C I bic ItttgI1n Ninety-six years of editorialfreedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, April 7, 1986 tttiu Vol. XCVI - No. 127 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Eight Pages i Shanty damaged twice by arsonists By MELISSA BIRKS The shanty built on the Diag to protest South African apartheid has been damaged by fire twice since it was boarded up and abandoned on Friday, a campus security official said yesterday. Members of the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee plan to repair the shanty today at noon. The vandalism comes in the wake of similar attacks around the coun- try, where shanties built to promote divestment from companies that do business in South Africa have been torn down. At Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H., about 12 staff mem- bers of the college's conservative newspaper, The Dartmouth Review, were arrested after they flattened shanties with bulldozers. AT THE University of California at Berkeley, a shantytown was destroyed during a protest on Friday that led to 29 injuries and more than 100 arrests. The Diag shanty was intact when two weeks of anti-apartheid actions at the University concluded on Friday, meaning that the first fire was set between 1 p.m. that after- noon and 7 p.m. Saturday, when economics graduate student Dean Baker notified the Department of Safety of the damage. University Security investigator Gary Hill said two boards from the side of the 7-foot by 7-foot shanty had been torn off and scorched and several posters had been burned. The most recent incident occurred early yesterday morning, when security officer Gale Taylor ex- tinguished a small fire in the shanty that burned four planks, Hill said. Investigators have no suspects in the case, Hill said, Free South Africa Coordinating Committee members say they were not entirely surprised by the at- tacks. "We assumed someone would try to rip it down, or that the Univer- sity wouldn't give us permission to put it up," said LSA senior Liz Got- tlieb. "This is really a sick way of doing it. I was very shocked." Bob Dion, a .teering committee member of the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee, said the University may be planning to tear the structure down because its per- mit has expired, but he doesn't think the administration would condone the arson attempts. Vest likely to be appointed engin. dean By CAROLINE MULLER Engineering college officials are speculating that Charles Vest, the college associate dean for academic affairs, will be named interim dean tomorrow, and they say Vest is the strongest contender for the post of permanent dean. The new engineering dean will replace James Duderstadt, who was recently recommended by University President Harold Shapiro to take over the University's No.2 position of vice president for academic affairs and provost. Duderstadt's nomination is expected to be approved by the Board of Regents later this month. "I THINK (Vest) has the confidence of the entire college, and many would like to see him become the new dean," said Electrical Engineering Prof. Thomas Senior, a member .of the college's executive committee. Executive committee members met with Billy Frye, current vice president for academic affairs last Monday to plan the search for a new dean. On Wednesday, Frye sent memos to all engineering faculty members soliciting recommendations for members of the search commit- tee. Frye's letter said the search com- mittee will probably consist of three or four engineering faculty members, one student, one alumnus, and a representative from outside the University. The student member, the letter said, will be chosen by the chairman of the college executive commitee. ACCORDING to Frye, he and Shapiro will ultimately pick the sear- ch committee's members. Although neither Frye nor Vest would comment on whether Vest will be appointed interim dean, Technical Communications Prof. 'Dwight Stevenson said, "I think very highly of Charles Vest, and would not be sur- prised if he becomes the interim dean or even the new dean." Duderstadt called Vest "an in-- dividual of extraordinary vision," who has "an unusually academic eye, and an extraordinary commitment to excellence." DUDERSTADT, who has worked See VEST, Page 3 Presidential hopeful talks to 'U' audience Daily Photo by DAN HABIB University Sociology Professor Aldon Morris takes part in Friday's rally on the diag. The demonstrators were commemorating Martin Luther King's assassination and calling on the University to grant an honorary degree to South African Nelson Mandela. Rally demands S. African changi e By PHILIP LEVY Congressman Jack Kemp (R-N.Y.) captivated a University audience Saturday afternoon with a speech ranging from such topics as the ideals of himself and the Republican Party, to his experiences as a professional football player. Kemp, who with Vice President George Bush and Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, is considered a leading candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in 1988, ad- dressed an audience of more than 400 people, mostly students, in the Assembly Hall of the Business School. During his speech, Kemp was in- terrupted four times by ovations. He spoke with such vigor that at one point, after a brief but passionate defense of President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative, Kemp paused and said, "I apologize for get- ting all wound up like this." KEMP continually triedto associate himself with President Reagan and his policies. Kemp, one of the early supporters of the '.'supply- side" theory of economics that Reagan adopted, praised Reagan's handling of the economy. "God bless this President for taking us out of a great depression," he said. Kemp declared, that 'deficits can be reduced and poverty eliminated through economic growth, and he strongly opposed a tax increase. See KEMP, Page 7 By MARTIN FRANK On the 18th anniversary of the assassination of Mar- tin Luther King, hundreds of people rallied Friday through the streets of Ann Arbor to show their dissatisfaction with racism, here, in Latin America, and in South Africa. The march was organized by the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee (FSACC). Starting at 11 a.m. at the anti-apartheid shanty erected on the Diag, mar- chers proceeded down State Street past the train station to Summit Park, where they held a 15 minutes rally. The marchers then wound up Fourth Street to William Street, and back to the Diag. THE RALLY was briefly interrupted at 1 p.m. for a See HUNDREDS, Page 3 Voters consider the issues in elections Candidates I. vie for ward By SUSAN GRANT Both Fifth Ward Ann Arbor City Council candidates agree that victory will not come easily in today's elec- LZ ' 86 City a Elections tion. Phil Spear, the Republican Can- didate who owns Spear and Associates Realtors, said winning the mostly Democratic ward will be an uphill battle. "When we started the cam- See Az CANDIDATES, Page 7 N Huron be Madison5 Univ. Hospital N. Univ. . o Diag Geddes cf0^y Union Voters voice opinion on C. America, roads xi I I i ward boundari Map shows in central Ann Arbor. F polling place locations, che voter registration card or ca City Hall. - Monroe c a es o or ck -lI 4 w 3 okland A 'or * , Q J -a a 21 By SUSAN GRANT Besides choosing city councilmem- bers in today's election, voters will voice their opinions on two very dif- ferent issues: U.S. policy in Central America and the funding of repairs for Ann Arbor's roads. If Proposal A is passed, the city clerk would send a message to President Reagan and the city's Congressional representatives stating that Ann Arbor residents do not want their money spent on military aid to Central America. THE MESSAGE would say that Ann Arborites prefer that federal money be spent on non-military aid like clothes and medical supplies to poor Central American citizens and that the money now spent on military aid be used to help needy Americans. The proposal would also require the mayor to create a seven-member Central America Sister City Task Force, which would raise funds to facilitate cultural and educational ex- changes between Ann Arbor and cities in Central America. After a year, the task force would be disbanded. The Coalition for Peace in Central America, a local organization formed to get Proposal A on the ballot, sub- mitted 6,000 signatures to City of- ficials in January. MEMBERS OF the coalition say See VOTERS, Page 7 Encore! Joan Baez performs to an en- thusiastic crowd of 2,700 at Hill Auditorium Saturday night. See story, Page 5. TODAY peared to be under the influence, he was permitted to leave the magistrate's office because it was assumed his girlfriend would drive, but Fisher got behind the wheel and was stopped about a block away, the spokesman said. Now Fisher will face two charges of driving under the influence of alcohol when he returns t ,--.,ir fn-r a rincon Anril 23 nnice said. City Co~uncil she found a box of skins, heads, and other remains of a litter of puppies in an alley near the home of a Vietnamese family she claims is slaughtering dogs for food. "It was pretty bad," she said. "They fatten them up. But when they're about 3-months-old, you can forget about them." Some theorize that dogs are being eaten by some of the -INSIDE YES ON A: Opinion supports the peace initiative for Central America. See Page 4. - f _ - 11I AT - A. .. rt rs I