Ninety-eight years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 51 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, November 19, 1987 Copyright 1987, The Michigan Daily Shapiro says he By MARTHA SEVETSON University President Harold Shapiro will not propose a code of non-academic conduct to the Univer- sity's Board of Regents before he assumes the presidency at Princeton University in January. The regents, however, have final authority to pass a code. Shapiro said, "I can't say what the regents will do... But I don't believe the issue will come up." The issue of a code is not scheduled on this month's agenda. The code is not a new issue, and Shapiro was not the first administrator to support behavioral guidelines for the community. But responsibility for the current code debate has rested squarely on his shoulders since Shapiro first proposed replacing the "useless" 1972 guidelines in the fall of 1984. Strong student opposition to the '84 code proposal, which included academic sanctions for non-academic conduct, prompted Shapiro to reconvene the University Council - a panel of students, faculty members, and administrators - with a charge to develop new non- academic guidelines. The nature of this charge became the first battle in an ongoing war between student council members - who adamantly opposed any code with academic sanctions - and administrators. on't pusi In a letter to The Daily this week, Shapiro said the University "should adopt its own procedures... to ensure an environment hospitable to all. Efforts to this end are currently in progress and will, I hope, be brought to resolution in the coming semesters." "I selected those words very carefully," he said, indicating that he has relinquished the code battle to his successor.+ Michigan Student Assembly President Ken Weine, a former council member, said the panel's first priority+ was to establish the need for a code. "The University+ has failed to show us why they need something to replace the 1972 rules," he said. a code But history Prof. Shaw Livermore, a council member for two years, said the point is moot, since the University Council was not asked to determine the need for a code. "My understanding was that we were charged with writing such a set of rules and procedures to adjudicate disputes," he said. The council never settled this dispute. Instead, the dozens of members who have taken their turn on the nine-person panel have fought internal and external opposition and attempted to draft a mutually acceptable code. See CODE, Page 3 Minority enrollment up slightly Doily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Twenty members of the LaGROC (Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus) occupy the office of Director of the University's Affirmative Action office Virginia Nordby yesterday to demand action against discrimination based on sexual orientation. By STEPHEN GREGORY For the first time Asian Americans have replaced Blacks as the largest minority group on campus, and Black enrollment increased a tenth of one percent, according this year's minority enrollment figures released by the University administration yesterday. The percentage of Asian American students on campus rose from 5 percent of all students last year to 5.6 percent, the largest increase of any minority group. Total Black enrollment this year came out to 5.4 percent compared to last year's 5.3 percent. In March University President Harold Shapiro committed the University to the goal of achieving a Black student population of around 12 percent, a number in step with the percentage of Blacks living in the state. Shapiro could not be reached for comment. Also according to the figures, the number of Hispanic students increased from 2 percent to 2.1 percent, but the percentage of Native Amercians remained at last year's level of 0.4 percent, Robert Holmes, the assistant to the vice president for academic affairs, said he didn't know whether the increases were due to changes in enrollment, changes in retention, or both. "We have got a couple more tables that we need to get out of the regi- strar's office to properly answer that," he said. Holmes said, however, his "sense" was that the number of first-year minority students is down from last year. Both Affirmative Action Director Virginia Nordby and Undergraduate Admissions Director Clifford Sjogren refused to comment. Minority Student Services' (MSS) Asian American representative Ron Aramaki said he expected the numbers of Asian Americans to be high this year. "I'm aware of the trend that there's always been an increase in the number of Asian Americans applying to and attending the University," he said, adding that this reflects a nationwide trend as well. Aramaki said because Asian Americans are now the largest minority group on campus, the University should make sure their needs are taken into consideration. See ENROLLMENT, Page 3 Iran - Contrareport impl icates. presi dent Group occ By ELIZABETH ATKINS Twenty students occupied the office of Affirmative Action Office Director Virginia Nordby yesterday to demand that she take action against discrimination based on sexual orientation. The group then met with University President Harold Shapiro to discuss the demands. Shapiro told the group he could not comment on their demands but that the issues are currently under "active discussion." Members of the Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus (LaGROC) demanded that Norby: -Advocate and work towards the addition of "sexual orientation" to the Affirmative Action office's logo which now reads, "It is the policy of the University that no person, on the basis of r Upies Non/i race, sex, color, religion, national origin: shall be discriminated against..."; -Implement a highly visible, publicized "Tell Someone" about lesbian and gay harassment poster campaign; -Use her position as chair of the AIDS Task1 Force to appoint a a gay-identified person to the task force immediately; -Hire openly gay people, including students and workers, in the Affirmative Action Office. LaGROC members requested Nordby's response in writing and she wrote a memo to the group - while they waited - in response to their demands. Nordby said she strongly supports the current presidential policy which prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation 6y's offie and will recommend that the next president reissue or affirm it. "I support the policy and I think it should be publicized," she said. Interim President Robben Fleming, when he begins his term in January, will have the authority to revoke the policy. "I will carry this concern to President Fleming," Nordby said. Nordby said she believes the policy should be publicized by inclusion in the University's nondiscrimination logo, by posters, in orientation materials, and in other media. LaGROC member Wendy Sharp, an L S A senior and vice president of the Michigan Student Assembly, said, "At least we have something on See NORDBY, Page 2 Teach- in addresses 'diversity, creativity By DAVID SCHWARTZ Although some art and architec- ture students rejoiced because their classes were cancelled, many said they gained an understanding of di- versity by attending yesterday's all- day "teach-in." The event, sponsored by the School of Art and the College of Architecture and Urban Planning, was designed to encourage students, faculty, and staff to reflect on issues stemming from creativity and diver- sity, including racism, sexism, and respect of other people's rights. The teach-in also sought to bring the two WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan contributed to a massive deception of Congress and the public in the Iran-Contra affair and bears responsibility for thwart- ing the law by allowing zealots to seize policy control, congressional investigators concluded yesterday in a 690-page final report. "These committees found no direct evidence suggesting that the president was a knowing participant in the effort to deceive Congress and the American public," the Senate and House investigating panels wrote. "But the president's actions and statements contributed to the decep- tion. "The ultimate responsibility for the events in the Iran-Contra affair must rest with the president," the report concluded. The report comes three months after the conclusion of summer-long hearings into the secret sales of U.S. weapons to Iran and the diversion of some profits to the Nicaraguan rebels known as Contras. At the White House, Reagan spokesperson Marlin Fitzwater said, "This new report reflects the destruction of thousands of docu- meifts. "A small group of senior officials believed that they alone knew what was right," the investigating law- makers said. All six Republicans on the House panel and two of the five GOP Senate panel members registered dissent, concluding that the president and his men were guilty of no more than errors of judgment. INSIDE Students should go hear a speaker from the Race and Class journal. OPINION, Page 4 The Ann Arbor Civic Theatre brings Tom Stoppard's "The Real Thing" to the Mendelssohn Theatre this weekend. ARTS, Page 7 Michigan hockey plaver Todd 77,MF II