Ninety-five Years EI rof IEditorial Freedom cl be L it 4 i3Iai1j Shucks Mixed clouds and sunshine with scattered showers in the after- noon. High in the low 60s. Vol. XCV, No. 154 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, April 13, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight pges Heatley promotes . 'U'police department By STACEY SHONK Women who want to improve campus safety should lobby for a state Senate bill that would make it easier for universities to deputize their security personnel, the University's Director of Safety told the Academic Women's Caucus yesterday. "If you're interested in campus safety, particularly women's safety, this is something we need," Leo Heatley told a group of about 20 faculty members. He asked them to contact their representatives and support the measure. THE BILL, introduced in February to the Senate Education Committee by Jerry Hart (D-Saginaw), would gave universities the option of establishing their own police departments without the permission of city or county police agencies. Similar versions of the bill have been proposed in previous years, but have either died in committee or been defeated on the Senate floor., But Keith Molin, assistant to the University's vice president for state relations, speculated that this year's at- tempt to get the bill passed would be successful. "THERE IS reason to believe that it may pass this year, he said. "The universities that want this bill have got- ten together, and they realize that they'll have to rework what (the op- ponents) don't like to get it passed." The University has a contract with the Ann Arbor police department to provide police protection. Three * security systems - medical campus See SAFETY, Page 3 Altern By CAROLINE MULLER For some people, having a career means a 9 to 5 job and making money., But for others there is an "alternative" approach to both working .and living. About 50 students gathered in East Quad last night to hear three speakers talk about career choices that involve no bosses and no bureaucracy. THE EVENT CALLED The Alter- native Career Fair, is the fourth annual event of its kind. It will continue today from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and will feature workshops hosting professionals in law, medicine, education, art, and business who have opted for an alternative S. African exile urg9es By NANCY DRISCOLL A member of the African National Congre called for the violent overthrow of the South A nment, and appealed to University students a join in the movement against apartheid. David Ndaba, a member of the African Natio delegation to the United Nations, told a crowdo Rackham.West Conference Room that "each a son opposed to apartheid must become a fight - politically or a fighter militarily." NDABA, A 31-YEAR-OLD South African exile experienced the government's policy of racial d first hand, and called the system a "policy of ger "People are being killed day in and day out workers go on strike, the police open fire," he than 1,000 people are arrested every day in pr theid laws." Ndaba said the time had come for people to pr overthrow against the system. "People's patience is not endless. There ss yesterday comes a time when people have to choose to submit or to frican gover- fight. We shall not submit. We need to pick up arms," .he nd faculty to said. nal Congress Ndaba attacked the Reagan administration's policy of of about 50 at "friendly persuasion" toward the government of South nd every per- Africa. "We are told as far as Reagan and (British Prime er-a fighter Minister Margaret) Thatcher are concerned, they are op- posed to violent change in South Africa, when all these years e, said he has violence has been unleashed against the African people," he iscrimination said. nocide." "If each and every American today knew what the gover- . When black nment is supporting, they would be up in arms against said. "More Reagan," he said. "There hasn't been any system in the otest of apar- world so condemned excepted Nazism. The U.S. did not have otest violentl See APARTHEID, Page 3 l V~aL ivllIILy Columbia sit-in gains support By KERY MURAKAMI Special to the Daily NEW YORK - An anti-apartheid protest at Columbia University con- tinued to gain momentum yesterday as protesters thwarted efforts to remove them from the steps of Columbia's Hamilton Hall. The blockade of one entrance to the hall began eight days ago when 20 students chained the doors of the ornate builiding and held a sit-in on its steps. SUPPORT FOR the protest continued to grow, and yesterday nearly 500 protersters - mainly students - lear- ned that New York Supreme, Court Justice Bruce Wright had refused to cancel a restraining order he issued against Columbia Wednesday. The order prohibits the University from taking police action against the supporters until late Monday afternoon. "It's Columbia zero, the people vic- tory !" students' attorney Randolph Scott-McLaughlyn proclaimed last night as he told the jubilant crowd of Wright's decision. McLaughlyn warned the crowd that it is now facing an "angry beast" even though "it is highly likely they will not take any action until Monday." MCLAUGHLYN said the fact that the University tried to reverse the order, showed that they wanted to use police force. He said police probably would be called in after the order ends Monday at 4 p.m. He added that it would not be in violation of the order if University security guards were called to' break I... - the chains. Shortly after waking up in the their sleeping bags on the steps of Hamilton Hall, the protersters learned of a rumor that university security officers plan- ned to gain access to the hall and cut the chains on the door. BUT INSTEAD, associate d.ean Michael Rosenthal asked the students to '"clear a path." Receiving no answer, he left as students flashed "peace" and "Black Power" signs. After hearing that security guards might break the chains, the demon- strators entered heated discussion. They agreed unanimously to sit on the steps of the hall, offering no active defiance to whoever' tried to get Lilliput Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH Lp Architecture school senior Kate Hauserman displays her final design class project yesterday in the Diag. ative jobs offer success v career. One speaker, former University student Kim McReynolds, said she was "restricted" and "didn't fit in" during her days on campus. But when she joined the Community Action Coalition of Englewood in Chicago two years ago, she "put (her) beliefs where (her) mouth and feet and stomach were." She refused to let anyone be her boss and now organizes private and sub- sidized housing for tenants. MCREYNOLDS SAID "there is no one way" of social change. "This isn't the 1950s anymore-confrontation is- important." She says the purpose of her job is to create conflict.. The most important quality in her work, she explains,.is having "common sense." Book smartness doesn't help. To John Weber, who is a student at the Queens College Law School, an alternative lifestyle could mean being a janitor, mopping up toilets and listening to loud music. "BY THE TIME I was a junior," he ex- plained, "I had a fantastic grade point average, but was incredibly unhappy." Weber, who also graduated from the University, is in the first class at the recently-opened school which stresses law as a means of servicing human needs. The school has no grade point average criterion for admissions, and Weber only had to write a few pages illustrating why he wished to become a lawyer. WEBER IS involved in a work/study program in Queens, where half of his week is spent volunteering for legal services in New York City. His average client has an annual income of $4,000 or less. Weber described the typical law school as teaching the student for three years "to learn that there is a certain truth that only lawyers can have."' f f c t . i Speaker defends proposed anti-porn law ByBARBARA LOECHER "the graphic sexually explicit subordination of MacKinnon said she doesn't consider her proposal Debate over a proposal that would provide a basis women" and includes a provision under which a incompatible with the United States Constitution's forsuingorngraprhsthassplituld idertariasns woman victimized while appearing in pornography First Amendment protections guaranteeing for suing pornographers has split libertarian, can file suit against pornographers involved in coer- freedom of expression "Coercion, force, assault are feminist, and fundamentalist Christian groups. cion, trafficking and force. activities and trafickiing in female sexual slavery is "You split everyone and then you hear that this is a "In porn we see women and children bound, bat- not speech because it is a business," she said. right-wing thing," Catherine MacKinnon, co-author tered, tortured and killed," she noted. "To the women Absent from the ordinance is the provision of the proposal which was introduced in Minneapolis, and children, being in the film means being bound, prohibiting the dissemination of pornography. told an audience of about 150 gathered at the Law battered tortured and, sometimes, killed." But omission of the provision has not calmed the School yesterday. "THIS IS not morals legislation," MacKinnon nerves of many civil libertarians and feminists who MACKINNON has been criticized by many who say have different views of trafficking. "I consider it a the proposal has a conservative - even moral - argued. "If the subhuman status of women were great first step to even be talking about (pornography flavor. regarded as debatable, it would be moral legislation)," said Women's Studies student Jennifer The proposed ordinance defines pornography as legislation."SeSPAEag3 r ~... .. .......,..... Women a opting for sex before marriage WASHINGTON (AP) - Only about one Amerian woman in five waits until marriage to begin sexual activity, ac- cording to government statistics disclosed yesterday. This was a decline from an earlier figure of nearly half who postponed sexual intercourse, a survey said. The decline, which appeared to occur most sharply between 1965-69 and 1970- 74, was reported as part of the National Survey of Family Growth, a study of childbearing, contraceptive practices, and maternal health conducted in 1982 but the National Center for Health Statistics. The statistics do not include figures for men because the survey is designed to analyze fertility and childbearing, and thus seeks information only from women in the childbearing ages of 15 to 44, said Marjorie Horn, who wrote the study with Christine Bachrach. "The proportion of women who delayed sexual intercourse until marriage declined from 48 percent among women marring during the period 1960-64, to 21. percent among women marrying in the years 1975-79'," the authors wrote. The largest decline appears to have occured between 1965-69, when 42 per- cent of women marrying for the first time had not previously had intercour- se, and 1970-74, when only 28 percent had delayed intercourse, the study said. Trends in marital and premarital bir- ths in the United States reflect changing patterns of marriage, divor- ce, and premarital sexual behavior, the study concluded. Doily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH Doggie bag Chico the Dog sits outside a Nickels Arcade store yesterday. x-.,~ *.....w............................................. ...........~...........................................~............... .................... ...................................................................... ................................ ...................................................................... .......................................................................... .......................................................................... .......................................................................... ................... .......~...................................................................... .................................................................................. . \. ............................................................... ..................,.............. ............................................. ................................................................. . ................. TODAY Kudos to South Quad T HAT TOWERING monolith at the corner of Madison and Monroe Streets known as South Quad often sends out conflicting reputations. It has the rentation nf being an "animal house." vet studen- South Quad Chronicles, a six to ten page newsletter which appears regularly every two weeks and which even has paid advertising, and the high attendance records and ac- tive participation by the dormitory's three representatives to RHA James Marchant, Jana Steiger, and Mike Ross. Moreover, South Quad fits what Greenwald calls "not just a place where you live. It's a place where you develop in-I tellectu.11v nia11v land nertmnnllv_ "Toard that Pnd the Fix-up time Question: Where can you see as many as 25 bikes at once of all makes and ages? Answer: Not at a bike shop, but behind one. And none are for sale. Owners of The Bike Shop on S. Forest have set up a mini do-it-yourself-fix-it behind their store for students. Jim Loy, owner of The Bike Shop, savs hes ets nut the tnool and air nmn durin hiuiness out here working on their bikes," Loy says. Just one word of warning: Watch out for the mechanics and tanners from the leather store next door, who frequently throw a few hoops during their lunch hour-smack in the center of Loy's fix-it lot. On the inside.. i i