Ninety-eight years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 55 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, November 25, 1987 Copyright 1987, The Michigan Daily Arms negotiators reach agreement g 3|||'U' profs.: Arms deal I ' Leaders to sign pact at talks next month sets a good precedent GENEVA (AP) - The United States and the Soviet Union agreed Tuesday to the first superpower treaty to eliminate an entire category of nuclear weapons, and they will sign the pact at a summit meeting in Washington on Dec.9. The deal was sealed with a hand- shake by Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze at the U.S. mission. "All that remains is treaty lan- guage which others will be ale to do," Shultz said. "We are very pleased that we have this agree- ment." The treaty io scrap shorter-and medium-range missiles is the centerpiece for the talks President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev are scheduled to hold in Washington Dec. 8-10. At a news conference, Shultz said the Soviets had not yet provided all See ARMS, Page 2 By JIM PONIEWOZIK The possible agreement to ban U.S. and Soviet intermediate-range nuclear missiles is a step towards nuclear disarmament, said University professors and spokespeople from disarmament groups yesterday. But they added that the Reagan administration needs to back off from its Strategic Defense Initiative if it hopes to make further progress on arms control. The comments came in response to Secretary of State George Schultz's announcement yesterday that he and Soviet Foreign Minister Edward Shevardnadze had agreed on the major terms of a treaty that would ban the two nations intermediate-range nuclear missiles. Both sides still have to draft, sign, and ratify the treaty before it can take effect. See PEACE, Page 2 Shultz Shevardnadze Shultz and Shevardnadze reach agreement on an intermediate range nuclear missile ban treaty. I Students plan CIA protest S 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .'C> N .'.' 0 _- '.4N.'b," , X'N'N..CNNN.V.---. -- Doily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Peace march The third annual Community High School March for Peace and Die-In stopped traffic on South Fifth Street at noon yesterday. "We mean no harm," said Community High senior Beth Dulka. "We just want to make a statement for world peace." By KATHERINE BEITNER Today, for the first time in two years, the Central Intelligence Agency will be recruiting at the University, and students will 'be protesting. The interviews are sponsored by the Career Planning and Placement office. The protest, led by the Latin American Solidarity Committee, will begin at 8:00 a.m. at the Stu- dent Activities Building. Protester Phillis Engelbert, a graduate natural resources student, explained the opposition to the re- cruitment, "The CIA is a network which carries out U.S. policies to oppress second and third world countries. They have toppled demo- cratic governments in countries which the government represented the majority of the people's inter- ests." In October 1984, protesters dis- rupted a CIA presentation and chased recruiters from the Modern Language Building, forcing interviews to be postponed. When the CIA returned to campus the following fall term, 26 protesters, including many students, were arrested and eventually acquit- ted. Despite the opposition,,the CIA interviewed 20 people. CIA recruiters, however, did not return the following spring. Deborah Orr May, director of CPP, said at the time that the CIA didn't need more employees and had a list of students on file from fall interviews. When asked if the 1985 protest stopped recruiters from returning to this campus last year, May said she did not know. But LSA junior David Austln said the protest did affect the CIA's decision to skip recruitment. "There were protests against the recruiter; all around the nation," he said. CIA spokesperson Sharon Foster, said she did not know why it did not come to this campus last year. "We recruit on 300 campuses a year." She said the CIA usually visits a school once a year, often depending on its size. Foster would not comment on the number of employees needed or re- cruited this year. "We don't talk about numbers because the opposi- tion is always interested in knowing the efforts against them." "This year's needs are smaller. At most universities we havewheld a general session in which we pre- screen," said Foster. "People who work here have to pass a polygraph test, we have a high moral standard." said Foster. Potential employees undergo an ex- tensive background investigation, including financial and personal in- formation, except political affiliation Foster said, "We accept that it is the protesters' First Amendment right to make a statement, and it is our right to recruit." Foster added that sometimes the protestsscreates such an interest that there is an in- crease in interview requests. Engelbert said, "I don't have a lot of sympathy for students who want interviews. It's like asking, 'don't you feel Nazis have the right to re- cruit?' These people have no regard for human rights and lives." " Petition to By STEVE KNOPPER A petition to buy more land for Ann Arbor parks is expected to garner enough signatures to put the proposal on April's city election ballot. Already, the Park Acquisition Resource Coalition has about 3,700 of the 3,882 signa- tures it needs before the-early-January deadline, said coalition chair Bob Elton. The parks would be paid for by a millage that would provide half a million dollars a year over five years. The funds will be taken from city property taxes. An identical resolution was proposed last February by City Councilmember Seth Hirshorn (D-Second Ward), but was rejected by council with a 3-7 vote. request 11 Currently, the Park Acquisition Resource Coalition has about 3,700 of the 3,882 required signatures, said coalition chair Bob Elton."We're doing this because a lot of us feel there is really little undeveloped land in this city," Elton said. "If we lose the chance to buy the land, it is lost forever." "The pace of development is quickly gobbling up open space," Hirshorn said, "and we're getting the short end of the stick. Parks are important for the overall ambience of the community." Hirshorn said he plans to use the issue as a platform when he runs for reelection in April. Elton, who has run for city council three times, called the park acquisition issue "non-par- tisan," saying, "Politically, this has been the I ore parks least controversial thing I've ever done." But the millage has its opponents. "We already have 100-plus parks," said Coun- cilmember Jeff Epton (D-Third Ward), who op-i posed the resolution in February. "It's a lower priority than some more essential needs that aren't addressed, like housing." Elton said that if the millage passes, he would like to see the city buy land in the northeast and southwest sections of Ann Arbor, which includes the Nixon Wetlands, and areas near Briarwood. Funding would begin in 1988 and continue through 1992. The millage, if it passes, will re- place a similar plan that expired last December, Elton said. .JHousing mediator known for fairness By ALYSSA LUSTIGMAN Sherie Veramay never lived off campus when she was a student at Hope College in the late 1970s. But her patience, objectivity, and her ability to put people at ease has enabled her to become a successful housing mediator for the University. As the off-campus housing adviser and chief coordinator of the University Mediation program, Veramay said her job entails trying to help students resolve disputes with their landlords. "You may have a situation where you've rented an apartment, and you made an agreement with the landlord that certain things would be done. If they aren't and things aren't going the way they should, and you don't know how to go about talking to the landlord, you can start here as a resource," she said. Last year, out of 878 requests for mediation, only 23 came down to actual mediation sessions. Out of Profile 'A 7q