Page 2 -The Michigan Daily-Thursday, January 21, 1988 All Big 10 schools have code except 'U' (Co-ma ~ mPae1 student behavior in three steps: , -Each policy lists restricted non- academic behaviors, such as theft, physical assault, and damaging property. AT THE University of Wisconsin, for example, the rules prohibit "blocking buildings" and "obstructing university operations," said Peggy Miezio, Wisconsin's assistant dean of students. She said sit-ins and other forms of protest may conform to this category. Northwestern University's rules prohibit obstruction and unautho- rized entry into university build- ings, said Margot Brown, North- western's assistant dean of students. Students have the right to protest, she said, as long 'as it doesn't in- volve blocking buildings. MSU's policy includes a rule against entering or staying in a university building after the uni- versity closes, Studer said. -Each policy provides a due process hearing, in which a com- mittee of students and faculty members judge if a student is guilty. Most schools have an ap- peal process, and the dean or vice president of student affairs makes the final decision. At Indiana University, the Dean of Students holds a "judicial conference" with the accused stu- dent, said Barbara Varchol, Indiana's assistant dean of students for stu- dent rights and regulations. A stu- dent can appeal to a hearing commission composed of two fac- ulty members and one student. A student still dissatisfied can appeal to the University Review Board, which can reverse or uphold the previousdecision, or order a new hearing. An accused student, defended by the Student Advocate's Office at the University of California-Berkeley, gets called in for an investigatory meeting, said Student Advocate Er- ica Teasley. If the student denies the charge, a committee of students and faculty members reviews the case. Finally, the Dean of Student Life and the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs make the final decision. NORTHWESTERN solves more than 90 percent of misbehav- ior cases through conciliation be- tween the victim and the accused, Brown said. "The rules are very clear," she added. "Our system is extremely effective, especially with the conciliation system." -Each policy denotes punish- ments, varying from community service, a letter home, or academic probation to suspension or expul- sion, depending on the severity of the charge. Most colleges do not prescribe punishments for specific examples of forbidden behavior. Instead, a school's judiciary board makes the decision depending on the case. Brown said Northwestern only resorts to suspension or expulsion in cases of physical abuse, fires or firebombs, or destruction of library material. AT MSU, Studer said, "Any act could be so severe, or be such a gross violation, that a person could be suspended without any previous (restricted) behavior." Teasley and Varchol, however, said suspension and expulsion are carried out depending on the accused student's past record. "Expulsion is seldom used," at Indiana, Varchol said. "It depends on the severity of the offense and the prior record. We have suspended students." Suspension, said Wisconsin's Miezio, "depends on the nature of the offense. It's a judgment call. Something that a green freshman might do, we would look at in a different light than an experienced graduate student." Job retraining, schools -Mr.. - w : CoM- from Page 1) either passed the Senate, or are introduced in the Senate awaiting action or are locked up in house committees." But House Speaker Gary Owen (D-Ypsilanti) disagreed: "I thought it was by far the governor's best State of the State," he said. "Not only the substance of it, but the delivery." ENGLER DID agree, however, that the governor's emphasis on K-12 education is appropriate. The state "can't afford high dropout rates and high illiteracy rates," Engler said. Sederburg gave the speech "high marks" but acknowledged that the governor presented a limited agenda, noting, for example, that Blanchard m'ade no mention of new programs for AIDS prevention. topBlancha Rep. Morris Hood (D-Detroit), a frequent Blanchard critic, said he was pleased with parts of the speech. "For some reason I have a feeling the governor has gotten the message in terms of sensitivity on where some of us, both Blacks and whites, are talking about economic development, unemployment, and education," Hood said. TO REACH job retraining goals, the state would create the "Michigan Opportunity Card" program, which would provide access to the state's job skills programs. Gl rd's agenda Using a card similar to a credit card, adults would be able to obtain the help they need to improve their job skills. The use of the card also would allow state officials to track the performance of the 50 job training programs in various agencies and departments and focus resources on those that do the best job. , Currently, the state spends about $500 million a year on more than 50 job training programs, and the Opportunity Card would eventually link them together. See GOV., Page 5 -in dSTRErET_, mOTORS Quality Care ForYour Fine Imported Automobile W OFFER P oe 663 AA ~ PhoneUU..y±L MON.-FRI. 9AM-6PM. I .M * MAIN STREET MOTORS 906 North Main Street Ann Arbor, MI 48104 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Israelis may impose curfews JERUSALEM - Israel said yesterday it might use curfews for the first time to quell riots in Arab east Jerusalem, where a police jeep stoned by children ran down a protester and crashed, injuring two officers. Increasing numbers of Jerusalem's Arabs have been calght up in the nationalist fervor generated by six weeks of violence in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, in which Israeli gunfire has killed at least 36 Palestinians. In northern Israel, soldiers killed three Palestinians who infiltrated from Lebanon with grenades and automatic rifles in an apparent attempt to raid a civilian settlement, the army said. An Israeli soldier was reported wounded. Political sources said privately that the Cabinet, at a meeting earlier this week, made an unannounced decision authorizing police to use curfews in Jerusalem at their discretion and with the approval of Maj. Gen.4mram Mitzna, head of the central military cwmmand. Bush campaign says Robertson supporters broke election laws LANSING- A leader of Vice President George Bush's Michigan campaign readied a civil complaint yesterday that claims Pat Robertson's campaign violated state and federal election laws. "Pat Robertson goes about the state talking about high ethics and moral resurgence in his campaign when his very staff is engaging in what I think are egregious, deliberate violations of Michigan campaign law. I think he's hypocritical," said Oakland County Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson, one of four Bush co-chairs in Michigan. Michigan Republicans will select the nation's first 77 presidential delegates next week at their state convention in Grand Rapids. Patterson said on the eve of last week's GOP county conventions that Robertson campaign workers illegally mailed copies of a newspaper editorial highly critical of Bush to 9,300 delegates to those meetings. Inflation 4.4 percent in 87 WASHINGTON - Consumer inflation rose 4.4 percent in 1987 but most of the increase came from an early rebound in-oil prices and the rise in December was just 0.1 percent, the government said yesterday. The 1987 increase in the Labor Department's Consumer Price Index, the steepest pace in six years but considered moderate by most economists, was four times 1986's tiny 1.1 percent rise. It compared with a 3.8 percent increase in 1985 and a 4 percent rise in 1984. Meanwhile, the Commerce Department said housing starts plunged 16.2 percent in December, the steepest decline in more than three years, dragging down housing construction for the year to 1.62 million units, the poorest showing since the recession year of 1982. Reagan asks for Contra aid WASHINGTON - President Reagan said yesterday that Congress will commit "one of America's most tragic mistakes" if it refuses to give more money to the Nicaragnan rebels. House speaker Jim Wright (D- Texas) accused Reagan of pursuing a military victory and the overthrow of the Sandinista regime. There was a sharpening of rhetoric on both sides as supporters and opponents of rebel aid tried to marshal forces for a showdown vote next month that will sustain the Contra force or effectively put it out of business. The White House angrily rebutted charges that the administration was trying to sabotage the peace process in Central America. EXTRAS Fifth-graders protest plastic forks, demand return to steel GREENFIELD, Mass. - Fifth graders upset over plastic forks and spoons in the cafeteria are demanding a return to stainless steel, and their principal said they should protest with posters and petitions "as long as they had everything spelled correctly." The campaign, dubbed "The Great Plastic Fork Revolution" by one father, began a few weeks ago when students at the Four Corners Elementary School discovered their stainless steel tableware had been shipped to the high school for use by what one youngster called "ugh, teen-agers." In the place of the stainless steel were blue-gray forks and spoons made of reusable of hard plastic. Christopher Peters, 11 described the new tableware as "bumpy, thick, hard to hold ... and eating with them makes you feel weird all over." Using non-violent tactics they studied for the Martin Luther King Jr. observance, Chris and his classmates hung the cafeteria with posters reading "School Is No Picnic" and "Real People Deserve Real Silverware." If you see news happen, call 76-'DAILY. 4 Fleming releases WJJX report 4 (ContinuedfromPage 1) versity's racial harassment policy deals strictly with faculty and staff. Fleming's proposal would establish such guidelines for students. Harris McClamroch, chair of the faculty's Senate Advisory Commit- tee for University Affairs, said the report was "an anti-climax after President Fleming's proposal. It's certainly consistent with what he's proposed." The committee's document was written last Dec. 22, and Fleming's document was dated Dec. 24. THE REPORT also recom- mends that a committee be formed to review WJJX in general. "WJJX clearly is a marginal activity," the report said. "In the first place, listenership has been very limited. More important, the quality of the training, management, and produc- tion of the station has been considerably below the standards that are maintained on the other Univer- sity stations." Fleming said the Campus Broad- casting Board of Directors is cur- rently reviewing the recommenda- tions. No members of the board were available for comment last night, and Campus Broadcasting Network Publicity Director Henry Hardy and WJJX Co-Director of the Sales De- partment Ralph Crossley would not comment. v ; 4 Vol. XCVIII - No. 77 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: January through April - $15 in Ann Arbor, $22 outside the city. 1988 spring, summer, and fall term rates not yet available. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and-the National Student News Service. Editor in Chief................................................ROB EARLE Film...........................................JOHN SHEA Managing Editor......................................AMY MINDELL Theater...........JENNIFER KOHN News Editor...............................................PHILIP I. LEVY ARTS STAFF: V.J. Beauchamp, Scott Collins, Robert City Editor..............................................MELISSA BIRKS Flaggert, Timothy Huet, Brian Jarvinen, Avra Features Editor.......................................MARTIN FRANK Kouffman, David Peltz, Mike Rubin, Mark Shaiman, University Editor................................KERY MURAKAMI Todd Shanker, Lauren Shapiro, Chuck Skarsaune, NEWS STAFF: Elizabeth Atkins, Francie Arenson, Mark Swartz, Marc S. Taras. Vicki Bauer, Eve Becker, Keith Brand, Jim Bray, Dov Photo Editors........................................SCOTT LITUCHY Cohen, Hampton Dellinger, Sheala Durant, Heather ANDI SCHREIBER Eurich, Steve Knopper, Michael Lustig, Alyssa PHOTO STAFF: Karen Handelman, Ellen Levy, Lustigman, Andrew Mills, Peter Orner, Lisa Pollak, Robin Loznak,_David Lubliner, John Munson. Jim Poniewozik, Melissa Ramsdell, David Schwartz, Weekend Editors.............REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Martha Sevetson, Steve Tuch, Ryan Tutak, Rose ALAN PAUL Mary Wummel WEEKEND STAFF: Stephen Gregory, Fred Zinn. Opinion Page Editors..........................PETER MOONEY Display Sales Manager...........ANNE KUBEK HENRY PARK Assistant Display Sales Manager......KAREN BROWN Assoc. Opinion Page Editor.....CALE SOUTHWORTH DISPLAY SALES STAFF: David Bauman, Gail OPINION PAGE STAFF: Muzammil Ahmed, Belenson, Lauren Berman, Sherri Blansky, Pam I r.. * Press here forgreat data Drocessinc cree : i r1 Rosemary Chinnock, Molly Daggett, Noah Finkel, Jim Herron, Eric L. Holt, Joshua Ray Levin, I. Matthew Miller, Steve Semenuk, Mark Weisbrot. Sports Editor..... ..........SCOTT G. MILLER Associate Sports Editors.........DARREN JASEY RICK KAPL AN Bullock, Jeff Chen, Tammy Christie, Miton Feld, Lisa George, Michelle Gill, Matt Late, Heather MacLachlan, Jodi Manchik, Eddy Meng, Jackie Miller, Shelly Pleva, Debbie Retzky,Jim Ryan, Laur4 Schianger, Michelle Slavik, Mary Snyder, Marie Soma, CassieVoatel[ Bruice Weiss. I ____