j:l; b E fRt2tga Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom Ba1i ., ____, Vol. XCVII - No. 66 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, December 8, 1986 Ten Pages U -Cellar considers options, may fold By KERY MURAKAMI The fate of the University Cellar bookstore will be decided this week when store officials negotiate with local banks for a $700,000 loan, Jane Self, the store's general manager, said yesterday. The loan is needed, she said, to buy enough text books for next term's book-buying rush. Com- bined with the beginning of fall semester, the first few weeks of winter semester make up about half the store's business. . Store officials, Self said, are also considering two back-up options: ielling the store's two shops on Liberty Street and on North Cam- pus, or simply selling its inventory to a local competitor and folding. Both options would mean the end of the University Cellar. Self would not comment on the odds of any of the possibilities. But she said a final decision would be made before Friday because of a deadline for one of the options. She vwould not elaborate. Self also defused to say whom store officials See U-CELLAR, Page 2 French PARIS (AP) - Student protests ,.against a university reform bill widened into a general challenge of the conservative government yes- terday as union leaders joined students in calling for nationwide demonstrations this week. Dozens of people clashed with about 500 police in the Latin Quarter student district. At least 68 people, inducing 58 police, were injured, and 28 people were arrested. ,Student leaders denounced the violence. Board c ritiques code draf t Lei-d down Associated Press Wolverines Andy Moeller and Tony Gant tackle Hawaii's Danny Crowell in the first quarter of Michigan's 27- 10 victory. See story, Page 8. student protest grows By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN A committee of faculty mem- bers, students, and administrators Friday passed a strong critique of the University Council's Emer- gency Procedures, which would allow the University to remove from campus a student who commits a life-threatening crime. The critique, issued by the Civil Liberties Board, may prompt the faculty government to oppose the separate judicial system that may result if the University adopts a non-academic code of student con- duct. "WE FOUND the additional judicial framework the Emergency Procedures set up to be unworkable, implausible, and contrary to the interest of our civil liberties," said Blake Ringsmuth, a student member of the Civil Liberties Board. As a committee of the Senate Advisory Committee of Faculty Affairs (SACUA), the Civil Liberties Board investigates possible violations of constitution- ally-provided civil liberties and rights. William Stebbins, the chairperson of SACUA, deferred the responsibility of reaction to the emergency procedures to the board because "they were logically most qualified to provide it." "We will give their conclusions very heavy consideration," he added. THE BOARD now joins the Michigan Student Assembly in opposing the Emergency Proce- dures. Under Regental bylaw 7.02, both MSA and SACUA are required to approve any draft of the proposed non-academic code of student conduct. The University Council - also a body of students, faculty, and administrators- has been working on a code since October of 1984. The council released a discussion draft of the emergency procedures to the University community for input last April. The procedures provide guidelines and a judicial system within the University to handle violent crimes which the admin- istration claims are not adequately addressed within the existing civil court system. "It's rather dubious of the University to want to set up a parallel court system," said Jack Weigal, chairperson of the board. "We want to make it clear, though, that we still support the existing progress of the University Coun- 'It's rather dubious of the University to want to set up a parallel court system' Jack Weigel Chairman of the Civil Liberties Board. cil," he added. THE COUNCIL tackled such violent crimes as murder and arson first because those violations promised to be the least contro- versial. The negative reactions the emergency procedures have elicited, though, question the basic right of the University to use academic sanctions such as suspension or See FACULTY, Page 3 Premier Jacques Chirac, faced with one of the gravest political crises of his nine months in office, appeared calm. His interior min- ister, Charles Pasqua, promised a full investigation into the death Saturday of a 22-year-old student following what witnesses said was a beating by police. Protests against the reform bill began three weeks ago but escalated in the last few days. The government says the measure would make universities more compe- titive, but students charge that it would make higher education elitist. The students' national coord- inating committee called for national demonstrations this Wednesday and invited unions and other organizations to join in opposing the reform bill and police "repression." The Communist-led General Confederation of Labor France's largest union federation, urged its membership yesterday to join "a powerful day of strikes on Wednesday, Dec. 10, and to participate en masse in the demonstrations." In the Latin Quarter, dozens of people threw stones and bottles at police, burned barricades, broke windows, and set cars afire, police said. After four hours, about 500 police officers surrounded the area and moved in on rioters, witnesses said. The students are demanding withdrawal of the reform bill. Galens drive raises $52,586 By REBECCA COX University medical students staked out busy corners all over the city Friday and Saturday, collecting $52,586 in the annual Galens Tag ,.Days bucket drive. The donations will go toward children's causes in Washtenaw County. The majority of the funds are given to the Galens Room in Mott Children's Hospital. "The main hulk of our money goes there, about $50,000," said Michael Brand, a fourth-year medical student collecting near a bus stop at University Hospital Friday. The IGalens Room is a work room for children staying in the hospital. The rest goes to children's groups which the Galens Medical Society determines to be needy. In the past, money has gone towards the Ronald McDonald House at the University Medical Center and the Alphe House for adolescent sub- stance abuse at St. Joseph's Mercy' Hospital. Sharon Gibson medical stude See MEDICAL, Page 2 Galen's Tag D Washtenaw C TODAY- - Movies Law school paper forced out of office By PETER MOONEY The witty, acerbic law student newspaper, The Res Gestae, has been forced out of its office in Hutchins Hall by the Law School administration. Last Wednesday's issue of The Res Gestae reported that the paper had been "evicted" from its fourth floor office in Hutchins Hall. The article went on to say that the paper was hoping to move to the seventh floor offices, which are assigned by the law student government. The weekly newspaper with a circulation of 1,200 has always had its office space assigned by the administration, according to outgoing Editor in Chief Steve Hunter. Hunter said he didn't believe that the administration's decision was in response to the paper's editorial content. But he did say, "The administration hasn't always liked everything we've done." According to Law School Dean Terrance Sandalow, new faculty members will need the paper's former office. "Roughly, what's happening is that we're desperately short of space," Sandalow said. Associate Dean Susan Eklund, who is in charge of allocating office space, agreed that the decision to evict the publication was not based on its editorial content. She said certain offices are reserved for student use, but that the Res Gestae was using offices reserved for staff organizations. "We give student government seven offices to allocate. We have also been able to give the student newspaper office space where the staff works," Eklund See STUDENT, Page 3 Developers drop condo plans By JOHN DUNNING Condominiums slated for con- struction above the Tally Hall parking structure will not be built because the developers say the need is not great enough in the downtown area. Last week John Corey and his partner, Peter Allen, dropped their proposal to build more than $10 million worth of condominiums above the mall. "The characteristics of building above a parking structure is that you have to build them all at once. And you have to be pretty certain that the market can absorb that number of condominiums," Corey said. There has to be "enough people with the means and interest to buy condominiums" in the downtown area. "Now is not the time to do it," he said. Corey and Allen's proposal to city council called for between 60 to 70 condominiums of 1,000 to 1,600 sq. feet to be built above Tally Hall, at a cost of $125,000 to $175,000 each to the buyer. According to City Administrator Godfrey Collins, the developers are reluctant to build the condomin- iums because much of the mall's retail space is still unleased. See TALLY, Page 2 Daily Photo by LESLIE BOORSTEIN. in, a fourth-year medical student, gives a tag to fourth-year ent Dorm Dougall Friday. Gibson collected donations for Days, an annual two-day fundraiser benefitting children in ounty. Alternative Action, The Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Cinema Guild, Cinema II, and Mediatrics - in addition to the Michigan Theater. Proceeds will benefit the film festival, which is the oldest of its kind in the United States. The pass may be purchased at Schoolkids Records on E. Liberty St. Washington, a conservative "think tank," Bennett said teachers should emphasize facts rather than "nuclear" or "peace" curricula. He said such courses are based on an unsupported assumption that American children are terrifyed by the prospect of nuclear annihilation and are a creation of the INSIDE- COMPASSION: Opinion endorses the Catholic Bishops' pastoral letter on poverty in the U.S. See Page 4. i I