Senate confirms new U.S. archivist The U.S. Senate confirmed the nomination of Donald Wilson as the seventh archivist of the United States Friday. Wilson, a former University history professor, is currently the director of both the Gerald Ford Museum in Grand Rapids and the Gerald Ford Library in Ann Arbor. President Reagan appointed Wilson to the position of archivist in August, but the nomination was not voted on until Friday. At his new post, Wilson will oversee the operations of the National Archives Center, which employs over 3,000 workers and consists of more than 30 presidential libraries. Wilson, who plans to take over as national archivist in January, was not appointed for a fixed term, meaning a future president may choose to nominate someone else in his place. He will receive an annual salary of $82,500 at his new post. By DavidSchwartz The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 24, 1987- Page 3 Nudel adjusts to life outside of Soviet Union REHOVOT, Israel (AP) - Ida Nudel, the "Guardian Angel" of Soviet Jewish dissidents who fought and finally won a 16-year battle to emigrate, says the transformation from outcast to celebrity has left her despondent and ill at ease. Instead of enjoying freedom, Nudel is fighting depression and exhaustion as she wrestles with the demands and uncertainties of her new life in Israel. "In a single moment, I arrived on another planet, in an absolutely different civilization and life," the graying Nudel told the associated Press last week in her first in-depth interview since leaving the Soviet Union on Oct. 15. "When I was left alone in my sister's apartment for a few hours, I couldn't figure out how to turn on the faucet," she said. "For someone like me, this is very depressing." "Also, in the Soviet Union, I was accustomed to living among a hostile populaion. Here, the attention is too strong for me to cope with," she, said, clutching her shirt collar close to her neck and stroking the collie that was once her only companion. Nudel was first denied permission to emigrate in 1971 on grounds that she might have overheard state secrets while working as a bookkeeper for the Moscow Institute of Hydrology and Microbiological Synthesis. Eventually fired from her job as an accountant and separated from her family, who had been allowed to come to Israel, Nudel channeled her energy into working on behalf of imprisoned Jews in the Soviet Union. Her tireless efforts won her the nickname of the "Guardian Angel." In 1979, Nudel was sentenced to four years in Siberian exile for her activism. In 1983, Soviet authorities refused to allow her to return to her Moscow home, and she was forced to live in isolation in the southwest corner of the Soviet Union before emigrating. Today she lives in a government- provided apartment in a high-rise on a busy shopping avenue in Rehovot, 15 miles south of Tel Aviv. Instead of being shadowed by the KGB, she is mobbed by well-wishers on the street. She is going with Natan Sharansky and other Soviet Jewish activists in the United States during the Dec. 7-10 summit between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The activists plan to demand that the United States raise the issue of Soviet Jews during the meeting. Daily Photo by DANA MENDELSSOHN Communication Lisa Marshall, who works at Del Rio Bar, social worker Darby Moreno, and interpreter for the deaf Joni Smith are members of the sign language club. This club includes students and Ann Arbor residents, some of whom are deaf. This group gets together every Sunday at the Anderson Room of the Michigan Union to practice and learn sign language. Students, legislators upset at secrecy (Continued from Page 1) Newblatt said the committees give positive or negative feedback, but all cuts are made by the regents. "I don't like the fact that the committees play an advisory role," Newblatt said. "It's hard to tell if our suggestions have been taken." The secrecy of the University's search parallels the process used previously at Michigan State University. But stricter "sunshine laws" in other states, which forbid closed meetings for any reason, demand that universities such as the University of Florida and the University of Tennesse conduct completely public presidential searches. Candidates' names for the top spot at the Florida school were published weekly last summer, and newspapers in Knoxville, Tenn. are granted unlimited access to information, including application letters from prospective candidates. Ian Winton, a news editor at the Daily Beacon, the University of Tennessee's student newspaper, said several papers in the area recently published Indianapolis mayor William Hudnut's application for the University of Tennesse's presidency. But Winton said that only six candidates have applied for the position, compared with over 300 to replace Shapiro. Even Michigan legislators who advocate greater openness in the University's selection process agree that Florida and Tennesse's laws are extreme. No one has demanded that the regents announce the final 15-20 candidates, who are expected to be selected in the next few weeks. In fact, Pollack commended confidentiality in the initial stages. "It's in the University's interest According to the Open Meetings Act, the names can be kept confidential at this stage if requested by the candidates. If not, their names will only be released upon request. In the 1980 selection process, all of the candidates insisted upon secrecy. "I'm not going to volunteer names," Brown said. "If a person wants to say 'I'm a candidate,' I guess that's everyone's privilege." Brown denied that anyone, including Education Secretary William Bennett, has been offered The advisory committees were formed over the summer by MSA, the faculty's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, and the Alumni Association. 'It's in the University's interest to at least be able to attract as many good (presidential) candidates as possible.' - State Senator Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor) to at least be able to attract as many good candidates as possible," she said. "We have a lot better university system than (Tennessee) - there are many ways in which I don't want to emulate them." Brown said the regents will ask the top 15-20 candidates if they want their names to be kept secret. the position. "We are not at the point of contacting people for that reason," he said. The regents appointed themselves as the Presidential Search Committee last May, immediately following University President Harold Shapiro's decision to become president of Princeton University. Quake rocks California WESTMORLAND, Calif. (AP) - An earthquake more powerful than the one that caused heavy damage in the Los Angeles area Oct. 1 jolted Southern California last night, toppling telephone lines and traffic lights, authorities said. There were no immediate reports of injuries or serious damage. The quake hit about 5:53 p.m. and was centered in Imperial County, about 100 miles northeast' of San Diego, said seismologists at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. It was estimated to have registered 6.2 on the Richter scale, said university spokesperson Robert Finn. An earthquake of 6 on the Richter scale can cause severe damage in the local area. Residents from cities as far away as Glendale, 150 miles distant, felt the temblor. In Westmorland, residents said the jolt shook cans off shelves. Sgt. John Jordan of the El Centro Police Department said the earth- quake lasted about 30 seconds and caused the department's telephone lines to go down. "We've had no reports of damage at this point. We've made a pre- liminary check of the city and all' buildings seem to be standing,"' he said. U' defends women in slander suit University astronomer Nancy Houk sits by her microscope. She is the subject of a feature airing tonight on PBS. ScienOtist classifies stars (continuedfrom Page 1) Students participating represented campus groups including United Coalition Against Racism, Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus, and the Black Student Union. They said the issues raised is common to all minority groups on campus. Todd Shaw, a graduate student and member of the Black Student Union, said if the University will not stand behind a case of sexual harassment reported through the "Tell Someone" poster campaign, it would not CORRECTIONS The first meeting for newly elected concert are Elizabeth Kupinski, an Michigan Student Assembly repre- Art School sophomore, for "Romper sentatives is Tuesday, December 1. Room Rubbish" and Ann Arbor Artists who helped complete resident Paul Marquardt for Sunday's Dance and the Related Arts "Coelacanth." TH E IST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Campus Cinema: Meetings Due to the holiday season and the In te r V a rsit y C h r I1s t i a n short school week, there are no Fellowship - Thanksgiving films showing on campus this Worship, 7 p.m. Pendelton Rm. week. Michigan Union. Bahai Club - 6 p.m. League Speakers Rm. A, Michigan Union. Selichi Kanise - resident journalist to speak on "An Insight Furthermr dh Japan's Success: the Japanese rrmore Educational System," noon, Revolutionary H i s t o r y International Ctr., 603 E. Series - seminar on "Workers Madison. of the World Unite to Fight for a William Matthews -tauthor New World," 7-8 p.m. MLB Rm. of seven poetry books to read 116. from works, 4 p.m. Rackham East Ann Arbor Women Painters Conf. Room. - "Winter Exhibit" to open 9 a.m. North Campus Commons. m oComputing Center Courses support someone who reports a racist attack through the "Tell Someone About Racism" campaign. Cathy Cohen, a leader of People Organized to Wipe Out Rape (POWOR) went to Shapiro's office to commend the University for deciding to provide legal counsel for the two women in a civil suit and to express outrage at the regents request to review the decision. "If the University generates policies like the 'Tell Someone' campaign, then they need to support students and staff members who are doing their jobs, as the case of the counselor, even in the midst of civil suits." she said. (continued from Page 1) worked on the study during the six years she spent achieving a Bachelor's in Political Science and a Masters in Soviet Studies. "Working on this study has allowed me to keep up with my interests in computers and astronomy. While studying one thing, I could work in other fields," she said. Houk and the students receive their salaries from the National Science Foundation. She added the Foundation has been "very generous and supportive over the years." Presented by Division of Chrysler Motors A Major Events Presentation I- - Scott Hamilton Dorothy Hamill l Join these stars for the Hottest Show on Ice! " Toller Cranston " Rosalynn Sumners " Brian Pockar " Kathleen Schmelz " Barbara Underhill & Paul Martini " Judy Blumberg & Michael Seibert " Lea Ann Miller & William Fauver Now in its third year, the Peer Information Counseling Program (PIC) has continued to grow. PIC is a minority student support program based within the library. Staffed by undergraduate students, it provides research assistance by appointment and on-demand when staff is available. PIC staff can also provide instruction in word rr-n-- -_~ - he ] ~:\7Y .t' .PT o.Rt Sunday, December 6th, 1987. University of Mic All Seats Reserved $15.00, $12.50 7:30 p.m. ,higan - Yost Ice Arena (service charge where applicable) Limited number of special "on ice" seats available, $18.00 . M 4ftA - ..... . . ...:[1 e z1 . . _U3 - A AI.-I-