Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 21, 1986 4 Raliers build shanty in an apartheid protest By STEVE HERZ and MICHAEL LUSTIG A nationwide protest against apar- theid began on the Diag yesterday as the Freee South Africa Coordinating Committee (FSACC) constructed a shanty that will remain on the center of campus until April 6. Committee coordinator Barbara Ransby began the National Weeks of Action Against Racism and Apartheid with a rallying speech condemning University policies in South Africa. "We are going to build a shanty on the diag," said Ransby, "We are going to try to save this University from carrying out its policies in South Africa." THE UNIVERSITY has divested all but 1 percent of its holdings in com- panies that do business with South Africa. University faculty and staff, however, last year contributed $15 million to a pension fund that holds $6 billion in South Africa-related in- vestments. The Universtiy also con- tributed $31 to the pension plan through its general fund. Ransby, whose coalition also ad- dressed the Board of Regents yester- day, said, "The University's position is unacceptable and immoral. If the regents really are against apartheid, Daily Photo by CHRIS TWIGG Three protesters build a shanty in symbolic protest against apartheid in South Africa and racism at home. - --.....-----.---.-.-------- - - --....- I COOKIES 4 NIGHT OWLS TAKE A STUDY BREAK! I Buy 2 or more of Mrs. Peabody's cookies or brownies after 9:00 p.m. and get a FREE beverage! Open till 11 p.m. doily COUPON MUST BE ' 715 N. University PRESENTED WITH PURCHASE 761CHIP OFFER VALID THROUGH I6IHPMAY 2,1986 ' ** * * ** * ####** ** **** * OPENING ON AN LSA STUDENT * * GOVERNMENT COMMITTEE* Joint Student Faculty Policy Committee * CALL OR STOP BY: LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICE 4003 MICHIGAN UNION 763-4799 * UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER COMMITTEE CHAIR APPLICATIONS Cult members not social misfits By SUZY ROSTLER People who join cults are not necessarily social misfits, but are looking to change their lives, Rev. Galen Hora of the Lord of Light Lutheran Church told a group of students at South Quad earlier this week. "It's just not the social misfit that is attracted to cults," Hora said during a two-day presentation that provided students with information about alternative religious groups such as the Hare Krsnas, the Unification Church, and the Baghwans. "The people who join cults are fed up with who they are, and in order to make a change in their lives, they affiliate themselves with a radically different group than who they grew up with." Although Hora could not estimate the number of University students involved in cults, he guessed that it is smaller than in other parts of the country. "At South Dakota State University, for example, there is more of a problem with cults. Students are coming out of naive congregations and are searching for simple answers to new and complex problems," he said. . Hora believes that students turn to alternative religious organizations because they provide students with "definite answers to very complex questions.' "The word cult is used when a group is following a man rather than God," said John Williams of the Unification Church. Williams joined the Unification Church in 1973, during a time when he See REV., Page 10 we want to see that translated into concrete policy. The University autonomy is not more important than the lives of our brothers and sisters in South Africa." Ransby said her group will demand that the regents divest the Univer- sity's remaining half million dollars of South African investments. "A former South African president once said, 'Every dollar invested in South Africa is a brick in the wall of apar- theid.' We want the University to divest its remaining money, remove that brick, and break down the wall." RANSBY said the committee received a letter from University Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson saying the administration will allow the shanty to stand for the two-week rally because "the Univer- sity sees it as an educational mission."~ Ransby said she was not par- ticularly worried about recent events at Dartmouth College, where about a dozen students who worked for the See PROTESTERS, Page 10 FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 120 S. State 662-4536 Sunday - 9:30 & 11:00 Worship and Church School 9:30 broadcast on WNRS 1290 AM 11:00 broadcast on WAAM 1600 AM Sun. sermon title, "A Man For All Sorrows" by Dr. Donald B. Strobe. Maundy Thursday 7:00 p.m. Holy Communion. Fri. 12:30 - 2:00: Union Good Friday Services. Fri. 7:30 p.m. Dr. Strobe's Adult Class * * * WESLEY FOUNDATION 602 E. Huron St. (at State) United Methodist Campus Ministry College class - Sundays 10:45 a.m. Sunday Evening Supper & Fellowship - 5 p.m . Bible Study - Mondays 6 p.m., Fridays noon. Holy Communion - Wednesdays 9:30 p.m. Rev. Wayne Large, Chaplain. Telephone: 668-6881. * * * 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 Lenten Worhship 7:30 Wednesday Sunday Supper 6:00 * * * COVENANT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sunday Service: 9:30 a.m. at Mack School 920 Miller, Ann Arbor 10:45 a.m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Study Philip H. Tiews, Pastor For more information call 761-1999. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave., 662-4466 (between S. University and Hill) Sunday 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Coffee Hour - 10:30 social hall Adult Education Classes during both services Campus Group: Coordinator - Jamie Schultz Meets for Communion 7 p.m. Wednes- days. Program follows at 7:30. Dr. William Hillegonds - Sr. Minister * * * AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Huron St. (between State & Division) Sundays: 9:55 worship, 11:25 Bible Study groups for both Undergrads and Graduate Students. Thursdays: 5:30 Supper (free) and Fellowship. CENTER OPEN EACH DAY for information call 663-9376 ROBERT B. WALLACE, PASTOR * * * CANTERBURY HOUSE 218 N. Division St. (at Catherine) EPISCOPAL CAMPUS MINISTRY Sundays at 5:00 p.m. MEDITATIVE EUCHARIST, fol- lowed by a simple meal and discussion group. Rev. Andrew Foster, Chaplain Telephone: 665-0606 IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS IBM wants charges dropped against Brown protesters PROVIDENCE, R.I. - IBM asked a judge yesterday to dismiss trespassing charges against Amy Carter and 13 other college students who staged an anti-apartheid protest at its office. IBM Branch manager Leonard DiIuro told District Judge Francis Darrigan the company wanted to drop the charges "for business reasons." He refused to elaborate to reporters afterward. City police arrested the students Wednesday about 30 minutes after they began a sit-in protesting IBM's dealings in racially segregated South Africa. They were released on personal recognizance. The protesters had said they would stay in the IBM building until they were arrested or until the company stopped doing business in South Africa. The demonstrators are members of Borwn Free Southern Africa Coalition. Carter, the youngest of former President Jimmy Carter's four children, has been a coalition member since coming to Brown in Septem- ber 1985. Mitterand appoints Paris mayor as new premier PARIS - Francois Mitterand, a Socialist, appointed conservative Jacques Chirac as France's new premier yesterday, and the nation began its novel experiment in cooperation between two leaders from rival political camps. It is the first time the president and his government have renresented opposite political philosophies since Charles deGaulle created the Fifth Republic, with its strong presidency, 28 years ago. Mitterand and Chirac have pledged to cooperate, but the stage is set for an eventual constitutional conflict. Mitterand's presidential term runs until 1988. The new premier made clear that he plans to exercise all the con- stitutional powers of his office and government to set and execute national policy, much of which will be aimed at reversing Mitterand's Socialist course. He said he would move immediately with' economic measures, in- cluding a start on selling state-run industries to private investors, and the most urgent measures would be implemented by decree. Bomb blast kills two in Paris PARIS - A bomb exploded at a shopping mall on the Champs Elysees boulevard in central Paris, killing two people and injuring 28. It was the latest of a series of bombings in the capital. Police sources said a second bomb was found a short time later on the tracks in Paris' main underground subway and regional train station. Several thousand rush-hour passengers were evacuated from the station while a bomb squad neutralized the device, according to the sources who stipulated anonymity. There was no immediate word on property damage at the Point Show arcade. Fire Department officials said at least 15 people were injured. The of- ficials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said they did not know how seriously the injured were hurt. The explosion occurred minutes after it was announced that Jacques Chirac, the mayor of Paris, had accepted Socialist President Francois Mitterand's offer to become premier of France and form a government. Chirac, a conservative, was speaking on national television when the. blast took place at about 6 p.m. NYC passes gay rights bill NEW YORK - The City Council approved a gay rights bill yesterday, 15 years after a similar bill was first introduced in the early days of the homosexual rights movement. The bill would prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation in housing, employment or public accommodation. More than 100 police officers were assigned around City Hall as suppor- ters and opponents gathered to await the vote. The gay rights bill grew out of a police raid on a gay bar, the Stonewall, whichmset off riots in 1969 and is considered the flashpoint of the movement. Among the leaders of the battle were Roman Catholic Cardinal John O'Connor, who denounced the bill, and Episcopal Bishop Paul Moore, who supported it. Mayor Edward Koch was also in favor. Councilman Noach Dear said he though homosexuals had pressed for the legislation because "they want society to accept them as normal human beings. I don't accept that. That's deviant behavior and they will pass it on to our children." Aquino drafts new constitution MANILA, Philippines - The draft of a new, interim Philippine con- stitution would abolish the National Assembly and vest all law-making., powers in President Corazon Aquino in a democratic revolutionary government, it was disclosed yesterday. A cabinet official, who dealt; with reporters on condition of anonymity, said Aquino wants to "soften some provisions" of the draft so she does not have to call her government "revolutionary." The official said Aquino planned to announce the new constitution Mon- day. He did not say why he released the draft yesterday. The draft says, "This government is revolutionary in origin and nature, democratic in essence and transistory in character." It would give Aquino the law-making powers of the National Assembly and would prohibit any court from questioning her authority or the validity of any law she decrees. Vol. XCVI- No. 116 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. 41 A 14 14 11 A 4 MUSKET Soph Show Mediatrics Michigras Minicourses Viewpoint Lectures Soundstage Laughtrack Impact Jazz Comedy Company College Bowl Starbound Homecoming Special Events Tech. Crew Ticket Central A Applications available at the UAC offices, 2nd floor Michigan Union. Return by noon, Monday, March 31. Interviews to be held Tuesday & Wednesday, April 1 & 2. For more info, call 763-1107. 14 REGISTERED NURSES C ontinue your professional development in an atmosphere of encouragement at... White Plains Hospital Medical Center I Open House Tuesday, April 1, 1986 1:30pm-7:00pm N- Appointment Necessary. Just Stop By Anytime Complimentary buffet served throughout the day and evening/On the spot inter- views with nursing management/Unit Tours/Speak w ith Staff RN's White Plains Hospital Medical Center is one of Westchester's most prestigious hospital medical centers located in a beautiful suburban location just 35 minutes from NYC and just a short distance from major ski resorts and the Long Island Sound. We offer the following benefits: Professional Pluses: Personal Benefits: " Primary Nursing e Tuition Assistance * Staff Development Programs Ongoing " Non-Contributory Pension/ " Individualized Orientation Life Insurance " Decentralized Nursing Department " 20 Vacation Days + 13 Holidays + " Internal Opportunities 12 Sick Days " Preceptor Program " Permanent Shifts Enjoy the personal environment of a prestigious medical center and the hospital of choice in Westchester. Excellent benefits and competitive salaries. For more informa- tion contact: Jan Thomson, RN, Professional Recruiter (914) 681-1100 D White Plains Hospital E , Medical Center Davis Ave at East Post Road White Plains, NY 10601 Fqual Opportunity Employer MF Editor in Chief.............ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor.........RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor ............... JERRY MARKON Features Editor............ 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