Students Disrupt Yale Commencement We visited them all. No other place even comes close. Go ahead. Shop around. No community matches our level of service. Sure, we may be a little more, Nit you'll get the quality you deserve. So look at them all, then visit The Trowbridge. Wel-e confident you'll.go with the best. Write or call (313)352-0208. • Spacious, elegant apartments •Flexible transportation service Name OTA •Restaurant style dining nightly •24-hour concierge Address •Weekly housekeeping service •Valet parking City State zip •Weekly linen service •Snack shoppe •Full activities & events calendar •Full service hair salon MAIL TO: 24111 CIVIC CENTER DRIVE, SOUTHFIELD, MI 48034 A PREMIER RENTAL RETIREMENT COMMUNITY Florida Fun Watches Huge selection of fashion watches with quartz movements and leather straps. as low as "1 0" Beresh Jewelers Parklane Twin Towers, Dearborn diagonally opposite The Ritz-Carlton (313) 336,8110 / 1-800-551-1250 M-F 9:30-5:30 • Sat: 10:00-2:00 Lu U) w 0 w 10 TEL-TWELVE MALL SOUTHFIELD 313-355-3660 New Haven (JTA) — Students hung banners distributed literature and hired a plane to disrupt graduation ceremonies at Yale University — all in an effort to pressure Vernon Loucks Jr., chairman of Bax- ter International Inc., to resign as a trustee of the school. The Illinois-based medical supply company recently pled guilty to violating fed- eral law by complying with the Arab boycott of Israel and was fined a record $6 million in civil penalties and another $500,000 in criminal penalties. The graduation protest was the latest incident in a continuing battle by student groups to force Loucks to resign as a senior fellow of the Yale Corporation. Mr. Loucks, a former Yale football player and the chairman of the university's five-year $1.5 billion fund- raising campaign had told the Yale Daily News in January 1992 that he would resign if an investigation revealed "substance" to charges against his com- pany. This past March, Baxter admitted as part of a com- plicated plea bargain and civil lawsuit settlement that it had paid millions in bribes to Syrian officials in an effort to get the company off an Arab blacklist of corn- panies that did business with Israel. In addition to the fine, Baxter agreed to invest $10 million in Israel and to avoid further actions in com- pliance with the boycott. Students for Business Ethics, a group of 30 Yale students, has been hounding Mr. Loucks to resign for the past year. In keeping with Yale tra- dition, at commencement exercises the students hired a plane to fly over the pro- ceedings trailing a sign that said, "Resign Loucks." Benjamin Gordon, a junior from Bryn Mawr, Pa., who heads the student group, said he believes Mr. Loucks sets a bad moral example for the university. "Loucks' continued presence implies that Yale condones blatant disregard for the law," said Mr. Gor- don, who majors in ethics and politics. Half of Mr. Gordon's group is non-Jewish and its treasurer is a Muslim. "This isn't just a Jewish or Israel issue. You don't have to be Jewish to care about ethics and want Vernon Loucks off the board of trustees," said Mr. Gordon. "The settlement doesn't mitigate (the company's) criminality. They didn't have a change of heart; they just avoided having further messy details come to light. This is also a Yale issue." So far, Mr. Loucks' student critics have gathered 1,000 signatures on petitions urg- ing Mr. Loucks' resignation and convinced the Yale Col- lege Council to vote to sup- port the demand. They have also won sup- port from alumni including the financial backing to pay for the plane. Harvard law professor and Yale Law School graduate Alan Dershowitz has public- ly called for Mr. Loucks' res- ignation in his syndicated column. Dr. Mark Cohan, a Florida physician and Yale alumnus was one of the successful plaintiffs in the civil lawsuit against Baxter. Dr. Cohan was pleased with the Baxter settlement but still supports the student protest. "I agree with the principle that Yale must stand for ethical behavior. The lawsuit settlement righted a wrong but that does not ex- cuse Mr. Loucks from his commitment. He should resign," said Dr. Cohan. To date, the university has closed ranks around Mr. Loucks. Incoming president Richard Levin, Yale's first Jewish president, has refus- ed comment on Mr. Loucks. Acting President Howard Lamar has refused to meet with Students for Business Ethics to discuss the Loucks matter. His office told Mr. Gordon that "it was not a matter for the administration." Today Mr. Lamar issued a state- ment in response to the pro- test lauding Mr. Loucks for his work for the university and saying "we hope that he will continue to serve" Yale in the future. University spokeswoman Laurie Trotta dismissed the student protest saying that "the students have a right to protest and usually do so with relish. Every year some students rent a plane."