U.S.-Soviet treaty to I J The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, December 8, 1987-Page 3 Kemp campaign chairs resign in protest of rules usher in conflict WASHINGTON (AP) - The brewing fight on Capitol Hill and across the country over the medium- :ange missile ban that President Meagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev are set to sign may be only a warm-up for a bloodier struggle over a treaty to slash long- range missile arsenals. Many of the same issues are in both accords, but magnified in a Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) because it involves more radical changes in the American nu- clear arsenal. The weapons that would scrapped by START are much more impor- tant to the defense of the United States and allies in Western Europe and Asia than the rockets due for dismantling under an Intermediate- range Nuclear Forces (INF) pact. Eliminating all U.S. medium- range rockets will still leave 4,000 U.S. nuclear weapons in Europe. But a 50 percent reduction in strate-. gic arms - the goal set by Reagan and Gorbachev - would make a vastly more substantial cut in A- merican armaments. Hard choices would have to be made by the Pentagon on which' weapons to keep and which to scrap in order to stay under prescribed ceilings. By contrast, the impact of the missile ban Reagan and Gorbachev are signing tomorrow afternoon is slight. About 7 percent of the 55,000 U.S. and Soviet warheadsf will be dismantled over three years. But the missile ban sets a prece- dent for inspection of each other's territories. Doily Photo by DANA MENDELSSOHN From D.C. to Diag LSA sophomore Beth Blumenstein speaks to a Soviet Jewry. virtually empty Diag during yesterday's campus protest for Council tables false report action LANSING (AP) - Two of Jack Kemp's Michigan co-chairs resigned yesterday so they could join sup- porters of Vice President George Bush in fighting a state party rules change aimed at helping Pat Robert- son. State Sen. Dick Posthumus (R- Lowell) and Larrain Thomas, first vice chair of the state party, said they no longer could go along with the tactics of the Kemp campaign. Kemp and Robertson backers joined forces earlier this year to take control of the state committee, trig- gering bitter warfare with Bush forces. "The party was just being destroyed," Thomas said. Thomas said Posthumus empha- sized they both still backed Kemp, but couldn't keep their campaign posts while the party was at war with itself. Flint attorney Paul Gadola is the third Kemp co-chair in Michigan. He didn't return a telephone message yesterday. The infighting has prompted a lawsuit, which was settled Friday in favor of Bush supporters, and threats of separate county and state conven- tions next month when Michigan selects the nation's first 77 delegates to the Republican National Conven- tion. "This coalition makes it unlikely the Michigan Republican Party will be faced with the possibility of ex- pensive lawsuits, 'rump' conven- tions, and intraparty battles, which could continue through the 1988 election cycle," Posthumus said at a Capitol news conference. Under an agreement outlined by Posthumus and a Bush co-chair, state Senate Majority Leader John Engler (R-Mount Pleasant), about. ten Kemp backers will oppose the. rules change that will be considered . Saturday and the Bush supporters won't file any more lawsuits against the state party. Posthumus and Engler said the agreement would let both their pres idential favorites emerge from the' Jan. 29-30 state convention in a "virtual dead heat." They refused to elaborate on that point. Posthumus said he and like- minded Kemp backers would tilt the balance of power on the 101-member state GOP committee away from the current conservative coalition. "It'll be very close, but I believe we have the votes to do it," he said. Earlier yesterday, state party chair Spencer Abraham announced the state committee would meet Satur- day to consider a proposed rule change that would erase some of the gains the Bush campaign has made in Michigan after a rocky early start. Abraham said he doesn't support the rules change, but was forced to call the meeting because more than a third of the party leadership had asked for it. Three weeks ago, Posthumus is- sued a letter criticizing the Bush forces and supporting the change.-h "The only way I justify it is that the Bush people are willing to withl draw further pursuit of lawsuits against the party," he said. (Continued from Page 1) tabled last night by City Council. The proposal was written by Epton in response to an incident in which the citizen was pulled over by police for a driving violation. The citizen then went to the police department and complained to police that he was assaulted. Assistant City Attorney Ron Plunkett denied the warrant against the officer, then authorized another warrant, filed later by a police officer, that the citizen made a false police report. Currently, Michigan State Law prohibits citizens from filing false reports, but another proposed ordinance by Epton, which passed through its first reading, would discount the law when a citizen makes a false complaint against a police officer. Epton's resolution, which was tabled as a separate proposal, says that the state law would apply "from time to time," and the new ordinance would apply, depending on policy set by city council and governed by the police. Epton's tabled proposal specifically demanded that all charges against the citizen be dropped. Councilmember Jeanette Middleton (R-Third Ward) said the wording in Epton's resolution was "really awkward." The resolution was tabled until the council's Jan. 4 meeting, and the ordinance passed through its first reading. A public hearing for the ordinance will also be held Jan. 4. Corbett said there have only been two false assault charges in the last year. Students rally against W. Quad evictions (Continued from Page 1) for "Fuck You Ratnesh." LSA sophomore Juan Litvak, one of the protesters, noted to Andrews that, "If those three deserve to be kicked out, thcn we all deserve to be kicked out," because all house residents had contributed to the slush fund, he said afterwards. Nagda refused to comment. Protesters said the women did not circulate the flier, and never intended to host the party, but another reason for their eviction is that they refused to identify the person who posted the flier. Brown and House President Jeff Martinez, also an LSA sophomore, did not refute the allegations against the three women, but stressed that many other people are committing worse offenses, like throwing glass bottles, and not receiving punitive action. They said that Nagda singled out these women by presenting only this specific case to Building Director Alan Levy and University Housing Director Archie Andrews. "It's pick- and-choose on what gets brought to the head honcho," said Martinez. The protesters also complained that Nagda has not shown concern for the students in his house. They said that in the past there has been derogatory grafitti on the walls aimed at specific people, but Nagda did not take action. They said that the grafitti has already forced one woman to move out of the house. But Resident Advisor Jean Liu said, "The person left because of personal problems that had nothing to do with the grafitti." The protesters said there has been animosity between Nagda and the house residents all term, and they said that he was unwilling to sit down and discuss the problem. "This G v? thisu (eviction) was the result of all the resident-staff problems (that have been building up)," said first-year LSA student Tarik Ajami. The three women will Levy today, hoping to decision overturned. meet with have the Simon says Sen. Paul Simon (D-Ill.) officially declares his candidacy for the presidency a't the New Hampshire Secretary of State's office yesterday. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today LoeleIpat cello Prate Celebrate Ceelat 0 SI 8dd 666 III'III Si I i I Resolut on cam Resolut of stud Your student government. The campum-wIde government. gome in and share with us your views on student PIsses. Constituients' time is reserved for Tuesday. 9pm. in the Assembly Chambers. eek's agenda includes: I tion condemning CIA recruitment apus and brutality by "U" security tion condemning harrassment ent in El Salvador meetings: Tuesday. 7:O0pm 3909 Michigan Union 763-3241 CANDLES AND MENORAHS ON SALE AT HILLEL 339 E. LIBERTY FOR CHANUKAH 663-3336 CHANUKAH 1st NIGHT L I GE T ITI. ROlrAiE GUAPEU- DEC. 15 tlinel '_a ------- Speakers Nicholas Delbanco - Reading from his work at part of the Visiting Writers Series, 4 p.m., Rackham East Conf. Rm. Admission is free. Spark Revolutionary History Series - "The 1905 Revolution in Russia," 7:00-8:00 p.m., 116 MLB. Meetings Alpha Phi Omega - Publicity and blood Drive Committees, 7 p.m., 4024 Michigan Union. Furthermore SAFEWALK - Night-time safety walking service. Open seven days a week, 8:00 p.m. -1:30 a.m. Stop by Rm. 102 Undergraduate Library, Sun.- Thurs., CIC Desk in Michigan Union, Fri.-Sat., or call 936-1000. Star Trax - Every Tuesday. Sing Pizzaria Uno's. Admission is free. Practice Interviewing - 3:10-5:00 p.m., Career Planning & Placement, Contact Sheri Bowers, 764-7460. Movies - "Energy and Morality" and "Harvest Comes Home," 1536 Schoool of Natural Resources. Call Prof. Bunyan Bryant at 763-2470. Concert - University of Michigan Early Music Ensemble under the direction of Edward Parmentier, 8:00 p.m., Blander Anderson Moore Hall of the School of Music. Admission is free. Stewards of the Land - A look at ethics in agriculture, our food source, personal responsibility for healing the earth. 7:30 p.m., Michigan League. Call Michael Garfield, 761-3186. Admission is free, donations welcome. University Lutheran Chapel - Evening Devotions, 6:15 p.m., 1511 Washtenaw. Call 663-5560. Jasmine - 7:30 performance at the Advertise in The Michigan Daily NEED HELP AT, CRISP? A peer counseling table will be available outside of CRISP The Personal Column MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS .JL -- University of Michigan Library Preservation Awareness Corner Answer "A" - relative humidity is the single most significant factor involved in the chemical deterioration that leads to fading and discoloration of photographs. Relative humidity should be kept stable and below I