The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 4, 1986 - Pagel9 INFIGHTING RESTRICTS ASSEMBLY DECISION-MAKING M I MSA hires mediator to resolve tension By MARY CHRIS JAKLEVIC On-going tension among members of the Michigan Student Assembly this summer led the assembly to hire a mediator. Mediation has resolved some im-. medite disputes, but assembly mem- bers say the long-term effectiveness of the mediation will not be evident until fall, when the full assembly resumes meeting. During the summer only about one third of the assembly is in town. Vocal and often heated infighting and name-calling during meetings have prevented the assembly from making any substantive decisions sin- ce the MSA elections in April. Tension from elections Most of the conflict is between MSA PresidentRurt Muenchow, a member of the moderate-to-conservative Meadow party, and members of the liberal Student Rights Party, who. hold a majority of seats and nearly all chairmanships on the assembly. Bad feelings developed during the assembly election campaigning last spring, when members of both the Meadow and Student Rights parties engaged in heavy-handed mud- slinging. Since then the resentment between the two groups has been perpetuated by a number of power plays attem- pted on both sides. Much of the controversy during the summer centered on Muenchow's op- position to Student Rights supporters who work for the assembly. In May, Muenchow fired former Student Rights presidential candidate Jen Faigel, and in June he refused to sign the timecards of Faigel and MSA Military Research Advisor Robyn Watts for work they had done since mid-April. Faigel was hired by former MSA President Paul Josephson in February to research the feasibility of a University-wide orientation course for freshmen. Improving communication Zena Zumeta, director of the Ann Arbor Mediation Center, was hired in June to observe assembly meeetings, and meet both with the assembly as a whole and with individual members to suggest ways to improve com- munication. Zumeta spent 25 hours working with the assembly in June and July, and charged $50 per hour for her services. MSA employee Richard Layman is optimistic the mediation will lead the assembly away from personality disputes and toward the issues which divide the assembly members. Layman said the assembly has a more cooperative spirit than it did at the beginning of the summer. "The kind of armed-camp atmosphere isn't there anymore," he said. Art School representative Dave Lovinger says the assembly has lear- ned to place more emphasis on the process -of decision-making, rather than merely the content of the issues. This includes being more con- siderate of members who hold op- posing views. Lovinger hopes this process can be carried over in the fall, when the full assembly resumes meeting. "There needs to be a way for people to express dissent and also feel like they're part of the organization," Lovinger said. In the past, more conservative representatives such as those from the Engineering College have clashed with other assembly members over issues such as military research on campus, which MSA as a whole has traditionally opposed. Some problems to persist But Faigel said she does not believe the mediation will make a dent in the assembly's problems. "A lot of (the problem) is the per- sonalities involved. There's been too much water under the bridge to go back," Faigel said. Faigel agrees that volatile issues could again split the assembly in the fall. "In certain issues there is going to be a lot of infighting," she said. Meadow and Student Rights can- didates split during the elections over whether MSA should pass resolutions on national and international events. Previous assemblies have taken con- troversial stances against U.S. foreign policies, especially insCentral America. Muenchow said he is optimistic that the assembly will run smoothly in the fall, but he refused to comment on how the mediation may effect the assembly. "The mediation won't resolve those differences of opinion, but it will help us learn to deal with them," Layman said. Lovinger said the ability of the assembly to hold together in the fall depends largely on the issues that come up, and how the assembly mem. bers handle a particularly divisive issue with strong ideological im- plications. Muenchow ... heads split assembly I Panel suggests partial research ban (Continued from Page 1) adopt guidelines which: " prohibit keeping the existence of a sponsoring agency or research documents secret; " require that the contents of a research contract or grant be made public; " forbid any research where the results are "unreasonably" kept from public knowledge; * allow researchers to use classified documents in their projects, but for- bid them to generate classified in- formation, and " allow the project's sponsor to review the documents generated but not to classify them after completion. The sponsor has six months to com- plete the review. Only nine of the 12 committee members signed the report. Phar- maceutics Prof. Gordon Amidon, Pathology Prof. Rees Midgley and Philosophy Prof. Carl Cohen submit- ted a minority opinion calling the recommended guidelines too restric- tive because they would apply to all research. Minority report "(The majority report's) restric- tions would vastly enlarge the scope of the restrictive rule, inhibiting in- tellectual inquiry not only when it is classified for reasons of national security, but also when the resear- cher and the sponsor would agree to refrain from publishing results longer than one year," the minority report said. It also said the majority report con- centrated on general openess atethe expense of academic freedom. Making all research open to the public, the minority report said, costs researchers the freeedom to do the research of their own choice. Michigan Student Assembly Military Research Advisor Robyn Watts disagrees with the conclusions of the minority report, and says the majority recommendations aren't restrictive enough. "The current guidelines aren't en- forced enough right now," Watts said." The committee was called to make the guidelines more specific, and not to use the restrictions by trusting the integrity of the professors." The regents are expected to act on the recommendations during winter term. BLOOM COUNTY Watch for it in Recruits lose eligibility P under Proposition 48 (Continued from Page 1) standards, but dislikes the SAT requirement. "I think that (SAT) is so prejudiced that it concerns me," he said. "Whether it's due to culture or whatever, there's no question that black kids haven't done as well on that test as well as white kids." averaged about 40 points higher than blacks. Frieder said he was not at all con- cerned about the academic abilities of Mills and Robinson. Coach supports recruits "I have absolutely no concerns about (Robinson) or Terry," he said, "because they're serious students who'll do the work. "Phil Hubbard (1975-1979) was a great player here, but he probably couldn't pass that test today. But he got his degree from Michigan and he's been a great person to have out of our program," Frieder said. "Where would Phil Hubbard be today if a place like Michigan hadn't give him a chance'?" he asked. Hubbard is currently a player in the National Basketball Association. Frieder said the potential effects of Proposition 48 would have little in- fluence on his choice of future recruits. Rend Uoe ~DaiR4 Cwo~6iei& * COME JOIN US " FELLOWSHIP " WORSHIP * CAIMPUS 4 W CII PE L z 1236 Washtenaw (one block south of CCRB-off Washienaw) } 668-7421 z WORSHIP: Sunday 10am & 6 pm a Wednesday 10 pm A campus ministry of the Christian Reformed Church REFLECTION * ENTHUSIASM * FRIENDSHIP __j Frieder ... questions SAT legitimacy Hey,. Uof M StudentsI You can place your order for telephone service from August 20 through September 5 at our Michigan Bell Customer Service Center. We're located at-324 E. Huron in Ann Arbor. Center hours are from 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. (We will be closed on Labor Day.) There are four important points to remember when placing your order for service: 1. Michigan Bell now provides basic telephone service only, NOT the telephones. If you already own modular telephones, just keep them and plug them in once your service is installed. If you don't own any telephones, there are a number of companies from which you can buy or lease them. 2. If your residence is already equipped with modular telephone service, no installer visit will be required. 3. Michigan Bell is able to provide your local and long distance service within the 313 Area Code only. For calls to other places in Michigan and to other states, you need to make arrangements for service with a long distance company. If you do not make any arrangements, you will not be able to place long distance calls to telephone numbers outside of the 313 Area Code. 4. Please bring picture identification, such as a driver's license or passport, when placing your order for service. I m