1£gan Bat Vol. Cl, No.20 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, October 3, 1990 Th eoMpynsgh Germany celebrates its reunification BERLIN (AP) - The Western Allies ceded their post-war occupa- tion powers yesterday as the clock ticked toward the historic moment when East Germany will be ab- sorbed, with all its problems, into a new united Germany. A vast party across the land of 78 million people was getting under way in anticipation of the midnight unification of Germany, with fire- works and ceremonies to last through tomorrow. Today has been declared a national holiday. Police in Goettingen near the dis- appearing East German-West Ger- man border reported 1,000 leftist protesters opposed to unification rampaged through the city late yesterday, breaking store windows and chanting "Never Again Germany!" and "Nazis out!" Police were gearing up for trou- ble from rightist and leftist radicals planning demonstrations in central Berlin, where the Berlin Wall used to stand. Hundreds of riot police as- sembled near Leipziger Street in East Berlin, a march route for radicals from the west. City authorities banned demon- strations near the Brandenburg Gate, the 200-year-old monument that will be a focus of celebrations, which start at the nearby Reichstag, the old German parliament building. The broad thoroughfares east and west of the Brandenburg Gate were crowded with tens of thousands of people hours before the historic oc- casion, and many vendors were sell- ing food, drinks, and souvenirs. Dixieland jazz, street musicians, and organ grinders played music that rang in the chilly fall air. Searchlight beams waved in a cloudless sky, and a tall crane dan- gled an old East German "Trabi" car 50 feet in the air just south of the massive stone gate. About 150 to 200 leftist radicals lined a police barrier outside the Schauspielhaus, blowing whistles and jeering at dignitaries arriving for a formal state ceremony hosted by the departing East German govern- ment. The radicals shouted "Germany, drop dead!" The arriving dignitaries included West Berlin Mayor Walter Momper and Hans-Jochen Vogel, chair of the Social Democratic party. They were rushed into the his- toric house, under heavy police guard. The Schauspielhaus is in the eastern part of the city, a few hun- dred yards from where Checkpoint Charlie used to be. Chancellor Helmut Kohl said in a statement to the Frankfurter Allge- meine newspaper that the new Ger- many will help stabilize Europe, and that it would not be a "restless Re- ich" like Nazi Germany, which plunged Europe into its most disas- trous war. Several German newspapers pub- lished the approved verse of the na- tional anthem to be sung in unified Germany - not the old "Deutschland Ober Alles" verse - but the third verse, which starts: "Unity and Justice and Freedom for the German fatherland." Souter to be next Supreme Court justice WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate voted 90-9 Tuesday to con- firm the nomination of Judge David Souter to the Supreme Court. The only dissenting votes came from lib- erals who fear he will oppose abor- tion rights. The New Hampshire jurist was approved less than 2 1/2 months after he was tapped as President Bush's first nominee to the high court. It was too late to put him on the court for the start of its session this week but, at age 51, he will probably participate in its rulings well into the next century. Souter watched the proceedings from a friend's law office in Con- cord, N.H. "He's just exactly the kind of person with a broad background that we need on the Supreme Court," Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said as debate on the nomination began. "I think he showed that he is a person of fairness. He's willing to listen. He's a person of independence." Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Joseph Biden, D-Del., said he supported Souter, but warned Bush that the path of the next nomi- nee might not be so smooth if the president moves further to the right wing. "I want to express the hope that the administration will not learn the wrong lesson" from the lopsided Se- nate vote on Souter, Biden said. A more doctrinaire conservative "could well fall outside the sphere of ac- ceptability," he said. Souter will become the 105th justice of the Supreme Court, filling the seat vacated last summer by the retirement of Justice William Bren- nan. Sen. Herb Kohl, a committee member, said there appeared to be "two Judge Souters." See SOUTER, Page 2 Roll 'em Lori Adair, a telecommunications graduate student, makes her first film for a class. She's already decided on its title: "A Crashing Fancy." RC faculty, students disagree about a by Matt Ader Within the next few days, RC senior Erik Riddick will go to the offices of the Residential College in East Quad to transfer into LSA. Rid- dick has been enrolled in the RC for three years, two of which were spent living in East Quad. Recently, the RC has gathered a reputation for being a college in the University which many students withdraw from, to pursue an LSA degree. There has been much discussion of this perception by RC faculty and students. However, it has been diffi- cult to determine whether or not there is any truth to this perception. The counseling office in the RC has only recently begun compiling fig- ures on attrition. It is even more dif- ficult to determine how RC attrition compares to the attrition rate in LSA, because they do not compile attrition statistics either. The RC's Registrar reports that out of 215 students who entered the RC in 1985, 180 graduated four Students say requirements a cause of drop-outs years later in 1990. The figures suggest that some students who start in the RC aren't graduating from the RC. But the figures don't necessarily indicate that RC students are leaving to pursue LSA degrees, and more- over, they don't indicate that RC students leave or drop out of their program any faster than students in other schools. According to a first-year student retention study for College of Litera- ture, Science & the Arts matriculates in 1985, 3714 students out of 4461 completed their studies within four years. Regardless of what conclusions might be drawn from these statistics, the feeling that high attrition exists in the RC, is common amongst its students. The reputation for-high attrition became a major concern of many RC administrators and students last semester, in the wake of an article in ouRC Magazine, entitled "Jumping Ship!: Why do students Leave the RC?" The article was written by the publication's editor-in-chief, RC se- nior Michael Kelley. Kelley inter- Residential College, disagrees with Kelley's assertions. "The phrasing throughout (the article) refers to things without giv- ing any account of numbers," Eagle said. Eagle disagrees with Kelley's as- takes place for that reason... we teach languages intensely because we think that's how students can get proficient." Proficiency in a foreign language, in addition to a literature class in that language, is a fundamental part The counseling office in the RC has only recently begun compiling figures on attrition. It is even more difficult to determine how RC attrition compares to the attrition rate in LSA, because they do not compile attrition statistics either. viewed several RC students who were in the process of transferring into LSA. Kelley found that their major reasons for leaving the RC were troubles with the RC's strict language requirement, bad experi- ences with the RC counseling office, and the desire for a major outside of the RC. Herbert Eagle. director of the sertion that the dropout rate may be high, saying that attrition rates for LSA are similar to those of the RC, hovering around 60 percent to 70 percent. Eagle said the reason students withdraw from the RC is they are unable to complete the language re- quirement. "We know that some attrition of the RC's educational philosophy. As Eagle points out, the RC "can't relax this requirement for some, and not for others." He also mentions that, "products of (RC) language programs are supe- rior to those of programs in MLB." For evidence, Eagle points to the fact that there are currently 18 stu- dents in the University's exchange ttrition program in Freiburg, Germany. Of these 18, 10 are RC students who began in Intensive German I. There is no question amongst RC students that the language require- ment is a reason for transferring into LSA. LSA junior Pete Miriani enjoyed taking Intensive French in the RC; but dropped out of the RC because he didn't want to take a French liter- ature class. "It's kind of a waste of time to take 20 credits of French... something I really don't care that much about." Many students withdraw from the RC because they find the RC's lan- guage proficiency exams difficult and burdensome. RC sophomore Ben Jones said that for him, the exams were "a major point of stress. " Although the language require- ment does seem to be the most common reason for leaving the RW there are those who withdraw fr other reasons. Riddick was dissatisfied mith the See RC, Page 2 Aircraft carrier to aid gulf forces by the Associated Press The United States bolstered its forces in the Persian Gulf yesterday with the arrival of the aircraft carrier USS Independence, and France fired warning shots at a freighter sus- pected of violating the U.N. em- bargo on Iraq. Assembly blocks condemnation of * PSC trip funding by Christine Kloostra Daily MSA Reporter A resolution to condemn the Michigan Student Assembly's deci- sion to give $1,000 to the Palestine Solidarity Committee (PSC) was de- feated last night. An 11-10 vote by the assembly, in favor of the resolution was made a * tie by President Jennifer Van Valey. Israeli and Palestinian representa- tives, and is presenting its findings in a series of speeches at the Univer- sity. Earlier this month, a proposal to make the PSC return the $1,000 was called out of order because the money had already been spent and the action could not be reversed. lix