Ninety-nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. I C, No. 49 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, November 15, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily PLO polishes new si ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) - Members of the Palestine National Council worked out final details yesterday of a new political strategy that would renounce terrorism and implicitly recognize Israel. The council also is expected to declare Palestinian independence in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, which Israel captured from Jordan and Egypt in the 1967 Middle East war and has occupied since. With the new approach, the 450-member council hopes to meet at least some condi- tions the United States has set for dealing with the Palestine Liberation Organization. The Arab League formed the council in 1964, but it has assumed the role of PLO legislature. Behind the scenes of the council, which began a special session Saturday, PLO chief Yasser Arafat rallied members to his new policy. Arafat beamediand said, "Everything is fine" as he entered the Palais des Nations conference yesterday for a meeting of the committee drafting resolutions. George Habash, leader of the radical Popular Front for the Liberation of Pales- tine, contended too many concessions were being offered with no guaranteed response from the United States and Israel. -In an unusual display of moderation, however, he assured Arafat he would "express reservations in public, but bow to the rule of the majority," conference sources said. In Washington, President Reagan said implicit PLO recognition of Israel "would be some progress," but added: "There are other problems that remain to be solved." Israel rejected results of the Algiers meeting in advance. "We will not negotiate with the PLO," said Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. "It's not a problem of definition and formula- tions of various positions. We'll not nego- rategy tiate with them because they are opposed to peace with Israel." Arafat and other PLO leaders consider the independence declaration a historic step to- ward creation of an independent state in the West Bank and Gaza. The council meeting is called the "Intefadeh" session after the 11- month-old uprising among the 1.5 million Palestinians of the occupied lands. Another resolution on the docket would empower the PLO's 15-person Executive Committee and the Central Council, a 70- member senate-like body in the Palestine National Council, to form a provisional government later. considers coalition JERUSALEM (AP) - Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir said yesterday his rightist Likud bloc would consider forming a coali- tion with the center-left Labor Party, but he ruled out giving the rival party an equal share of the power. Shamir, who was chosen by President Chaim Herzog to form a new government, also tried to defuse concern over the far right's hard-line stance on the peace process, pledging to make a "tremendous effort" to achieve dialogue with the Arabs. In parliamentary elections Nov. 1, nei- ther Likud nor its rival, the center-left Labor party, won enough parliament seats to gain a majority in the 120-member body. Ac- cording to Israeli law, the president calls on the party with the most support to try to See Israel, Page 5 DAVID LUBLINER/Doily Members of 10 different minority groups meet with University President James Duderstadt yesterday in the Regents Room of the Fleming Building. Duderstadt offered to print a sheet of corrections to cover errors in a report on minority activities and courses at the University, but the student groups want the report recalled. Groups BY LISA POLLAK The University's 1987-88 minority af- fairs report will be removed from circula- tion until its numerous errors and omis- sions are corrected, University President James Duderstadt said yesterday. But those corrections must be submitted by the stu- dents who discovered the errors, he said. Twenty-five students, representing 10 student groups, met with Duderstadt yes- terday to demand a recall of the 96-page annual report. The meeting was scheduled after some 50 students protested the docu- ment at the Fleming Administration Building Friday. Duderstadt apologized for the errors, and demand recall repeatedly called for increased student input to help avoid such mistakes. But he re- fused to recall the report; instead, he said, it will be distributed again with an "errata sheet" of corrections - as soon as the students submit such a sheet. The students, however, said they were frustrated and dissatisfied by Duderstadt's response to their concerns during the half- hour meeting. "I don't know if he believes it, or just chooses to believe that the errors in the report are so minor that corrections can be done with an errata sheet... The report is so bad that the errata sheet could be longer than the report," said Anne Martinez, a member of the Socially Active Latino Student Association and the Chicano Graduate Students Association. "We're also not satisfied that we're re- sponsible for any change that has to hap- pen. We're paying tuition for the Office of Minority Affairs to find out these things," said Martinez, who represented the students during the meeting. Duderstadt agreed that the burden of the corrections shouldn't rest on the students. But he would not grant their repeated re- quest for another meeting to discuss er- See Report, Page 5 .College GOP calls for Phillips to quit BY NOAH FINKEL The resignation of Michigan Student Assembly President Mi- chael Phillips will be demanded at tonight's Michigan Student As- sembly meeting by some members of the College Republicans. The College Republicans want to keep Phillips true to his word. Phillips said in April that he would quit as president if he could not collect 5,000 signatures asking for Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) to resign. Glenn Kotcher, vice president of the College Republicans and an MSA candidate for LSA repre- sentative, said Phillips owes the students his resignation because of his April threat. "I wouldn't make a bet with him because he's the biggest welcher in Ann Arbor," said Kotcher. "I don't have anything personal against Mike. It's just politics really... He's an em- barassment to the student body." But Phillips said the College Republicans are requesting his res- ignation for purely political rea- sons. "All of (the College Republi- cans) are running for MSA... It's just for publicity," Phillips said. "I'm too damn busy... I don't have time for their bullshit." 'I'm too damn busy... I don't have time for (the College Republicans') bull- shit.' -Mike Phillips, MSA President Phillips' April comments fol- lowed an MSA resolution asking for Baker's resignation. "If I don't get 5,000 signatures supporting the resolution between September 1 and November 1, I'll resign and leave school," Phillips said during an April MSA meet- ing. But at the June 16 meeting of the University Board of Regents, Baker said he understood Phillips had only one month to collect the signatures. After some debate, Phillips grudgingly agreed to a one-month deadline. "OK. September 1 to October 1. 5,000 signatures or I'm out of here," Phillips said. He said he initially agreed to the one-month time period at the meeting because he was "sick of playing games." High court: spouse can't veto abortion WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court, amid speculation it is prepared to restudy abortion rights, refused yesterday to give husbands legal power to prevent their wives from terminating pregnancies. The iustices withont comment. Diag addition prompts c ri ti c is m BY JONATHAN SCOTT A new addition to the Diag - a wooden school bus - was erected yesterday by Tagar, a pro- Israeli student activist group, in "commemoration of all people who have been victimized by ter- rorist attacks." Tagar President and LSA senior Keith Hope said that although the school bus is a general statement about terrorism, "It specifically represents Israeli citizens who have been victims of Arab terror- ism." Tagar member Laura Cibul, an LSA jdnior, said, "The bus is in memoriam of the victims who died in the recent Arab attack on an Israeli schoolbus. Just as the other shanties are there to repre- sent unrest, so is ours." See Bus, Page 5 DAVID LUBLINER/Daily Passersby notice a bus that was constructed on the Diag yesterday. The pro-Israel group TAGAR built the bus to symbolize a recent terrorist attack in Israel in which an Israeli woman and her children died in a bombing. Vote today in MSA and LSA- SG elections where When EECS 8:15-12:45 Dow 12-3:45 Fishbowl 9-4 Union 9:15-3:30 and 7-10:30 PublicHealth 11:15-1:15 Rackham 4-8 East Quad 12:30-1:30 and4:15-6 South Quad 11:13-1:15 West Quad 11:15-1:45 and 4:30-6:15 Bursley 4:45-6:30 UGU 10-2 and 7-10:30 Gra 7.1-10A5 LSA Student Government focuses on curriculum issues BY ED KRACHMER AND DAVID SCHWARTZ With about 16,000 constituents and a $36,000 annual budget, the LSA Student Government represents the largest individual college at the University. Only the Michigan Stu- dent Assembly governs more stu- dents on campus. "We let MSA deal with political issues," said current LSA-SG vice president Trisha Drueke, a senior. "We're more concerned with in nrnv.in 0e*iAnt 1:rn r.r .a For complete LSA-SG elec- tion previews, see Page 5. up for re-election by LSA students today and tomorrow. The winners will assume office Nov. 30. The government's activities are currently organized through its four action groups: Counseling, Teach- ing Assistant Liason, Pre-Registra- tion and Communications. This format was adopted last year, Drueke nn easily further its agenda. She pointed to recent efforts to improve the reg- istration process as an example. She said the current scope of LSA-SG's concerns gives it an ad- vantage over MSA, which has a much wider focus. "I think (LSA- SG) differs from MSA because in- stead of taking a position for or against something, we're saying what we're going to do," Drueke said. But MSA President Michael Dhi;11; *:.:,.A T T A _e I