Child porn kindles COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) - Allegations that child pornography is flowing into the United J Sites from Scandinavia and the Netherlands have rekindled debate here on how to control pornography. Officials in Denmark, Sweden and the Netherlands acknowledged that charges made by the U.S. Senate and the media on imported child pornography con- tain a grain of truth. But some authorities questioned the original source of the material and argued that the U.S. market for child porn is a big part of the problem. ONE SPARK to the northern European debate on child pornography was the NBC program "Silent Shame," a documentary on child abuse and por- nography shown on U.S. television in August. -The broadcast said Denmark is the center for City voters to commercial production and wholesale distribution of the material, while the Netherlands is the center for mail order and retail sales, aimed at billion-dollar market in the United States. Danish newscasts showed parts of the program, and the resulting uproar prompted Danish officials including Prime Minister Poul Schleuter to make pronouncements that these charges must be in- vestigated and laws tightened. One Danish expert disputed the broadcast. "I WON'T SAY the broadcast was all a pack of lies, but when it is said that huge amounts of child por- nography are pouring into the United States, the first question is: Who is buying it? Child porn has largely disappeared from Denmark," said Berl Kutchinsky, a University of Copenhagen criminologist who helped debate write Denmark's 1980 ban on child porn. "Police have not come across it, and there have been no reports here of its production or sale," Kut- chinsky said. Police subsequently searched two premises and charged four Danes with violating the 1980 ban. But officers insist they always have enforced that law which provides jail terms for producing it and fines for distributing. SCANDINAVIAN officials also reacted to a series of hearings on child porn in the U.S. Senate's juvenile justice subcommittee. In testimony Wednesday, two experts stated that Scandinavia and Southeast Asia were the heart of a worldwide distribution system of child pornography. The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 14, 1984 - Page 5 settle nuclear freeze question (Continued from Page 1) where military research is actually conducted to have such a ban. BUT YESTERDAY, attorneys from the two companies attempted to make sure that doesn't happen. . , ERIM attorney W. Gerald Warren argued that because the issue is a Zoning issue, putting it on the ballot through voter initiative constitutes im- proper procedure. "They may not be wrong in what they're trying to do, but how they're trying to do it," Warren said. "YOU CAN'T step aside from these procedural steps," Warren said, adding that the ballot proposal will have a "chilling effect" on ERIM's "legitimate business." He said that companies like ERIM would stand to lose contracts just by putting the proposal on the ballot because uncertainties over which types of research can and cannot be done could cause organizations like the defense department not to allow them to bid on contracts.. ERIM currently has about 100 gover- nment contracts, Warren said. Laurence Schultz, ADI's attorney echoed Warren's remarks. "ADI IS IN exactly the same position as ERIM," he said. "We believe that this proposal on its face is invalid," because improper procedures got it on the ballot, he added. "We believe the court must take action to remove it from the ballot." According to Schultz, the city is inter- fering with the United State's right to provide for the common defense by allowing such an issue to be kept on the ballot. He also blasted nuclear free activists for their role in getting the proposal on the ballot. Schultz accused members of the Campaign for a Nuclear Free Ann Arbor of using the proposal as "a political tool to gain nothing for their cause except notoriety and publicity for their issue. The objective here is stric- tly publicity," he said. CITY ATTORNEY R. Bruce Laidlaw responded to the companys' claims that the issue was a zoning ordinance with good humor. "When I first heard (that argument), I thought maybe they were pulling my leg," he said, adding that it was "ludicrous"to even suggest that such a referendum was a zoning or- dinance. Even though Campbell ruled against ERIM and ADI, Schultz said he was "not too surprised" that he lost the case. Neither he nor Warren would say whether they would appeal. "That's still something we're going to have to consider," Warren said. Marvin Holter, ERIM executive vice president said he was "disappointed of course," but would not say whether his company would appeal. - A similar freeze proposal failed by a margin of 60-40 in Cambridge, Mass. in 1983. Freeze advocate Michael said the group will now begin canvassing the city to gain support for the proposal. Child psychiatrist BenjaminmSpock M.D. will be in town late this month to push the freeze, she said. I lio IE"% I *i'Li- I 0 1 k f J I PRE L=1%3" 'SENTS ":ti. ...:.. .. ... .: i}:?}}}:.:. " S i h Y v}: r tea} 64 A.D. EMPEROR NERO COMES UP W7THA BRIGHT IDEA FOR ENDING URBAN BLIGHT Nero' fiddling around with bright ideas wouldn't have been necessary if Bud Light had been served at all those toga parties. It's the less f]an c out your bes Bud Light at toga party O at your favor beeratorium. 490 t Serve your next )r ask for it ite