Page 5- The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 1, 1986 MSA dismisses two reps, another resigns By WENDY SHARP Two Michigan Student Assembly representatives were kicked off the assembly last night because of their poor attendance record, and one representative resigned due to other time commitments. Brian Burt, a Rackham Student Government rep- resentative, and Brian Drabik, a fifth year College of Pharmacy representative, violated the assembly's constitution by missing 12 consecutive roll calls at six MSA meetings, so they were formally dismissed. BURT IS in Germany and not a University student this year, according to Gus Teschke, another RSG representative. Drabik said he attended two assembly meetings since he was elected, but cannot commit the time to attend meetings. "It's a combination of a lot of things, but mostly schoolwork," Drabik said. RSG representative Thea Lee officially resigned from the assembly due to other time commitments. Lee is working on graduate student Dean Baker's final decision on the nominations. Bruce Belcher, chair of Rules and Elections Committee, said it is not unusual for representatives Associated Press Puddle popper Fifteen-year-old Scott Garcia of Saginaw creates a totally awesome fan as he skids his bike through a 25-foot puddle. 'The attendance is about the same this year. We're just watching it more closely now.' -Bruce Belcher Rules and Elections chair campaign to unseat to leave the assembly during the Congressman Carl Pursell. first few meetings. "The Replacement procedures attendance is about the same this require that RSG and the College year. We're just watching it of Pharmacy nominate Students more closely now," he said. to the assembly. MSA makes the THERE'S STILL TIME TO PREPARE CLASSES STARTING IN OCTOBER 203 E. Hoover 662-3149 .CALL DAYS, EVENINGS & WEEKENDS EDUCATONAL CENTER LTD. TEST PREPARAION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Blood and Gore Study says PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Rock videos, under fire for their blood, gore and slow- motion mayhem, have yet to rival the violence on prime-time television, according to a study published by the University of Pennsylvania's School of Communications. "Nothing is as violent as prime-time TV," said George Gerbner, dean of the Anneberg School of' Communications, -'which published the report. "I ThINK the concernsabout rock videos have been exaggerated. There does not seem to be a scientific reason for focusing ion music videos per se." The researchers stopped far short of endorsing music videos, however. They said their analysis of 42 hours of videos led to the conclusion that they are violent, male- oriented and laden with sexual content - criticisms voiced by feminists and the National Coalition on Television Violence. About 75 percent of all prime-time shows 'contain violence, compared with 56 percent of all "concept videos," which dramatize the ,music, according to the study's authors, Barry L. Sherman and Joseph R. Dominick of the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of eorgia. videos less violent than TV THE STUDY covered the 1985-86 prime- time season. Gerbner said this week he wouldn't discuss the new TV season because, he said, impressions usually are misleading. 'Violence is the cheapest, most active thing going. Not that it's popular- it's cheap to produce.' -George Gerber Journal of Communications editor The study found that music videos don't have as much sex as prime-time televison -1.4 sexual episodes per minute versus 1.6 on prime time - but the sex is more graphic. However, most of the sexual involvement consisted of non-intimate touching, such as handshaking. "It's well-charged, with a lot of sexual implications," Gerbner said. SEX IN videos has a distinctively adolescent slant that is "long on titillation and physical activity but devoid of emotional involvement," the researchers said. "Violence is the cheapest, most active thing going. Not that it's popular - it's cheap to produce." Videos on the MTV network and on such shows as "Friday Night Videos" and "Night Tracks" rely less on action and more on the performers and their music," he said. The researchers found several key differences between videos, which aredirected at teen-agers and young adults, and conventional TV, which is aimed at 25- to 49-year-old consumers: Women in videos are more likely to be aggressors than victims, often appearing as "predatory females." On conventional television, non-whites are more apt to be victims than aggressors. In videos, non-whites are equally likely to be either. On televison, children, teen-agers and adults all get abused. In videos, older adults, especially mother figures, are the predominant aggressors. The young are regularly persecuted on video by their "establishment elders" and also by their non-white peers. to the ce and denied I ge and pt. 16 he icholas Moscow Normandie Flowers 2for 1Carnations * WITH THIS COUPON (Good until 10/8/86) I one customer per week ssion is 1104 S. University ome of 996-1811 posal to ld new- Y 1 C c Zakharov pleads no contes (ContinuedfromPage1) when the 39 year-old Zakharov affairs officer assigned was arrested on a subway U.N.'s Center for Scien The no-contest plea means he platform as he allegedly tried to Technology. He c neither pleaded guilty nor pay an FBI informant $1,000 for involvement in espiona nnocent to the charges. U.S. classified documents on military told a news conference Sep Attorney Andrew Maloney jet engines. The informant said had been set up by the FBI. outlined the terms of the plea he was recruited by Zakharov in American journalist N agreement. 1983. Daniloff was arrested in The spy case began Aug. 23, Zakharov is a scientific a week after Zakharov. and Student Comedians JIM RHOADES and JON WEINSTEIN Greeks face housing crunch (Continued from Page 1) "OUR PROBLEM is with frat behavior, which in my opinion is a direct, result of overuse of alcohol," says Susan Hughes, who lives two doors down from Sigma :Alpha Mu and across the street "from Sigma Chi. "The Sigma Chis are really good neighbors; P they are thoroughly thoughtful with their parties." The Sigma Alpha Mus are a different story, according to Hughes. "What I really don't like is that they allow the minors to drink, especially hundreds of high school kids that come to their parties and then relieve themselves on our lawn." "They just don't care," she says-. "I see it as a situation that is much more out of hand than last fall. There's no control. The Sammies asked us to call if we had a problem with the noise, and when we did we got a very, very obscene reply," says Hughes. "At 3:30 in the morning when you can hear the words to a song in bed clearly enough to sing along, it's too loud!" THE FRATERNITIES are not the only Greeks having trouble housing their members. Sororities are finding it increasingly difficult to cut through neighborhood concerns and the red tape of the Zoning Commission. "I think the sororities have a reater problem with housing "than the fraternities, because there .are a lot more fraternities I .and I don't think they see the campus." Sororities also experience trouble with neighbors. "It's a long, hard battle," Seiler says. "The city council people and city planning commission are under a lot of pressure from neighbors. I would think that people would want group housing that .would provide nice, safe, clean housing at a cheap price." "THE PROBLEM is just finding a house in Ann Arbor that will house a fraternity or a sorority," says Omid Osanloo, president of the Kappa Delta Rho fraternity, which is currently on Catherine Street, far from the other Greek houses. The Kappa Delta Rho house had trouble with the residents of the old Fourth Ward area when house members moved in last year. The residents were afraid their neighborhood would become saturated with other Greek houses. The IFC had intended that the Rho house remain there, in hopes that other Greeks with housing problems might follow suit. "It is a great location," said Osanloo, "except it really hurts our rush. We had to go to the dorms and pick people up." After a battle of their own, the Alpha XiDeltassorority has purchased a house. "When we moved.in we changed occupancy. It was owned by the University," explains House Manager Diane Werner. "When we moved in we got stung with every rule in the book." Xx~t".1 TTI "The Task Force Commi working on resolving s these problems." One problem is a pro make it illegal to bui as. r V. FrKUNI\ ERSITY Sunday, Mon" ,aY Saturday C LUB UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTE-A I 2105 MICHIGAN UNION u ANN ARBOR MICHIGAN 46104 O, m,smI.~~a ~ 763-1107- - - - ' - - Greek houses in the area bounded by Lincoln and Olivia streets. Existing houses would be given senior priority and could remain there. "EVERYBODY'S got an opinion," Clark says. "Ten years ago there was a decline in the Greek system and neighbors were worried about boarded up old houses. Now there's just not enough room. Neighbors worry about acquiring new frats. It goes in cycles." As for solving the problems that arise from housing disputes, "We are looking at moderate changes, rather than wholesale changes, which is what the neighbors want," says Clark. "I think we're going to be busy for a long time." No one faces cancer alone. Call us. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY ja Reserve a Micro! What? Three hours of uninterrupted work. BLOOM COUNTY I OH A10,. ~0 Where? When? 400 N. Ingalls Bldg., Rm. 4438. Mon.-Fri., 8:00am-5:00pm. I I