The Michigan Daily-Monday, January 11, 1988- Page 3 Fleming won't cancel class for King holiday By JIM PONIEWOZIK Interim University President Robben Fleming said yesterday he told members of the United Coalition Against Racism(UCAR) the Univer- sity administration will not ask the Board of Regents to declare Martin Luther King's birthday an official University holiday. Fleming said he made the an- nouncement at a meeting Friday with Rackham graduate students and UCAR members Barbara Ransby and Dan Holliman. Vice Provost for Mi- nority Affairs Charles Moody was also present at the meeting. Last week, UCAR members had called for students and staff to boy- cott classes and University jobs to honor the holiday. Ransby said the boycott was announced before meet- ing with Fleming because they as- sumed the University would continue its policy of holding class on Martin Luther King Day. Yesterday, Fleming supported his decision, saying that the loss of class time would inconvenience professors who have planned their schedules to include sessions on Jan. 18. "Cancelling a day (of class) that's already been committed is always difficult," said Fleming. But several professors have already decided not to hold their classes on the holiday. Political Science Prof. Matthew Evangelista, who has cancelled his lecture for Political Science 470, said he does not believe his students have been inconvenienced. "I have the impression that the students understand the rationale be- hind the decision, and are interested in honoring Dr. King," said Evange- lista. Evangelista said he supports the idea of creating a University holiday in honor of Dr. King. LSA junior Kim Jones, whose Afro-American Studies 326 class with Prof. Walter Allen was can- celled, said she welcomed the cancel- lation because she planned on partic- ipating in Martin Luther King Day activities in lieu of class. Fleming ... wants classes on King holiday "I think that (a University holiday in honor of Dr. King) is long over- due," said Jones. "I think it would show a lot on the part of the Univer- sity regarding concern for Blacks and other minorities." Police suspect West German woman in '86 disco bombing A fire late Friday morning on East Kingsley caused approximately $45,000 worth of damage but no injuries were reported. It took eight fire trucks and 22 firefighters 45 minutes to put out the blaze. Fire damages campus house BERLIN (AP) - Police suspect a West Berlin woman working for Palestinian terrorists planted the bomb that killed two U.S. soldiers and wounded 229 people in a West Berlin discotheque, authorities said yesterday. President Reagan had blamed Libya for the April 5, 1986, La Belle discotheque attack, which also killed a Turkish woman, and ordered the retaliatory bombing of Tripoli and Benghazi 10 days later. West Berlin justice department spokesperson Volker Kaehne said police were seeking 27-year-old Christina Gabriele Endrigkeit, who has been missing since the bombing. Kaehne said an arrest warrant was issued for her on Dec. 30 and that authorities were offering a $93,000 reward for information leading to her capture. West Berlin security sources said Mrs. Endrigkeit, a German born in West Berlin, was believed to be hiding with her 3-year-old son. "On the basis of seized documents and according to eyewitness accounts of her behavior before the explosion, she is strongly suspected of bringing the explosives into the club and leaving the explosives there," Kaehne said. He did not elaborate, and make no mention of Libya in his announce- ment to reporters yesterday. It was the first major lead the authorities have disclosed in their massive investigation into the bombing. The disco was popular with American soldiers, and was crowded on the night of the attack. The ZDF international television network quoted unidentified police sources as saying the woman had been suspected for a long time but that police only now had enough evidence to issue an arrest warrant.- "Mrs. Endrigkeit...allegedly acted on behalf of the Jordanian-born brothers Ahmed Nawaf Hasi and Nezar Hindawi," said a security source who spoke on condition of anonymity. Both men are convicted Palestinian terrorists. Hasi was convicted of an earlier West Berlin terrorist bombing and is serving a 14-year prison sentence. Hindawi is serving a 45-year sentence in Britain for his 1986 conviction on charges he tried to smuggle a bomb onto an Israeli jetliner in London in the luggage of his Irish girlfriend. Kaehne said Hasi remains a suspect in the La Belle bombing, but he refused to elaborate. Hasi was arrested two weeks after it and police found what appeared to be drawings of the club in his possession, but he was never charged. CLASSIFIED ADSI Call 764-0557 By JILL REINSTEIN Twenty-two firefighters, with eight trucks, extin- guished a fire at 816 E. Kingsley late Friday morning. No injuries were reported, but the house was damaged extensively, said Ann Arbor Fire Department Battalion thief Charles Torrey. The landlord, Michael Bielby, said the house is "mostly gutted." Two-thirds of the house was charred, with extensive smoke damage throughout the whole house, he said. Bielby said there is about $45,000 worth of damage to the house. Many of the tenants' personal belongings and house furnishings, such as the hard wood floors and bevelled glass French doors, were lost in the blaze, he said. The cause of the fire is still being investigated, but fire department officials suspect that it was started by an electric space heater in a first floor bedroom, Torrey said. The house was rented to seven people, mostly stu- dents. Tiff Crutchfield was the only person inside when the fire started at approximately 11 a.m. "I woke up and smelled smoke," he said. Crutchfield escaped by climbing through his bed- room window and jumping off the porch roof, he said. He sustained minor injuries on his wrist and knee. "I just had time to put on jeans and shoes, and when I got outside, a passerby lent me a coat," Crutchfield said. Bielby said he arranged for the tenants to stay in an- other house, which he has recently purchased, while the damaged one is being restored. He expects the house to be rebuilt within a few months. Debate grows over wait staff pay cut LANSING (AP) - Supporters of a bill to make Michigan restaurants more profitable by cutting wages for new waitresses and waiters claim the proposal could create 60,000 new jobs. But labor interests and Commerce Director Doug Ross - who de- scribed the proposal as "inhumane" - said with wages already low for most service sector jobs it makes no- sense to reduce the minimum wage for food servers from $2.51 to $2.01 an hour. Besides, Ross argues, there is al- ready a shortage of qualified restau- rant workers and reducing wages will discourage rather than entice more THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Campus Cinema A m a d e u s (Milos Forman 1984) Michigan Theater 9:20 p.m. Forman's adaptation of the stage hit treats a musical genius as a manic/depressive Bozo (played by Tom Hulce). Pleasant'and often spectacular, but marred by its de- piction of high-brow art flowing from a low-brow mind. Won eight Oscars, including Best Actor for F. Murray Abraham. Emital (Ousmane Sembene 1972) Aud. B 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. The fall of colonialism in mod- emn Africa. Tampopo (Juzo Itami 1987) Michigan Theater 7:00 p.m. The title character (the name Zvi Brosh - Israeli ambassador to the U.S., "Middle East Peace Prospect in Perspective," 8 p.m., Pendelton Room, Mich. Union. Maurya Simon - Visiting Writers Series, 4 p.m., Rackham East Conference Room. Dr. Omeljan Pritsak - Director of the Harvard U. Ukranian Research Institute, "What Really Happened in 988," 4:00 p.m., MLB Lecture Room #2. Meetings The Ann Arbor Cage B i r d Club - 7 p.m., Matthei Botanical Garden, 1800 N. Dixboro Rd. United Coalition A g a i n s t Racism - Mass meeting, 7 p.m., Kuenzel Room, Mich. Union. Christian Science Organization - 7:15 p.m., applicants. Michael Newman, president of the Michigan Restaurant Associa- tion, said the proposal, which his 1,800-member group supports, has been largely misunderstood by its critics. Newman said the main objective of the proposal isn't simply to lower wages for existing restaurant em- ployees, most of whom would be protected under the bill. Think You're Pregnant? Free Pregnancy Test Completely Confidential Family Life Services 529 N. Hewitt, Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (Any Time) RENT A REFRIGERATOR LOWEST PRICES PHONE 1-800-333-9966 FREE PHONE CALL FREE DELIVERY UNIVERSITY RENTALSERVICE KINKO'S HAS KODAK DISKS single-sided 5.25"-990 THE HONORABLE LOUIS STOKES . l / I ~ %. { * Member of the House Committee on the Iran-Contra Affair * Congressman of the 21st Congressional District of Ohio " Served on the Select Committee to conduct an Investigation and Study the Circumstances Surrounding the death of President John F. Kennedy and the death of Dr. Martin Luther King CONGRESSMAN STOKES WILL BE SPEAKING ON