LS charts a new future See Weekend Magazine Ninety-five Years Scarf of L Sunny, windy, and cold with a Vol. XCV, No.62 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, November 16, 1984 Fifteen Cents Twelve Page 3S Regent protests 'U', ProposalC endorsement By ERIC MATTSON The fight over Voter's Choice may have ended November 6, but controversy surrounding the tax- cutting ballot proposal is alive and kicking. At the regents monthly meeting yesterday, Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) protested the Univer- sity's role in defeating Voter's Choice, which would k have rolled back all state taxes to their December 1981 levels unless increases were approved in a special election. IN OTHER action, the University's Board of Regents decided to request a $45 million increase in state aid for the next fiscal year, a hike that one ad- ministrator said "may seem enormous" but is "well justified." Baker said he neither endorsed nor opposed Voter's Choice, which was defeated by a 3-2 margin, but he said that "the University must avoid entanglements in the destructive web of partisan statewide politics.'' The University became involved in Voter's Choice last September, when the regents approved a resolution asking the University's president and executive officers to campaign against the proposal. Baker abstained, explaining that he was "troubled by the fact that we take the people's money and use it to lobby against them." THE UNIVERSITY asked alumni, parents, studen- ts, and faculty to vote against the proposal. In addition, See 'U', Page 5 Shapiro releases new code draft By LAURIE DELATER The new draft of the student code for non-academic conduct proposed yesterday by University officials would give students the right to be tried by a jury of their peers. And the out-of-classroom conduct rules would ap- ply to faculty members, deans, directors, and the University's executive officers as well as students. THESE features are two of several changes the University administration has made in revising its March draft of the code. The new draft was mailed yesterday to the University Council, the committee responsible for issuing new conduct rules. University President Harold Shapiro has asked the committee of students, faculty, and adminstrators to review the new draft and issue a code which can be voted on by the Michigan Student Assembly, the faculty Senate Assembly, and the Board of Regents. Under regents' bylaw 7.02, all three of these groups would have to approve the code before it was adopted. The code would replace the existing Rules of the University Community and would punish students for such acts as arson, theft, vandalism, assault, and some types of civil disobedience. The changes in the administration's draft come in large part as a result of recommendations from the University's Civil Liberties Board and students. Some of the other major revisions: "The participation of attorneys would be unrestric- ted during trials in which expulsion or suspension for more than one semester is a possible sanction. The March draft gave the administrator who was acting as hearing officer the right to limit the attorney's role: " Any sanctions imposed on a student under the code would not be noted on the students' transcript; eHearings before the all-student board would be open, not closed, unless the hearing officer decided otherwise; * Only the rules prohibiting arson, physical harm, or hazing will apply to fraternities, sororities, co- operatives, and other campus organizations. The March draft applied all of the conduct rules to those groups; and * Any amendments made to the code would have to be proposed by the University Council and voted on by students, faculty, and the regents. The current draft says that amendments need approval from the regents only. THE ADMINISTRATION will ask the Civil Liber- ties Board to develop special procedures for dealing with cases which involve free speech, dissent, or academic freedom issues. The regents' bylaws say any code must apply to faculty and administrators as well as students. The administration's new draft is an attempt to get back to those bylaws, said Virginia. Nordby, a policy ad- visor who directed the administration's work on the code. See NEW, Page 5 Daily Photo by CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA LSA senior Lee Winkelman (left) and LSA sophomore Paul Josephson protest the student code of non-academic conduct yesterday at Regents' Plaza. See story, Page 5. Tear wins LSA-SG By THOMAS HRACH Michelle Tear, newly elected president of the LSA Student Gover- nment (LSA-SG) has one up on President Ronald Reagan. Tear and her vice president, Michael Brown, scooped up more than two- thirds of the votes for LSA-SG's top slots. The team's coattails extended far enough to elect all of the SAID party representatives onto the new council. ACCORDING to Miriam Dushay, election director only about 1,700 of the ap- proximately 14,000 eligible students went to the polls to cast ballots Tuesday and Wednesday. The turnout was far lower than the pre-election predictions of the current LSA-SG president, Eric Berman. He previously said he hoped 3,000 students would vote and that if 2,500 students went to the polls, the election would be a success. Last year, about 2,300 students voted at the election. Dushay blamed the lack of interest in the LSA-SG elections on last week's national elections. She said that some students who might have considered running for the council were too busy working on the national elections to run for LSA-SG. SHE ADDED that the lack of cam- paign activity on the part of the only opposition party, SPOCK, caused no sense of excitement amongst the elec- torate. "I'm disappointed that SPOCK did not campaign very hard, but it's not my place to tell themr paign," Dushay more people woul did all we could i election." All 13 of the rep under the SAID p ted to the counc candidates filledi on the council wi tatives. THE SPOCK pa presidential cand vice presidenti Mikatarian, and representative. Members ofE organized last M candidates for la 0 presidency how to run their cam- Student Assembly elections. SPOCK said. "Sure, I wish also campaigned for the defeat of a d have voted. But we proposal, which appeared on the city's to stir interest in the Nov. 6 ballot, to make Ann Arbor nuclear free. presentatives running According to DeGraff, the MSA elec- arty ticket were elec- tions were a farce, and the party chose 2il. Two independent to run a campaign aimed at pointing out in the other positions the lack of interest in MSA. hich has 15 represen- HOWEVER, according to the group's leader Eric Shapiro, SPOCK's par- arty consisted only of ticipation in this year's LSA elections is lidate Greg DeGraff, a different story. al candidate Doug "We entered the election the night one candidate for before the deadline because we heard that SAID was running unopposed," SPOCK, which was Shapiro said. "We didn't want SAID to arch, ran as write-in get cocky, and we did make the election st spring's Michigan See SAID, Page 2 Some support solely sound-based spelling I By DAVID KLAPMAN and ELIZABETH REISKIN executive director Ayb Citron, would significantly improve the American literacy rate. actually used simplified spelling), Mark Twain, and Noah Webster are among Citron's predecessors in tl C^14 ~ 19Z lttr r rakin e lained: Hail to th victorz, valyunt, "If you make the relationship between letter and the field. In a a7iyletter, r. ranxii n coJI m u. Hailtuthconquringhil a e b y i vT i lnsounds reliable and reasonable (you) will have 100 "The difficulty of learning to spell well in the old Halhail tu i chigarn i, percent more success," Citron says. "People will get way is so great that few people attain it; thousands H chameeu ov ch West!along faster and more of them will learn." and thousands writing on to old age, without ever Th champeeunz ov th West! Citron, a retired Wayne State University Sociology being able to acquire it. 'Tis, besides, a great dif- It looks different, but it sounds the same. of Education professor, says phonemic spelling ficulty continually increasing, as the sound gradually That's exactly the effect a Bloomfield Hills-based would be instrumental in building confidence among varies more and more from the spelling." group called Better Education thru Simplified children - and adults - who are handicapped by the BEtSS's plan for the simplification of English Spelling (BEtSS) is looking for - spelling words the current difficult and arbitarary system of spelling. spelling includes a 20- to 30-year span during which way they are pronounced. SPELLING reform is nearly as old as English it- THE SYSTEM of phonemic spelling, says self. Benjamin Franklin, Theodore Roosevelt (WhoSeGRUPg2 .. .ir. v.. ...:.. ................... ........................................................ ..................................... ; r\;{ "":iYi:4:\:v+:{dy "f+:.v::w v~b.:y,.f :w:. ::.t. .. :.:..:: ". :::......:.:,::"..:::::....................................... .......... T 1 i CIA may return, but not as 'targets' By KERY MURAKAMI Central Intelligence Agency recruiters left town yesterday, one day after their informational presentation was thwarted by protestors, but "it's safe to say" that they will return, a CIA spokesperson said. "The question is when," said Cathy Thurmon, chief of media relations for the CIA. PROTESTORS Wednesday staged a mock trial featuring the CIA as the defendant in the Modern Language Building lecture room where three representatives were scheduled to speak to students. The group then chased the CIA recruiters out of the room to their car parked across the street. Thurman said that after talking with one of the analysts who came to cam- pus, "the feeling is that they will give people who wanted to talk to them the chance." THE RECRUITORS "are not in- terested in being targets. They're in- terested in interviewing," Thurmon said. The representatives left '"under con- cern for the safety of their personnel," said Deborah May, director of Career Planning and Placement. Meanwhile, May said that the 39 students who were scheduled for inter- views with the CIA were asked to sub- mit their resumes to the recruiters. Many of the students, however, were concerned about their chances to get See CIA, Page 3 Doily Photo by CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA Un-Garde-d moment Michigan guard Garde Thompson drives to the hoop past Sonan Radovic of the Yugoslavian national team. The Wolverines coasted to a 100-87 exhibition victory last night. See story on page 10. to x . ...... . . -ToDAY- 17 f 1 A Y1 Y1 [ft families for Thanksgiving. The annual project takes a dif- ferent form each year. Last year the "kidnappers" were dressed as a street gang. This year they were Soviet Secret police (KGB) agents. As part of the ransom the sororities had to do a skit or song for the fraternity while delivering the canned ransom. mischief and were fined by Associate Municipal Judge Cleve Moten. The pledges were arrested at 12:47 a.m. Wed- nesday as they chopped down bamboo on city property, said police Sgt. Don Martin. I - I i I