Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, December 12, 1984 PSN trial By CHARLES SEWELL The trial of 11 members of the Progressive Student Network arrested last March for blockading a University research laboratory has been postponed for the third time - this time until Jan. 24. Last week, Judge S.J. Elden decided to postpone the trial, scheduled to begin Dec. 20, in the 15th District Court, because the date was inconvenient for the defendants, according to his secretary. DEFENSE ATTORNEY Donald Koster said he never filed a motion for adjournment. Martin Blank, Koster's co-attorney in the case, said he told Elden's secretary that the date would be in- convenient for everyone involved but never made a formal request. David Lady, the assistant prosecuting attorney, said the trigl may have been postponed because it was inconvenient for some of the witnesses. The cour- ts do not schedule trial dates around witnesses, Lady said, but witness convenience is a consideration.. ELDEN POSTPONED the first trial date in August because he expected the defense to appeal a court postponed until Jan. ruling against the defendants' claim that their ac- tions were justified under international law because they were acting to prevent a crime. Elden was ill at the time of the second trial date in November, and a new trial date was set for Decem- ber. Erica Freedman, one of the defendants, said January will be a much better time for the trial because more students will hear about it. Protesting is "a tool for educating people," she said. If the trial had been in late December, then there would have been far less publicity, she added. WHEN THE CASE is heard in January, it will have been more than ten months since the incident took place. Lady said delays of this length usually weaken the prosecution's case because witnesses tend to forget the details of an incident after a while. He said that this would not be a factor in this case because the defendants' actions were videotaped. Koster said the University benefits from the post- ponements because as long as the fate of the defen- dants is unknown other students will be reluctant to protest on campus. "(The University) has this hanging over the head of every activist on campus," said Koster. Freedman said she is not intimidated by the pen- ding trial. "I'm not going to let the court case stop me from protesting," she added. Burley mattrssbumns A mattress caught fire in a room at Bursley Hall last night around 9 p.m. According to Gus Goetz, resident director for the section of the building where the fire occurred, most of the damage to the room was caused by the water used to extinguish the blaze. Fire department officials had not determined the cause of the fire at press time last night. The blaze was on first Rotvig, a men's floor. STUDENT ACCOUNTS: Your attention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting on February 28, 1936: "Students Shall pay all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this reg- ulation; however, students' loans not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid ac- counts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University and "(a) All academic credits will be withheld, the grades for the semester or summer session just completed will not be released, and no transcript of credits will be issued. "(b) All students owing such accounts will not be allowed to register in any subsequent semester or summer session until payment has been made." AISAJoins coalition By NANCY DOLINKO The Michigan Student Assembly last night voted unanimously to join the Michigan Collegiate Coalition, a stud- ent lobbying organization established this fall. The MCC "allies all students in a common lobbying group in Lansing," said MSA President Scott Page. As a member of MCC, MSA will pay four cents for every student at the University - about $155 - to belong to the group. The money will come out of the MSA budget. Fourteen out of the 15 public four- year institutions in the state now belong to the lobbying group. MCC was formed so that schools could exchange infor- maiton about their student governmen- ts and lobby lawmakers in Lansing for increased support to state universities, Page said. Similar programs have been established in California and Min- nesota. MSA representative Kevin Michaels organized the effort to get the University involved in the group. MCC's president is Michigan State University student Rocky Beckett. MSU was chosen as the center for the group's activities because of its proximity to Lansing. Students use 'mailboxes' for work, fun (Continued from Page 1) said. "IF YOU'RE really stuck, really aggravated, you can take a break, send a few messages, and go back to the program," agreed LSA sophomore Jo Broughton. Users can send four types of messages through the system - "mail" is sent between individuals or groups; "sign-on messages" are general messages printed on the screen to everyone using the system; "bulletins are messages sent to selec- ted users; and "dispatches" are instant messages sent between two operating terminals. Several users mentioned that the conversation mode of the message system - which allows users to establish a quick exchange of messages between each other - is a particularly convenient aspect. "Because the ex- change can take place relatively quickly, it is like a conversation on the screen," said one unidentified user. MESSAGES VARY as much as the students who send them. They range from a simple request for a phone call to an offer for a date. One student who asked to remain anonymous told of a romance that grew from a friendship through the message system. "We had a poli sci class and a com- puter class together," he said. "We were friends in the class, but became more than friends by sending messages." At the year's end, the two decided to use the remaining two dollars in their accounts by exchanging messages, he said. "We sent a few short messages and had a nice soliloquy at the end. Then that was the end of the money." One of the most popular methods of sending a message is through a dispat- ch because the message gets to the recipient immediately. Although con- venient, the mechanism can also be an- noying because it interrupts the recipient's work. LSA senior James Boughton said his work on a project was recently in- terrupted by "a friend who sent me Hamlet quotes." Boughton added, however, that if interruptions become too frequent or annoying, there is a method by which the receiver can stop the message from reaching the ter- minal. When the going gets tough, LSA senior Mile Rafeld said he occasionally sends a rather creative dispatch. The message, which Refeld calls "Chinese Terminal Torture," consists only of the word "drip," which in- terrupts the recipient's work to make its appearance on the screen. "It's like Chinese water torture on the terminal," Rafeld said. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Doctors stike at Rhopal hospital NEW DELHI, India - Doctors at the largest hospital in Bhopal walked off the job in a wildcat strike yesterday and left victims of history's worst chemical disaster without medical treatment, the Press Trust of India said. It was not known how many gas victims remained in the Hamidia hospital, but PTI said at least 30,000 already had been treated there - the largest number of victims of the Dec. 3 leak treated at any single facility. The disaster occurred when a cloud of methyl isocyanate spewed from the Union Carbide pesticide plant on the outskirts of the city on Dec. 3, some 360 miles south of New Delhi, leaving at least 2,250 people dead and 200,000 in- jured. The strike began at 3 p.m. when a municipal official slapped one of the doctors on duty, PTI said, quoting N.R.Bandarj, medical superintendant for the region. It was not immediately known what sparked the incident. No one was attending to the victims inside as a steady stream of suffering people trying to get help were treated outside the hospital entrance, Bandari said. Hostages say Iran aided captors Two Americans freed from a hijacked Kuwaiti airliner headed home yesterday as other hostages charged that Iranian authorities supplied, hijackers with guns, ropes, and handcuffs during six terror-filled days at Tehran airport. The Americans, scarred and bruised from beatings and torture at the han- ds of the hijackers, arrived in Kuwait with other hostages aboard a Kuwaiti jetliner that picked them up in Tehran, the official Kuwaiti News Agency said. The return of the hostages coincided with charges from two released passengers in Karachi, Pakistan that Iranian authorities supplied the four Arabic-speaking hijackers with ropes, handcuffs and weapons. "They had silver-colored pistols when they hijacked the plane and they had nothng except that," said Sheik Abdul Hafiz, 50, a Kuwait Airways catering officer. "After two days, they had .38 revolvers, iron handcuffs they put on the American passengers, and nylon ropes by which they tied me and other passengers," he said. Lab technician catches AIDS BOSTON - A medical technician caught AIDS after being exposed to high risk blood in a laboratory, and experts attempted yesterday to learn whether he got the disease from on-the-job contact, a form of transmission never before documented. The possibility that lab and hospital workers might catch AIDS from patients has been a major concern since the epidemic began, and a variety of studies have shown that those people face little, if any, unusual risk. The unidentified victim, who has been hospitalized for' about a month, is in poor condition in the intensive care unit at the New England Medical Center. AIDS, or acquired immune deficiency syndrome, is marked by the inability of the body's immune system to resist disease. The cause of the disorder is not known, but researchers have evidence that it is caused by a virus discovered in France in 1983. Anne Speakman, a hospital spokeswoman, quoted doctors as saying that the man was not a homosexual, a needle drug abuser, a Haitian, or a hemophiliac - all groups considered to be at higher-than-usual risk of con- tracting the disease. U.S., Cuba agree on refugees WASHINGTON-The United States and Cuba have reached basic agreem- ent to return to Havana more than 1,000 "undesirable" refugees while allowing thousands of other Cubans to emigrate here with regular U.S. visas, an administration official said yesterday. He said an announcement would be made later in the week unless com- plications developed over the legal problems of Cubans in detention in this country. The talks with the Cuban government are "basically wrapped up," said the official, who spoke only on condition that he not be identified. The Justice Department has expressed concern that legal problems raised in U.S. courts by Cubans who want to be set free might make it difficult to repatriate them. "There may have to be some back and forth with the Cuban government over this," the official said. In return for Cuba's taking back criminals and mental patients, the United States would resume the processing of visas for regular emigration from that country to the United States. More than 20,000 Cubans might come here as a result. Leftists bomb NATO pipelines BRUSSELS, Belgium-Bombs exploded at six NATO pipeline sites in Belgium yesteday, spewing fountains of burning fuel into the air and shut- ting down sections of the Alliance's largest pipeline system in Europe, police said. No injuries were reported in the bombings, claimed by the terrorist group the Communist Combatant Cells in a "war" against NATO. The blasts came 48 hours before 16 alliance foreign ministers Secretary of State George Shultz were to begin their regular fall session in Brussels. Shultz arrives in Brussels today. "The war against NATO has become the main thrust of our action," the Communist Combatant Cells said in claiming responsibility for the blasts in a letter to the Brussels newspaper La Cite. I NATO operates a series of pipelines throughout its European territory. 1, r E ENffIH data systems Ao TRUCKLOAD SALE* Wednesday & Thursday Only New Lower Prices on ENOfifl data systems a beMkb-oawn t B M Vol. XCV -No.80 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub- scription rates: September through April - $16.50 in Ann Arbor; $29.00 outside the city; May through August - $4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. 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JOfIN WORMS' Editor in Chief ....................BILL SPINDLE Managing Editors...............CHERYL BAACKE NEIL CHASE Associate News Editors........LAURIE DELATER GEORGEA KOVANIS THOMAS MILLER Personnel Editor .................... SUE BARTO Opinion Page Editors..............JAMES BOYD JACKIE YOUNG NEWS STAFF: Laura Bischoff, Dov Cohen, Stephanie DeGroote, Nancy Dolinko, Lily Eng, Rachel Gottlieb, Thomas Hrach, Gregory Hutton, Bruce Jackson, Sean Jackson, Vibeke Laroi, Carrie Levine, Jerry Markon, Eric Mattson, Molly Melby, Tracey Miller, Kery Mur- akami, Arona Pearlstein, Lisa Powers, Charles Sewell, Stacey Shonk, Dan Swanson, Allison Zousmer. Magazine Editor ................JOSEPH KRAUS Associate Magazine Editors ..... PAULA DOHRING JOHN LOGIE Arts Editors.................FANNIE WEINSTEIN PETE WILLIAMS Associate Arts Editors.............BYRON L. BULL JEFF FROOMAN DENNIS HARVEY ANDY WEINE Sports Editor .................... 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