Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, November 3, 1984 U-Clubs (Continued from Page 1). David Kaufman, editor of the Journal of Political Science. And their audience wasn't exactly as attentive as American television viewers. Happy hour drinkers carried on their private conversations and Leachman even had to ask the audience to "please, shut up." Those who did listen, however, thought the student politicians imitated the real presidential debate. Jami DeBona, LSA junior, said "They soun- ded too much like the candidates. All it was was superficial bullshit." THE MOCK debate followed the script of the presidential and vice- presidential debates last month as the Democrats attacked Reagan's policies, and the Republicans defended them. Hartman, president of the college Democrats, said "Democrats stand for women's rights, minority's rights, human rights. There isn't much I can disagree with them on." Collins, secretary of College Republicans, had to admit that she disagreed with President Reagan's an- ti-abortion policies. And Hartman criticized the Republican platform which favors the appointment of only ierves those Supreme Court justices who are against abortion. GOLDFARB, vice-president of college Democrats, went on to attack the president's affirmative action programs, saying Reagan has 'the fewest number of women in his ad- ministration in modern times." Collins rebutted, claiming that those small numbers mean more women and minorities can be moved up into the up- per echelon of Reagan's second ad- ministration. The Mondale administration would not support big business or big religion, Hartman told the crowd. In- stead, Mondale's administration would support the little people. MOREOVER, Hartman said "Mon- dale doesn't believe in an overly militaristic society. He would probably see no need for the selective service," Hartman said. Reagan, on the other hand, promised in 1980 to abolish the draft, but then signed the Solomon Amendment, which denies federal financial aid to college students who fail to register for the draft. Leachman countered that there is nothing wrong with asking those who received financial aid to "defend the country that gave them their mock debate IN BRIEF education." The biggest issue of the event, however, was the recent terrorist at- tacks in Lebanon. HARTMAN attacked Reagan's con- tradiction in chastising Carter for 50 hostages in Iran, while 400 Marines lie dead on the shores of Lebanon." "How many more dead will we have if Ronald Reagan is elected for another four years?" he asked. Leachman defended Reagan's peace- keeping force in Lebanon. "We tried to bring peace to that nation, but we failed," he said. THE REAGAN administration can't deal with terrorists abroad, Leachman said, because the nation's leaders can- not "put a finger on who is responsible. "Andrew (Hartman) would like us to believe that we should go around poin- ting our finger and shooting people," he added. But Hartman reminded Leachman of Secretary of State George Shultz's recent vow to retaliate against inter- national terrorism. Leachman said Shult's statements were policy issues that should be kept behind closed doors. On the economy, Leachman said the country's record high deficits aren't the only cause of climbing interest rates. But Goldfarb, after a heightened pause, pulled out a Mondale issue sheet which says high interest rates have killed the dreams of young Americans who can no longer afford a home or a college education. Leachman denied that Reagan's restructuring of the federal financial aid program have hurt the middle American family, offering himself as an example of one who could still afford a college education. POLICE NOTES Break-in reported Jewelry valued at approximately $475 was stolen from a residence on the 1300 block of Geddes, according to Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Jan Suomala. The break-in occurred between 7:45 and 9:40 p.m. on Wednesday. The in- truder entered through an unlocked door, Suomala said. -Molly Melby (JUurb # 1rsbip 8truitn Students oppose code in belief, not in action CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Ct. A Campus Ministry of the Christian Reformed Church Rev. Don Postema, Pastor 668-7421 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship. 11:15 a.m.; Refreshments 6:00 p.m. Evening Worshop. 0 * * * LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY at Lord of Light (LCA-ALC-AELC) 801 S. Forest at Hill St. 668-7622 Pastor: Galen Hora Sunday Worship; 10:30 a.m. 6:00 p.m.; Supper. Sunday Evenings: 7:00 p.m., Inclusive Community Study. Wednesday Evening Worship, 9:30 p.m. Choir; Wednesday, 8:00 p.m. Thursday Evenings; 7:30 p.m., Cen- tral American Study. * * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave., 662-4466 (Between S. University and Hill) Sunday Post Lude recital at 12:05 p.m. Worship Services at 9:30 and 11:00. Church School, including nurseries. Broadcast of Service: 11:00 a.m. - WPAG, 10.50 AM FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 120S. State St. (Corner of State and Huron) 662-4536 Church School and Sunday Service 9:30 and 11:00. November 4: "Amos: The Prophet of Righteousness" by Dr. Donald B. Strobe. Ministers: Rev. Wayne T. Large Dr. Donald B. Strobe Dr. Gerald R. Parker Rev. Tom Wachterhauser Education Director, Rose McLean Bmadast Sundays 9:30 a.m. - WRNS, 1290 AM Televised Mondays 8:00p.m. - Cable Channel 9. * * * UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL and STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenaw Robert Kavasch, Pastor 663-5560 Sunday Services at 9:15 and 10:30. Thursday: Bible Study at 7:30; Vocal Choir at 8:30 and Handbell Choir at 9:30. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS FOUNDATION 502 East Huron, 663-9376 (Between State and Division) Sunday Worship, 9:55 a.m. November 4: "The Gifts of the Spirit." Midweek Study and Dinner for Students: Thursday, 5:15 p.m. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Staln's daughter returns home MOSCOW-Svetlana Alliluyeva, the daughter of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin who denounced her father as a "moral and spiritual monster" when she defected to the West in 1967, has returned to Moscow, Tass said yesterday. The official Soviet news agency said the Soviet parliament had restored the 58-year-old Svetlana's Soviet citizenship and granted citizenship to her American-born daughter Olga, 13, who returned with her from Britain. The announcement came hours after the principal of Olag's private Quaker school in England said Svetlana telephoned him Oct. 22 to say she was going back to Moscow. He said Olga failed to return from a mid-term break. In a brief dispatch, Tass said the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet "has ,considered and complied with a request made by S.I. Alliluyeva, who has returning to Moscow, for restoring her to the citizenship of the U.S.S.R. as well as for granting Soviet citizenship to Alliluyeva's daughter Olga." Unemployment rate holds steady WASHINGTON - Civilian unemployment, the last major economic in- dicator released before Election Day, held steady last month at 7.4 percent, a notch below the rate President Reagan inherited, the government said yesterday. Amid other signals of a business slowdown, some 350,000 Americans found work. New hiring by business was strong enough to offset a surge in the number of job-seekers without forcing the unemployment rate up. White House spokesman Larry Speakes, accompanying Reagan on a cam- paign swing through Michigan, said the latest Labor Department report showed that "the economy is still expanding and creating new jobs." On Capitol Hill; the Democratic Policy Committee maintained that Reagan's record on job-creation was inferior to that of the Carter administration and. Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis.) told the Joint Economic Committee "there is a stall in the economy. There is no improvement." Labor and civil rights groups also weighed in with criticism of Reagan, saying the unemployment rate masked lost opportunities for too many people. Mourners clog Warsaw streets WARSAW, Poland - Thousands of mourners clogged railways and roads leading to Warsaw on the eve of the funeral of a slain pro-Solidarity priest as his body was carried across the nation for burial in his church. The government was believed to be on alert for any trouble arising from public outrage over the 37-year-old Rev. Jerry Popieluszko's death at the hands of three members of the secret police. The government has suspended an Interior Ministry general and arrested two colonels in the ministry in connection with the slaying, official reports said yesterday. The reports indicated that the investigation into the death of the pro- Solidarity priest had reached the higher ranks of Poland's police hierarchy. Three lower-ranking officers have already been arrested in the case. Scottish researcher develops first prenatal cystic firosis test TORONTO -s A researcher from Scotland has developed what he says is the first accurate prenatal test for cystic fibrosis, an inherited illness that af- flicts 30,000 people in the United States. David Brock of the University of Edinburgh said yesterday that studies with about 100 patients have shown the test can correctly identify 90 percent of the fetuses carrying the illness and 92 percent of 95 percent of normal fetuses. In an interview during the annual meeting of the American Society of Human Genetics, where he presented his findings, he emphasized that the test is intended only for families that have already given birth to a child with the illness and subsequently decide to have another child. "You're dealing with pregnancies that have a risk of being affected of one in four," Brock said. "In a very high risk group like that, we're picking up a substantial number of the affected cases." There is no known cure for the disease, which primarily affects tw respiratory and digestive systems. Of patients diagnosed in early infancy and given specialized care, about 50 percent reach young adulthood. (Continued from I age 1) That may not be all bad, said Schnaufer, since MSA's involvement in a wave of opposition prevents ad- ministrators from dismissing the protests of different smaller groups as not representing the entire student body. Even MSA has had its problems organizing local opposition to the code. A rally held at the University's Homecoming game last month drew few participants. And although the assembly passed a resolution in Sep- tember calling for a rally before the regents meeting in October, the protest never materialized. PANHEL, ICC, and IFC leaders look to MSA for direction. They distribute literature MSA provides and publicize code meetings. But they prefer to push responsibility for stronger actons or a more vocal stance down the hierarchy to house leaders and residents. Ironically, those students said they are waiting for their respective councils to organize something. Several co-op and Greek house leaders and members said they would probably participate in a rally - as long as someone else organized it. .A RALLY held by one individual co- op would not attract the attention of University officials, said Mike O'Neill, house manager of Lester Co-op. But a rally organized by the whole ICC might, he said. He said, however that "the ICC (is) afflicted with apathy just as much as Judith James Wood for Probate (Juvenile) Judge ST IN QUALIFICATIONS J Senior Assistant Public Defender * Assistant Attorney General-Department of Mental Health - Instructor of Juvenile Law o Extensive Juvenile Court practice ST IN EXPERIENCE " Junior High School Teacher* Nursery School Teacher* Foster Parent * Mother of three children, ages 10-17 ST IN LEADERSHIP J State of Michigan Family Living Council " Board of Directors, Perry Nursery School " Judiciary Committee-- Washtenaw Trial Lawyers Association 9 Lecturer, State Police Academy--"Prosecution of Child Abuse" ST IN COMMUNITY SUPPORT -Preferred Candidate"--Washtenaw County Bar Asso- ciation Poll " Endorsed as "the standout in this field"- Ann Arbor News, July 31,1984 - Endorsed by the Michi- gan Education Association, the National Organization for Women, AFSCME, UAW and the Huron Valley Labor Council o First in the primary election any one else." Although the general sentiment is that members of fraternities, sororities, and co-ops oppose the code, few of the houses have taken a formal vote on the issue or debated it at house meetings. And many house officers haven't even read the code. The president of one co-op, who asked not to be named, said that if her house was to discuss the code, "I would have to go and get a copy." Asked whether she thought it was her responsibility to stay informed on such issues, she said residents should read the flyers posted around the house. STEVE SHAPIRO, president of Sigma Alpha Mu, said many house leaders, "don't know why (the code is bad) and you're not going to get people to go out and make waves without knowing anything about it." The apathy sifts down to house mem- bers as well. House officers gave .several reasons why their residents haven't learned about the details of the code: they are too busy with schoolwork and national political issues; many are upperclassmen who don't care if the code is implemented after they gradaute; and that no matter what students do, the administration won't listen. "Just the way it is, nobody has seen a clear cut route to beat this thing," said Steve Helm, treasurer of Zeta Psi. Another co-op resident said, "I think most people feel MSA's opinion doesn't matter all that much, that the regents could care less." That student, who spoke only if her name wasn't used, said discussing the code at house meetings would make the meeting so long that members would stop coming. STUDENTS NEED an emotional ap- peal to force them to look at the code's impact, said Sigma Alpha Mu's Shapiro. He said the articles and editorials printed in the Daily this fall haven't provided that appeal. Shapiro says he explains the code to his house members in the most radical terms he can think of: that if it were passed, the administration might be able to reprimand the fraternity for serving beer to underage students at a party. (MSA would like to see a frater- nity or sorority sponsor a "Bash the Code Bash," but hasn't got any offers yet.) And not all houses oppose the code. A spokesman for Triangle Fraternity said members are split over the code, while the steward of Nakamura Co-op, David Finkelstein, prefers that members focus their attention on filling up vacancies in the house and completing their chores. Although most of the residents of Nakamura are graduate students in their late 20s, Finkelstein criticized the more radical students a decade ago who probably would have rallied around the code. "Their causes were more important than getting thehouse clean, things which are important to me, like how I live," he said. THE GROUP No Code has only eight steady members, an increase from when it was formed last spring. The group held rallies and tied blue yarn around the Diag to force a boycott of classes to protest the code. But so far this fall, the group's acitvity has been limited to handing out flyers andcopies of the code in the Fishbowl. MSA is planning a rally against the code on Regents Plaza before the University's top governing board meets on Nov. 15. But Schnaufer said he isn't sure what the turnout will be like 4 Il. trick-or-treaters found slain. DECATUR, Ill. - Two girls who disappeared while trick-or-treating Halloween night were found slain yesterday in an abandoned building near 4 their home, police said, but a third girl who went with them was found unharmed, hiding in a closet. Police Chief Patrick Vaughan said authorities believed the two had been strangled. He would not say if they had been sexually assaulted. Police were searching for an elderly man after receiving a tip from a motorist who might have seen him with the girls. The survivor, Patricia Hall, 7, was in good condition, physically unhar- med, Bill Homoky, a spolesman at Decatur Memorial Hospital, said Friday. Dead were Sherry Gordon, 12, and her cousin, Theresa Hall, 10, Patricia's sister. Before they went trick-or-treating, the girls had been taught Halloween safety measures such as avoiding strangers and the proper time to trick-or- treat. The mother of two of the girls said she hadn't been afraid to let the .children go out alone because "they know the people around here." ~1wqtr tg nUt1tl Vol. XCV -No. 51 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub- scription rates: September through April - $16.50 in Ann Arbor; $29.00 outside the city; May through August - $4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second-class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndi- cate and'College Press Service, and United Students Press Service. Editor in chief......................BILL SPINDLE Managing Editors...............CHERYL BAACKE NEIL CHASE Associate News Editors...........LAURIE DELATER GEORGEA KOVANIS THOMAS MILLER Personnel Editor.....................SUE BARTO Opinion Page Editors ................ JAMES BOYD JACKIE YOUNG NEWS STAFF: Laura Bischoff, DyC ohen, Stephanie DeGroote, Nancy Dolinko, Mary Beth Doyle, Lily Eng, Marcy Fleischer, Bab Gordon, Rachel Gottlieb, Thomas Hroch, Gregory Hutton, Bruce Jackson, Sean Jackson, Carrie Levine, Jerry Morkon, Eric Mattson, Curtis Maxwell, Molly M"byTracey Miller, Kery Murokaml, Lisa Powers, Elizabeth Reiskin, Charles Sewell, Stacey Shank. Don Swanson, Allison Zousmer. Maaazine Editor ................... JOSEPH KRAUS Sports Editor.....................MIKE MCGRAW Associate Sports Editors.............JEFF BERGIDA KATIE BLACKWELLA PAUL HELGREN DOUGLAS B. LEVY STEVE WISE SPORTS STAFF: Dove Aretho, Mark Borowski, Joe Ewing, Chris Gerbosi, Jim Gindin, Skip Goodman, Steve Herz, Rick Kaplan, TomyKeoney, Tim Makinen, Adam Martin, Scott McKinley, Barb McQuade, Brad Morgan, Jerry Muth. Phil Nussel, Mike Redstone, Scott Salowich. Randy Schwartz, Susan Warner. Business Manager.................STEVEN BLOOM Advertising Manager.........MICHAEL MANASTER Display Manager .... .........LIZ CARSON Nationals Manager ..................... JOE ORTIZ Sales Manager ................. DEBBIE DIOGUARDI