E Alit ija Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October17, 1985 t1 Vol. XCVI - No. 31 'U' regent says he wilsuppot code By LENA HERNANDEZ University Regent Deane Bake said yesterday that if Presidei Harold Shapiro presents a code o nonacademic conduct to the regen in January, he would favor ti passage of the code. In addition, .Baker said he wou] support the changing of a regents bylaw which requires the approval o both the Michigan Student Assemb]i and the faculty senate before sucl guidelines governing behavior outsic the classroom can be implemented Both have opposed the ad ministration's proposals for a code. BAKER, SPEAKING at the moi thly session of "Campus Meets the Press," in the Union, was asked aboi the code issue, after it was disclose+ last week that Shapiro has threatene+ to propose a code of conduct to the regents in January unless the Univer sity Council completes an alternative code by then. The nine member council made t of students, faculty, and staff have 1 been working since last November c an alternative to the administration' code which sparked student protest last year. Baker said yesterday he does no feel the council has been makir progress. "Student effort (on ti council) has been concentrate+ around delaying discussions instea+ of promoting them," said the Republican from Ann Arbor, "I students wish to participate, then the; should sit down and seriously discus this." BAKER PREDICTED, "There wi] be a code." See BAKER, Page 3 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Eight Pages Italian pary out of Daily Photo by JAE KIM Poet Allen Ginsberg, famous for his activism spanning four decades, appeared at Rackham Auditorium last night. He was accompanied on guitar by student Tom Lorcanic. Ginsbe rgentertainsfull hose By ALAN PAUL and lines such as "The axe on the neck Poet-activist Allen Ginsberg, backed of Nicaragua is a big error of war by two student guitarists, began a fever," showed that Ginsberg is still reading of his work last night by politically sharp. singing "Gospel, Noble Truths" Following "Little Fish Devours Big before a standing room only crowd of Fish," Ginsberg read "America" 1,100 at Rackham Auditorium. from his recent "Collected Poems: From the first words of the 1956 1947-1980." The poem opens with poem, "Born in this world, you've got "America I've given you all and now to suffer," it was clear that the I'm nothing" and goes on to mock radical poet has not softened his stan- Americana from the Red Fear to ce. The song's message was clear: Reader's Digest and Time magazine. Live easy and be real. "I love to read the older poems," "WALK WHEN you walk, talk when Ginsberg said during intermission. you talk . . . Die when you die," the "With perspective, they are very real, poet crooned energetically. very accurate." Introducing the next piece, "Little A 1976 series of poems about the Fish Devours Big Fish," a 1982 poem death of his father revealed Ginsberg about Nicaragua, Ginsberg said that contemplating and accepting mor- since Homer, poetry and music have tality. He asked, "Will that happen to been allied. He gave wonderful proof. me?...Will my knees collapse? Your "Fish" with the chorus "Hypocrisy legs will need crutches perhaps. Will is the key to self-fulfilling prophecy" my chest get thin? Your breasts will be hanging skin." "Plutonium Ode," 1978, Ginsberg spoke of the nuclear threat as a new divinity, "a divine wind over vengeful nations in civilizations stupidly in- dustrious." Ginsberg ended the first set strongly. "Bird brain," a 1984 poem, revealed the poet at his cynical best. He blasted and mocked everyone from J. Edgar Hoover to Stalin, in- cluding Ronald Reagan, Hitler, the P.L.O., and Israel. Almost every politically powerful institution of the last half century, including the Bible, was called "bird brain." Ginsberg finished his first set by singing William Blake's "The Nurses Song." The crowd clapped and sang along, obviously enjoying themselves. The guitarists, Darren Shaff and Tom Lorcanic were also well received. ROME (AP) - Defense Minister Giovanni Spadolini's Republican Par- ty pulled out of the governing coalition yesterday to attempt to bring down the government over Italy's release of PLO official sought by the United States in the Achille Lauro hijacking. Spadolini said he expected the action would force the government to resign, but Premier Bettino Craxi said he would not quit without a vote of confidence in Parliament. CRAXI SAID he will take the government's case to Parliament today. Asked if he was going to the presid- ential palace to hand in his resignation and end the 26-month-old government, Craxi snapped, "Why should I go to the Quirinale? Tomorrow I will go to Parliament." In a statement adopted by the par- ty's executive committee, the Republicans accused the government of failing to consult coalition partners on "major subjects of the fight again- st terrorism and fundamental political interests" involving foreign policy issues. IT SAID the party's "paramount task today is to safeguard indispen- sable interests for the good of the republic." Spadolini, a former premier, has condemned the release of the Palestine Liberation Organization oficial, Mohammed Abbas, and said he only learned of Abbas' departure from television. Washington has said it had infor- mation that Abbas, a top aide to PLO leader Yasser Arafat, masterminded last week's hijacking of an Italian cruise ship during which an American passenger was killed. THE UNITED States has issued a warrant for his arrest, charging him with piracy and hostage-taking. Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres arrived here yesterday with "a message of peace and hope" for President Reagan and, according to Israeli officials, a plea to exclude the Palestine Liberation Organization from the U.S.-backed Mideast peace process.- Abbas was aboard the Egyptian plane carrying the hijackers that was forced down in Sicily by U.S. carrier- based jet fighters. Italy allowed Ab- bas to leave for Yugoslavia on Satur- day. THE SMALL but influential pro- NATO Republicans have three ministers, including the key posts of defense and finance, in the 30- member Cabinet. The government was formed in August 1983 and is one of Italy's longest lasting governmen- ts. Spadolini and the two other Republican ministers submitted their resignations to Craxi. The other coalition partners are the Christian Democrats, Craxi' s See ITALIAN, Page 2 Teach-in to discuss apartheid and racism By CHERYL WISTROM Sponsors of a "Teach-In Against Apartheid and Racism" hope to educate students about apar- theid and establish a link between apartheid and racism in the United States. The series of speakers, panel discussions, and workshops begins tonight and continues through Saturday. "PRIMARILY we want to educate students and other members of the Ann Arbor community about the situation in South Africa and what apar- theid is," said Barbara Ransby, head of the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee (FSACC) and organizer of the teach-in. FSACC members believe that establishing a link between the apartheid system in South Africa and racism in the U.S. is crucial for building a strong anti-apartheid movement on campus. "While we've come a ways (against racism), we still have a ways to do and sometimes we lose sight of that," said Hector Delgado, a University graduate student in sociology and one of the foun- ding members of FSACC. DELGADO SAID that one of the major reasons why students and faculty have trouble making this tie is because we're "so far away from where the action is happening." "We do want the focus to be on South Africa and apartheid," he said, but he feels that making the tie is essential in order to "see what we can do here to help bring about the end of apartheid." ALDON MORRIS, a Sociology professor at the University, will be the featured panelist at a Saturday discussion session titled "How Univer- sity of Michigan Faculty, Students and Staff Can See APARTHEID, Page 3 ......S... ..: m o s t:::: ......::;:.::::::: r. . . US most educated in world, study says WASHINGTON (AP) - Giant strides in schooling since 1940 "have made the American people the most educated in the world," but the quality of U.S. schools sagged in the 1970s, a Census Bureau study con- cluded yesterday. The special demographic study by two Census analysts also found evidence that the "return" on a college education - the edge in ear- nings that college graduates have over high school graduates - is growing again after shrinking in the 1970s. LESS THAN 45 years ago ... a solid majority of young adults were either high school dropouts or had never gone beyond elementary school," said the report. "Today . . . high school dropouts have been reduced to a small minority." In 1940, only 38 percent of those ages 25 to 29 had attained a high school diploma, and a mere 6 percent had college degrees. Now, the report said, 86 percent of those surveyed by the Census Bureau said they have high school diplomas and 22 percent possess college degrees. "These are very large trends and they have made the American people the most educated in the world," said the report, "Education in the United States: 1940-1983," by Dave M. O'Neill and Peter Sepielli. IT CITED surveys showing that in 1980-81 almost 32 percent of all U.S. adults 25 or older had at least some college education, compared with 17.3 percent of East Germans, 17.2 percent of Canadians, 15.5 percent of Swedes, 14.5 percent of Japanese, and 7 per- cent of Hungarians. The Census figure on high school graduation is markedly higher than that used by the U.S. Department of See U.S., Page 6 Former MSA member seeks reinstatement By RACHEL GOTTLIEB Former Michigan Student Assembly member Virginia Ward is contesting her replacement on the assembly as one of five Rackham Student Government representatives. In September, Ward told MSA President Paul Josephson that she wished to resign her seat on the assembly, but she is now claiming that her resignation was never validated and that RSG's move to replace her with Bruce Belcher was wrong and "sets a dangerous precedent." JOSEPHSON SAID he took her resignation on good faith, adding "I asked her to get me something in writing so I wouldn't have any problems down the line." "In the three years that I've been here there's never been any problem with accepting resignations on good faith. It's a precedent," Josephson said. In a letter to MSA members, Ward, a graduate student in engineering, wrote "oral discussions lend themselves too easily to misinterpretation, misunderstanding, and indefiniteness to be enfor- ceable. By the very nature of my discussion with the president of MSA, no contract came into existence because there was no meeting of the minds." WARD ALSO said that Michigan law does not recognize verbal agreements as binding. But Eric Schnaufer, MSA's director of personnel and a law student, said "the state takes verbal agreements as binding and it is unnecessary to rely on Michigan law in this case because Virginia resigned. Schnaufer said that Ward acknowledged the fact that she resigned when "she came storming into the office the morning after MSA passed a resolution objecting to Bush's visit to the campus. See WARD, Page 6 Daily Photo by JAE KIM Peacefulness Fallen leaves and a light fog grace the near deserted sidewalk in front of Angell Hall yesterday. -TODAY C Care Package bakers mixed and poured 1,200 pounds of flour, 336 eggs, 192 pounds of butter and other ingredients. The cookie was rolled into a specially built oven and baked. "All we need now is the world's largest glass of milk, so we can dip the world's largest cookie," said Cheshire's son, Lance. Chunks of the cookie were sold to raise rr s~...' TTLn~L... A '. irT.......,.. to take six courses in high school," the 15-year-old said. "Here, I only have to take three." Done decided in the third grade - when most boys worry about recess and avoiding yucky girls - that he would make science a career. He attributes his interest in science to his father, James Sr., who earned a chemistry degree Sfrm Pnncevelt and wnrkad sa TT 5 cnpvrnment WEATHER: Sunny with a high in the low 60s. MfADTAIITY. hnv aei.lnnist Eric Mattson