Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 24, 1986 A2 to vote on Central America By JOSEPH PIGOTT Ann Arbor voters will decide on April 6 whether to support a referendum calling for an end to U.S. intervention in Central America. If passed, the referendum would also call for the creation of a league of sister cities in Latin America. The Coalition for Peace in Central America, a local group which was formed specifically to get the referendum on the ballot, submitted a petition with 5,900 signatures to the city clerk on Jan. 6. Benita Kaimowitz, a coordinator of the coalition, said the proposition was adapted from the text of an ordinance passed in Seattle. "We're way behind what other cities are doing," she said. Kaimowitz and a friend came up with the idea for a referendum when they were talking about finding a sister city for Ann Arbor in Nicaragua "We called people from different organizations to get their input and ideas, and it eventually developed into our referendum," she said. The group decided to pursue the idea by collec- ting signatures instead of going directly to the Ann Arbor City Council in order to show coun- cilmembers that there is support for the idea. The council has been criticized for discussing in- ternational issues by people who feel it should stick exclusively to local concerns. "The direct approach makes the Ann Arbor News and the council resistant to mixing in in- ternational affairs. This way, however, we get a chance to mix with people and make them aware of the issues," Kaimowitz said. Councilmember Gerald Jernigan (R-Fourth Ward), who has opposed discussing international issues at council meetings, declined to comment on what he thought of the referendum. He said, however, that "it doesn't bother me at all that it is on the ballot." Councilmember Jeff Epton (D-Third Ward) said he enthusiastically supports the referen- dum, and predicted that it will pass by a "sizable margin." Kaimowitz said she feels the referendum will probably pass because of the large number of people in Ann Arbor who oppose U.S. policy in Central America. "There are a lot of people in Ann Arbor who have been to Central America, and they have shared their ideas with others around," she said. The largest obstacle the referendum faces is the traditionally low voter turnout in April, Kaimowitz said. "Our underlying goal is to raise the level of in- formation and awareness of Central America in Ann Arbor, and through the petition drive, we have already done this," she said. Miranda Rule debated in law schoolforum t l t i 1 c (Continued from Page 1) police officer failed to inform the GRANO said he objects to Supreme suspect of his right to have a lawyer Court Justices John Stevens, present during questioning-one of Thurgood Marshall, and William the Miranda Rule provisions. Brennan "playing formalistic, Procedural mistakes that may legalistic, black-letter games." He allow suspected criminals' con- opposed the justices' willingness to fessions to be disregarded shouldn't dismiss evidence obtained from a be cited as a flaw in the law, Kamisar murder suspect in a confession simply said. becauseofaproceduralerror. "AFTER 20 years of walking. Grano cited the three justices' around with these cards (with the dissenting opinion in a California Miranda rights written on them), I'm case. They wrote that a murder concerned if the police can't read suspect's confession should not be these cards right," Kamisar said. 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Kamisar said Justice William Rehnquist has "taken Miranda out of context" in believing that it can be violated without doing damage to the Constitution. "I don't believe there is an official right to silence... the Constitution says T-SHIRT PRINTING TEAM AND ORGANIZATION SHIRTS RUSH JOBS WELCOME MULTI-COLOR OUR SPECIALTY SURPLUS AND "OOPS" SHIRTS 3/$550 SUPERIOR QUALITY SINCE 1973 206 S. F IRST 994-1367 KALUVA RESTAURANT FINE SOUTH INDIAN CUISINE Specializing in Vegeterian Foods: chapati, poori, idli sambrar, dosa and many other varieties. M-F 11:30a.m. -2:30p.m. 5:00-8:00p.m. Sa. 12-9 p.m. 761-8280 3001 S. STATE STREET (former/y To wers Restaurant in olvermne Totwer) that no person should be compelled (to testify against himself)," Grano said. "There is no privilege against self-discrimination.'" GRANO said a non-pressured question that "maybe even uses some trickery" but doesn't wear the suspect down for 36 hours is "very much in the societal interest." "What I want to allow is in- terrogation. I don't find that offen- sive," he said. "The mere effort to change the person's mind doesn't bother me." "I don't think the goal is to let people have a sporting chance once they've been suspected of a crime,' Grano said. BUT KAMISAR disagreed vehemently. "The public has been conned," said Kamisar. "They're beating the crap out of these guys (criminal suspects being questioned)... and all these years they've been saying, 'We're just in- terviewing."' "You can't get away from the real world and how this thing is being ad- ministered. What's going to happen if we get away from this rule?" Kamisar asked. "There's just not going to be any protection. "I AGREE that there's no right to silence, but police have no right to make you answer," Kamisar said. "The suspect is bargaining with a cop for a plea. But the suspect doesn't know what he's doing. The cop is telling the suspect what the law is," Kamisar said. ATTENTION STUDENTS SAVE 20% On all Michigan Daily Classified Ads with Student I.D. . FIND A ROOMMATE " SELL UNWANTED ITEMS " ANNOUNCE PARTIES " BUY OR SELL TICKETS Place your ad Monday-Friday from 9a.m.- 5 p.m. at The Michigan Daily office, 420 Maynard, or Wednesdays at the Fish- bowl. Rent a Car from Econo-Car W eaWV rent to 19 YR. OLD STUDENTSI Choose from small economical cars to vans. Special WEEKEND rates Pick up services upon request IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS U.S. ships sent toward Libya WASHINGTON-n a show of resolve, the United States has or ered its two aircraft battle groups in the Mediterranean Sea southward toward Libya and notified civilian air traffic officials there that the carriers wil conduct flight operations over the next week. Pentagon sources said yesterday that the moves in no way presaged any type of military attack on Libya and that operations would be conduc- ted in international airspace and waters. One official added, however, that the exercise was intended to demon- strate that the United States would not be intimidated by increased Soviet naval presence in the region nor by Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy's decision to place his own military forces on alert and to pledge continuing support for Palestinian terrorists. "It's asserting the right to passage in international airspace, with plen- ty of notice to everyone in advance of our peaceful intent," one source said. The United States has accused Libya of supporting a Palestinian terrorist group suspected of mounting the Dec. 27 attacks on the Rome and Vienna airports, in which 19 people died. Khadafy responded during the first week of January by putting his military forces on alert, claiming the United States was planning an invasion. Govt. moves to ban asbestos WASHINGTON - The government moved yesterday for the first time to ban deadly asbestos, a widely-used substance that officials say causes up. to 12,000 cancer cases annually in the United States. Under a two-phased attack, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed an "immediate" ban in five product categories, mostly in the construction area. Over the next decade, EPA said, it wants to cleanse the environment of all products containing the known carcinogen. The decision, attacked by an industry group as "unwarranted," culminated more than six year of regulatory soul-searching within the government and months of infighting between EPA and the Office of Management and Budget. EPA Administrator Lee Thomas said human health - not monetary cost - was EPA's foremost concern. Thomas said it would take about a year for the agency to complete public hearings and administrative review of the proposed asbestos rule, which has been in the works since late 1979. The initial ban would affect five product categories that now contain from one-third to one-half of the approximately 300,000 metric tons of asbestos used by U.S. manufacturers each year. Police stop sters' roadblock AUSTIN, Minn. - Striking meatpackers attempt to stop non-union workers from entering the Geo. A. Hormel & Co. plant yesterday was th- warted when.police bashed windows and yanked strikers from their cars; abruptly halting an auto blockade. Eight strikers were arrested. Officers smashed the windows of two strikers' cars, pulled the drivers out and handcuffed them when they locked themselves in their vehicles. Six others surrendered without incident as police stopped the effort to block the highway ramp leading to the plant. The police also impounded four cars and reportedly drove two cars into ditches. National Guard troops at the plant entrance were not involved in the confrontation. About 25 cars stopped on the ramp attempting to block non-union workers who were arriving for work at the plant's north gate but police cleared the roadway within half an hour. No injuries were reported, police said. Warriors clash in S. Africa JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Tribal warriors with spears and clubs clashed yesterday in the Umbumbulu hills of Eastern South Africa, leaving at least 30 dead and scores wounded on the battlefield. Riot police units sent in to separate the fighters fired tear gas and shotguns to disperse battling members of the Zulu and Pondo tribes. Truckloads of weapons, mainly spears and clubs, were confiscated and about 500 Pondos arrested, police said. Umbumbulu is a predominantly Zulu tribal area about 30 miles southwest of Durban in the eastern section of the country. In the past few years, thousands of Pondo tribesmen moved into the region looking for work and land to settle on. The Zulus demand the Pondos leave the area because it lacks enough jobs and land to accomodate both tribes, which bear grudges going back more than a century. Witnesses said about 400 Pondos were arrested and driven to the near- by Isipingo police station. New Delhi hotel fire kills 37 NEW DELHI, India - A fire believed caused by an electrical short cir- cuit swept through the lower floors of a luxury hotel before dawn yester- day killing at least 37 people, including one American, and injuring 41 others. Fire officials said the blaze at the 10-story Siddharth Continental Hotel - the worst ever in New Delhi - could have been halted by hotel em- ployees but they fled in panic. A few employees returned to help evacuate guests, some of whom leaped from windows or climbed down knotted bed sheets to escape the flames. "They (the workers) had the facilities to control the fire," said senior fire officer F.K. Dheri. "If they had acted, the fire would have been con- trolled." Among the victims were at least one American whose identity was withheld pending notification of relatives. Most of the victims suffocated in their sleep when smoke filled the hotel. 0Iie MI~ih an U atI Vol XCVI - No. 81 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April - $18.00 in Ann Arbor; $35.00 outside the city. One term - $10.00 in town; $20.00 out of town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and Sub- scribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. 0 S Editor in Chief.................NEIL CHASE Opinion Page Editors...........JODY BECKER JOSEPH KRAUS Managing Editors .......GEORGEA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor..............THOMAS MILLER Features Editor........... 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