspaper Iz- vestia also reported' that the situation on Vietnam's border had been stqbilized with the Chinese unable to penetrate Vietnamese lines. However, Soviet newspapers revealed no, clues about the Kremlin's next move should China continue its of- fensive. The Soviet propaganda barrage denouncing Peking pressed home the message that there Was no longer-any excuse for governments around the world failing to take Vietnam's side yesterday. EARLIER yesterday, the State Department said the United States was seeking a meeting of the United Nations Security Council to consider "both the Chinese invasion of Vietnam and the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia." The United States has coupled its calls for China to end its five-day-old incursion into Vietnam with a demand that Vietnamese forces withdraw from Cambodia, where they helped topple the pro-Chinese Pol Pot government early last month. Shulman said it was not clear if the China-Vietnam conflict would become a -major intrusion beyond the present level or how long it would last. THE SOVIET Union has publicly stated since the fighting on the Sino- Vietnamese border started that it will fulfill the obligations of a friendship treaty it signed with Vietnam last year. It has not said, however, what action that would entail. Shulman said that the Soviet Union's relationship with the Hanoi government may prove as burdensome to Moscow as its support of Cuba, where he said Russia was providing aid at the rate of two million dollars a day. He said the United States was not in a position to influence directly events on the ground in Southeast Asia, and stressed that the United States was not going to get involved in the fighting it- self. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Viet- namese and Chinese troops backed by heavy artillery were on the move yesterday toward the Vietnamese town of Lang Son and what could be the showdown battle of the five-day-old border war, intelligence sources in Bangkok reported. The sources said Chinese strategists apparently intend to deal a final bloody blow to the Vietnamese military and then to withdraw most of their forces from Vietnam within three or four days. Japan'sKyodo news service quoted a government official in Peking as saying China hopes to end the conflict within a few days, but the unidentified official warned that it might be prolonged if Vietnam throws its regular army troops into the fighting. That appeared to be just what Hanoi .was doing yesterday, as columns of regular army reinforcements were reported rolling north toward Viet- namese-held Lang Son, a strategically situated town that for centuries has guarded the approaches from China. The troops apparently were relieving battered militia units that bore the defensive burden for the first three days of fighting. Daily Photo By MAUREEN OMALLEY AhiOzluck, a Math 114 TA from Turkey, helps student John Fellrath with a math problem. All foreign Math TA's are required to take the English proficiency exam administered by the English Language Institute. 'U' c o -mmunitysplit on,'baby prof'value By HOWARD WITT They are "overused,'. "scapegoats," "underpaid," "more personable," "fair," "unfair," and "baby professors." There are over 1,600 of them throughout the Univer- sity, teaching more than 15,000 students. They are Graduate Student Assistants '(GSAs), better known to undergraduates as "TAs" (teaching assistants). To many freshpersons and sophomores, TAs are what the University is- about: Each term these graduate students, who are usually working toward doctoral degrees, teach hundreds of sections of large introductory courses, in ad- dition to many smaller classes. Their use is so widespread that some undergraduates might not see many full professors until they become juniors and reach the concentration level. ARE UNDERGRADUATES mere "guinea pigs" for these aspiring scholars, providing bodies upon which TAs can practice their skills, as one rather cynical political scien- See TAs, Page 12 US. TO CONTINUE SALT WA TCH: 11 0 0 r Iran bans monitoring CONTR OVERSIAL CLA USES DELETED: Proposed cheating rules revised From Reuter and AP The loss of American listening posts in Iran will not cause serious problems in verifying Soviet compliance with a new Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) accord, a leading expert said yesterday. Paul Warnke, former chief American negotiator in the SALT negotiations and ex-director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, told a meeting of news editors and broadcasters that the Iranian monitoring stations duplicated information now being obtained by other means. IN TEHRAN yesterday, Iran's new armed forces chief, General Mohammad Yali Gharani, told a press conference the new authorities would not allow previous arrangements for the U.S. intelligence facilities to remain in force. Warnke, who resigned last year from his arms control, agency post to return to his lawyer's practice, told the meeting at the State Department that the primary U.S. means of assuring Soviet compliance with SALT was through photo-reconnaissance satellites. Radio signal monitoring, which was done in the Iranian stations, also could be done from ships at sea. he said.w "INSOFAR AS SALT II is concerned, the loss of the stations in Iran will not provide serious verification problems," Warnke said. Verification is expected to be one of the most important issues in the Senate ratification debate on the expected treaty. Warnke said a summit between President Carter and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhniv, at which SALT II would be signed, could be expected to take place in two months or less. IRAN'S NEW GOVERNMENT announced yesterday it will hold a referendum in 15 days'on the issues of formally changing the nation's political status from a monarchy to an Islamic republic. The government statement, published in afternoon newspapers, said the single question on the ballot would be "Do you favor an Islamic republic?" A. "yes" vote in the referendum would provide legitimacy - for Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeinmi's revolution and ,support the provisional government of Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan. - Under Bazargan's plan for establishing a new permanent government, the referendum will be followed by elections to choose a constitutional assembly. THE ASSEMBLY would decide whether to approve a new constitution, a draft of which reportedly already exists. If the assembly. approves it, a national referendum on the con- stitution would be held. Then parliamentary elections would be conducted and a new government, appointed by the Parliament, would be in- stalled in place of the current provisional administration. By LEONARD BERNSTEIN Controversial portions of proposed rules which would govern cases of cheating in the Literary College (LSA) have been deleted from a draft passed by the college's Administrative Board yesterday. Several clauses in the new Manual of Procedures of the LSA Academic Judiciary had drawn strong criticism from members of the Administrative Board and student government because many students felt the clauses violated their rights. THE OLD proposal - a revision of the current Manual of Procedures - contained a clause allowing "individual faculty members (to) handle minor cases of plagiarism, fabrication, aiding or abetting dishonesty with minor con- sequences, and impulsive cheating." Another section sanctioned "disciplinary grading" as a punish- ment instructors could invoke. According to Eugene Nissen, assistant dean for academic affairs, the two rules were designed to encourage ThFursday e The Peking Opera, product of an Oriental musical heritage quite different from that of traditional American perfor- mances, was in town Tuesday evening. See review, Page 6. * Ralph Nader airs his views on the power and influence of the Educational Testing Service (ETS), and the benefits the organization received due to its associations with learning. See Editorial Page. i Former Michigan cage great Rudy Tomjanovich is on the road back to stardom following an in- jury that nearly ended his fruitful career with the Houston Rockets. See story, Page 10. * The Chicago-based comedy troupe Second City treated an professors to use the Judiciary only for major instances of academic dishonesty. But students complained that permitting professors to be both accuser and judge created the possibility that students might be treated unfairly. The proposal, and student criticisms of it, were reviewed by the LSA Executive Committee on January 19 and sent back to the Academic Judiciary for revision. That group voted to delete the passages which students disliked, and sent a new draft of the manual to the Administrative Board. After approval by that body yesterday, the code now goes back to the Executive Committee for review before reaching the college's governing faculty for final approval. ADMINISTRATIVE Board member Kathy Friedman called the elimination of the clauses a victory'for students. "All the major changes that we were concerned about have been deleted," she said. "The new code seems to provide an equitable process for students." But Friedman and fellow LSA student government member Dan Solomon had less success amending another clause' of the new draft at yesterday's meeting. SOLOMON OBJECTED to a clause designed to eliminate delays in the hearing of cases by transferring jurisdiction of cases to the Ad- ministrative Board if the Academic Judiciary does not hear a case within six weeks. If the Board fails to review a case in six weeks, it then goes to an ad hoc committee of the Executive Com- mittee. Solomon said the possibility that the Executive Committee, which has no student members, might hear a case was unfair. Students comprise half the Academic Judiciary and Ad- ministrative Board. Solomon and Friedman pressed for a change after some debate on the mat- ter, but were cut off by LSA Associate Dean Judy Bardwick, head of the Ad- ministrative Board. "THIS IS OUT of order already. My See PROPOSED, Page 6 'A Jew speaks .out' about simple lifestyles Mideast From AP and Reuter Egyptian and Israeli negotiators opened new Mideast peace talks yesterday under U.S. auspices with a joint pledge to complete a peace treaty as soon as possible. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance took charge of the meetings at rustic Camp David, in the snow-bound Catoctin. mountains of Maryland, but there was no word on whether new United States proposals were introduced to break the stalemate. ACCORDING TO a joint statement, Vance, Egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil and Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan began the talks with a reaffirmation of "their deter- mination" to bend their best efforts toward successful completion of the negotiations as soon as possible." A news blackout ordered by President Carter kept reporters and photographers away from the 147-acre retreat where the negotiations will be held in seclusion at least through the weekend. The blackout, aimed at preventing "leaks" to the public, appeared to be firmly in place. Carter's expressed hope is that secrecy will promote a set- tlement. THE JOJNT statement read to repor- ters at a midday briefing said the at- mosphere at Camp David was warm and informal. State Department spokesman Hodding Carter said he did not nnwwhp th rsiP.tmaighot in peace talks, reopen Middle East. ThdesE as, d treating Egypt on an equal1 These officials, declnng to be iden- other countries in the are tified by name, said Sadat made the Israel-when it came to arms request last Saturday to Defense For two decades the Uni Secretary Harold, Brown during a had assigned the prime lengthy private meeting in Egypt. military role to Iran, but the. Sadat told reporters following his the monarchy of Shah M Saturday meeting with Brown that he Reza Pahlavi has raised do expected the United States to begin that country's stance. - ~ -' basis with a-namely s sales. ted States Mideast toppling of ohammad ubts about 4 By WILLIAM THOMPSON Proponent of macrobiotics and author Meir Abehsera explained last night the advantages of the unlikely combination of simple Judaism and macrobiotic food. Speaking to a crowd of about 60 in the Pendleton Room of the Michigan Union, Abehsera gave a lengthy lec- ture, touching topics from world gover- nment to herbs. One member of the audience described the talk as a "stream of consciousness." THROUGHOUT his speech, the nutrition advocate stressed the impor- tance of the simple life. "Don't over- do," he urged. "Don't make yourself higher than you are." According to Abehsera, people should be more concerned with the spirit than ; mat 41K: A