The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, July 25, 1979-Page 11 Capt. Cornell (ouninuedfrom Page 4 terested not in education but rather in maintaining the University's $35 million dollar capital fund. Captain Cornell crystalizes these ideological gems in his most recent hit "The Sounds of Compliance." Frank H.T. Rhodes wails on the trustees: Hello trustees my oldfriends, You've brought me here to speak again, Because you won'tfund Cornell's upkeeping, With the profits you are reaping. Budget revisions simply madefor fiscal gain; Who's to blame? The students sound, compliance. In comic strips you plot alon, While the students all get stoned; You know the battle has been won, When you can raise tuition just for fun. When the Senate was dismantled without afight; You thought it right. The students sound, compliance. You trustees havefound your prey, For the students have no say; Although tuition is soaring, Next semester Istart touring, Andil11sing: "The costs and the profits are painted on the campus walls, And Sibley Hall" And whisper thesound, compliance. But victories - cannot be measured by comic strips or album sales. It's the record that counts. And what is the record? Maybe the trustees are right. Perhaps Captain Cornell is only the delirious scribblings of an ob- scure cartoonist gone mad. After all, the trustees are rich, power- ful, big businessmen. We're mere students. They're vice presidents of major U.S. corporations. We're not. They have a concern for the University's fiscal solvency. We're here for an education. They can be more objective; they rarely show their faces in Ithaca. But we're not impressed. Although the comic strip has run its course, Captain Cornell need not fade away. While stands against such issues as Cornell's investments in corporations in- volved in South Africa may not be hits with the trustees, Frank Rhodes should strive for creative leadership at the expense of commercial success. It would be sad indeed if Cap- tain Cornell limited himself to tossing an occasional Frisbee on the arts quad, frequenting local bars, or fraternizing with the Cornell Liberation Army. It's time to face the music. Cone on, Captain Cornell; Kryptonite is found only in the comics. (CONTINUED TOMORROW) COMPUTER TALK LOS ANGELES (AP)-The market for automated office products will ex- ceed $15 billion by 1982, reports AM In- ternational., Included in the category are such common itemgsas duplicators and such exotic items as laser optical recognition systems that turn typed copy into com-, puter language. Iranians TEHRAN, Iran (AP)-Iranian radio played Persian folk music, classical pieces, and themes of the nation's revolution yesterday, ignoring a call by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini for a ban on music, which he described as an opiate that makes the brain inactive. The director of the state radio said the ban "would apply only to the holy month of Ramadan, which starts on Thursday." "For periods starting at the end of Ramadan, an appropriate decision will be made later on," said Director Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, apparently avoiding a direct clash with Khomeini, the nation's austere 79-year-old religious leader. In other developments yesterday: " Rebellious Kurdish forces captured a state police headquarters near the ignore ban town of Khoy in northwestern Iran as fighting was reported elsewhere in the region letween Kurds and government forces. Two men were arrested, tried, and executed within hours of being caught while trying to set off a bomb near pipelines leading to the world's largest oil processing plant. Saboteurs believed to be ethnic Arabs pressing for autonomy damaged pipelines in the Persian Gulf region earlier this month. Khomeini launched his attack on music in an address Monday to em- ployees of a summer radio stationa in the holy city of Qom. "Music should not be played over radio and television . . . like opium, music also stupefies persons listening to it and makes their brain inactive and frivolous," the official Pars news agen- China accuses Soviets of provocation' at border PEKING (AP) - China accused the Soviet Union yesterday of creating "a serious incident of provovation and bloodshed" on their border by killing one Chinese and wounding another, just when both sides were preparing to talk about improving relations. The official Xinhua news agency said about 20 Soviet soldiers lying in ambush at the Soviet border with northwest China's Xinjiang region killed a her- dsman and wounded a veterinarian as they were inspecting a pasture on July 16. Xinhua said a strong protest note to the Soviet Embassy in Peking accused the Soviet Union of a number of provocations this summer "designed to create tension and threaten thebsafety and life of the Chinese border inhabitants." THE NOTE declared: "The Soviet side has deliberately created a border incident of provocation and bloodshed at a time when concrete arrangements are being discussed for negotiations on the relations between China and the Soviet Union. This cannot but draw the serious attention of the Chinese side." After notifying the Soviet Union it would not renew their amity treaty when it expires next year, China had proposed talks on their relations covering such matters as trade, technological cooperation, peaceful coexistence and non-interference in each other's affairs. After exchanges of notes, the Soviet Embassy in Peking said last week China had unconditionally accepted talks on a variety of government-to- government questions with the Soviet Union. CHINA ALSO publicized a protest to the Soviet Union in May last year, when it accused Soviet troops of intruding in- to northeast China's northeastern Heilungkiang province, shooting at more than 30 Chinese and wounding some of them. The Soviet Union said its troops became lost while searching for an armed Soviet criminal, but had not fired at Chinese. Meanwhile, Japan's Kyodo news ser- vice reported from Peking that an open letter has been put up on "democracy wall" urging promotion of friendship with the Soviet people - as opposed to the Soviet government. on music cy quoted him as saying. KHOMEINI ACCUSED the regime of deposed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of "corrupting and degrading" Iranian youth by permitting music to be broadcast over the nation's airwaves. But songs of the revolution that top- pled the shah's regime and other stan- dard music fare still were broadcast Tuesday on Iranian radio. Two Tehran teen-agers laughed when reporters asked their reactions to Khomeini's ban. "I don't care what state radio does, but in the privacy of my home and in the company of my friends, we find music relaxing and in- spiring," one of the teen-agers said. KHOMEINI'S ATTACK was reminiscent of attempts in other coun- tries to censor music. China tried to root out some music in its Cultural Revolution of the 1960s. Radicals said Western music reflected "the nasty rot- ten life and decadent sentiments of the bourgeoisi." But Western music is back in China. Loudspeakers in a Peking park recen- tly blared such light numbers as "The Skater's Waltz" and "The Sound of Music." Hitler banned "depraved art," in- cluding jazz and some modern classical composers. But he loved Richard Wagner, and for that reason, an unof- ficial, but firm ban of Wagner's music persists on Israeli radio, television and concert stages. IN NORTHWESTERN Iran, Gover- nor General Jamshid Haghu of West Azerbaijan Province disclosed that the state police headquarters near the town of Khoy had fallen to insurgent Kurds, Pars said. "We have no information about the situation in other state police posts between Khoy and Ghatur since our communication lines are down," Haghu told Pars in Orumiyeh, capital of West Azerbaijan province. Premier Mehdi Bazargan's provisional government acted quickly and severely to discourage further at- tempts to sabotaging the country's vital petroleum industry. revisions der the old code, a radiologist who spot- ted a serious disease while reading the X-ray of a patient referred by a chiropractor was obligated to tell the patient about it. The new code obligates him only to tell the chiropractor. COLD MICE LONDON (AP)-Exterminators say that mice which go foraging in a London meat market are developing long fur coats to protect them from the chill inside the cold-storage units. U-M Stylists AT THE Union Open Mon-Sat 8:30am-5:15pm Otthe UNION AMA studies ethics code CHICAGO (AP) - A new ethics code that would have let physicians adver- tise was shelved for more study yester- day at. the American Medical Association (AMA) convention. The AMA House of Delegates voted to send the ethics proposal to its state and local medical societies for comment. The vote has the effect of delaying final action on a revision of the elisting ethics code, which was first enacted in 1957, until at least December 1980. MEANWHILE, the delegates also adopted a new position paper that modifies a stand that chiropractors are members of an "unscientific cult." The position said, in effect, that chiroprac- tic is unsupported by scientific eviden- ce, but that individual chiropractors may be all right. According to Dr. James Todd, chairman of the committee that wrote the ethics revisions, "The =public has the right to go to hell medically if they so choose, and we think they're doing that by licensing chiropractors and so forth. But that's their right." AMA Executive Vice-President James Sammons said the mere fact that revisions were under study would put the AMA inbetter legal position in its many lawsuits stemming from its current policies banning advertising and accepting patient referrals from chiropractors. THE 214000-MEMBER doctors' group is fighting a decision by a Federal Trade Commission judge that said its advertising policies were restraint of trade. It's also defending itself in three states against charges by chiropractors that the AMA is trying to put them out of business. Among the revisions in the new code: " It encourages physicians to "make relevant information available to the public," a section Todd said would permit "honest" advertising. * It removes the old code's prohibition against working with "un- scientific" practitioners. That referen- ce has been taken to mean doctors - particularly radiologists - should not accept patients referred by chiroprac- tors, although many doctors do. " It says a physician may choose how and where to practice. "That removes anything against group practice or prepaid medical plans," Todd said. - It limits a physician's respon- sibility to a patient referred to him. Un-