I __. i 1 y i i 4 4 i 1 M 4 t ' Court disallows sentence reductions LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan Court of Appeals yesterday refused to or- der that Gov. James Blanchard ease prison crowding by slashing inmates sentences. Cordelius Brown, an inmate at the Huron Valley Women's Facility near Ypsilanti, argued that Blanchard is required to sign an early release order for female prisoners under the state's controversial Prison Overcrowding Emergency Powers Act. THE APPEALS court, in dismissing her suit, cited the constitutional separation of powers and concluded it lacked jurisdiction to issue such an or- der. The decision was a victory for Blan- chard, who feels sentence reductions under the emergency powers law has become a threat to public safety. But the governor still faces a legal challenge from attorney Zolton Feren- cy. Attorney General Frank Kelley called the ruling a victory for all law- abiding citiznes of this state. THE GOVERNOR is taking quick strides to increased prison capacity. "Clearly, there is no reason to to release any of these dangerous felons at this time," he said. The emergency powers law provides for sentences to be reduced by 90 days when prisons are jammed beyond capacity for 30 consecutive days. Last month, the state Corrections Commission declared overcrowding emergencies in both the men's and women's prisons. Blanchard, however, refused to sign sentence-slashing orders, saying the x Corrections department had not pur- sued all administrative means of easing the crowding. Officials confirmed Monday three empty buildings at the Coldwater Regional Center for Developmental Disabilities will be converted into a 250- bed, minimum security prison for women. Additional space also is being sought for male prisoners. The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 16, 1985 - Page 3 Winkelman reinstated as MSA code researcher By AMY MINDELL The Michigan Student Assemby last night reappointed LSA senior Lee Winkelman as a researcher on the proposed student code for non- academic conduct. Winkelman will be paid $100 a week for 25 hours of work. He is responsible for researching the history of the code, which is a proposed revision of the Rules of the University Community, and the issues which surround it. HE IS ALSO supposed to inform students about the University ad- ministrators' position on the code. Winkelman was first appointed to the position last fall. He said he will deliver his first full report on his findings at next Tuesday's meeting. "It's a bad code but the ad- ministration will pass it if no one protests," he told the assembly. WINKELMAN is currently acting chairman of the University Council, the official panel responsible for writing the out-of-classroom code of conduct. In other business last night, the assembly members outlined their goals for the new term: " The Women's Issues Committee is organizing rape prevention and 'education seminars, and also will try to create an escort service for female students. " the assembly will look into teaching quality at the University. A special committee will investigate this especially in regard to complaints about TAs. * Another committee is planning a symposium to explore the effects of a nuclear war. Winkelman ...retains MSA position Colleges pressured to divest Postage paid Associated Press Frank DePlanche of Brighton is back on his mail route yesterday after being away from the job for more than three weeks. DePlanche was told he would be fired on Dec. 22 for placing some 545 unstamped personal greeting cards in his customer's boxes. Israel fears V0 ielee after troop withdrawal (CPS) - "Nothing happens in the winter," lamented Dumisani Kumalo of the American Committee on Africa (ACA), referring to the scarcity of student protest against South African racial segregatin during the beginning months of 1983. But now, in the dead of winter, the student anti-apartheid movement has suddenly heated up, surprising even movement leaders. FUELED BY Jesse Jackson's ongoing anti-apartheid crusade, South African Bishop Desmond Tutu's recent winning of the Nobel Peace Prize, numerous marches on U.S.-based South African diplomatic offices, and the arrests of some 200 protesters since late November, 1984, the campus South African movement is going strong, leaders report. "A lot more students, because of the media attention South Africa has been getting among the general public, are suddenly becoming aware and in- terested in stopping apartheid," notes Joshua Nessen, ACA student coor- dinator. Nessen, who in the past has tried tt, spread the word by associating it with more highly-publicized causes like the anti-nuclear movement, thinks he may have turned a corner. "YOU KNOW the campus movement is gaining momentum when, in the mid- st of Christmas vacation at Berkeley, you have 1,000 students marching on the administration building, locking arms, and demanding divestiture," he says. Indeed, in just the last several weeks students on dozens of campuses across the country have protested the plight of the black majority in South Africa, demanding that their colleges stop in- vesting in U.S. companies which do business with the white supremicist government there. During the December 7 march at Berkeley, for instance, 38 students were arrested as over 1,000 protesters encir- cled the administration building for three hours. THE DAY before, several hundred University of Maryland-College Park students, locked out of a planned sit-in at the administration building, boarded buses and marched on system President John Toll's office to protest the system's $6.3 million in South African-tied investments. Likewise, a group of University of Texas students chanting "Board of Regents, you can't hide, we charge you with genocide," protested outside a recent board of regents meeting demanding the UT system sell its estimated $600 million in South African- linked stock holdings. And in a somewhat more radical tac- tic, 12 members of Oberlin College's Student Coalition Against Apartheid tried unsuccessfully to shut down the campus computer system and hold it hostage until the school sold off its $30 million in South African-tied com- panies. ACCUSTOMED to a regular, organized series of student protests during the warmer, spring months, this winter's spontaneous uprisings have caught even anti-apartheid activists by surprise. "I don't think any of us expected (the campus protests) to be this big at this time," Nessen reveals. "I don't know what would have happened at Berkeley, for instance.. without the national focus given the issue by people like Tutu and Jackson." Ruled by a minority of five million whites, South Africa's 22 million blacks are forced to live, work, play, and at- tend school only with other blacks. CAMPUS anti-apartheid leaders want to force colleges to sell off their billions of dollars in endowment stock holdings in some 350 U.S. companies which do business with South Africa. Such "divestiture," they say, will force U.S. companies to pressure the government-to amend its racist policies or lose American business. The University of Michigan's Board of Regents voted in April of 1983 to divest about 90 percent of its holdings in firms which operate in South Africa. The board's vote came after seven years of student and faculty pressure for divestiture and the passage of a state law ordering the action. In the past few years, Brown, Nor- thern Illinois, Wesleyan, and the City University of New York have also par- tially or fully divested of South African- tied stock. But Harvard, Southern California, Illinois, Pitt, and Stanford, to name a few, have consistently refused to consider selling their stock in IBM, Motorola, Black and Decker, Newmont Mining, Ford, Coke, Mobil Oil, and other firms in South Africa. Learn to live with someone who's living with cancer. Call us. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY' (Continued from Page 1) about 17 miles in the western sector was to be followed by a pullback on the eastern front facing Syria. The final phase will see Israel retreat to its inter- national border, ending an occupation that began with the June 6, 1982, in- vasion. The senior Israeli official who spoke on condition of anonymity pointed to some possible flashpoints that could explode into civil war when Israel makes its first withdrawal. He said that Sidon, a city of about 150,000, "is going to be hell," if rival factions battle for control of the provincial capital and key port city. About 35,000 Palestinians live in refugee camps outside Sidon, where the official said their Lebanese enemies "are waiting to get at them." A third potential trouble spot was the string of Christian villages east of Sidon along the Awali River, which could be attacked by Shiites to the south or Druse to the north. The Christians farther west around the city of Jezzine could threaten to ex- pand their zone of influence southward, the official said, to link up with the Israeli-backed South Lebanon Army. HAPPENINGS- court lets Highlight The Hopwood Underclassmen Awards Ceremony is being held today at 4 p.m. at Rackham Auditorium. Donald Hall will present a poetry reading. Film MED-Barefoot in the Park, 7 p.m., The Odd Couple, 9 p.m., MLB 3. MTF-Close Encounters of the Third Kind, 7 p.m., Michigan. Hill St.-Dr. Zhivago, 8p.m., Hill St. Ann Arbor Farm Labor Organizing Committee-A Day Without Sunshine, 8 p.m., 126 E. Quad. Performances Ark-Hoot Night, Lady of the Lake, 8p.m., 637 S. Main. Speakers Russian & E. European Studies-Robert Slusser, "Stalin's Role in the Russian Revolution Reconsidered", noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall. Computing Center-Forrest Hartman, "Welcome to MTS", 7 p.m., 141 Business Administration. Anatomy & Cell Biology-Jon Kaas, "The Structural Basis of Information Processing in the Primate Visual System," noon, 5732 Med. Science II. Chemistry-Dr. Joseph Hupp, "Photoelectrochemical Charge Separation and Energy Conversion," 1 p.m., 1200 Chemistry, Raymond Yoder, "Recycle Gas Chromatography With Penumatic Switching and Photoionization Detection", 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry. Sigma Theta Tau-Eileen Ales, "Marketing: What is it Really and Where does Nursing Fit", 7:30 p.m., Sheraton University Inn. Meetings Holistic Health Awareness'-7 p.m., 900 Oakland. University Council-1p.m., 3909 Michigan Union. Dissertation Support Group'-8:30 a.m., 3100 Michigan Union. Downtown Development Authority-7:30 p.m., 2nd Floor Council Cham- bers, Ann Arbor City Hall. LSA Student Government-6:10 p.m., 3909 Michigan Union. Academic Alcoholics-1:30 p.m., Alano Club. Ann Arbor Support Group for Farm Labor Org. Committee-5:30 p.m., 4318 Michigan Union. Science Fiction Club-8:15 p.m., League. Latin American Solidarity Committee-8 p.m., Michigan Union. Rec. Sports-Pre-trip meeting for Swamp & Ski trip, 7:30 p.m., NCRB Conference Room Research Club-8 p.m., W. Conference, Rackham. Miscellaneous CEW - women in Science Program, Conference Room 5, Michigan League, Near East & North African Studies-Video, The Kingdom", Video Viewing R nnm MT.R schools search u1111ut. warrants (Continued from Page 1) Choplick then took her to his office, opened her purse and saw a pack of cigarettes. He noticed that next to the cigarettes was a package of rolling papers, the kind often used for marijuana cigaret- tes. Choplick dug furthertdown in the ~purse and found other drug paraphenalia as well as records in- dicating the 14-year-old was selling marijuana to fellow students. The girl eventually admitted that she had been selling marijuana cigarettes for $1 each. She was tried as a juvenile, found to be delinquent and sentenced to one year probation, conditioned on her attending a drug-therapy program. The New Jersey Supreme Court over- turned the delinquency finding, after ruling thatdthengirl's constitutional rights against unreasonable searches had been violated by Choplick. PR EPAR E FOR: EDUCATIONAL CENTER TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Call Days, Eves & Weekends 662-3149 203 E. HOOVER ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 Permanent Centers In More Than 12U Major U.S. Cities & Abroad For inormation about other centers OUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE 800-223-1782 In New York State Stanley H Kaplan Educational Center Ltd uv Your award-winning student newspaper needs your talents Writing Photography Advertising Hands-on Experience! MASS MEETING 7:00 p.m., Wednesday, January 16 Second Floor of Student Publications Building 420 Maynard or call 764-0554 if you can't make it . - -04 -L 0c 4a