The Michigan Daily-Monday, February 29, 1988- Pogt3 U U.N. resoluti~onsl- Die-in decry American Regents reject bylaw change, spur protest anti-PLO efforts By JIM PONIEWOZIK About 20 members of the Les- bian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee staged a "die-in" follow- ing the University Board of Regents' Feb. 19 meeting, after the regents refused to vote on a LaGROC pro- posal to amend an anti-discrimina- tion bylaw. The group had proposed that a March 1984 statement by former University President Harold Shapiro, which said the University should not consider sexual orientation as a fac- tor in academic or hiring decisions, be added to bylaw 14.06. The group members, holding gravestone-shaped placards, lay down in front of the main exits from the Regents' Room in the Fleming Ad- ministration Building, where the meeting was held, forcing the re- gents to leave through a side door. LaGROC leader and LSA senior Alicia Lucksted said the "die-in," which lasted about 15 minutes, was symbolic of the harmful effects on gays the group says stem from the regents' refusal to amend the bylaw. The group has said the bylaw change would help discourage sometimes violent harassment of gays. "Your complacency is killing us," read one protester's sign. Regent Deane Baker (D-Ann Ar- bor) defended the regents' decision yesterday, pointing out that the re- gents voted to endorse Shapiro's statement at their January meeting. The endorsement does not incorpo- rate the statement into the bylaw. Baker would not comment on the reasons behind the regents' decision not to vote on the proposal. "The regents' action speaks for itself," he said. LaGROC member Brian Durrance called the regents' refusal to vote on the proposal "very frustrating. (Anti- gay discrimination) is the one kind of minority discrimination that the regents can casually dismiss." Durrance and other LaGROC members said they were not sur- prised by the regents' decision. "We knew they'd stonewall," he said. At January's meeting, LaGROC had proposed that the regents add the words "sexual orientation" to the section of the current bylaw which prohibits discrimination based on "race, sex, color, religion, creed, na- tional origin or ancestry, age, mari- tal status, handicap, or Vietnam Era status." The regents had defeated the Jan- uary proposal unanimously. Lucksted said LaGROC changed its request for the bylaw revision to address concerns some regents had voiced at January's meeting. The re- gents were worried that the previous proposal would force the University to cut its ties with groups, such as ROTC, that discriminate on the ba- sis of sexual orientation. Lucksted said she and about 10 other LaGROC members held a closed meeting with regents Baker, Paul Brown (D-Petoskey), and Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor) the af- ternoon following the meeting to discuss LaGROC's proposals. She would not discuss details of the meeting "(The discussion) wasn't really fruitful... there wasn't any concrete agreement made," Lucksted said. Baker said the two groups dis- cussed LaGROC's January and February proposals at the meeting, which he termed "a friendly exchange of views." -Associated Press A call for peaceA Israelis carry torches in a main Jerusalem square as part of a demon- stration organized by the 'Peace Now' movement calling for immediate peace talks with Palestinians. About 3,000 people joined the demon- stration which was held Saturday night. Regents OK funds for N Camp us center UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The United States, its U.N. prestige and influence already at an all-time low, faces a showdown today when the General Assembly convenes an emergency session to condemn U.S. efforts to close the PLO mission. Some Arab leaders say they want to shift the next General Assembly meeting to Geneva to punish the United States for harassing the Palestine Liberation Organization, which the United Nations recognizes. The entire U.N. operation here, including the General Assembly, funnels $400 million to $700 million each year into the U.S. and New York economies, according to the U.S. mission. The 42nd General Assembly will reconvene for at least three days beginning today and consider two resolutions regarding the P L O mission. One reaffirms the PLO's right to operate and calls on the United States to honor its treaty obligations, the other calls for a ruling by the International Court of Justice. The move to shut the P L O mission comes as Secretary of State George Shultz is on a critical Middle East visit aimed at initiating Middle East peace talks and ending the 11- week Palestinian uprising in Israel's occupied territories. State Department and United Nations lawyers as Congress' new anti-terrorist legislation, whi h would close the PLO's U.N. obsefvr mission, is illegal and violates the 1947 Headquarters Agreement. Former Attorney General RanIsey Clark, legal adviser to the PLO, told the Associated Press Saturday, "We assume the United States doesn't want to be an international outlaw 'We assume the United States doesn't want to be an international outlaw and will, therefore, honor- (the UN's) obligations." -Former Attorney General Ramsey Clark and will, therefore, honor its obligations." S PLO Ambassador Zehdi Labib Terzi told the AP that the U.S. action against the PLO mission is harming Shultz' chances in :the Middle East. "The Palestinians are being killed in their own home, and this is.an attempt to stifle their voice in'¢the international community. This. s not a message of peace, but a requiem," he said. The anti-terrorist legislatioe, passed in December and effective March 22, has put the United States on a collision course with the 159r member world organization. By STEVE KNOPPER Students living in the Univer- sity's North Campus family housing will receive their long-awaited com- munity center in the fall of 1989. The University's Board of Re- gents, at their Feb. 19 meeting, unanimously approved construction for the center, a proposed 14,000- square foot building for additional family housing facilities. Rackham graduate student Kevin Harris, a family housing resident and Residents' Council member, said he was "pleasantly surprised" by the re- gents' vote. In the past, he said, re- gents have spoken against additional child care facilities. The community center will in- clude more than child care. The new building will incorporate a large meeting room, a kitchen, an exercise room, a study, and more space and See COMMUNITY, Page 7 ' pursues radon research lab' Sparks fly at GOP d1 atiAtlanta By The Associated Press George Bush, whose backers claimed victory yesterday in Maine's Republican presidential caucuses, was attacked by chief rival Bob Dole on the Iran-Contra affair, while Rep. Jack Kemp blasted the two G OP frontrunners on taxes. Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis won the Maine Democratic caucuses, scoring another victory on his New England home turf, and Jesse Jackson scored a surprisingly strong second. Most of the Democrats, meanwhile, gathered for a debate in Houston. The Maine caucuses pick delegates to the parties' state conventions this spring, where national convention delegates are chosen. At a Republican debate in Atlanta - their first full-scale face off of the Southern campaign - Dole took aim at Bush for the Reagan administration's decision to trade arms for hostages in the Iran-Contra affair. That, he said, was a big mistake. "We should never trade arms for hostages. We shouldn't issue these reports and say we shouldn't trade arms for hostages - and then later By DAVID SCHWARTZ The University may house a Radon Research and Education Center to investigate the effects of radon - a gas that causes lung cancer - and train people to measure radon levels in their homes, if a plan proposed by two University professors is granted state funding. Arnold Jacobson and James Martin, University professors of environmental and industrial health, developed the idea for a radon center about a year ago. Jacobson said the state of Michigan will most likely approve funding for the $97,000 project, which would then open in April. Earlier this month, the University formed a commission to research the extent of the problem after 20 University buildings were found to have small amounts of the gas. Radon is an odorless, colorless, radioactive gas that seeps into buildings through water or soil. Breathing air heavy with radon is linked with lung cancer, according to studies by the Environmental Protection Agency. It is produced by the radioactive decay of uranium in the soil and may enter houses through the water or the air. John Jones, the director of the University's Radiation Control Service, said 22 more buildings were found to have at least traces of radon. But Jones said radon is everywhere and it is not a problem unless found in large quantities. Radon gas is measured in picocuries. The EPA reports that more than four picocuries per cubic liter of air is dangerous and presents a lung cancer threat. Jones said three University buildings have "unacceptable" levels of radon, but he would not elaborate on which buildings. He said the levels would be checked again to make sure the original measurements were accurate. The center is being created to deal with problems of high radon levels in houses and buildings in Michigan and throughout the country, as well as to gather and provide information on radon. Jacobson said people exposed to both cigarette smoking and radon generally run an increased risk of contracting lung cancer. "Radon may be the second largest cause of lung cancer, after smoking," Jacobson said. Another goal of the radon center will be to train people to properly measure radon levels in homes or buildings. Jacobson said between 10 and 15 percent of homes in Michigan have dangerous radon levels. Jacobson said radon levels in homes can be lowered through better ventilation, among other methods. Radon can be trapped in a home through insulation that is designed to' conserve energy during winter by trapping heat, he said. An official from the EPA in Lansing who spoke on condition of anonymity said no laws currently exist to protect citizens from the harmful effects of radon poisoning. The state's grant will only be for one year. Jacobson said he expected to receive further funding if needed. But if the center does not receive more funding, he said he hopes the center can become self-sufficient by charging fees;for services such as training to take tests. Bush ... assailed by Dole go to a meeting and say it's all right. We shouldn't do these things," Dole said, holding up a report on terrorism that was written by a presidential commission headed by Bush. Bush did not respond directly, but did say "mistakes were made" in the Iran-Contra affair. Kemp, whose campaign has been faltering after poor showings in early contests, accused Bush and Dole of supporting tax hikes. "They sound alike. They talk alike. They've supported every single tax increase over the last eight years," the New York representative said. "If they're nominated, the Reagan revolution is over, gone, dead." Donation didn't affect probe, senator says (Continued from Page 1) Corp., which presented its contribu- tion to Riegle on March 23, 1987, at a fundraiser hosted by company, Chairperson Charles Keating. The investigators were looking into high-risk investments made by Lincoln that could threaten its sol- vency, the News said. "If there was the slightest sugges- tion or hint that somehow somebody was going to contribute in return for some kind of favorable consideration, we don't want that money," Riegle said. "I wouldn't accept it." The other senators at the meeting also have accepted contributions from Keating and his associates during the 1980s - Democrats Alan Cranston of California, $41,900; Dennis DeConcini of Arizona, $43,000; John Glenn of Ohio, $34,000; and Republican John McCain of Arizona, $112,000, the newspaper said. The contributions were permiss- ible under federal election laws. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Speakers Sydney Shoemaker - "Qual- ities and Qualia: What's in the Mind?", West Conference Room, Rackham, 4 p.m. Clare Snook and D a w n Soerries - Guild House Writers Series, Guild House, 802 Monroe, R 2 4:30 p.m. Furthermore Topics in the Art of Peter Paul Rubens - seminar: "An- twerp and Amsterdam: the Cities of Rubens and Rembrandt", 180 Tappan, 4 p.m. Pre-School Programs - Pee Stop by and see a Jostens representative, Monday, February 29-Friday, March 4, 11 a m tnAn m } P i .1 I