eThe Rele InWeekenMagazine: The List vancy of Religion 9 John Logie 9 Interview: Rosemary Reuther 1E t:t~:I;1nt:.I Cyrht18,Mcga Ninety-eight years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 60 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, December 4, 1987 Copyright 1987, The Michigan Daily Cubans vote to terminate prison siege Inmates to sign pact that a s! fi l9..Could free 19 hostages. A room with a view Doily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER Shielding themselves under an umbrella, two women walk in the blustery snow flurries and slush yesterday outside the Michigan Union. This weekend's weather forecast calls for more wet snow and wintery temperatures. H Ho'using cod debtnasend ATLANTA (AP) - Cuban inmates holding 89 hostages at the U.S. Penitentiary voted yesterday to accept an agreement with the federal government that could free the captives and end the 11-day siege, a federal official said. U.S. Justice Department spokes- person Patrick Korten said the agreement was approved by a majority of the inmates, and officials were waiting for word on when the pact could be signed. "They want somebody to come in from out of town," Korten said, an apparent reference to Bishop Agustin Roman of Miami, a Cuban native credited with helping end a similar prison siege in Oakdale, Louisiana. Roman booked a 7:35 p.m. flight to Atlanta. The two-page proposal was put before all 1,100 inmates for a vote after it was initiated by detainees' representatives in a meeting with federal negotiators, said Korten. The proposal had already been approved by U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meesse. Korten said he was told the inmate vote was not unanimous, but that inmate leaders had promised to enforce the majority sentiment. No details of the pact were disclosed, and Korten refused to say whether the proposal goes further than a settlement that ended the eight-day siege last week at the federal detention center in Louisiana. That pact, which led Sunday to the release of 26 hostages by 1,000 inmates, included provisions for amnesty for actions during the siege and for individual reviews of the inmates' cases. Some inmates announced over a rooftop public address system that they approved the agreement in an afternoon meeting in the prison chapel, said Ernesto Perez, a host of a Hispanic radio program that inmates' wives have used t o communicate with their husbands. "We have agreed to everything and we're going to end this thing, Tomorrow everyone will go home," he quoted the speakers as saying. Carol Dixon, whose husband was among the hostages, said shortly after 5 p.m. that prison officials told her to go to the penitentiary because detainees had agreed to the pact and would release the captives within three. hours. The standoff began Nov. 23 following the announcement of an agreement to deport to Cuba some of those individuals imprisoned after arriving in theX Mariel boatlift of 1980. Korten said the agreement would apply to an estimated 3,800 Cuban detainees held in county, state, and federal prisons nationwide. It would have no bearing on the status of American inmates at the U.S. Penitentiary here, he said. Gary Leshaw, an attorney who has represented some of the inmates but was not at the negotiating table yesterday, said it was clear that in order to reach a settlement, "they would have had to deal with the deportation issue." By ALYSSA LUSTIGMAN After more than two years of debate and compromise, the struggle for a new Ann Arbor housing code may be coming to an end. A 53-page proposal is scheduled to go before a public hearing and a subsequent second reading before the city council on Dec. 21. The proposal is the work of an ad hoc committee created by council, in the spring of 1985, to redraft the code now in effect. The code was revised last June and again in early October. The revisions would simplify language used in the present code, as well as change the complaint procedure, notification to tenants about inspection, and t i m e extensions for repairs. "Many houses in Ann Arbor are old, and have certain peculiarities about them that have to be taken into account when writing a new code," said Council member Kathy Edgren (D - Fifth Ward). Some changes were made to fit these eccentricities - in some cases ceiling heights were lowered from the standard 7'6" to 6'6," said Edgren, who originally proposed that the current code be changed. The revision would also tighten lax enforcement policies, she said. "The inspection department was sending paper tigers to the property owners and not following up on the threats," she said. The new code gives the landlords six months to make repairs instead of the former limit of one year. It also spells out the penalties for violations, which are mostly financial. "We're trying to set minimum standards for health and safety, protect the housing stock from deteriorating, and do it at the lowest cost to the owners and tenants," Edgren said. Jack Donaldson, director of the city's Building Department and a technical advisor to the committee, said the proposed code would also See AFTER, Page 8 encourages top Sminorities to enroll 'Ford Visits Alumni campaignfinishe By DAVID SCHWARTZ Special to the Daily DEARBORN - A symposium last night reached out to minority high school students from southeastern Michigan in an effort to bring them to the University. Selected because of their high test scores and grades, about 450 I minority seniors from southeastern Michigan were invited to the Fairlane Manor in Dearborn. About 110 students actually attended the symposium, with questions pointed more towards traditional high school concerns than with minority problems on campus. University Admissions Counselor Jim Vanhecke, the Iprogram's organizer, said that in past years, 80 percent of the students who attended the symposium enrolled at the University. The event allowed University administrators to address the concerns that students had about the University and its programs. Representatives from the admissions office - including Director of Undergraduate Admissions Clifford 1 Siogren - financial aid, and of students and opprotunities. In addition, a panel composed of 15 current University students answered questions about issues ranging from housing to the Honors College. The program was one part of University President Harold Shapiro's six-point plan to encourage qualified minorities to attend the University. After protests last spring, in which students demanded higher minority enrollment at the University, officials expanded thel minority student symposium. Vice Provost for Minority Affairs Charles Moody said during an introduction to the students, "I hope you look at the events of last spring on campus as opportunities, opportunities where an institution can look at itself and say, 'Yes, we must change."'" "When you come to Michigan, be proud, stand tall, hold your head high, and tell everyone that you belong there and that you deserve to be there," Moody said. The students on the panel felt the symposium was an effective step in increasing the number of minority By DAHLIA DEAN I and JEFF HUGHES With former President Geralds Ford on hand, University President Harold Shapiro announced at Crisler Arena yesterday that the four-year alumni contribution drive, Campaign for Michigan, had collected $172.9 million. It sur- passes the campaign's goal by $12.9 million. Ford, who attended the University in the early 1930s, was t h e campaign's honorary chair of the campaign. He joined Shapiro and former University regent Robert Nederlander, who chaired the campaign, in a luncheon and news conference to celebrate the end of the campaign on December 31. Faced with dwindling avenues of funding and increasing needs - such as a new hospital and chemistry building- the University established the Campaign to tap the alumni for money. Construction projects have recieved $80 million from the drive, while $80 million has gone to faculty endowments and student scholarships. These areas are the largest recipients of the funds. "Over the past five years, we've raised more...than ever before in the history of the Univeristy of Michigan," Shapiro said. As an indication of the campaign's significance, Regent Thomas Roach was quoted in an interview last year, saying that without the fund-raising drive, the University's $285 million hospital would not have been completed. Similarly, he said, the University could not have afforded the $20 million chemistry building now under construction. Roach was the campaign's "special gifts" director. Ford fielded reporters' questions at See CAMPAIGN, Page 7 Ford ... surprises class MSU to award Shapiro with honorary degree By DAHLIA DEAN Michigan State University will mend at least some of the rivalry between it and the University this Saturday when President Harold hn. nrn ran a. iaan -. nnnra-r pr n President of Research and Graduate Studies, said their Honorary Degree Committee recommended Shapiro for the degree. "I think that there should be no mrea a e