Code: More apathy than anger By LAURIE DELATER One resident of Minnies; Co-op said she vehemently opposes everything about the proposed student code for non-academic conduct. She said the judicial system was un- fair. She didn't like the fact that students couldn't have lawyers. And she was especially angered that her co- op, or any other student organization could be punished for violations of its members. YET SHE hasn't raised her objec- tions at co-op meetings, or expressed her concerns to University ad- ministrators. She hasn't spoke at the regents' public comments session, or written letters to the members of the board. She didn't even want her name used in this story. After homework and other academic commitments she said she has little time left to fight the code. Besides, she a~iA hnrn;an' mllh ch nr thr students can do to make the University listen. "You know, I don't think of myself as apathetic," she said, reflecting on her comments. "But I really sound like it. I care a lot about the code, but I just can't make another commitment." SHE IS not alone. Across the campus, there have been plenty of students and organizations who say they are opposed to the code, but very few who are willing to back their words with actions. Members of fraternities, sororities, and co-operativessay they are willing for their organizations' leaders to head a fight against the code. But those leaders - who banded together last spring to oppose the code - are keeping a low profile, claiming their groups are resource centers, not vehicles for mass dissent. LAST SPRING, the Michigan Student Assembly asked the Inter-Fraternity Council, Panhellenic Association, and 'I don't think of myself as apathetic ... I care a lot about the code, but I just can't make another commitment.' - an anonymous student the Inter-Cooperative Council to take a stand on the code and publicize their decision. Representatives for the groups decided they were opposed to the code. ICC and Panhel sent letters to President Harold Shapiro and the regents outlining their objections to the proposed code. Leaders of the groups made public statements opposing the code. But neither ICC nor Panhel has checked back with administrators to see whether their suggestions are being considered. And neither group feels that stronger moves are appropriate. "I CAN'T tell you what Panhel will be doing," said Panhel vice president Gretchen Matz. Matz and IFC president Harry Walter said that any move is up to the council's representatives. Walter said the IFC of- ficers can offer alternatives to representatives, but he added that he was "not sure what those options are." ICC received sharp criticism from its members after co-op leaders rejected the code last year. Some co-op residents complained that everyone in the system was not included in the decision, while others said ICC was innappropriately intervening in political issues. EARLIER THIS week, one of the council's committees decided against holding workshops and calling for a system-wide referendum on the code. Instead, the committee said ICC should spend its time on parties and other social programs to boost the popularity of co-ops which are having trouble filling vacancies, according to Dana Donohoe, the committee chairperson. "We just don't have the time (for the code) right now,' she said. Donohoe said she hadn't read the code. Eric Schnaufer, chairman of MSA's code committee and a vocal opponent of the proposed code, complained about the "frustrating" lack of commitment student leaders show toward protesting the code. THE'BURDEN of organizing rallies, a forum, and distributing literature all falls on his shoulders and those of about 15 others, although the committee's phone list has 50 to 75 names, he said. "They will come out and sit at a table (distributing literature) but they won't organize a rally," he said. "We have a lot of people, but few who are willing to spend 20 hours a week organizing." Schnaufer pointed to a meeting this fall where he expected to discuss the code with about 14 representatives from co-ops on the southern part of campus. Only two members showed up. ALTHOUGH MSA strongly urges groups to examine the code in light of their various activities, Schnaufer said that in the end "MSA is going to have to organize the mass dissent, the protests." See STUDENTS, Page 2 Ninety -five Years iI 1 4 Nippy iin the evening. Highs in the low Editorial Freedom 5 sO. Vol. XCV, No. 51 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan --Saturday, November 3, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages " - " v v s 500 killed 1 Hindu-Sikh [n From AP and UPI NEW DELHI, India - India's millions, deeply shocked by the assassination of Indira Gandhi and the carnage of revenge that followed, were warned by her son and successor yeste- rday to halt the violence or "communal madness will destroy us." Belated police reports from rural areas raised the death toll to more than 500 from three days of mob violence, the worst since 1947 when the subcon- tinent was partitioned into India and Pakistan. A 24-hour curfew was in force in more than 80 cities across the coun- try,. MOST OF the violence has been directed at the Sikhs - an influential religious minority that constitutes 2 percent of India's 730 million people - because Gandhi's two assassins were identified as Sikh security guards. But about 80 of the 300 bodies overflowing the storage rooms of the Delhi morgue were those of Hindus. Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, Mrs. Gandhi's son, was elected prime minister by an emergency session of the ruling Congress Party yesterday, ratifying his appointment Wednesday within hours of his mother's death. In an emotional nationwide radio appeal for calm, Gandhi said the violence "is only helping the subversive forces to achieve their ends." He did not refer directly to the Sikh extremists who for three years have campaigned for autonomy. riots "Communal madness will destroy us," Gandhi said. "It will destroy everything India stands for. As prime minister. . .. I cannot and will not allow this. "Indira Gandhi gave her life so that a united India should live and prosper," he said, quoting a saying of his mother: "Do not shed blood, shed hatred." Gandhi assassination frustrates 'U' Sikhs By STACEY SHONK Despite resentment for Indira Gan- dhi's political policies, local members of the Sikh religious sect criticized the terrorists who assassinated the Indian ruler. They abhorred the violence which now engulfs the country. Many, however, expressed a deep feeling of unfairness that Gandhi's. death has attracted so much world sympathy when- the-deaths of 2,000 Sikhs at the hand of the Indian gover- nment went nearly unnoticed. "I HAD respect for her strong leader- ship," said Minti Sindu, senior in the College of Engineering, "but I was in India around the time the Golden Tem- See LOCAL, Page 3 Workers walk above the rubble of a completely destroyed house in New Delhi yesterday to extinguish still burning par- ts. Several houses were burned down by rioting Indians following the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi by her Sikh security guards. New form of hepatitis strikes Mass. drug users WORCESTER, Mass. (AP)-They call themselves "Weekend Warriors," young people whose heroin and cocaine habits are limited to party nights. But for the past year, the tips of their syringes have carried the risk of virulent disease and possible death. Since September 1983 seven people have died from the ravages of a par- ticularly dangerous combination of germs known as delta hepatitis. All contracted the disease through drug use or sexual contact with a drug user. MORE THAN 84 cases have been linked to the outbreak, making Worcester the first U.S. city to be hit with a major siege of the new and little understood form of the disease. "It's the first outbreak of hepatitis B in the United States where the severity could be attributed to the delta virus," says Dr. Ludwig Lettau, an epidemiologist with the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. The delta virus is widespread in southern Italy and has been found in the Middle East, South America, and Africa. There have been deaths at- tributed to the disease in Kentucky; sporadic cases have been reported in the Los Angeles area. DRUG users and their sexual partners have always faced the risk of hepatitis B, a virus that attacks the human liver. Transmitted via blood or body fluids, the disease can bring nausea, fatigue, painful joints, rash, and jaundice. But it is rarely fatal; only one in 500 cases results in death. Most patients recover within a few months, receiving immunity to the disease for their trouble. But some 5 to 10 percent become carriers, capable of passing the disease to others. In delta hepatitis, a second virus is present with the hepatitis B virus, prolonging and worsening the illness. The incidence of liver failure and resulting death among sufferers is 10 to 20 times higher. "The mortality rate in Worcester has been exceptional," said Walter Irvine, the city's health director. The city has held free clinics and has advertised on radio and in the newspapers in an attempt to identify those with hepatitis, those carrying the disease and those vulnerable to it. Some 150 people were screened and received innoculations in the first round of clinics. Seventy returned for the second of three innoculations last month But health officials said they don't know whether they are reaching their targets. Students. debate election issues By KERY MURAKAMI The University Club Bar yesterday hosted a combination happy hour- presidential debate. But as hard as the bar tried, it just wasn't Kansas City. President Reagan or Walter Mon- dale wasn't there. Nor was George Bush or Geraldine Ferraro. Instead, students sipped their happy hour drinks and looked on as College Republican officers Mark Leachman and Cheryl Collins debated domestic and foreign affairs with Andrew Har- tman and Cheryl Goldfarb of the College Democrats. QUESTIONS came from a panel not of the the top journalists in the coun- try, but Neil Chase, managing editor of the Daily, Michigan Student Assembly President Scott Page, and See U-CLUB, Page 2 Doily Photo by MATT PETRiE Andrew Hartman, president of the College Democrats, speaks at a debate last night at the University Club. The event attracted quite a few people who were more interested in their gin and tonics than the discussion. I TODAY Rock 'n' roll high school NSTEAD OF nagging children to stay in school, the Jefferson Parish school system has found a new medium for the message: a rock video. A local band, Gypsy Savage, performs in the video, "Never Drop Out," which was shnt at Homedale Elementarv in Harvev It cost only to MTV, the popular cable video channel, but got no respon- se. Local radio stations have played the record, and more than 500 copies have been sold. Robison said he knows of no other school system that has made a rock video. "We're revolutionary," he said. Debates are a joke SOME SAY THAT debates are nothing but a show, but this show was more than just a debate. U.S. Senate can- didate John Kerry won a landslide victory Friday, in Boston, garnering more chuckles than his Republican op- nnanR aunechmiin in a rrlmn ctatinn's "Great Jnke-Off" joke was a quip about Oliver Cromwell's skull. Kerry and Shamie are running for the seat being vacated by Sen. Paul Tsongas due to illness. Church swap THE NEW Fox River Baptist Church looks suspiciously like the old Church of the Nazarene. The reverse can be said for the new Church of the Nazarene. Two Appleton ministers decided it was easier to swap churches than to dition or a new church seemed out of the question. The ministers said the legal transaction took some time because it had few precedents. The buildings were ap- praised, the congregations polled for their opinions and, finally, the names went on the dotted line. Because the Nazarene church was appraised at a higher value, the Baptists turned over an undisclosed amount of cash in the transaction. 1 i i