ZIMBABWE BREAKTHROUGH See editorial page Si tan Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom itaii SUMMER'S BACK High-8o- Low-50* See Today for details Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 27,1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages Vol. LXXXX, No. 19 - I Passed-up spectators can press charges By TIMOTHY YAGLE If you were "passed up" the stands during a recent football game at Michigan Stadium, city officials say you could press charges, but prosecution rmay be difficult. "Anytime someone is picked up and thrown or tossed around, it would con- stitute an assault," explained Ann Ar- bor City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw. "It isn't just the touching that constitutes the crime," added Washtenaw County Prosecutor William Delhey. . DELHEY DEFINED assault as "an offer or threat to do injury to another (person)". He also said a victim of being passed up could file charges of assault or assault and battery, but the assault must come before the battery. "The battery is the actual injury. It can be very slight; as slight as black and blue marks," Delhey said. Punishment upon conviction of assault and battery, according to Delhey, is $100 or 90 days in jail or both. But most of them just go on probation," Delhey explained. "These cases are a matter of proof beyond reasonable doubt." BUT DELHEY emphasized, "If the girl is consenting and doesn't object (to being passed up), it's not a crime." Ann Arbor Police Major Walter Haw- kins stressed the difficulty of bringing criminal charges against a person whom the victim claims actually picked her/him up or injured her/him in the process of passing her/him up. S"There is no intent to harm," he said. "The intent is the key." Delhey said it doesn't matter how many persons were involved in the ac- tual grabbing of the victim. Any num- ber of persons can be charged, he said. LAIDLAW SAID actually identifying tle person(s) who allegedly harmed the victim,' and coupled with proving the victim did not consent to being passed up may combine to discourage prosecution. See PASSED-UP, Page 7 U.S. urges meeting of Mideast states g UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The Car- ter administration is sounding out Israel, Syria and a number of other Mideast parties on setting up an inter- national conference to impose a truce in Lebanon, U.S. officials said yesterday. One objective is to replace the Arab League peacekeeping force, which is dominated by Syrian troops, with a United Nations group. The U.S. of- ficials, who asked not to be identified, said they hoped Palestinian and Christian factiohs could be induced to meet in Beirut and agree to a truce. AT THE SAME time, these officials were skeptical that the most extreme elements in the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) would give up their terrorist raids against Israel. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance signaled the fresh U.S. drive in a speech Monday to the U.N. Genleral Assembly. Since then, American diplomats here and in the Middle East have tried to rally support for negotiating a truce to supplant the frequently broken ceasefire. "Nothing is set yet," one official commented. However, Syria has raised U.S. hopes by indicating it would like to withdraw the troops it has stationed in Lebanon as part ° of an Arab League peacekeeping operation. THE SYRIAN-DOMINATED force has managed to scale down conflict between Palestinians and Christians. But Lebanon's central government remains weak, with the country essen- tially under Syrian control. An eight- nation interim U.N. contingent now patrols southern Lebanon, but there still is fighting in the area involving Christian militias, Israeli forces and Palestinians. The U.S. plan envisages building up the U.N. contingent with more troops or creating an entirely new group, and widening the patrol area to include other parts of Lebanon as well as the Israeli side of the border. Daily Photo by LISA KLAUSNER INTERIM PRESIDENT Allan Smith and wife Alene greet students arriving for the annual tea with President-designate Harold Shapiro and wife Vivian. The tea, held at the president/s house on S. University, attracted 170 students. TWO PRESIDENTS GREET CALLERS: Students baffedattea By JULIE ENGEBRECHT "I wonder if he takes boarders?" asked one student roaming through the President's House yesterday. "Eh, the cookies are fair, the pun- ch is good," said another woman showing a friend to the table laden with the goodies. "They asked us questions, but we didn't get to find out much about them," one student remarked after meeting the "presidents" and their wives for the first time. IN FACT, the confusion of having both Interim President Allan Smith and President-designate Harold Shapiro greeting students at the an- nual reception for students at the President's House on South Univer- sity proved a useful topic of conver- sation, as did the weather and home towns. Some early arrivals expressed disappointment that the "real president" wasn't there yet - Harold Shapiro made his entrance after a meeting. "I almost said welcome, but I found it wasn't the right one (president)" said Dee Sloan, a freshwoman from Pit- tsburgh. recalled that "somebody said 'Welcome to campus.' Allan's only been here 34 years," she laughed. Alene Smith said she thought the "students are interested in meeting the Shapiros much more than us." "I'm glad Shapiro was there. It shows he's interested in associating with students, and that's good to know," said Sandeep Shekar, a second-year Inteflex student from Kalamazoo. Those who were meeting a University president for the first time admitted they were impressed by being introduced to the Univer- sity's chief executive. See PRESIDENTS', Page 3 Botha questions ban LATER, THE ident's wife, interim pres- Alene Smith W ork/Study upped to $1 million By MARY FARANSKI The federal government has added nearly $1 million to the University's College Work/Study program this year, providing needy students here a greater variety of job offers. About 1,800 positions are still open, with 949 filled as of Tuesday. Nancy Longmate, Coordinator of the Work/Study program, said that at the peak last year, 1,200 students were em- ployed. She predicted that the greater availability of jobs should make this year's figure much higher. EACH YEAR, the University must apply to the federal government for its Work/Study monies. Thanks to the Middle Income Assistance Act, passed last November, this year's receipts tally $2.5 million, compared to $1,740,000 last year. Jim Zimmerman, Associate Director for Systems, Operations, and Fiscal Management, said, "This increases our ability to meet the financial needs of our studen- ts." Only those full-time students who in- dicated interest in Work/Study on their financial aid applications can get a job. Applications are still being taken, and late applicants need not worry about the availability of jobs. "We always have more jobs than we have students to fill them," Zimmerman said. Prospective employers give a job description to Gail Reisman, a student assistant for Work/Study, who files them according to job title and depar- tment. Students are free to look through the files, select a job, and contact the employer for an interview. Employers pay 20 per cent of the worker's wages, while the federal government funds the rest. WORK/STUDY money is not applied directly to a student's account, but paid through the University payroll depar- tment, like other University employees. The majority of jobs are for depar- tments or projects on campus. They may range from Atmosphere and Oceanic Studies to Institute of Labor- and Industrial Relations to Near East Studies, with job titles from Audio Visual Aid to Opera Production to Research Assistant. The Athletic Department hires more students than any other employer. Off-campus offerings must be through a tax-exempt, non-profit organization which does not deal with See GOVERNMENT, Page 3 " on mixed from AP and Reuter In a startling turnabout, South African Prime Minister Pieter Botha has suggested changing laws prohibiting interracial sex and marriage - pillars of that nation's apartheid policy. Botha discussed both laws during a congress of the ruling National Party in Cape Town on Tuesday. His remarks were published here yesterday. It was the first time a leader of the white- minority regime even questioned the statutes. The prime minister skirted the issue of whether the laws should be scrapped entirely, saying only his government was open to suggestions for "im- proving" the legislation. He added that, in his.opinion, ;mixed marriages were undesirable. BUT HE told the congress no law should be regarded as a "holy cow" and said that he would not tolerate laws which insulted people in South Africa. "If we can improve the immorality act, not only in connection with people of different races, but in all areas, I will be amenable to the suggestion," he said. Botha's remarks, cautious as they were, surprised critics of the regime's race segregation policies. "IT IS remarkable that Botha is even thinking about this," said Kowie Marais, a spokesman on justice mat- ters for the Liberal Progressive Federal Party. marriages "Those acts are among the foun- dations of apartheid," he said. "If he is serious about scrapping them, the PFP will applaud it as a step in the right direction. "Once you start tinkering with apar- theid, other acts must fpllow.. . I only hope Mr. Botha is serious. If he is, it augurs well for the future." A report in the Rand Daily Mail, a cr'itic of apartheid, said "highly placed government sources" indicated legal groundwork was to be prepared to scrap all, laws regulating social behavior on the basis of race. "At all times," Botha told the congress, "we will consider positive suggestions about any act. There is no such thing as standing by a law whether it is good or bad." Comm ittee initiates . searchfor Members of the committee searching for a new vice-president for academic affairs to replace incoming President. Harold Shapiro met privately for the first time last night. The search group consists of the nine members of the Senate Advisory Com- mittee on University Affairs (SACUA) and two representatives from the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA). SACUA HAS BEEN discussing the search since its first meeting of the academic year. Monday, committee member Jesse Gordon from the school of social work, objected to discussion of procedural matters without the student search committee members present. new VP According to SACUA chairman Richard Corpron, everything the com- mittee has done is unofficial until the students, LSA junior Marc Breakstone and graduate student Alan Isack are. consulted. Earlier this week, Presidential Sear- ch Committee Chairman Harold John- son gave the committee a list of ap- proximately 50 names left over from the presidential search for whom the post would be a lateral or upward movement. Shapiro will assume the University presidency Jan. 1. The president- designate will leave his current office Nov. 1 to prepare for the new post. Botha ... questions mixed marriage law LSA-SG position interviews set By CHARLES THOMSON Interviews for persons interested in committee positions on LSA-Student Government (LSA-SG) will be held Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 15 and 16, according to a resolution passed at last night's LSA-SG executive council meeting. Currently, 15 positions are open on several of the governments' commit- tees, including the admissions commit- tee, the curriculum committee, the administrative board, the student- faculty policy board, and the academic judiciary. The council also voted to advertise for an elections director for the up- coming LSA-SG elections. THE ELECTION directorship, a paid position, must be filled before the date can be set for elections for the LSA-SG Executive Council. Council president Bob Stechuk said he has no idea when the elections will actually be held, but he would prefer they be held in early November. Stechuk, a senior, recently announced that he would not seek reelection to his post. In other actions, the council: * Voted to postpone fund requests un- til November because, Stechuk said, the council did not have enough people to evaluate the requests; * Discussed additional methods of distributing "Michigopoly," an infqgr- m'ation booklet published by LSA-SG; and; * Discussed a proposal by council vice-president Kathy Friedman to request funding from the Michigan Student Assembly to print additional copies of the booklet. (;orpron ... vice-president search begins E lb' s o4per re see °0 I visit to Detroit, the President stepped out for a nostalgic look at the boat, and perhaps a refresher course in steering his often cumbersome ship of state. cumulating the right combination of pieces. McDonald's says the odds of winning the top prize are one in 82,665,000, while the odds of winning a Big Mac, Coke, or fries are one in seventeen. To date, the Maynard Street McDonald's reports it has given out hundreds of small prizes though no one has won more than $5. But Bonnie Bradley, who lives in Jackson, doesn't want to wait for the right game pieces un- til she gets a prize. She placed an ad in a local newspaper saying she'll combine her diamond hunt ticket with in- terested persons and they can split the prize. Bradley said yesterday she had received only one response. "There's got have to pick up a form from a counselor, fill out said form, obtain approval of the professor or teaching assistant to en- ter or exit the course, and finally, return to the counselor and obtain his or her approval. And even if you survive all this, any drop after today will live forever on your tran- script as a "withdrawal." Crisp will be open, today from 8- 11:45 a.m. and from 1-4:45 p.m. You have been warned. On the inside An examination and evaluation of student legal services F I , I ; it