The Michigan Daily-Friday, November 11, 1977-Page 9 Protest ends in arrest A diligent breed of scholars turn iContinuedfrom Page 1) up to the car," one of the protesters stated. "They (the police) waited until the newspaper people had left and then said 'you are being arrested for wearing the mask.' They didn't treat him politely. There was a brutal yelling and cursing which I will not repeat," a second group member said. Many of the protesters -were wearking masks-cut from yellow con- struction paper-because they said they need to protect themselves from SAVIK (Iranian secret police) agents on campus. The protestes would not reveal their identities for fear of reprisal from SAVAK agents. THE STUDENT was arrested under provisions of a Michigan law stating that "any person who shall assemble march, or parade on any street, high- way, or public place in this state while wearing a mask" is guilty of a from football roars to misdemeanor. The law doesn't apply in cases in- volving Halloween masks and other similr circumstances.' The student entered a not guilty plea at his arraignment late yesterday af- ternoon. Judge Pieter Thomassen set bail at $1,000 and slated the preliminary trial date for November 22. After posting $100 of the bond and an additional $50 for a traffic ticket revealed by a police check, the student was released. The arresting officer and other of- ficials involved with the case refused comment. THE STUDENT expressed relief and resentment after his release. He said although the police had warned some of the protesters of the illegality %of wearing masks, he was in the tower at the time and didn't know of the warning until his fellow protesters urged him to take off the mask. By that time, the police had already moved in to arrest him, according to the students. - "I didn't have the mask on at the time of arrest," the arrested student claimed. protesters charged the Shah is the "most brutal" of foreign leaders. "He's coming here backed by big U.S. in- terests and Carter's just seeing him to get a good image under his human rights policy," said one protester. "All the oil money is going to the Shah's pocket," charged another protester. "We are depending on our American friends and democratic people who are going to help us," he added. The Iranians said they don't plan any more organized activity on campus and said yesterday's actions were in an- ticipation of larger-scale demon- strations next week in Washington, San Francisco, and one tomorrow afternoon in East Lansing. (Continued from Page 1) As the Wolverines continued their scoring spree, garbled sounds drifted from a tape recorder in Mason Hall. Although Curtis Longs usually studies in the Undergraduate Li- brary, he chose solitude for his speech acquisition project. "I know the outcome of the game, anyway," he asserted. "It will be a wipe-out." He seemed less assured of the Michigan-Ohio State match-up and said he plans to have his work completed 17y Nbv.14. Besides accumulating study time on football Saturdays, some studiers forego completely the typical week- end agenda to maintain their studies. AS THE NIGHT life in Ann Arbor began to blossom around 11 p.m. on a recent Friday night, the Law Library was silent to every sound but the ruffling of pages. His eyes bloodshot and whisker stubble shadowing his face, first year law student Ken Roberts made no protests over missing out on Ann Arbor's night life. "You must chan- nel your personal life into blocks of time when you're not so busy." Study procedure differs for law students, Roberts said, because the material covered is "not so much the work load or the number of pages per se, but the degree of responsibility of covering it from day to day, knowing it in class and defending it." ROBERTS ADMITS that studying can become a grind. But having worked his way through the jungle of law acedamia, he rationalized, "If you're reasonably bright and are a good test taker, you'll make it through." Roberts, who plans to go into public policy after graduation, contends those who compete for high grade points are actually attempting to "translate (the grades) into big bucks in three years." During mid-terms and finals when grade- points are determined, the Law Library is a popular place, said Ann Miller, a law student. From behind the reference desk, Miller sees students carry on the Ann Arbor tradition or forming long lines at the front door. Sometimes, according to Miller, study devotion extends late into the night. "They won't leave even when we turn off the lights. They move under a flood light to study longer." Not everyone is a night-owl studier. Some choose the early morning hours to trudge through their work.. CONCENTRATION before 9 a.m. can be a laborious task for some and a cinch for others. The early morning quiet study sun filtered into the Graduate Li- brary as several bleary-eyed stu- dents straggled in. Few of the wooden chairs were inhabited as p lone student silently dozed in an upright position. Facing the book-aligned shelves, graduate student Brad Feinberg continued the study of Urban Plan- ning which he'd been doing since 8:15 a.m. "I'm a morning person,'' he ex- plained. "By 3 p.m. I'm usually on the downswing." A library's atmosphere influences the type of studiers and their purpose. STUDENTS ARE not disruptive in the Graduate Library's Reference Room, according to Janet White, Head of the Reference Department. "The people here are here to study," she maintained. She attributed the room's popularity partly to the high ceiling which absorbs sounds. Although the Graduate Library is a research library designed for grad- uate students and faculty, there has been an increase in undergraduate patronage, according to Robert Star- ring, assistant to the associate direc- tor for Public Services. "We have a major problem when we're filled to the gunnels," he said. "We've had complaints from some of the grads about the noise." Speaker assesses U.S. foreign policy and $outh African affairs (Continued from Page 1) petty apartheid. There is no such thing as petty apartheid. The one' thing black Africans are interested in is one man one vote," she said. "The most liberal elements of the white community will say: 'Yes, eventually, black Africans can have some participation,' but nobody, advocates one-man one-vote." Challenor related the comments of a spokesman for the liberal political party in South Africa. "He said: 'To give the black Africans a vote would be like giving a drivers' license to five-ydir-olds - That, is the liberal (element.' - She described the limitations in recent agreements to prohibit wea- pon sales to South Africa. "France, Italy and Israel are the principal arms suppliers to South Africa. South Africa has made agreements with these countries to manufacture arms within South Africa. The black powers tried to get the United Nations to revoke these licenses and contracts. The U.N. powers said they would be reviewed." "The kinds of weapons South Africa will no longer get are the kinds of weapons, they could use in case of ex- ternal interventions," she continued. "They are not important to the repression South Africans receive on a daily basis, Challenor said. Challenor expressed some satisfac- tion with the embargo. "I think the ar- ms embargo is a first step. It was the Just for the health of it. Get moving, America! March 1-7, 1977 is National Physical Education and Sport Week Physical Education Public Information American Alliance for Health. cal Education and Recreation 12 1 16th St 'N W .Washington. D C 20036 only thing possible, given the problem we have in the Congress. It has little concrete effect but as a symbolic step, it's important." She expressed the wish that further sanctions be formulated in the areas of politics,economics an diplomacy, and suggested that limits be put on new in- vestments in South Africa. ."In the final analysis," she con- cluded, "it depends on what the American people want and what the American people ask their country to do. Unless it's clear to South Africa that this country and the other nations of the world will act, they will do nothing." Thursday and Friday, Nov. 10, 11 4:00 p.m. Angell Aud. B MEXICO: THE FROZEN REVOLUTION This film examines modern-day Mexico, dominated by a single political party; the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) heir of the 1910 Revolution. Yet widespread poverty exists today-tenant farmers, Indian communities, aging veterans of Zapata's legions. Set against interviews with hacienda owner, union official, and Party Leader. DIRECTOR of this film is Raymundo Gleyzer, held prisoner, incommuni- cado by the Dictatorship of Videla in Argentina. "THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION AND ITS SIGNIFICANCE FOR TODAY" (Monday, Nov. 14 7:30 P.M. Pendleton Room Union) James D. Cockroft, Professor of Sociology -at Rutgers University, is one of the foremost radical scholars on Latin America in the United States. Me is a participating editor of Latin American Perspectives and a coordi- notor of the Rutgers-Livingston Transnational Corporation Research Group. 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