OPINION 4 ARTS 7 SPORTS 9 Health care is a right Taj Mahal to play at The Ark Baseball team gets a few good men Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No. 16 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, September 28, 1989Tr ldsilv Errant Bush is artillery strikes 80 soldiers FORT SILL, Okla. (AP) - An artillery shell fired at a practice range went off course yesterday and struck a group of about 80 soldiers, killing three and injuring 25 others, three critically, officials said. Early reports indicated that one or more rounds exploded outside the Fort Sill firing area about 5:15 p.m. and struck a nearby rifle range at which the soldiers were training, said Master Sgt. Michael Brown. Helicopters and ambulances were used to evacuate the injured to Reynolds Army Hospital on the base, located in south central Oklahoma, officials said. Brown said the identities of the dead soldiers were not released pend- ing notification of relatives. Army spokesman John Long said three of the injured appeared to be in serious condition. Bush ii optimistic on arms Summit with Soviets could yield reduction,. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush said yester- day there is "a good likelihood" he and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev will be able to sign a landmark treaty to slash the deadliest weapons in the superpowers' nuclear arsenals at a summit meeting next year. Bush said the scheduling of a summit in late spring or early summer "will serve as a catalyst for moving forward on a treaty" and that it may be ready by the summit. "It's not absolutely certain that that's going to hap- pen but I would have to agree (there is) a good likeli- hood that might happen," Bush said in an interview with a small group of reporters in the Oval Office. Bush's statement put him in sync with an optimistic forecast by Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, who told the United Nations Tuesday there are "realistic prospects" by theatime of the summit for passing "the last turn" on the road to a strategic arms reduction treaty (START) to trim 30 to 50 percent from each nation's arsenals of long range nuclear mis- siles, bombers and submarines. "I don't want to set it up so that if we don't have ev- ery 't' crossed and 'i' dotted (on a treaty) that the sum- mit...is considered a failure," said Bush. But he said he agreed with Shevardnadze's statement. Bush balked at a Soviet proposal to go beyond the plan he outlined earlier this week to the U.N. General Assembly for deep cuts in the superpowers' chemical weapon stockpiles. Asked if he would accept the Kremlin's offer to eliminate all poison gas from U.S. and Soviet arsenals, Bush said, "No. Absolutely note We need a certain sense of deterrence." The president said "I would have difficulty" eliminat- ing all testing of nuclear weapons. Bush said he was willing to discuss Soviet proposals to ban testing, but added, "we do have some differences on it" with Gorbachev. Bush avoided making a commitment for additional U.S. aid for Poland already promised. Saying he wanted N o!DAVID LUBLINER/DAILY A student walks by the mural painted by the Ann Arbor Artist's Co-op in front of the construction on S. University. It is sponsored by Campus Commercial Properties. IIFt teieets wit th ation' governoi CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) - 'President Bush sat down with the na- tion's governors at an education summit yesterday, summoning them to forge "fundamental changes" in a national school system wracked by drugs, high dropout rates and mediocrity. Governors circulated a memo outlin- ing their own goals for the educational summit, the first ever conducted be- tween a president and the states' execu- tives. Their plan called for eliminating il- literacy, curtailing the dropout rate and s to discuss education making American students the equal of their counterparts anywhere in the world, especially in mathematics and science. The summit scene was the historic camps of the University of Virginia, whose establishment was the proudest accomplishment of Thomas Jefferson - America's first "education president." The university is still called "Mr. Jefferson's school" and Bush referred to it that way, too. "It's time to get on with it," said Bush, challenging the governors to do more than just study the issues and to act without partisanship. One plan pushed by the administra- tion and welcomed by a number of gov- ernors would allow parents to shop around for schools, sending youngsters to the one they think will educate best. "This is a mechanism that's very, very important," Education Secretary Lauro Cavazos said in an interview. "I've called it the connerstone of restruc- turing." He said he would begin a whirlwind tour in mid-October to sell the idea to educators in states including North Carolina, Colorado and California, con- ducting hearings during the day and meeting with working parents at night. Before leaving Washington, Bush told reporters that he was looking for commitment from the governors "to made those fundamental changes that are needed if we are going to improve educa- tional performance." Controversy over federal spending rumbled just below the surface but a number of governors said it would not be a major issue at the meeting., to see what kinds of reforms see BUSH, page 5 .Sony Corp. buys Columbia Pictures NEW YORK (AP) - Sony Corp. struck a $3.4 billion deal yes- terday to buy Columbia Pictures Entertainment Inc., producer of such movies as "Ghostbusters" and TV hits like "Who's the Boss." The deal comes 21 months after the huge Japanese video and audio equipment maker bought CBS Records for $2 billion. It marks the biggest step of Sony's push into the software side of the entertainment business that will provide products such as movies and records to com- plement its stereos, televisions and videocassette recorders. The agreement also extends the recent trend of foreign buyouts of Hollywood studios during which MGM-UA Entertainment Co. and 20th Century Fox have gobbled up. Sony said it intended to allow .Columbia's U.S. management inde- pendence in day-to-day operations, but some top-level changes are ex- pected. Columbia said its president and chief executive, Victor A. Kaufman, and its chief operating officer, Lew Korman, intend to resign when the buyout is completed in early November. There were published reports that movie producer Peter Guber was ex- pected to replace Kaufman. Guber. Columbia stock, subject to approval by Coca-Cola's board, which is ex- pected to meet Monday. Coca-Cola declined comment on what it intends to do with the cash. In trading yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange, Columbia rose 37.5 cents a share to $26.625 while Coca-Cola gained 50 cents a share to $64.625. Sony reportedly had been looking for a movie studio for more than a year in an effort to extend its reach into new areas of the entertainment business that it already serves as a dominant maker of consumer elec- tronics. Michael Scholhof, vice chair of Sony Corp. of America, said he had held informal discussions with Columbia executives for about a year but that the talks turned serious only in the past week. He said Sony decided on a proposal over the week- end and presented it on Monday. Columbia Chair Donald R. Keough, who also is president of Coca-Cola, said Sony was "an ideal buyer." "It has all the right characteristics and very importantly has the ability to take the company to its next im- portant step," he said. Columbia began as a tiny studio in 1920 and grew into a major Hollywood force, placing fourth _ ..L. 1 4 , .,_ A P 4fflfl *- EMU considers conduct ru'les by Noah Finkel Daily Administration Reporter Eastern Michigan University is considering adopting an anti-discrim- ination policy that punishes students for harassing remarks - but not un- til its lawyers can study what a fed- eral court judge thinks of the University of Michigan's original policy. Kenneth McAnders, legal counsel for EMU, said the school is ready to enact anti-discrimination rules, but first wants to look at the written opinion of Federal District Court Judge Avern Cohn, who ruled Michigan's original policy unconsti- tutional. Cohn issued a bench ruling Aug. 25 that declared the University's pol- icy in violation of the First Amendment. The judge released his written opinion Monday, detailing exactly what portions of the University's anti-discrimination pol- icy violated the Constitution. EMU has not yet received a copy of the opinion. McAnders said EMU's policy will fall somewhere between the University's broad original anti-dis- crimination rules and its much-nar- rowed new interim policy. "It will .be an effective policy, but lawful," he said. McAnders would not go into Katherine Jones and her Trek 950 mountain bike. Part dirt bike, part 10-speed, mountain bikes hit campus by Dan Poux You've seen them around cam- pus, chained to bike racks and street signs everywhere. They look like the dirt bike your dos and biking historians would agree that the mountain bike was born somewhere around Marin County, California, in the late '70s. The original off-road cycles were sell road bikes in 1989," said Mark Trinklein, an employee at the Cycle Cellar in Ann Arbor. "A lot of our customers are U-M students looking for a denendable hike for trannorta-