In cekendMagazine:. 'Sid & Nancy' - Women's athletics * Mike Fisch - The List Bob Keeshan, 'Captain Kangaroo' cl ble Ninety-seven years of editorialfreedom 1Bai1y Vol. XCVII - No. 52 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, November 14, 1986 Twelve Pages *Students write proposal for code By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Student members of the University Council yesterday proposed a draft of the non-academic code of student conduct, emphasizing that University should rely on the civil court system to regulate political dissent. "We think the University -should be involved only to the point of determining when the civil authorities should be called," said student councilmember Jen Faigel. THE COUNCIL AS a whole produced a separate set of guidelines that would govern political dissent. The guidelines suggest that during a political protest, University administrators should use neutral observers to determine whether to call the police, and that student protesters should exercise restraint. Missing from this proposal, though, is a means of enforcement to punish those who repeatedly violate these guidelines. The council, composed of students, faculty members, and administrators, has been debating the controversial issue of the rights and limits of protesters since September. THESE ARE THE FIRST documents the council has released since it issued its discussion draft of the emergency procedures last spring, detailing how the University should deal with violent crimes after they occur. According to Internal Medicine Prof. Donald Rucknagel, co-chair of the council, enforcement was left out of the council's draft because members have yet to decide whether a violation of protesters' rights should be handled within the University through academic sanctions or through the police and civil court system. See STUDENTS, Page 3 Parties to battle in LSA-SG 'elections By ANDY MILLS The newly-formed Effective party and the incumbent SAID party will be battling for positions on LSA Student Government in campus-wide elections Tuesday and Wednesday. The Effective party was formed recently to oppose SAID which, until a few weeks ago, was running unopposed for the presidency, vice presidency, and 15 executive committee spots. A KEY CONCERN of the Effective party, led by presidential candidate Joe Forcier, is student awareness of government; Forcier wants to make LSA-SG "more See SAID, Page 5 - ~ - - ( f ' ~/ ; .<< t C 9J i -.y aS r F ' Reag9an addresses nation Presivdent detail's U.S. -Iranian plant WASHINGTON (AP) - the Americans held hostage in President Reagan yesterday Lebanon. Nor, he said, had the confirmed that he has been involved United States "undercut its allies in 18 months of secret diplomacy and secretly violated American pol - with Iran and authorized the transfer icy against trafficking with ter - of "small amounts" of weapons to rorists." i i 1 M ichigan -Minnesota: no laughing matter By MARK BOROWSKY The winner of tomorrow's 77th Michigan-Minnesota football game gets the Little Brown Jug. Famed the trophy may be, but the games...well, recently the games haven't been quite as notable. In fact, Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler has lost only once to the Gophers in his 18- year career at Michigan, a 16-0 shocker in 1977. Otherwise, the Jug might as well have been filled with cement and anchored in Schembechler's office. "I WENT to the elderly folks home and tried to find some people that remembered it from over here," said Minnesota head coach John Gutekunst. Despite Gutekunst's musings, the Michigan coaching staff doesn't find the prospect of facing the Golden Gophers (4-2 in the Big Ten, 5-4 overall) humorous. There's more than a glorified water bucket at stake. Bo Scehmbechler can become the winningest coach in Michigan history with a victory, passing Fielding Yost with 166 victories. Michigan will keep its national title aspirations alive with a win, while the Gophers need an upset to hope to get a bowl bid. This is not funny stuff. Furthermore, Minnesota has an explosive offense that leads the conference in rushing (235 yards a game), a senior-laden defense, and is coming off a 27- 20 win at Wisconsin, "OUR BIGGEST concern is being able to stop the Minnesota attack," Schembechler said. "It's See BO, Page 11. that country. But he insisted he was not trying to ransom American hostages in Lebanon or tilt toward Iran in its war with Iraq. After telling reporters he was being forced to speak out by widespread misinformation about his dealings with Iran, Reagan acknowledged he sent his former national security adviser, Robert McFarlane, on a secret, four-day mission to Iran last spring "to raise the diplomatic level of contacts" with Iranian officials. "SINCE 'T'HEN," Reagan said in his hastily arranged national broadcast address, "the dialogue has continued, and step-by-step progress continues to be made." "Due to the publicity of the past week, the entire initiative is very much at risk today," the president told the nation in an address prepared for broadcast from the Oval Office. Reagan said it was "utterly false" that the weapons shipments to Iran, at a time when the United States had imposed an embargo on such deliveries, were intended to ransom REAGAN SAID there were four reasons for the, secret diplomacy: renewal of a rela - tionship with Iran, which has con - ducted an ardently anti-American policy since the overthrow of the U.S.-back'ed Shah of Iran in January 1979; bringing "an honorable end" to the 6-year-old Iran-Iraqi war; elimination of state-sponsored terrorism and subversion, and "to effect the safe return of all hos - tages." The United States, he said, sought to gain "some degree of access and influence within Iran - as well as Iraq." "At the same time we undertook this initiative, we made clear that Iran must oppose all forms of international terrorism as a condition of progress in our relationship," Reagan said. "The most significant step which Iran could take, we indicated, would be to use its influence in Lebanon to secure the release of all hostages held there." Inteflex: From high school to med school to the real world By MARC CARREL Students in Inteflex, the University's experimental LSA- medical school hybrid, seem to stand apart from the rest of the student body during their seven years in the program. Unlike other students in LSA, they start college knowing that they will get a medical degree - as long as they keep up their grades. And unlike other students in the medical school, they often continue taking courses in the liberal arts while their colleagues are concentrating exclusively on medical school courses. IN THE END, however, research shows that Inteflex students get the same sort of jobs and have the same qualifications as standard medical students, but their overall education is more diverse. "I think the purpose of Inteflex was to give us a broader base in the humanities and social sciences, and I think they succeeded in that," said Yardy Tse, a fourth-year Inteflex student. Inteflex Director Dr. Alphonse Burdi noted that students can take medical school classes during the first three years of their college career, which is spent primarily in LSA, and can take LSA classes while they are in the medical school portion of the program during their remaining four years. "AND THE FLEXIBILITY means a student in our program, because of early admissions and because of a rich menu of courses, can take time off from the program to do other things," Burdi said. Dawn Mudge would be in her fourth year in Inteflex, but she decided to take a year off to pursue a double major in art history to go along with her bachelor's degree in biomedical science, granted to all Inteflex students, and her M.D. "In my schedule there wasn't enough room with electives to get the double major, and I really wanted to get it. There's a lot more fields that I wanted to study in art history," Mudge said. DOUG FRIDSMA, a fourth- year Inteflex student-the equivalent of a first-year medical student,-took several history and philosophy classes while in the LSA portion of the program. "I had the opportunity to take a lot of other courses I probably See NEW, Page_2 Juniors will register earlier By LESLIE ERINGAARD Winter class registration, which begins next week, will feature a new system that gives juniors priority CRISP time. Instead of registering with freshmen and sophomores, they will CRISP right after seniors. "With the classes that are closed, I think it's important for juniors to have access to these courses before sophomores," said Associate Registrar Douglas Woolley. "They're closer to graduation." L S A STUDENT GOVERNMENT helped instigate the change in April 1985. Student leaders won support for their idea from then-Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye and LSA Dean Peter Steiner, as well as other deans and administrators. Before the new priority system was implemented, Woolley's office designed a questionnaire with four registration alternatives. Of the High lighter Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Frank Rowe changes the light bulb in a streetlight on State Street Wed- nesday. The bulbs are changed every four years. TODAY Man or mouse A man drivingon an interstate highway in the snow. Miller wasn't hurt, but the patrolman estimated there was $500 damage to the car and four highway reflector posts. The confrontation between man, machine, and mouse proved fatal to the mouse when Miller grabbed it and squeezed it. "I have no doubt that's what happened," the natrolman -aid "H kent the dand motnv Tt mnc n decision. It is mounting a national campaign to correct the slight in time for its Dec. 19 release of Kong's latest epic, "King Kong Lives." "We're upset; aren't you?" Michael. Battaglia, director for national publication for the Kong film, said in a telephone interview from Beverly Hills, Calif. The irroun has made nostcards available at concerned INSIDE HARASSMENT: Opinion criticizes questionable behavior. See Page 4. I I I