The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 24, 1986- Page 5 Dartmouth students end administration bldg. sit-in HANOVER, N.H. (UPI) - More than 100 students ended a two-day occupation of Dartmouth College's admin- stration building yesterday because officials agreed to suspend classes today to discuss racism and division on campus. Dartmouth President David McLaughlin and Dean of Students Edward Shanahan joined the students in singing "We Shall Overcome" as they left Parkhurst Hall. More than 200 students and professors occupied the building Wednesday to protest the destruction of three an- ti-apartheid shanties on the college green by sledgeham- mer-wielding students Tuesday. About half of the protesters maintained the sit-in through Wednesday night and yesterday. Laura Dicovitsky, a Dartmouth administration spokeswoman, said there would be "absolutely no statement"' regarding disciplinary action against the protesters. Earlier yesterday, McLaughlin and a committee representing faculty unanimously agreed to suspend today's classes to discuss in workshops allegations of racism, violence and disrespect for diversity at Dar- tmouth. Norris employed by vice president Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Defendants Bob Krause (left) and Peter Rosset (right) confer with their attorney, Eric Lipson, before their acquittal last night. Krause and Rosset were two of four protesters charged with disorderly conduct at CIA ' protests last October. CIA protesters acquitted (Continued from Page 1) an analysis of minority student at- titudes. NORRIS SAID that he didn't tell other memebers of MSA about his job because he regarded it as a matter of personal interest. "Many people are set off about this because it's so fashionable to be at odds with the administration," he said. "The communication gap between the administration and the students is a perpetual problem," Norris added. "T be at odds with a person who is this way long before I started working for Sudarkasa, he said. "People have to realize that being active in MSA takes a lot of unpaid time. It's not hurting anyone, and if anything it's helping me," he added. According to Layman, MSA is still dealing with the issue internally. MSA Vice President Phil Cole sees things differently. "The people who make a big deal out of this have nothing else to do with their time," he said. At some other universities, student governments have laws against having a job in a field related to a student's representation. MSA. however has no set policy, Layman said. Support the March of Dimes IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIBIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION (Continued from Page.) But Lipson said the prosecutor did not prove this beyond a reasonable doubt. About 15 witnesses gave dif- fereing reports of the warning and subsequent arrest. "KLINGE SAID he opened the door twice, some said they saw it open only once. Some witnesses said the noise got louder, some said it got softer. Some said the warning was given directly to the protesters, but at one point someone said they heard a shouted warning," Lipson said. the defendants agreed that they had not planned to commit an act of civil disobedience, to be arrested, or to stop anyone from an interview. Bel ast cftiz "We very much wanted the CIA to hear our moral reasons for protesting their recruitment on campus. . . and we wanted to bring the attention of people on campus which CIA ac- tivities we feel are illegal," Rosset said. ISKRA SAID he would have stopped chanting if he heard a warning from police, and was suprised when the police came out to make the arrests. Iskra's father was present for much of the proceedings, even though he may not have supported his son's cause. "I taught him to stand up for what he believes in, and I thought I'd come down and support him," he said. "I'm proud of him." Several campus officials testified ens vote ford yesterday, including safety director' Leo Heatley, Anne Richter, assistant director of the office of career plan- ning and placement, and Tom Easthope, assistant vice-president for student services. The defense sent a subpeona to University Harold Shapiro, but Shapiro wasn't present. The trial began at 9 a.m. with the selection of the jury, and court proceedings about 6:30 p.m. Presiding Judge George Alexander of the 15th DistrictCourt saidnthe length of the trial was not unusual con- sidering the large number of wit- nesses. About 30 people watched the proceedings. parliament supposed problems to be solving minority won't do any good. I felt illk presents .. . YAKOY SMIRNOFF Comedian & Russian emigre Sunday, February 9 8:00 p.m., Power Center Tickets now available at Ticketworld in the Micbigan Union and Hudsons: $8, $10. Visa/MC 763-8587 "We in the Soviet Union also have two political parties- the living and the dead" BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) - Citizens of this troubled province lined up under heavy guard yesterday to vote in parliamentary elections that are the first popular test of the historic Anglo-Irish agreement signed in November. Police said all leaves were canceled and about 25,000 police officers and soldiers were mobilized to guard the 529 polling stations against disruptions by the mainly Catholic Irish Republican Army or Protestant militants. No election-related violence was reported. Voting hours were from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m., and the ballots are to be counted today. 9 the 15 by-elections were made necessary by the mass resignation of Northern Ireland's Protestant lawmakers from the British Parliament to protest the Nov. 15 accord, which grants the Irish republic a say in the province's af- fairs. They saw it as a weakening of Ulster's union with Britain and portrayed the elections as a referendum in which Protestants, who make up at least 60 percent of the population, could register their opposition. "If any prime minister rejects the ballot box, then they are asking for anarchy," said the Rev. Ian Paisley, the Protestant politician who leads the movement against the agreement. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government has said it will not be swayed by the by-election results. Yakov Smirnoff is coming to Ann Arbor! One of the hottest comedians around and also the only Russian-born Jewish stand-up comic in America. Seen on the Letterman show, Johnny Carson and Miller Lite beer commercials. Tickets are Going Fast! Buy Yours Today! £&eligiun #'erutEIG UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw 663-5560 Dr. Paul Foelber, Interim Pastor LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY Sunday Worship 9:15 and 10:30 Bible Study 9:15 Sunday and 7:30 Wednesday Sunday Supper 6:00. 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