cl bic Ltt tgan Iatl Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVI - No. 36 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 24, 1985 Eight Pages Chrysler and auto workers agree on contract From AP and UPI HIGHLAND PARK - Chrysler Corp. and the United Auto Workers agreed yesterday on a tentative con- tract for 70,000 strikers, giving them wage parity with other autoworkers plus a $2,000 bonus to make up for concessions granted when the automaker faced bankruptcy. However, the UAW did not get guarantees against job-threatening subcontracting and the company lost its bid for Japanese-style job classes. CHRYSLER SAID the three-year agreement would cost the company at least $1 billion more than the contract that expired last week. If ratified, the agreement would give each U.S. Chrysler worker an immediate minimum of $2,000 cash to compensate for the $1 billion in con- tract concessions that workers gran- ted the company during its brush with bankruptcy. The agreement followed a marathon 42-hour bargaining session ending a strike by 70,000 American workers that was entering its eighth day. "ASPECTS OF it (the contract) startled me," said Thomas Miner, Chrysler's top negotiator, regarding the UAW gains. "We're pleased to have a set- tlement, but we weren't happy we went out on strike. We lost a lot of money, and in a short time we would have lost a lot more. We were very happy to get it over," Miner said. The UAW's Chrysler Council of 170 See UAW, Page 2 11 more arrests CIA protested By KERY MURAKAMI in the morning Eleven demonstrators protesting disorderly condu recruitment by the Central Intelligen- ACCORDING' ce Agency on campus, were arrested an LSA junior inv yesterday in the second day of six protesters w protests in the Student Activities away" outside o Building. to the career p A total of 26 demonstrators were were also bangi arrested in the two days of CIA said. protests. Most of those who were - He said police arrested are University students. arrested four of PROTESTERS ACCUSED the the other two - agency of helping overthrow - fled. legitimate governments in Chile and "The cops just Guatemala, as well as helping in him, and him, a trying to overthrow the Sandinista Iscrow, an Ann government of Nicaragua. They also was arrested. say that the agency has helped train Rackham grad secret police in South Africa as well as Michael, an Ann "death squads" in El Salvador. Bob Krause, an] Despite the protests, Deborah Orr arrested. May, director of the Career Planning "IF CHANTIN and Placement Office, said CIA officer is disor recruiters interviewed all eight we're living in University students scheduled Rosset said. yesterday. Seventeen students were The other arri interviewed Tuesday. terwards. About The arrests yesterday came in two outside the othe stages, beginning with four Univer- fice and began sity students who were arrested early opened the door for 2nd day and charged with ct. TO Mark Weinstein, volved in the protests, ere chanting "CIA go ne of two back doors planning office. Two ng on the doors, he opened the doors and the protesters, while including Weinstein t went, 'get him, and nd him,"' said John Arbor resident who Peter Rosset, a duate student, Bill Arbor resident, and LSA junior, were also MG in front of a police derly conduct, then a totalitarian state," ests came shortly af- 30 students gathered r back door to the of- chanting. As police ir to let in a Detroit television news crew, seven of the protesters blocked the door open with their bodies and began chanting, "USA, CIA, out of Nicaragua." After May read them the trespassing act, giving them the choice of leaving the building or being arrested, police carried the seven to police busses waiting in front of the building. ARRESTED WERE Phyllis Flora, an LSA junior; David Miklethun, an Ann Arbor resident; Dean Baker, a Rackham graduate student and president of the Rackham Student Government; Hugh McGunness, a Rackham graduate student; Carey Garlick, an LSA senior; John Har- tigan, an LSA junior; and Steve Latta, an Ann Arbor resident. They were later charged with trespassing. All arrested yesterday were released on their own recognizance, and given court dates late this month and early next month. MAY SAID she decided to read the! trespass act because the protester's chanting and singing were disturbing the interviews. She said that when the See CIA, Page 6' DaUiIYlyPoto bDARIAI~N SITHI Deborah Orr May, director of the Office of Career Planning and Placement, reads the trespass act to protesters in the Student Activities Building yesterday. Shortly afterwards, 7 CIA protesters were arrested for trespassing. Misconduct allegations By NANCY DRISCOLL and STEPHEN GREGORY Three recent campus protests - including yesterday's demonstration against Central Int- elligence Agency recruiters - have resulted in allegations of misconduct by students and Ann Arbor police officers. Several protesters who were arrested this week in the anti-CIA actions at the Student Ac- tivities Building have said they were hit, kicked, or pulled by their hair during their arrests. ANN ARBOR Police Capt. Kenneth Klinge said that he will begin interviews today in his in- vestigation of complaints aris: arrests at the anti-CIA protest. Protesters who showed up for show broadcast from the Diag h they were mistreated by the police band director, and members of vocally opposed Vice Presidentt Oct. 7 visit to campus say they we, physically harassed during his spe No formal complaints have be ming from the Bush protest, and vestigating allegations made about events. follow campus demonstrations ing from the BARBARA Kritt, a ' University graduate events in ElSalvador. student, said she hopes her complaint about the KRITT SAID a campus security officer NBC's Today way a city police officer treated her during the her to put the sign down. "I responded that last week said Today show broadcast will "lead to some kind of my legal right," she said. e and a student change in the current escalation of policy. According to Kritt, Ann Arbor Police Sgt. aggression that we've been seeing on campus thur Hughes then grabbed the sign and hera a group who over the last few weeks." "I informed him that ... I have a ticket to' George Bush's Kritt said she and graduate student Kathy the audience and it's my legal right to hold re verbally and Savoie were carrying a sign that read "NBC: sign in silent protest," Kritt said. "He told .ech. Report on the Bombing in El Salvador" on the 'Your legal rights have nothing to do wit en filed stem- Diag as NBC weatherman Willard Scott began a You're at the University of Michigan andl 1police are in- segment with a group of fraternity members. doesn't want you here.' " it the other two Savoie and other protesters were complaining about the way NBC has handled coverage of See DEMONSTRATORS, Page 2 told t it is tAr- arm. be in d this me, th it. NBC I Skateboarding makes a comeback around campus By MARY MOORE They glide down the sidewalk, skillfully weaving in and out of a flood of campus pedestrians much like a California surfer maneuvering the cool tides of the Pacific. Occasionally the fluidity of their movements will be broken, and instead of falling into. water, they hit the cold pavement with a thud. THEY ARE, of course, a new breed of skateboarders who skate not only for recreation but to get to class on time. Pushed into the background in the early 1970s because of its dangers, skateboarding is now making a comeback in Ann Arbor - possibly because of Back to the Future, a film in which the main character hitches rides on the back of cars on his skateboard. When the skateboarding fad first arrived n the 1970s, it was often associated with "bad types," but has since moved into the realm of the mainstream, though there are still the hardcore skateboarders who deck out in chains and sport punk hair styles. While most "boarders" around here are high schoolers who have been skating for from five to seven years, Univer- sity students can also be seen riding around campus. JOHN KEST. an education school freshman, gave up walking in favor of skateboarding to class. He says he is no longer late to class thanks to the purchase of a skateboard. It is better than the bike, he says, because he is among the pedestrians and can talk to friends he bumps into. It's a great way to meet people, he adds. Phil Seiden, a former University student, remembers the time he had to get ten or twelve stitches in his rear end when he fell into a pile of glass. But this didn't stop his skateboarding. "I can remember the exact day I started," Seiden said. "It was July 4,1972." SINCE THAT time, he has amassed around 20 boards and boasts that he has attained speeds of 39 miles-per-hour on Broadway near North Campus. He has boards tailored to his many uses. Being a well-equipped skateboarder is expensive. Most riders say that the cheap ones go for $50. To get the best equipment, riders must be willing to pay upwards of $100 and assemble it themselves. Each skateboard is unique, enthusiasts say. There are wide boards, flat boards, and skinny boards - even those that dip in the middle. Riders choose their form depending on the flexibility they desire. Large wheels and skinny wheels See SKATEBOARDING, Page 6 i House abortion override fails Daily Photo by JAE KIM Peace march LANSING - Opponents of state- funded abortions for poor women yesterday narrowly lost another round in their battle to cut off money for the operations, and were split on whether another attempt will be made this session. Abortion foes could muster only 72 votes to override Gov. James Blan- chard's veto of the controversial legislation cutting off state support for abortions. That was two votes short of the number necessary to reject a veto - the same number abortion foes lacked when the House 'last took a vote in March. THIRTY-seven lawmakers voted to sustain the governor's veto. The vote keeps Michigan among the 14 states which currently provide fun- ding for abortions through the Medicaid program. Both sides gave credit to Blan- chard's lobbying efforts for the failure of the override attempt. "I think so," said Rep. Michael Griffin - the Leader of House abor- tion opponents - when asked if the issue were dead for the year. However, Barbara Listing, head of Right to Life of Michigan, the state's major anti-abortion lobby, said other attempts will be made closer to next year's elections. Listing said an "adamantly pro- abortion governor" was responsible for the defeat. She said the defeat identifies for her group districts in which more work is needed. Richard Cleaver (left), Justin Schwartz (center), and Benjamin Ben-Baruch carry Palestinian and Israeli flags side-by-side as they march toward the Diag yesterday. The three were part of ceremonies calling for peace in the Middle East and marking the second anniversary of the bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon, which claimed 241 lives. TODAY Homecoming G o Blue. Go Blue. It's Homecoming time again. Saturday's showdown with Indiana is the main event, but festivities for Homecoming weekend begin today at 3 p.m. p.m. at the Diag. Later that night, students will be able to warm-up for the game at a bonfire at Elbel Field. Saturday's festivities get off to a fast start with the Go Blue Run through North Campus. A Go Blue Brunch is scheduled for 10 a.m. at the Track and Tennis Building. All-American Ron Johnson of the Class of '69 will be featured. The mudbowl at Sigma Alpha Epsilon is also ting scene of Act II in a production of Friedrich von Floton's romantic comedy, "Martha" "Interested beagles and beagle owners should report to the new MOT company administrative offices... Detroit," a statement said. "While no previous stage experience is required, all beagles will be judged on a variety of abilities and talents, and must be paper trained INSIDE- CRIME: Opinion looks at the roles of cor- poration in the CIA's international actions. See page 4. 1 I