Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom cl br Lt9 43UU Iai1Q Permutations Rain changing to snow by late afternoon as temperatures plunge from a high of 42 in the morning. V M, 1. .__... _. -__ Vol. XCIV-No. 135 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, March 21, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Senate rejects organized school prayer WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate yesterday rejected a constitutional amendment to permit organized spoken prayer in public schools. House Democratic leaders, mean- while, said they will seek substantially smaller military spending increases than Reagan wants over the next three years. AFTER TWO weeks of heated debate and strong lobbying in favor of the prayer proposal by President Reagan, the Senate voted 56-44 in favor of the measure, 11 votes short of the two- tirds needed for passage of a con- stitutional amendment. Reagan said in a letter to supporters of the measure that the constitution was "designed to protect our religious liber- ty, not restrict it," and he accused op- ponents of seeking "freedom from religion instead of freedom of religion." But Sen. Lowell Weicker (R-Conn.) leading the opposition, said the proposal "would have us forfeit our bir- thright of religious liberty for a mess of speculative political pottage." SCHOOL prayer was the last of the social issues pushed by the so-called New Right in the 1980 elections to come before the Senate. The president promised. his constituency a vote on school prayer, and he delivered it. Reagan has been unable to deliver ' congressional passage on any of these constitutional issues - prohibitions against school busing and abortion, an effort to limit the authority of federal judges, and a balanced budget amen- dment. Baker rejected amendment opponen- ts' charges that the president should not be lobbying on something as personal as the prayer issue. "IT IS A leadership prerogative of the president and it's even more impor- tant when it's a morally sensitive issue like this," Baker told reporters. But Weicker had called the president's lobbying efforts "taseteless" and said, "This is not the type of issue you can lobby on. It's a matter of deeply held beliefs, not like a missile system." The inability of amemdment suppor- ters to agree on. What form school See PRAYER, Page 2 MSA re ject vote code o~f eon duet By CLAUDIA GREEN The Michigan Student Assembly last night unanamously rejected the existing draft of a proposed code of conduct which would govern student's behavior outside of the classroom. Members of the assembly, however, said they would have to vote on the issue again if significant changes are made in the existing draft of the code of non-academic conduct before it is for- mally proposed to the regents. THE PROPOSED code has sparked considerable debate between student leaders, who oppose the guidelines almost unamimously, and University administrators who feel strongly that some form of a conduct code for studen- ts is desperately needed. The code would allow the University to punish students for crimes such as arson, sexual assault, theft, and vandalism. "It's a token vote," said MSA 'resident Mary Rowland. "We're voting on this but it's not even for real. This is just to put MSA on the record" as rejecting the code as it is now writ- ten. ALTHOUGH MSA members endor- sed a letter last month from the heads of twelve school and college gover- nment heads criticizing the code, yesterday's vote was the first time the assembly has officially rejected the existing draft of the code. Under current University bylaws the code cannot be passed without MSA ap- proval. . But several University ad- ministrators and regents have recently said they may be willing to change the bylaws so that only the regents would have to approve the code. If the bylaws were changed, the student assembly, as well as the faculty government, would be considered only as advisory groups to the regents. BECAUSE THE regents may amend See MSA, Page 2 Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Swallow! A member of the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity struggles to swallow his piece of pizza as teammates cheer him on. The pizza eating and beer chugging contests were held last night at Dooley's as part of Greek Week festivities. Mondale leads Hart in Ill, and Minn. CHICAGO (AP) - At press time last night, Walter Mondale had gained an early lead over Sen. Gary Hart in the Illinois presidential primary - a test of the former vice president's claim to a comeback in the race for the Democratic nomination. The Rev. Jesse Jackson of Chicago was third in a closely-contested race, prelude to a string of big-state primaries that will determine who really owns the front-runner Walter Mondale held and lost in earlier competition. WHILE THE presidential preference vote provided the drama in Illinois, Mondale was all but. assured of victory in the parallel competition for delegates, and of another gain in caucuses in his home state of Minnesota. The vote count, with 24 percent of the precincts reporting showed: " Mondale 214,924 or 46 percent. " Hart 161,169 or 34 percent. " Jackson 74,210 or 16 percent Mondale was running well ahead in the Chicago area and leading narrowly in the nearby suburbs. The vote from downstate, where Hart was expected to do well, was slower in being counted. * THE PRIMARY capped a week that had all three contenders dealing not only with the traditional issues of a campaign, but also the byzantine world of Chicago politics. Mondale had support from the mostly white Cook County Democratic organization and hoped it would not hurt him among blacks. Jackson had support - but not an endorsement - from Mayor Harold Washington. At stake were 171 delegates to the Democratic nominating convention next summer, the largest prize so far in the efletion year: But more than that, Hart and Mondale were angling for momentum in the other industrial states to follow, Connecticut, New York and Pennsylvania over the next three weeks. Before the vote was counted, Mondale picked up nine delegates and Hart got two when Senate Democrats chose the senators they will send to the Democratic National Convention. Fourteen of the senators selected did not state a preferance. House Democrats chose 164 delegates in January. THE DELEGATE lineup before the primary was Mondale, 523; Hart, 288; Jackson, 60; Uncommitted, 124. Other candidates, since withdrawn from the race, had 80. President Reagan was unopposed on the Republican primary ballot in Illinois. Minnesota Democrats caucused to pick 75 delegates. Mondale was a heavy favorite to score a home state victory, although final returns were not ,expected for several days. Mondale was in St. Paul, Minn. yesterday, while Hart flew from Illinois to Washington. Jackson got in some last-minute cam- paigning in his adopted hometown of Chicago. FOR MONDALE, Illinois was a critical test of a self-described "comeback" in the nominating battle he once was prohibitively favored to win, and a gauge of whether he finally has been. able to slow the momentum that has been building for Hart since the early primaries and caucuses. For Hart, who emerged from the Democratic pack late last month, Illinois was an opportunity to demon- strate that his "new ideas"': candidacy has staying power. See ALL, Page 2 Hart .. . may lose momentum Economic growth spurs debate WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's economic growth surged to an annual rate of 7.2 percent in early 1984, the government reported yesterday, setting off fears that an- overheated economy could trigger renewed inflation. But while private analysts warned of a possible runaway economy, the Reagan administration maintained there were no signs of overheating and predicted the current surge would settle down to more sustainable growth. NO ONE disagreed that the Commerce Department's "flash" preliminary estimate of economic growth of 7.2 per- cent for January through March was far above most analysts' earlier estimates of between 5 and 6 percent. The government not only gave a higher estimate for the in- crease in the real gross national product for the current quar- ter, but it also revised upward the estimate for the final three months of 1983. Real GNP is the value of all good and services in the economy after adjusting for inflation. Growth was put at 5 percent in the fourth quarter, up from an original estimate of 4.5 percent made in December. The change sent real GNP up 3.4 percent for the year, compared with the December estimate of 3.3 percent. In 1982, when the nation was mired in recession, the economy fell 1.9 percent. MARTIN FELDSTEIN, chairman of the president's Council of Economic Advisors, said the new report "shows the economy is still on a powerful roll" as it rebounds from the 1981-82 recession. Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldridge called the first-quarter surge a "temporary acceleration" and predicted the economy would slow to a more sustainable growth rate for the rest of the year. He said the ad- ministration was not changing its forecast of economic growth of 4.5 percent for the whole year. The men discounted the idea that the economy was growing too quickly. Baldridge said the 7.2 percent growth rate "does not mean that the economy is showing signs of overheating." But many private analysts were not so confident. THE ADMINISTRATION was "putting an impossibly op- timistic sheen on the numbers," said Michael Evans, head of -his own economic forecasting firm. With such rapid growth, with the large federal budget deficit and a falling dollar, "I defy anybody to predict that in- flation can remain stable under these circumstances," he said. Evans and other economists said there was no doubt the Federal Reserve Board would move soon to tighten credit further in an effort to keep inflation from taking off again. The prediction was that the Feds would boost its discount rate, the fee it charges on loans to banks and savings in- stitutions, for the first time since December 1982. Major banks across the country took their own steps at raising interest rates on Monday when they raised their prime rate, the rate they say they charge their best business customers, from 11 percent to 11.5 percent. Allen.Sinai, chief economist for the New York investment house of Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb, said such moves were needed to prevent even sharper interest rate jumps in the future. "The U.S. domestic economy is overheating. It is expan- ding too fast and it is not sustainable," he said. "If it doesn't slow down then we will be facing sharp rises of interest rates, higher inflation and the whole range of difficulties that come when an economy booms." ~ - AP Photo Cocaine coup Police in Colombia attacked an isolated jungle cocaine processing plant guarded by communist guerrillas and seized 13.8 tons of cocaine with a street value of $1.2 billion, yesterday. It is the largest drug arrest ever by any standard - money value, purity and quantity. The amount uncovered totals about one-quarter of the estimated annual consumption in the United States. TODAY No loaf F YOU thought eating the Quad's meatloaf two nights in a row was bad, imagine eating it every meal for seven days. But that's similar to what inmates of Arizona prison system face if they fail to correct their hahavinr "The nrnoram is aimed at stonning the inmates Perils of love A N AMOROUS 12,000-pound killer whale named Namu is recovering from surgery on his dorsal fin, maimed while he was courting a female, officials at Sea World in San Diego, Calif. say. Park veterinarians performed the "life-saving" surgery, which included amputation of about two feet of the smashed fin from the anesthetized mammal, after the whale was found bleeding in its tank. Dr. Lanny Cornell said Namu, one of three killer whales ciih ..rn r t hnn nnIenr i ittractin n a feling to be caught sunbathing in Hawaii without a tan. "Everybody thought I was crazy at first," said Turner, who has opened three tanning salons and is planning others. The demand, says Turner may be created by the fact that in Hawaii a person without a tan sticks out like a sore thumb. "It's reverse psychology," he said, "In areas where you don't get much sun people aren't used to seeing people without tans." His customers seem to agree. "A tan is vital here," said one customer who declined to give her name. "You can get a complex if you're not tan in Hawaii." Some cav the like the eae and nnveniencenf the indnr hnths. Also on this date in history: " 1945 - College of Engineering officials said the school's Honor System would be revived. The system was nearly abolished a few months earlier; * 1956 - The Daily reported that University facilities for parking bicycles were inadequate. In addition, frequent collisions had left some students with "mental and physical ill-feelings;" * 1969 - The Daily learned that the University's regents would abolish the mandatory physical education requirement for all students. 3 I i I I