The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 24, 1985-- Page 3 SAT shows strong g q~ s upswing NEW YORK (AP) - Demon- strating that education reform is ,taking hold in public schools, 1985 'Scholastic Aptitude Test scores 1posted their biggest gains in more than two decades, paced by an especially strong showing by Hispanic students. College Board President George H. 'Hanford said at a news conference yesterday that nationwide average scores rose five points on the verbal portion of the test, to 431, and four points in math to 475. THE COMBINED gain of nine poin- ts on the two-part exam, taken an- nually by about a million college- bound high school students, boosted .the average math-verbal score to 906. It was the biggest increase since 1963 when scores also gained nine points before sliding steadily for the next two decades. The SAT is scored on a scale of 200 to 800, with a combined math-verbal score of 1600 being perfect. It is an en- trance requirement at virtually all the :nation's selective colleges and universities. Scores on the ACT, a rival test ad- ministered by the American College Testing Program in Iowa City, Iowa, and taken by about a million students mostly in the West and Midwest, also rose in 1985 but only slightly. HANFORD said this year's SAT up- surge was a product of steps taken by schools in the 1970s to stress basic skills, as well as the more recent education reforms of the 1980s. In Washington, Education Secretary William Bennett hailed the SAT gains with a "Bravo!" but cautioned against letting up in the push for educational excellence. He called this year's results "further evidence that American secondary education is on the mend." Hanford also warned against com- placency. "Despite the gains of the past few years, we are yet a combined -total of 74 points behind the scores of 1963, the last high point in this SAT saga. We still have a long way to go." correction In a story that appeared in yester- day's Daily, Jackie Victor, an LSA junior said, "It happened so quickly, bang, bang. You saw our faces. .We were there the whole day, and we 0 were being quiet. If we wanted to in- timidate the regents, we would've been there with billy clubs." The lack of attribution implied that Ingrid Kock, MSA's military researcher, made the remark. Speaker assails Kahane By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Extremism within Israeli sociey is the country's most pressing problem, a noted Israeli professor said last night. Chemistry Professor Israel Shahak from Hebrew University said the ex- tremist beliefs of Rabbi Meir Kahane's Kach party are potentially more dangerous than the Israel's economic or Palestinian problems. "A POLARIZATION within Israeli society leading to civil war is not out of the question in combatting this Jewish Mazism," Shahak said. Shahak spoke at the Union to a crowd of about 50 people. Shahak advocates the returning of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip as a solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict. Kahdane, on the other hand, has called for the immediate expulsion of the Palestinians along with extreme social deprivatin for Israel's Arab population. He assailed the Kahane and other religious fanatics who claim that they "know the gods," and can dictate salvation through political policies. "FOR UP TO 8-9 years, these people have regarded Begin and Sharon as traitors for making peace with Egypt," Shahak said. To these people, the Isreaeli war with Lebanon was punishment or those "sins against God," he said. Before the meeting, groups op- posing Shahak's beliefs, passed out literature to the crowd. The material states: "He (Shahak) believes that Israel does not have the right to exist as a separate, independent state." ONONE OF the material was signed; a fact that Shahak pointed out before speaking, calling the distributos of the literature "viscious cowards." Mimi Fox, an LSA senior at the speech, said that Shahak "presented the problems, but not any solutions." "I don't think he was representative of the real Israel," Fox said. Shahak was brought to the United States by the Palestine Human Rights Campaign and Arab American Anti- Discrimination Committee. The speech was sponsored locally by the New Jewish Agenda. S. Africa plans Zulu relocation Daily Photo by DAN HABIB' Sara Massarik relaxes back in Ann Arbor. She studied abroad at Cam- bridge University last year. Student abroad felt 'American' (Continued from Page 1) Massarik. "Anti-Reaganism became Anti- Hank Peiter, director of the Unive- Americanism," she recalled. rsity's Study Abroad Program, who "Especially when he went to Bitburg. immediately mentioned Massanik I followed that every day on the news when asked about the program. He and so did my other American frien- said that most who spend their junior ds. We were all disgusted. Many of us year abroad are above average are Jewish, too, so it bothered us even students and fiercely independent. more. "What impressed me about Sara "At the same time, I felt it proved and what set her apart," he said, that the British were right about "was not only that she's very in- Reagan being a mindless, mechanical telligent, but that she has a wry, sar- drone. They tend to have a very one- donic and quirky sense of humor - dimensional viewofrReagan as this - like my own." idiot actor. It's trendy to feel that That sense of humor causes way."~ Massarik to giggle when recalling the There came a turning point, garbage can incident, but contrasts however, when Massarik grew more sharply wit the seriousness she loyal to her native country - to assumes when explaining how her Reagan. year abroad also opened her eyes to "I saw an interview with Reagan American politics, on the BBC," she said. "There were WHAT WAS the biggest political six reporters all firing questions at issue of the time? "Reagan," said him and he really answered all of them very well. It seemed that he was JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (UPI) - A government commission yesterday proposed removing 42,000 blacks from their traditional homes to make way for whites in a move described by a Zulu tribal leader as "a prescription for disaster." The report was commissioned by the white-minority government five years ago to examine the future of the fragmented KwaZulu tribal homeland in the eastern Natal province of South Africa. IN THE latest racial unrest in yearlong violence that has killed an estimated 700 people, a black policeman was killed by a mob and police fatally shot another black man in townships outside Port Elizabeth during the night, a police spokesman said yesterday. Police also found a critically in- jured black man, unconscious with a burning gasoline-filled tire around his body, in a black suburb outside Queenstown in the Cape Province. In a report published in Durban, the government commission recommended land swaps between "white" South Africa and the Zulu territory to join some of the Leaves precedes autumn (Continued from Page 1) "Society has really wiped out seasons," Cohen noted. "We're in- sulated by television and modern con- veniences." In the Arboretum recently LSA senior Karl Christiansen rested on a blanket and read a book of philosophy, intentionally soaking up the last few warm rays. "The weather is most conducive to being outside and moving around," he said. And as she lay under a still-green tree in front of Angell Hall Thursday, LSA senior Heidi Klein wondered when she would see the leaves change color and thought about her regular hiking trips in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Plenty of autumnal activities abound right here in Ann Arbor. Canoes and bicycles can be rented at Gallup Park, 3000 Fuller Road. Rental rates for canoes run from $6 to $7 for the first two hours; bike rentals are $1 m ore. KwaZulu's 44 separate parts and create a homeland comprising 15 islands of "black" land. THE EXCHANGES would increase THE WARREN/FLEW DEBATE ON THE EXISTENCE OF GOD (Pre-recorded) Two Philosophers Debate the Most Important Question of This or Any Age: Is There a God? DR. ANTONY G. N. FLEW, Ph.D.: "I KNOW THAT GOD DOES NOT EXIST." DR. THOMAS B. WARREN, Ph.D.: "I KNOW THAT GOD DOES EXIST." Tuesday Evenings - 8:00 - 9:00p.m. Beginning September 24th for 8 weeks Schorling Auditorium - School of Education AT THE CORNER OF EAST AND SOUTH UNIVERSITY (Also to be shown on Ann Arbor Cable Vision on Tuesdaysffrom 8:05-9:05 p.m. beginning Sept. 17th. Community Access Television- Channel 19) This debate is brought to you by the Saline Church of Christ. IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS PLEASE CALL (313) 429-4319 the actual area of KwaZulu but would entail the removal of an estimated 42,000 blacks from land they have owned for up to 200 years.' HGIAPPENINGS Highlight The Committee Against Racism and Apartheid is sponsoring a forum on South Africa at 7 p.m. tonight at Trotter House, 1443 Washtenaw. Speakers include Elizabeth Sibeko, a coordinator of labor and women's affairs, Joe Moadi, a member of the Pan African Congress on Azania, and Shanta Driver, an organizer against apartheid and racism. Films CG - High Noon, 7 & 8:45 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. AAFC - L'Age D'or, 7 p.m.; The Exterminating Angel, 8:30 p.m., MLB 3. MTF - A Private Function, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theater. VP Student Services - Revolution in Nicaragua, 7 p.m., 1309 SEB. Speakers Art & Architecture - Kingsbury Marzolf, "Women Architects of Finland and Scandinavia," 8p.m., A & A Auditorium. Ecumenical Campus Center - Leroy Cappaert, "Coalition for Peace in Central America," noon, 603 E. Madison English Language Institute - Catherine Pettinari, "Methodologies for Applied Linguistics Study: Discourse Analyses in an Institutional Set- ting," noon, 3050 Frieze Building. Meetings Rugby Football Club - Meeting, 7 p.m., Tartan Turf. Student Business Bd. - General meeting, 4 p.m., Room 170, Business school. Action Against AIDS - Meeting, 7 p.m., first floor, Michigan League. Eclipse Jazz - Mass meeting, 7 p.m., Kuenzel Rm., Michigan Union. Miscellaneous Chemistry - Departmental Colloquium, "Activation of Small Molecules by Transition Metal Complexes," Prof. C. Floriani, 4 p.m., Rm.1200, Chemistry Building. Microcomputer Education Center - Workshops: Basic Concepts of Microcomputer Word Processing, 10:30 a.m., Basic Concepts of Internal Microcomputer Communications, 3 p.m., 3113 SEB; Lotus 1-2-3 (Part 2), 1p.m., 3001 SEB. Near East and North African Studies - Video, Golda, Part 3, noon, Video Viewing Room, second floor MLB. Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures - Lecture, Emilio Gabba, "John Adams: Classical and Medieval Models, II", 4 p.m., East Conference sincerely admitting his poor judgement, but apologizing and ex- plaining it." Seeing that BBC interview helped her to be able to defend America with more conviction. By the end of the year, she said, she was really able to hold her own in those types of discussions. "Being abroad, you learn objectivity. You're less grounded in being an American, and you can iden- tify with different kinds of people." "We're really sheltered in America. British news is a lot more graphic and world oriented. I feel like I've taken a course in world politics and history just from living with this kind of ex- posure to what's going on." Police Notes Employee injured An electrical employee of the University was seriously injured at the Central Power Plant Saturday, according to Bob Peifer, assistant director of Campus security. Donnel Hall, who is seventy years old, was cleaning breaker contacts when a short occurred. Hall was taken to the hospital where he had to have his right arm amputated. He was also blinded as a result of the accident. Larcenies reported Three larcenies were reported Friday, according to Peifer. A woven leather purse was taken from a file cabinet in the School of Education building. The purse contained $6, credit cards, a wallet and a check- book. A blue nylon backpack which contained $15 was taken from the Chemistry building. A wallet con- taining $7 was reported missing from the Natural Sciences Building. The wallet was later found empty. WAShiNIqTON INTE Juniors or Seniors withe interested in Congress?E on Capitol Hill. " Unique Internships b interests. Work with mem gress in their offices and+ mittees. " Seminars with leading experts, focusing on c issues. " Washington Faculty the chairman of the C Intern Advisory Council. - Discussion Groupstc mation and opinions with f participants from around Filing deadline for Seme November 1. For applications and inf BOSTON UNIV Washington Legislative In College of Liberal Art 725 Commonwealth Avenue 617/353-24 An Equal Opportunity Institution RNShIp a3.Oaverage: arn 16 credits ased on your nbers of Con- on their com- g government urrent policy fheaded by ongressional o share infor- fellow student the country. ster II: ormation: (ERSIT nternship Program s-Room 302 e, Boston, MA 02215 408 The University of Michigan has a national reputation for excellence. THE COLUMBIA SCHOLASTIC PRESS ASSOCIATION awards this FIRST PLACE CERTIFICATE to ctron- at ,MUIIc r ;td La MkII or S is iia g Given at Columbia University in the City of New York, in its Gold Circle Awards for 1985 - - ?I t I/ac -Linda Holler = - I