Vol. XCV I - - No. 36 c School board, rejects C linics By EVE BECKER The Ann Arbor Board of Education last night rejected a proposal to apply for a grant to set up health care clinics-which could have included dispensing birth ,ontrol prescriptions-for teens in Ann Arbor public schools. Around 75 Ann Arbor residents, mostly parents, appeared at the board meeting to object to their children receiving birth control information from the schools. University Medical School Prof. Inta Ertel presented the school board with the idea of providing clinics for teens in either Huron or Pioneer High Schools. The clinics would have been staffed by University pediatrics interns. ERTEL SAYS ,she will continue her efforts to improve adolescent health care, and the board agreed to discuss the issue with her. She had wanted to gain the school board's approval to make application by the Nov. 1 deadline for a six-year grant of $600,000 from The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a national organization which promotes the school-based adolescent health care clinics. There are 50 such clinics nationwide, with three in Michigan. The clinics would treat common and serious illnesses and offer physical examinations. Services would also include "effective preventive services aimed at pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases and other high-risk con- ditions, such as injuries and drug and alcohol abuse." Parental consent for use of the clinic would be required at the See BOARD, Page _. C I be II 43UU Ninety-seven years of editorialfreedom IEItI opyright 1986, The Michigan Doily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 23, 1986 Ten Pages a-- Diplomats expelled Embassy staff is cut MOSCOW (AP)-The Soviet Union yesterday ordered five more American diplomats to leave the country in retaliation for what a foreign ministry spokesman called "anti-Soviet actions," by the United States. The spokesman, Gennady Gerasimov, also announced the ordered withdrawal of 260 maids, drivers, and other Soviet workers who handle the U.S. Embassy's daily non-diplomatic operations. His announcement brought to ten the number of American diplomats ordered to leave the country. GERASIMOV said the Soviet Union also was imposing new restrictions on the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and the consulate in Leningrad, including limits on visas for temporary assignments. The move came one day after the United States ordered the expulsion of 55 Soviet diplomats, five of them in direct retaliation for the Kremlin order expelling five American diplomats in the Soviet Union, and 50 to reduce the overall size of the Soviet Embassy in Washington and the consulate in San Francisco. Gerasimov said the United States will not be allowed to use third- country nationals to replace the Soviet workers, and can bring Americans in to fill their secre - tarial, custodial, and driving jobs only within the overall limits on embassy staff. HE ALSO said the number of Americans at the embassy in Moscow and the Leningrad consulate will be held to the U.S.- See SOVIETS, Page 2 Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Don't eat on it Louise Pieper and Rolland Frey admire a reupholstered couch that Frey delivered from Advance Interiors to the Kempf House Center for Local History. Pieper is the Staff Director of the Ann Arbor Historic District Commission. The house, located at 312 S. Division, is being restored to the 1850's Greek Revival look it had when the Kempfs owned it. The house contains an 1875 Steinway piano, the first grand piano in Ann Arbor. Forum hi hlts By MARTIN FRANK 85 percent over the last six years. She said th Several students and faculty members last rule should be extended to include classifi night urged the University to maintain a research and research done for outsi clause prohibiting classified research that companies. could result in the destruction of human life, Kock said defense department contrac but others said the so-called "end-use" clause with the University "move out of research th is ambiguous and impinges on the rights of will help humans and promote an arms ra researchers. that can kill humans." Speaking at the first of three forums on the PH Y SIC S Prof. Daniel Axelrod sai University's proposed research guidelines, "The University and engineering departme LSA senior Ingrid Kock said defense are already in too deep in dependence upon t department research at the University-which defense department.". is limited by the end-use claise-has increased Axelrod believes that the end-use clau research he should be retained as well as the revie ed committees that currently oversee the curre de guidelines-the Research Policies Committ( and the Classified Review Panel. Under tt ts proposed guidelines, these committees wou at be eliminated. ce The end-use clause prohibits research th d, can kill or maim human beings. The end-us ;nt clause currently applies to the classifie he research guidelines, but it has been delete from proposed guidelines by both the majori se and the minority reports of the committ guidelines w which reviewed the current guidelines. nt ee _ The reports, submitted by University he President Harold Shapiro's ad hoc committee ld last July, are being reviewed by various groups on campus, such as the Michigan Student Assembly and the faculty's Senate at Advisory Committee on University Affairs. se Their recommendations are due by the end of d the fall semester, and the Board of Regents is d expected to vote on the proposal at its ty meeting in January. ee .See 'U', Page 5 NewU11 lounge to welcome snack ers By KEVIN GRAY Chronic snackers who like to munch at the Undergraduate Library will no longer have to hide soda cans under backpacks and pretzel bags in notebooks. By the end of the semester, they will be able to use the new UGLi lounge. The lounge will boast several soda, sandwiches, candy, and snack , machines, coffee pots, "modular" furniture, study tables, and new wallpaper. The lounge will be ready once the library gets specially fitted gratings to lock the vending machines at night, Library officials had hoped the new lounge would open in September, but time constraints made that impossible, according to Barbara MacAdam, an associate /librarian who is in charge of the redecoration. The new lounge will be open during regular library hours, but the machines will only be available from late afternoon until "sometime at night." A monitor will be on duty at those times to guard the machines from vandals and keep the area neat. "Staff funding is not available to Socialist gov. hopeful seeks labor support Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON By the end of the semester, the first floor Undergraduate Library lounge will boast modular furniture, new wallpaper, and vending machines. The new lounge will be open during regular library hours and will enable students to eat legally in the UGLi once again. By STEPHEN GREGORY Workers League gubernatorial candidate Martin McLaughlin says his campaign is geared more toward amassing support for the formation of a labor party than to further his own political career. Election '86 McLaughlin, a socialist, was a University student and 1969 president of the Student Government Council-the precursor of today's Michigan Student Assembly-said that if he wins a significant number of votes in the November election, it will mean "there is a growing discontent with the choices presented by the two-party system." "I don't believe there is any significant difference between the two parties," he said. "They're both big business parties." McLaughlin slammed both Gov. James Blanchard's and Republican candidate William Lucas' campaigns. He said their common promise to bring more businesses to Michigan clashes with labor interests. RICK WEINER, Chairman of the Michigan Democratic Party, refused to even consider keep the machines open all day," MacAdam explained. The idea of an UGLi lounge is. not a new idea. In 1985 University administrators eliminated a previous lounge, located on the UGLi's fourth floor, to use the room "more practically" as a microcomputing center. Since then students have been without an actual lounge, although they have been allowed to use the vacant area across from the front desk. The issue of establishing a new lounge was brought before the Uni- versity Library Council in October 1985, shortly after the decision to eliminate the old one. Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson approved the new lounge plan last February. Smoking will be prohibited in the lounge because of recent University guidelines restricting smoking in public places. In the past, smoking was allowed in the entire basement of the library, but due to the restrictions it is now only permitted in room eight of the basement. McLaughlin ... hopes for support for third party McLaughlin's criticisms. "I'm not going to respond on what a third party candidate might say," he said. "The real election here is between Jim Blanchard and Bill Lucas." See FORMER, Page 5 TODAY Sidewalk math E ven during midterms week, some students fmnn sxnndc~dprie totn n -~ an,-1 rhnt nn the Dine with a sign saying 'Sidewalk Math.' It was like someone answered my prayers," said Aronow. David Burkam, a Math 115 TA, said the Diag approach is a good way to make students feel comfortable asking for help. "There isn't that power-grade problem that you have with office hours. It's easier to come up to some random come to them. The Pumpkin Brigade, made up of crews of high school students, expects to deliver about 400,000 pounds of jack-o'-lantern and pie makings to doorsteps across the valley be next weekend. The "Great Pumpkin Giveaway," which got under way last weekend, is the promotional brainchild of real estate entrepreneur Mike INSIDE MANIPULATION:Opinion clls for a ban on covert CIA activity. See Page 4. REVISION: Arts reviews Game Theory's I I I I