Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom VOLUME XCVII - NO. 118 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 1987 COPYRIGHT 1987, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Blacklead agreeVmen By EUGENE PAK administration and black leaders. "A limited victory," said United Jackson and Shapiro commended Coalition Against Racism member each other and the students for their Barbara Ransby. work. Shapiro said he did not feel "Progress," said BAM III pressured into the resolutions, but organizer John Simpson. "extraordinarily helped in the That's what two student leaders situation." called six major resolutions Uni- BAM III and UCAR members versity President Harold Shapiro said the resolutions ,did not mark announced yesterday to increase the end of their work, and they will black student and faculty enrol- continue to push and monitor the lment. The resolutions are designed University's progress. to increase the numbers to more Most agreed that Jackson's help accurately reflect the state's 12.9 percent black population and to l snip o eterca t op eeo Jaclison campus. Shapiro announced the reso- By WENDY LEW lutions just before the Rev. Jesse and DAVID WEBSI Jackson's speech at Hill Audi- The Rev. Jesse Jackson culmina torium. University yesterday by urging mem Black students leaders, faculty, collectively take a stance against th administrators, Shapiro, and other forms of discrimination which pen administrators agreed upon the government. resolutions after hours of Jackson, an associate of the late negotiations this afternoon in King Jr., spoke to a standing-room Shapiro's office. Jackson was Hill Auditorium yesterday aft present during the negotations, University President Harold Shapi serving as a facilitator between the and black student leaders throughout ers reach with expedited the agreement. "I don't think anyone could have done it other than him," said Barron Wallace, a BAM III negotiator. Wallace said the establishment of timetables, goals, and mechanisms to achieve them were a significant component of the agreement. Shapiro declined further com- ment on the resolutions, which are still in the draft stage, but is expected to release a more complete statement during the week. The resolutions are: -Presidential recommendation to the Board of Regents to establish a vice provost position for an Office of Minority Affairs. The vice provost will be a senior, tenured professor in charge of minority student and faculty recruitment and retention. The vice provost office will be provided with a staff and an autonomous line item budget See BAM, Page 2 addresses 'U' racism Is TER ted his visit to the bers of all races to he institutionalized meate society and Dr. Martin Luther n-only audience at er meeting with ro, administrators, the day. He said institutional racism has manifested itself in both the university setting and government policy due to conservative political trends brought on by the Reagan administration. "My mixed emotion is that we're on the right cause when we fight racism and fascism, but in 1987 it's the wrong agenda," Jackson said. Instead, students should now concern themselves with putting an end to "economic, educational, and environmental violence." Many students agreed with Jackson's views that combating racial bigotry is a national priority and See JACKSON, Page 2 Doily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Rev. Jesse Jackson speaks to a standing-room only crowd at Hill Auditorium on combatting racism both at the University and in the world community. Student raped after fraternity function By STEVE BLONDER Ann Arbor police are in- vestigating the rape of a University student that occurred last Thursday night, according to Sgt. Jan Suomala. The victim, identified only as a woman born in 1965, was at a fraternity house on Oxford Street when she was assaulted by a male fraternity member she was acquainted with, Suomala said. Suomala said the man forced himself upon the victim and forcible penetration occurred. Detective Mary Smith, who is investigating the case, refused to comment about the case, but she said a suspect might be arrested soon. Suomala said the victim had been at the fraternity house prac- ticing a dance routine for Greek Week before the incident occurred. She was taken to University hospital for medical treatment and was released. Suomala added the suspect probably would be charged with first degree criminal sexual conduct. First degree CSC differs from the other three degrees of CSC in that it involves sexual penetration by force. First degree is a felony which carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. Police will not reveal exactly where the rape occurred - or any other information about the case - unless a suspect is charged. GEO calls for immediate. strike ballot TAs may walk if talks with 'U', mediator fail Cheek to cheek Doily Photo by SCOTTLTUCHY- The team of Alpha Delta Pi sorority and Alpha Delta Phi and Phi Kappa Psi fraternities twist and stretch their way to victory over the team of Zeta Tau Alpha sorority and Phi Gamma Delta and Theta Delta Chi frater- nities in the annual Twistermania challenge in the Diag Yesterday. Council1 Dem-s, Republicans spIt on task force extension By ANDY MILLS Members of the union that re- presents all University teaching as- sistants voted yesterday to send strike ballots to their general mem - bership beginning today. If the strike measure is approved, the Graduate Employees Organization will call a strike beginning April 8. The measure, which passed 95 to 2, calls for a strike only if the GEO bargaining team and the University fail to reach a tentative agreement at mediated talks on April 7. GEO President Alice Haddy said members at the meeting were stau- nchly behind the decision. "There were a lot of people who felt that we weren't acting fast-enough," she said. Haddy contrasted the sentiment at yesterday's meeting with that last fall, when the teaching assistants were also considering a strike. "The membership present didn't express any real fears about going out on strike. In the fall, people were fearful (of a strike)," she said. The results of the vote will not be known until just before talks restart April 7, so members will have as much time as possible to send back their ballots, Haddy said. At the meeting, GEO Vice President Diane Meisenhelter encouraged the crowd to give strong support to a strike authorization vote approved at an earlier meeting. By CARRIE LORANGER Ann Arbor City Council Republicans and Democrats last night were divided once again on an amendment to extend the life of the Central America Sister City Task Force. In the past, the four council Republicans have refused to concern themselves with international politics, so the seven Democrats could not attain the eight votes necessary to extend the life of the task force. At last night's council meeting, Ann Arbor Mayor Ed Pierce charged that the Republicans were making a serious mistake by not voting to extend the life of the task force. A vote will not be taken until the new council takes office in April. The task force was created last April when a ballot proposal passed with 61 percent of the vote. Third Ward Republican candidate and task force member Isaac Campbell urged the council to extend the life of the task force. He said that he has been impressed with the $20,000 the task force has raised to send a garbage truck to Ann Arbor's sister city, Juigalpa, See TASK, Page 3 Hadd v ...leads TA union But during discussion, the motion was amended to allow for actual ballotting. "A 'yes' vote would be tre- mendous leverage for the bargaining team," Meisenhelter said. "It would show (the University) that we mean business." As the situation stands, the GEO is asking for a full tuition waiver for TAs (the current waiver is 56 percent of resident tuition); a salary increase of 8 percent next year and 6 percent the following year; paid training for new TAs; and departmental-set class size limits. The University's most recent offer proposes a three year contract See TAs, Page 3 INSIDE Shapiro should pay heed to the majority of BAM III 's de- mands. OPINION, PAGE 4 Zydeco heir Simien Terrence and his Playboys perform at the Blind Pig tonight. ARTS, PAGE 5 The Wolverine baseball team . Protesters' rights should be protected, statement says By WENDY SHARP The University should take care to ensure the effectiveness of demonstrations and the rights of protesters, a statement from the University's Civil Liberties Board says. The statement, which was discussed yesterday by members of the faculty Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, urges the University to avoid calling police to protests unless there is a "clear and present danger" of infringement on the rights of others. 1 The statement, called "Remarks on the Rights and Limits protesters enter the building, and arrested many of them when workers in the building said the interviews were being disrupted. "A protest of NBC News's coverage of Central America when the Today Show came to campus in October 1985. The University restricted the protest to an area where the demonstrators could barely be heard on TV. *A protest during Vice President George Bush's visit to the University to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Peace Corps in October 1985. the statement was went too far in protecting protesters and not far enough in protecting the targets of protests. "We want refined behavior at a University," Briggs said. SACUA chair William Stebbins said the statement is necessary because it expresses the "University's attitude towards people who protest and the rights they should enjoy." Stebbins said the previous statement of the board in 1977 "said very little." The Civil Liberties Board decided to revise its 1977 statement on freedom of speech because of the treatment of