cl ble 4r 41r tctt 9 an tti Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, January 14, 1986 Vol. XCVI - No. 73 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Eight Pages . . ................ 'U' Council works on code compromise By KERY MURAKAMI Second of a two-part series Fourteen months ago, with administrators and students deadlocked in their negotiations about a code of non-academic conduct on campus, University President Harold Shapiro decided to wash his hands of the debate. The University Council instead was called in to iron out differences which have prevented University-wide approval of the controversial code. Ironically, it was the council that drafted the first four versions of the proposed code, although the group is now composed of a completely new set of students, faculty, and ad- ministrators. All of the versions were rejected by the Michigan Student Assembly, and the original conduct rules University administrators claim are inadequate have remained in place. THE COUNCIL'S efforts have only recently begun taking shape in the form of specific alternatives. With at least two more months of work left, it appears the coun- cil may not be allowed to finish. At least not without a gun to its head. Shapiro and members of the University's Board of Regents have reportedly tired of the lack of tangible results from the council. And Shapiro, according to students on the council, has warned them he may bypass the council and ask the regents to approve at least a temporary code as soon as this week. But whether or not this happens, the council seems to be heading towards a compromise between the students' demands and the six previous drafts of the code. Students, it seems, have tempered their opposition to any code of conduct. They are now asking why a code is needed and agreeing to support rules if it is. THUS FAR, students on the council have conceded that the University should be able to take action in life- threatening or dangerous situations. Whethercoun- cilmembers will agree the University should be able to act in other situations, such as civil disobedience, remains to be seen. The council has finished a preliminary draft of its "emergency procedures," and is expected to finish polishing it over the next couple of weeks. According to the draft, once a dangerous situation arises, a faculty member or administrator, serving as the University's "central coordinator," would be responsible for deciding what kind of immediate action to take. For example, if a student threatens other students in class, the coordinator would be able to bar the student from the classroom until a hearing could be held. A KEY TO the council's work, said Ann Hartman, professor of social work and one of three faculty mem- bers on the council, is that "we're not out to get anybody. All we're concerned about is the safety of the University community." According to previous drafts of the code, the only ac- tion the University president or vice president for student services, serving as the "central coordinator," could take would be to suspend the student from the University until the hearing. The hearing would not have to take place until a month after the suspension. Under the council's version, the coordinator would not be able to suspend or expel a student. "Any restriction imposed," the council writes, "shall be in proportion to the assessed risk and the minimum necessary to protect See COUNCIL'S, Page 2 I Law may slash federal spending WASHINGTON (AP) - An automatic $11.7 billion timistic economic assumptions, is expected to project a reduction in the federal deficit under the budget- somewhat lower deficit figure than the congressional one. balancing Gramm-Rudman law would force a 4.3 percent BUT AN administration official who also spoke on the cut in domestic programs and a 4.9 percent cut for the condition he not be named said the OMB forecast would be military on March 1, a White House spokesman said only slightly lower than the CBO one and would still come Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said the Office in "about $220 billion. of Management and Budget sent orders out to all affected Both the CBO and OMB assembled their deficit data federal agencies on Friday informing them of the based on economic conditions that prevailed in the nation estimated cuts necessary to implement the new law. Friday. Reagan will send agencies a list of detailed cuts next Under the Gramm-Rudman law, both budget offices month. will submit their findings to the General Accounting Of- THE CUTS are to be triggered if the estimated deficit fice, a congressional auditing and watchdog agency, for 1986 - based on projections by the White House and which will come up with a final list of specific cuts later congressional budget offices - top this year's Gramm- this month. Rudman target of $172 billion by $20 billion or more. The GAO could change the cut percentages, although A congressional budget official who spoke only on the congressional and administration officials say they do not condition of anonymity said that the CBO forecast of the expect that will happen this year. deficit likely will top $220 billion, far above the record $212 THE ACTUAL cuts will then be passed along to billion set last year. President Reagan, who is required to issue an order on The OMB projection, to be based on slightly more op- Feb. 1 detailing them. 'U' doctoral student to reunite with Soviet spouse By MARC CARREL One can hear the combination of ex- citement and disdain in her voice as she speaks of her ordeal. Excitement that her husband finally, after more than 4% years and seven denied ap- plications, is being allowed to leave the Soviet Union and join her in the United States. And disdain for Soviet officials who have ignored her requests, just as they continue to 'I thought about the potential difficulties, but I didn't think it could happen to us. I don't think it should happen to anyone.' -Sandra Gubin University doctoral candidate Profile Chime time Doily Photo by DAN HABIB Prof. William DeTurk, the University's carilloneur, chimes the "hour bell" in Burton Memorial Tower. The carillon, comprised of 53 bells, was dismantled in August 1984 for renovation of the tower and to replace the rusting bolts that held the bells in place. The tower clock will be set on Monday and bells will be played at noon. 'ecltronic note book'aisstuies By ROB EARLE What kind of notebook is perfectly legible and organized, but doesn't have any pages? The "electronic notebook." Education Professor Robert Kozma and John Van Roekel, director of the University's Computer Aided Engineering Network, have created the new package of computer programs called "The Learning Tool" to help students improve their study skills as well as their familiarity with computers. THE PACKAGE, which can be used on any Apple Macintosh computer, duplicates the learning process of the human brain, according to Kozma. Like the brain, the program uses symbols to show relationships bet- ween concepts and topics and "notecards" to compile related details in one place. "It's exactly what happens in your mind when you learn," Kozma said. He and Van Roekel believe the elec- tronic learning process can be adap- ted to any subject taught in the classroom. A POLITICAL science student, Kozma said, could use the program to depict graphically the relationships between different politicial theories. Through step-by-step instructions, the program helps students set up See 'U,' Page 5 ignore the pleas of other Americans married to Soviet citizens. Sandra Gubin, a 38-year-old doc- toral candidate in political science at the University, will be reunited next Monday with her Soviet husband, Aleksei Lodisev. Their reunion will be the result of a Soviet "gesture" that came on the eve of the Geneva sum- mit allowing 10 Soviet citizens - eight of whom were married to Americans - to emigrate to the United States. "We're pleased that these 10 were allowed to leave, but we're not pleased (because) everyone didn't get out," Gubin said this week. "It is a sign that the Soviets are making a gesture (towards peace), but as long as they violate the rights of a single American, there are limitations toward accomplishing that." Gubin vows to continue fighting for the release of dozens of other Soviet citizens with American spouses through her involvement in the Divided Spouses Coalition, which she helped form last fall. The coalition has been lobbying American and Soviet officials for the release of Soviet spouses. Gubin met her husband in 1981 when she traveled to the Soviet Union on a Fullbright-Hays Fellowship through IREX - an exchange program for scholars between the United States and the Soviet Union - to do research on her Ph.D. dissertation dealing with "Soviet Policies Toward the Elderly." "Shortly after arriving, I met Aleksei, we dated, fell in love, and we married April 17, 1981." GUBIN'S VISA expired on July 3, 1981, and she had to return to the United States. Lodisev, who is now 33, applied to leave the Soviet Union for the first time in August, 1981, and was refused on December 30 of that year. Lodisev lost his job as a computer programmer soon after. Soviet of- ficials rejected his following six ap- plications. Looking back, .Gubin says she never thought her own husband would be denied permission to leave his country after their marriage. "Eighty to ninety percent of the Soviets who marry Americans are allowed to leave after the first request .. sure, I thought about the potential difficulties, but I didn't think it could happen to us. I don't think it should happen to anyone." "The Soviet government violated an agreement it had with America," she says, referring to the Helsinki Accor- ds of 1975, in which the Soviet Union and other nations pledged to reunite divided families. "It's just not acceptable!" AND GUBIN didn't accept the refusals. Instead, she began to pressure Soviet officials in Moscow and at the Soviet Embassy in Washington, D.C. In mid-1983, she started writing letters five days a week to the Secretary-General of the Communist Party, asking for her husband's release. Every letter was worded differently, she says. Senators and congressmen from See 'U', Page 3 TODAY- How do you spell Khadafy? vard's Near Eastern Language Department. Arabic speakers "all read and write the same language," Thackston said. The differences develop in tran- sliteration, he said, when Arabic script is rendered in English. There also can be a major difference in the sound of the spoken word from region to region, Thaprgtonnsaid- nntinci that same Arahie sondsnrkcannot consecutive year. Burns says the Second Annual Magathon, sponsored by the World Organization of Racing Maggots (WORM), is scheduled March 8-9 at his Barney's Bar & Cafe in Seeley Lake. Last year's inaugural event attracted international media atten- tion. Burns says he expects even more interest this year since the 1984 event was such a success. Including -INSIDE- AIDS: Opinion urges calm approach in the wake of AIDS panic. See Page 4. BLOSSOMING: Arts previews University tfuamf 4,60 tar/ nwmwaeruar nawA, i i II