Ninety-five Years Of Editorial Freedom C I - be LIE 46 1E~aI1I Activism Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. High in the 60s. Vol. XCV, No. 155 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, April 14, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages _pring. ever Apartleidprotests ["EiIMUIBERKELEY: Polish TA still recalls her fight .for Soli darity NEW YORK - When students at Columbia Univer- sity began their anti-apartheid blockade of Hamilton Hall last week the obvious comparisons were made betweeen them and their activist predecessors of the 1960s. But yesterday, th- two generations of protesters stood side by side as 50 Columbia alumni who par- ticipted in the 1968 anti-war protests returned to the scene of their civil disobedience to support the- students. "WE'RE NOT here for nostalgia," Helen Meyers, a 1969 graduate told the 300 person human blockade of Hamilton Hall. "We've never stopped our commit- ment," she said. "We're still looking for places to take our stance. This is the time and the place." The alumni, carrying a baner reading "Alumni of '68 supports you," sat down with the students on the building's front steps. ELEVEN DAYS ago, 20 students chained the main entrance to the building and started a sit-in in front of its doors. The protesters are attempting to pressure the university into divesting its stocks in companies that do business in South Africa. The crowd has since grown to as many as 500. "You teach us and continue to be our backbone," Tony Glover, a Columbia senior involved in the protest, told the alumni. "The issues are different but have the same degree of commitment. We fight with See COLUMBIA, Page 3 By RITA GIRARDI Her fork stops halfway to her mouth, hovers a moment, then descends back onto the plate. Kasia Kietlinska has hardly touched her lunch since she began talking a half hour earlier. Praofile "It was the most exciting period of my life. It gave us the sense of being important," she says. Born and raised in Gdansk, Poland, the 29-year-old Kietlinska is eagerly trying to explain how she became involved in Solidarity, the Polish worker's union. A compact woman with short, curly red hair, strong features, and glasses, Kietlinska looks more like a Bohemian philosopher than a shipyard union ac- tivist as she sits eating lunch at Cafe Fiore. Kietlinska is currently enrolled in the English Ph.D. program at the Univer- sity and is a teaching assistant for English 355. But before her relatively quiet days as a student in Ann Arbor, Kietlinska actively participated in the tumultous events that surrounded the formation of Poland's Solidarity Union. Kietlinska received. an English degree from the University of Gdansk in 1978 and later taught there. As a student, she became involved in a num- ber of activist movements including the Committee for the Defense of Workers and the Young Poland Movement. During this time she married her husband Tomasz, an engineer, and in 1979 gave birth to their son Piotrek. Kietlinska and her family were out of th country when the first major Solidarity strike took place in August, 1980. "One day before it (the strike) star- ted we went to Budapest ... to have our first vacation after our son was born. If we had known, we wouldn't have gone. It was awful," she says. "We just spent our vacation in Budapest sitting near the radio set to catch the Western radios broadcasting about what was going on in Poland. When we came back . . . we went. straight to the shipyards. It was the last day of the strike E XCEPT FOR a slight accent, Kietlinska's English is flawless. See 'U', Page 2 Ransby ... led Columbia movement ANN ARBOR: tudent seeks faculty support By NANCY DRISCOLL While students at Columbia University and Univer- sity of California-Berkeley have been protesting South African apartheid, students here on campus have been quiet. But that could all change-if Barbara Ransby has her way. RAN SBY, A FIRST-year history grad student at the University, served as chair of Columbia Univer- sity's Coalition for a Free South Africa during her See PROTESTER, Page 2 By PETE WILLIAMS Special to the Daily BERKELEY,:Calif. - After three days of intensve- anti-apartheid protests, student demonstrators at the University of California-Berkeley yesterday used their fourth consecutive day on the campus for reor- ganization and workshops on civil disobedience and non-violent protests. But the more than 100 people who have remained on the front steps of Berkeley's Sproul Hall were not disappointed with the decreased turnout yesterday. -Many attributed it to the fact that the majority of the student populaton is not on campus on weekends. "THIS IS really our turning point because it is the weekend period. There are a few people who come to study or go to the library, but there are not many people on campus," said Ian Elfenbaum, a senior in economics who is participating in the protest. "When school starts again on Monday, we'll know whether we have peaked out or whether more people will join in." Weekends are always hard . . . you just have to cross your fingers and really hope," said protester Lorenzo Sadun. "The support you get is from the people going by." Sadun is involved with the campus chapter of the College Democrats - one of the many groups who have formally pledged support to the action. "I DON'T know of anyone who doesn't support the protest," Sadun said. "This is something everyone - outside of the College Republicans - is in support of." See CAL., Page 3 .........v. '::: '::. -. :.-. ".-1 . .:.. '"y" :::V.l :"":: "": :": ".": f: "::: ......:::".Y ............. ::h: ::.:1Y'::::::.::::::.. 'y: ......:: :1 - :1t:S':tw . " 1 .1 . " .. " ..... ..... . ..:" ..1 ..............1. .. " 'tii.":.... ... .. .. ..R:... °'s.. ... .1A: s ... s14.. : ... .......... ......... 1.... r...........1 ... ............. st.... .: s 1 _..ti ti" \ 1. ' ',""": 1N:,:.....1..... :";:.p :v." o. . k 1.".t'11..1 .5...1.. ..'~t . ..L.. ..:1........t. . : 1 " c:."a' tit \ t . .. ta.ss:1:" .. ..... ..........................: 1... ..s.... .. ........ :.. .. " :::::.:.. 's. " "s".L'4:a. s " '"s . .. k.. .n .............. r.:::::. :::.: ::.:1:w. ::. a.:::. . 'w .: s"}riaw: :;;;a } :;:: i : i: 1:1 "".. '. hY1: ".. \.....1Y: ".:11 Lti!{. " Y: . f ..N. ..J::..... ".11 14 1 yy''.. ,, ".:iva. r..... " sT:'ti: "... 1.1 Lf :"\ ': V: .: ::.: ::.: .. ". .: "} 1:":t :. 1:"::::..:...., 111. ::::1 "11:. ..: .: .:1.1.11.. .:41:.. k\ . .. " ".:: .1.....:.. ..{.. .. J.......... . ":"ti} 111:, . ..1. ' "r. ":.:1:: }.. h's.1. s"L'{".. ...r ".. }. . . r.:::::. :: vi: . si . '+'1'{... yr ssaC+' ": }'":v ':..... :: x."s fir. .. h ... . ?.. 1 a 41:: :":5.1\"::".\:Y.h1": 1 .::M1\"..t.1n}.};:s.} s ..} :..0..r:.....4 ry1.. ....... e............. .. ... ..... ....,......:. .....::.: 35k.2a 1\'1':1'? :s1a7"}: \\\\\\\ ti \!\\' ' . \ 'v ,ris" s sfi..... ... ...1..a.n...:%... .. ...s 'U' wants financial aid figures earlier By RACHEL GOTTLIEB In an effort to cut down on the risk of financial aid awards being rescinded by the state after being awarded to studen- ts, the University's financial aid direc- tor has recommended that the state allocate aid funds for one year in ad- vance. Under the current system, financial aid appropriations are not approved un- til late June or July - two or three months after the University promises students aid awards. HARVEY Grotrian, the University's financial aid director made the recommendation to the University Vice President for Government Relations, Richard Kennedy. Aid officers find that they are often forced to revise awards when the legislation is passed. Last year the University and Michigan State Univer- sity ; combined had to make 800 revisions. After revisions, students usually get the same amount of aid, said Grotrian. The only difference, he added, is that they get aid from different sources. "Revisions are usually viewed by students as positive because they generally get more desirable types of aid. For example, a work-study award might be exchanged for a grant," said Tom Scarlett, MSU's financial aid director. Nevertheless, Grotrian says the revisions are confusing and force the University to assume an unnecessary risk. No changes, however, can be made without state legislature approval. ....... ..5 .. . :w .S S .. .. 1 :.... Y .... . .S . .. . S . . TODAY MS who? D'YA EVER wonder why a popular bumper sticker reads: "If you can't get into college, go to MSU?" Well, here's why. It seems the students over at "Moo U" have a little problem with name rvnanitinn The students identified Galileo as an opera than freshmen, who could only name 18. In their answers, Some students claimed Mao was a Buddhist leader, Galileo was an opera singer and several said Picasso painted Rome's Sistine Chapel. American architect Frank Lloyd Wright was identified as one of the brothers of aircraft fame, while painters Rembrant and Rubens were identified as a classical composer and a sandwhich respectively. "Hey, friend. I'm going home because my parents went to Florida to relax." "Great!" "Forget that, you foul nerd. You're too excited, man. If you vomit, you'll do poorly on your test and be really em- barrassed." According to the National Education Association, a nationwide survey has revealed that today's youth are currenthv facian innemrantinn by tPanank " n n-- .in- was a serious harsh." As a verb: "I'm really mad at myself for harshing out on that test." "As an adjective: "I hate heavy metal. It's the harshest music." As an adverb: "I'm so out of shape, I ran to class really harshly this morning." Dig the new lingo and try it out on the high schoolers on y.. nc - irin 4 f 71/ T . o ,_7 i I I