Regeni By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Third in a three-part series Recent statements by members of the University Board of Regents suggest that the regents may be on the verge of passing a code of non-academic students conduct - with or without student input. "I think that if the administration is interested in getting something done, a code could be formulated and passed in a matter of months," said Regent Paul Brown (D-Petosky). The administration has expressed a definite interest in getting something done. University President Harold Shapiro has been one of the staunchest O supporters of a code with academic sanctions. Because of his recent sabbatical, administrators say the code has not been a high priority recently. hint code is imminent Shapiro could not be reached for comment, but with his return, the administration may be in the best position to push through a code that it's been in for at least a year. Although the regents and administration have ultimate authority over the code, until now they have appeared content to wait and see what the University Council develops. The University Council, a nine-member panel of students, administrators, and faculty members, has been unsuccessfully attempting to formulate a code since 1984. Prior drafts of the code - a proposal to regulate student behavior outside the classroom - were defeated because of stubborn student opposition. But some regents and administrators seem impatient with their slow progress.. "If the council is really at the standstill they appear to be, I think it is perfectly all right for us to write our own code," said Regent Brown. Much of the council's slow progress can be attributed to student opposition to the University judicial system that a code would create. Student members on the council agree that guidelines should be created to set standards for student behavior outside the classroom, but vehemently disagree that these guidelines should be enforced though a University court with academic sanctions. These sanctions - suspension or expulsion - would appear on a students permanent transcript. Students have protested that if a code utilized academic sanctions to regulate student behavior, the University administration could control students's private and political lives. But some regents feel student opposition to the code has waned. "I don't really sense that there is a broad scale of dislike for the code," said Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor). There has been much speculation that the administration has waited to pass a code in hope that student opposition and controversy will eventually die down, but Baker disputes this. "I do not think that the regents or the administration have ever avoided any action because they fear causing controversy," he said. Administrators insist that a code and proper enforcement is necessary to protect the University community from dangerous students. Administrators and regents maintain that a code is needed to help the See STUDENTS, Page 5. Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom VOLUME XCVII-- NO. 104 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1987 COPYRIGHT 1987 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I City zoning change hurts Greek houses Webster nominated By JERRY MARKON Most fraternities and sororities will not suffer immediate damage from the Ann Arbor City Council's decision Monday night to limit group housing in North Burns Park. But the rezoning of 40 lots, which was unanimously approved despite student protests, will hinder Kappa Delta Rho fraternity and Delta Phi Epsilon sorority in their search for housing. The change may also affect future Greek expansion, Greek officials said yesterday. "The rezoning will just about devestate our fraternity," said LSA senior Jeff Houston, vice president of Delta Kappa Rho. "It will hurt our efforts at becoming a full chapter." The fraternity, which is recognized by the Interfraternity Council but does not have voting rights, had been trying to purchase a house in the rezoned area, Houston said. Currently, fraternity members live at 711 Catherine Street, which is isolated from most of the Greek community. According to Houston, the fraternity's location hurts its ability to recruit new members, making it difficult to gain full IFC recognition. Fraternity members will now seek housing elsewhere in North Burns Park, he said. Delta Phi Epsilon sorority, which currently does not have a house, will also face a more difficult search because of the rezoning, said LSA sophomore Amy Rose, the sorority's president. The sorority's effort to purchase a house at 920 Baldwin Street-in the rezoned area - was rejected in November by the Ann Arbor See GREEKS, Page 5 to head CIA By the Associated Press President Reagan picked FBI Director William Webster, yesterday, as chief of the CIA and told his new team of national security aides that "legal issues must be addressed head-on and the rule of the law respected" in developing foreign policy. Reagan met with about 50 members of the overhauled National Security Council staff on the eve of his speech to the nation in response to the Tower commission's findings on the Iran-Contra affair. Webster, the director of the FBI since 1978, was offered the CIA post by Reagan after the job was turned down by former Senator John Tower who chaired the Tower commission. Reagan had nominated the CIA's acting director, Robert Gates, to take over the top spot. But the president withdrew that nomination Monday after it became clear Gates would face stiff Senate opposition because of the Iran-Contra affair and the CIA's involvement in it. See FBI, Page 2 Cheek to cheek Associated Press Entertainer Danny Kaye, who died early yesterday in a Los Angeles hospital, teams up with Miss Piggy during a 1978 Muppet Show rehearsal. The duo sang 'Cheek to Cheek' from the 1930's movie Top Hat. LSA Budget Director thrives By MARTIN FRANK What began for her as temporary employment at the University evolved into a 20-year stay culminating in her current position as LSA's Associate Dean for Budget. Ironically, Carolyn Cope - Profile on finance, difficult because her interests cover said. different areas. But, as As Talented in all aspects of art, Budget, Copela especially painting and art history, the financial sce Copeland has studied the art of New York adv India, Morocco, Instanbul, Egypt, 1949 to 1951. the Greek Islands and Eastern finance came fr Europe. employed her She maintains close association Scarsdale, New with professors in the Department public accounta of Anthropology. In 1976, she retired to a farm worked on a project in India with When she retu History of Art Prof. Walter Spink in the late 1960s studying Ajanta art, ancient clerical job in LS Buddhist cave paintings. She directed fun IN THE 1960s, Copeland acted the summer tern in several plays. Once, she played interested in co the character Adelaide in Guys and education that sh Dolls. She met the man who would She started ta become her second husband, her lunch hour, William, while doing a musical she received a b comedy show in Vermont. See TRA "I was his leading lady," she art sociate Dean for nd also thrives on ne. She worked in a ertising firm from Her experience in om her father, who as a financier in York. A certified nt, her father later in Vermont. urned to Ann Arbor , Copeland landed a SA's budget office. ding allocations for .m, but was mainly ompleting the arts he left in 1948. king courses during and in five years, achelor's degree in VEL, Page 2 land left the University after her freshman year in 1948 because she ran out of money. Copeland returned to the University in 1967, searching for temporary employment while her husband studied for his degree in music. "I looked for something that suited me and that I was familiar with," she explained. For Copeland, that decision was Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY LSA's Associate Dean for Budget, Carolyn Copeland, recounts her career with the University and her many travel experiences. Her journeys have led her to such exotic places as Morocco, India, and Eastern Europe. University alumnus to compete for Mr. U.S.A. Ex-DJ apologizes for racial slurs By STEVEN TUCH Here he comes. Mr. America. University graduate Geoff Safron, a 25-year-old actor and model, will represent Michigan in the U.S. Man of the Year pageant, to be held in Atlantic City next month. "The judges were looking for a (renaissance man. Someone who is very balanced and well-rounded, a departure from the Mr. Muscles stereotype," Safron said. The pageant committee received more than fifty nominations by the Feb. 1 deadline. During the Mich - igan U.S. Man of the Year contest, held last weekend at the Novi Hilton, Safron was selected from among five finalists to compete in Ann Arbor Brecht Company. In addition, Safron has hosted a shopping show for television on channel 31, participated in numer - ous radio shows, and has done modeling for companies such as General Motors and Hushpuppies. The pageant consisted of four competitions. First, a panel of judges interviewed the contestants for five minutes, asking questions of both serious and humorous nature. The panel consisted of professional model David Carey, beauty expert Sylvia Warner and Elizabeth Puleo, Miss Michigan USA. After the interview, contestants participated in a swimsuit compe - tition. According to Johneanne Powers. the na~eant director, the By STEPHEN GREGORY Former WJJX disc jockey Ted Sevransky officially apologized yesterday for the racial slurs he aired on his radio show last Feb. 4. Yesterday afternoon on WCBN, the University's student run radio station, Sevransky sincerely apologized for the incident and said that he alone was responsible. "WJJX should not take the responsibility for what I alone did," Sevransky said. He said he allowed the jokes to run because of poor judgment and poor taste. He regretted that the jokes have exacerbated racism on campus and said he would urge campus leaders to "fight racism with all the means at their disposal." Last week, state Rep. Morris Hood (D-Detroit) responded to the University official Henry Johnson's office in room 3000 of the Union. The office will be open between 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today. University president Harold Shapiro, representing the administration, will address the panel first. INSIDE A greater commitment from the Administration is necessasry to combat racism. OPINION, PAGE 4 Hughes' new beauties, Mary Stuart Masterson & Lea Thomp - son, talk about "Some Kind of Wonderful." ARTS, PAGE 7 w