The Michigan Daily, Thursday, September 10, 1987- Page 7 . 7 'U' officials grow weary of Administration appears code debate eager to By MARTHA SEVETSON Staunch student opposition has prevented the implementation of a code of non-academic conduct - a set of rules to govern student behavior outside the classroom - for the past fifteen years. But University President Harold Shapiro and other administrators are impatient with student opposition and appear eager to implement a code before Shapiro leaves the University in January. Members of the University's Board of Regents, 'Shapiro, and administrators have indicated that there is a growing need to impose a code with or without student approval. Although regental bylaw 7.02 gives students the right to veto a code, the regents have the power to rewrite the bylaw. PASSAGE of a code would establish a supplemental court system within the University that would use academic sanctions to control behavior outside the classroom. University adminis - trators think a code is needed to protect the University community from potentially harmful students since they feel the Ann Arbor and U.S. court systems are not fully adequate to protect the University. But students opposed to the proposed code feel that a threat of suspension or expulsion would indirectly repress students' rights - especially the right to protest freely against the University. If a students' actions outside the classroom could potentially cause suspension or expulsion, many may be hesitant to protest on campus. WITH the threat of a code looming in the near future, student pass'ac leaders have tried to rally more support to oppose its passage. "The ,most important thing that we can do is impress the regents and administration that we demand student input," MSA President Ken Weine said earlier this year. Most other private and public Universities throughout the country have implemented some form of a control over students outside the classroom. Previous drafts of the code have prompted such stubborn student opposition that the University has become a battleground among students, faculty, and administrators over the issue. But in 1984, Shapiro shifted the fight over the code and its possible academic sanctions to the Uni - versity Council - a panel of nine students, faculty members, and administrators. In an effort to reach a compromise between code-debate factions, the council has attempted to write a code of its own for the past three years. IMPATIENT with the coun - cil's progress, faculty and adminis - tration council members have concluded that the panel is incapable of agreeing upon a set of behavior guidelines with "appropriate sanctions" in June. The in-fighting among council members and a lack of results over the past three years prompted council Co-Chair and history Prof. Shaw Livermore to call for the council's dissolution last May.' "The course of action I propose now is that we conclude our operations with the charge we have now," Livermore said. Enraged by a statement from the ,student members which called the 'ode council a "facade of democracy," Livermore wrote a resolution announcing the council's inability to fulfill its charge. Despite the opposition of students on the council, the maj - ority of council members approved the resolution and forwarded it to the regents. Livermore said he would not attend another meeting in the near future unless the regents ask the council to resume. "WE'LL see how the regents wish us to proceed at this point. If they want us to have another go at it with a new charge, we'll see," he said. No regents would comment on the status of the council, but both regents and administrators seemed to be losing patience with the slow progress of the appointed group even before this incident. "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," Regent Paul Brown (D-Petoskey) said. Brown said the administration was capable of formulating and passing a code "in a matter of months." Council Co-Chair David. Newblatt, an LSA senior, said he felt the administration impatience was an attempt to coerce student members of the council to accept academic sanctions as a form of punishment for students. "I'M NOT going to buy the threat that if we want to write our own code, we have to give in to academic sanctions," Newblatt said earlier this year. "I have to think that the political cost of having to bypass MSA and student opposition is so incredible that the regents wouldn't pass a code : .tl :o -" , " p 4 u ! 1 1 4 b Doily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN Two University students hold up signs indicating their sentiments about a code of non-academic conduct at a noontime Diag rally. without our consent and input." Many students and faculty members feared that the adminis -. tration had, in effect, imposed a code last term, when Shapiro established hearings to handle two students involved in racist jokes aired on WJJX, a student-run radio station. Strong student opposition to a University judicial system capable of suspending or expelling students caused an indefinite postponement of the hearings. "For these students to go through a hearing for their non- academic behavior is definitely an indication that the University is going to implement all that a code stands for," Weine said earlier this year. NEWBLATT said that despite negative comments many have made about the council, "the process we have is as good as we're going to work with." He and other student members of the council planned,.to continue meeting throughout the summer and said they would request new appointments to the vacated faculty and administrative positions. "Part of the reason I'm here is because I'm afraid if I'm not here the administration will bulldoze a code with repressive measures," Newblatt said. "If (Livermore) is coming to the conclusion that it's useless to proceed, I don't agree." THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 Topp urges student involvement in DSS I (Continued from Page 3) essential to a successful program for the disabled. "Even for (the office's) own internal functions its important to have volunteers," Thompson said. *.Thompson believes that although students who volunteer are aware of the needs of the disabled, the students body as a whole is not. But with increased efforts and cooperation from the University, Thompson believes that "people will be more aware of what we are looking for and how they can do it." Topp, who had her right leg amputated due to a rare form of cancer, worked at Hope College in Holland, Michigan for eight years as director of both the college's Career Center and Handicapped Student Services. During her time as director there, The New York Times deemed Hope College's programs for the disabled as "the hidden jewel for the handicapped." With Topp's vigor and determination it appears that the University may become an equal gem for disabled students, but Topp is concerned that to some the office remains a hidden treasure. "We know that there are more] out there," Topp said about the number of disabled students who are unaware of the services offered to them at the office. "We know that they're there but they don't know that we're here." i . t , l fit. M 1 1 A r a q M s q " ,I p I .{ ... - ; , ^^ I } s li" (. ® I i ! I I, ,. SOME THINGS YOU MAY NOT KNOW ABOUT BURTON MEMORIAL TOWER U". Q The tower was erected in memory of Marion LeRoy Burton, a past president of the University of Michigan. It was completed in 1936. Q The 10-story tower houses the Charles Baird Carillon. Q In 1940, the tower became the head- quarters of The University Musical Soci- ety, presenters 'of the world's greatest performers for over 108 years.; Q The Musical Society box office is on the tower's first floor. Classrooms and offices for the School of Music occupy; the upper floors. Please stop by Burton Memorial Tower to visit the Musical Society box office. Discover the world of performing arts on your campus. -', .,..«4. /T - nnnrv~ r~ ('7> 'HIDDEN IN THE BASEMENT OF' photo&campus g A ig ug g gg m ggn THE services L*04 DUILIJIIMP 9 . . The University of Michigan Photo & Campus Services 4 Also . i i HAVE YQUR INSTANT PASSPORT PICTURES TAKEN! * 4 Color Polaroid Photos Which Meet American Passport Requirements 10L!/ DAnd... ___ DISCOUNT ON ALL B&W WORK.. * We Are A Quality B & W Photographic Lab. We do copy photography, film developing, custom enlargements, PMT's (Photo-Mechanical Transfers), and other B & W processing services. COMPUTER PRODUCTS AVAILABLE FOR CASH SALE Including supplies and accessories for your Macintosh: S1',i#w91rMV ArwAritca -- Mrnei44 Wn'rd fnr Mnr 3_n f I I I $