Page 2 -The Michigan Daily-Friday, February 12, 1988 MSA4 By ROSE MARY WUMMEL The Michigan Student Assembly, working to improve communication with students, will send its second annual survey this weekend to all dormitory residents. The 20-question survey asks students for their opinions on campus issues, the possibility of a code of non-academic conduct, and groups including the assembly, and The Daily. MSA plans to share survey results with University ad- ministrators. The survey aims to gain student feedback and raise student awareness about campus issues, said survey organizer Mike Phillips, an L S A junior and MSA representative. LAST YEAR, 10,000 students aims for received the survey, but only 1,000 returned it. This year, MSA is pushing for a 15 percent response rate. The assembly hopes to spur replies by sending letters to Resident Advisers, encouraging them to inform residents about the questionnaire. To reach students off- campus, MSA will set up survey tables in the Fishbowl, the Michi- gan Union, and North Campus Commons next week. Some representatives blame last year's low response rate on essay- style questions, so this year they made the survey multiple choice. ONE QUESTION asks: "Are you willing to sacrifice your 'student constitutional rights, civil liberties, ar civil rights to allow administrators (only) to create what they believe is best for the univer- sity community?" Students then circle responses ranging from strongly willing to strongly oppose. "We wanted to ask a code-related. question without using the word 'code,"' Phillips said. The survey also asks students if financial difficulties would force them to leave the University. The assembly hopes to use the results when they lobby the regents against a tuition hike and for more student financial aid, said Susan Overdorf, an LSA sophomore and MSA representative. Silk Knit Lingerie r 325 E. Liberty " 995-4222 . ,. - input. LAST SEPTEMBER, MSA President Ken Weine and then-Vice President Rebecca Felton distributed an abbreviated version of the 1987 survey results to administrators at one of their monthly pre-Regents meetings. Felton, an LSA senior, said she remembered administrators were interested in the survey results but didn't have an opportunity to read it or share their reactions that day. She said University Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost James Duderstadt requested a full copy of the results. Duderstadt was out of town and unavailable for comment yesterday. CANTERBURY HOUSE Worship Schedule (The Chaplaincy of the Episcopal Church to the U-MCommunity) 218 N. Division St.. Sunday 5:00 p.m. Eucharist at Canterbury (supeer follows) February 17, 198 Imposition of Ashes And Holy Eucharist 7:30 a.m. and 5:15p.m. ..----.-- ......-............- --.......... .I I Restaurant & Pub aA 1 Sunday Specials 338 S. 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Other locations Phone (313) 761-1523 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Appeals court bans drug testing for railroad workers SAN FRANCISCO - A requirement that 200,000 railroad workers undergo drug and alcohol testing after major accidents or rule violations was declared unconstitutional yesterday by a federal appeals court. In a 2-1 vote, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the rules, in effect since February 1986, violated the constitutional ban of unreason- able searches because they allowed testing without evidence that an in- dividual worker was under the influence of drugs or alcohol. "Accidents, incidents or rule violations, by themselves, do not create reasonable grounds for suspecting that tests will demonstrate alcohol or drug impairment in any one railroad employee, much less an entire train crew," said the opinion by Judge Thomas Tang. GM defends executive bonuses DETROIT - General Motors Corp. is defending its stock bonuses for 5,000 executives, in a year when hourly workers are going without profit- sharing, as part of a risk and reward philosophy. The top executives will divide about $184.6 million in stock under a new bonus program, "so that both the managers of the business and the shareholders are ready to share in the business over the long term," GM spokesperson Patricia Molloy said. On Tuesday, however, as it had in 1987, GM said its $3.6-billion profit in the past year was too little to trigger profit-sharing payments for hourly workers, under a formula negotiated with the United Auto Workers union in 1984. UAW Vice President Donald Ephlin, head of the union's GM depart- ment, said executives should not receive bonuses if profits were insuffi- cient to warrant profit-sharing for the workers. Young drops opposition to JOA DETROIT - Mayor Coleman Young dropped his opposition yester- day to a partial merger of Detroit's daily newspapers. Young said he is convinced the Detroit Free Press will close if a joint operating agreement with The' Detroit News is denied. That would cost more jobs than the partial merger, he said. "I consider a JOA as a newspaper and a half, or maybe a quarter, but that's better than one newspaper," Young said at a news conference. "I have reason to believe those talks will culminate in a fair deal for the union," Young said. But he would not elaborate on who he talked to or what assurances he received. The newspapers seek a limited antitrust exemption under the Newspa- per Preservation Act, which would enable them cut costs by merging business operations while maintaining separate news and editorial depart- ments. Inmate details drug scandal WASHINGTON - A Columbian drug cartel made $200 million a month in profits in the United States, laundered the cash through Pana- manian banks, and spent some of the, money to bankroll the U.S.-backed Contra rebels in Nicaragua, an imprisoned accountant testified yesterday. "I am a capitalist," Cuban-born Ramond Milian Rodriguez said as he detailed the workings of an.intricately organized drug empire he said paid him $2 million to $3 million a month for his ability to make the money appear to be of legitimate origin. Rodriguez also told a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee that his money-laundering operation had ties to both the CIA and the Contras fighting Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government. Neither connection was pursued in open session by the panel, which is investigating Panama's involvement in drug smuggling. EXTRAS Four-cent stamp from camp delivers - 22 years later MONROE, Mich. (AP) - A postcard written in November 1966 has arrived 22 years after being mailed from boot camp. The card was mailed with a 4-cent stamp by Jim Finley when he was 18 and beginning the rigors of military training in Fort Knox, Ky. "The front shows a sergeant with a big sickle slicing four guys' hair off the top," Finley said. "It looks like a lot of old water marks on it, like it's been lying somewhere." Finley, a 40-year-old resident of Wayne County's Brownstown township, said he mailed the card as a joke to his father, then a barber. Finley wrote: "I'm not feeling too good because tomorrow we get those (medical) shots from that gun. One guy told us that a guy jerked his arm, and it put a big cut in his arm." U.S. Postal Service officials in Louisville, Ky., said they didn't know anything about the card. It has a Jan. 22, 1988, Louisville postmark. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. This sprin , b or mak it. 01 e Mirbigan 1Baflu Vol. XCVIII- No. 93 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, 1and 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 ........REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Todd Shanker, Lauren Shapiro, Chuck Skarsaune, Mark Managing Editor................. MARTHA SEVETSON Swartz Marc S. Teras. News Editor...........................EVE BECKER Photo Editors..........................KAREN HANDELMAN City Editor................. MELISSA BIRKSJONMN N Peatures Editor..................ELIZABETH ATKINS University Editor. ..... ....KERY MURAKAMI PHOTO STAFF: Alexandra Brez, Jessica Greene, Ellen NEWS STAFF: Vicki Bauer, Dov Cohen, Hampton Levy Robin Loznak, David Lubliner, Danny Stiebel, Lisa Dellinger, Ken Dintzer, Sheala Durant, Heather Eurich, yk,, Steve Knopper, Kristine LaLonde, Michael Lustig, Alyssa Weekend Editors ...........STEPHEN GREGORY Lustigman, Andrew Mills, Peter Moony, Lisa Pollak, Jim ALAN PAUL Poniewozik, Micah Schmit, Melissa Ramsdell, David WEEKEND STAFF: A Aed Zinn. Schwartz, Steve Tuch, Ryan Tutak, Rose Mary Wummel. Display Sales Manager ....................ANNE Opinion Page Editors........ ....A.JEFFREY RUTHERFORD KUBEK CALE SOUTHWORTH Assistant Display Sales Manager.KAREN BROWN OPINON TAFF Muaminl Axned Saah BbbDISPLAY SALES STAFF: David Baumnan. Gail Belenson, Rosemary Chinnock, Molly Daggett, Noah Finkel, Jim L Berman, Sherr iBlanky, Pam Bullock, Jeff Chen, Herren, Eric L. Holt, Joshua Ray Levin, L Matthew Miller, Tammy Christie, Milton Feld, Lisa George, Michelle Gill, Steve Semnuk, Mark Weisbrot, Mark Williams. Matt Lane, Heather MacLachlan, Jodi Manchik, Eddy Meng, Sports Editor..........:..................... JEFF RUSH Jackie Miller, Shelly Pleva, Debbie Retzky, Jim Ryan, Laura Associate Sports Editors .............JULIE HOLLMAN Sehager, Michelle Slavik, Mary Snyder, Marie Sono, ADAM' Cassie Vogel, BrueMWeiss. ADAM SCHRAGER NATIONALS: Valerie Breir PETE STEINERT LAYOUT: Heather Barbar, DOUG VOLAN TEARDOWN: Tara Fatah. SPORTS STAFF: Adam Benson,Steve Blonder, Steve Finance Manager........................ERIC Cohen, Richard Eisen, Lisa Gilbert, Mike Gill, Steve Ginns, PMERANT C 1 f i l t, i t 41 O This Spring Break, catch a Greyhound to the beach, the mountains or your hometown. For $49.50 each way, you and your friends