The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 2, 1988- Page3 SACUA 's stance against CIA protest draws mixed reactions By MICHAEL LUSTIG A faculty group's statement Monday condemning the methods used by anti-CIA protesters at a recruitment session last week drew mixed reactions yesterday. While student groups objected to the statement primarily out o f concern about the CIA, several administrators supported it on the grounds that a student's rights to interview should be protected. The statement, unanimously ap- proved by the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs said the group, "oppose[s] activities on campus which substantially interfere with the legitimate rights of other students," but "recognizes and supports the right of people to protest the activities of those with whom they disagree." PROTESTERS disrupted job interviews for the CIA at the Law School when some entered the rooms where the interviews were taking place and refused to leave. Six of eight interviews scheduled were cancelled. Michigan Student Assembly Vice President Wendy Sharp said MSA objects to allowing the CIA to recruit on campus. "I'm not saying that people shouldn't interview with the CIA, just not on campus," she said. "People that engage in murder, rape, and torture shouldn't b e allowed to recruit here," said David Austin of the Latin American Solidarity Committee, which was involved in the protest. SUPPORTING SACUA's statement, the director of Career Planning and Placement, Deborah Orr May, said, "We have the responsibility to protect both the right to protest and that an interview won't be interrupted." Zoo officials defend Chinese panda funds DETROIT (AP) - Allegations that the Chinese government is col- lecting more donations from U.S. zoos than it is using to protect en- dangered giant pandas are baseless, according to one zoo, where a spokesperson said yesterday that officials have seen the money in ac- tion. Georgeanne Irvine, a spokesper- son for the San Diego Zoo, which hosted a pair of pandas for six months, said money given by the zoo to the Chinese went to panda conservation efforts. Others are not convinced. The World. Wildlife Fund has asked the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to ban permits for panda loans, in part over concerns that money donated by zoos that have hosted pandas is being used improperly by the Chinese. "If it's the CIA this year, it can be another company next year," May said. CIA recruitment sessions in the CP&P office 'the past several years have met with vocal protests although few interviews have been cancelled as a result. Law School Dean Lee Bollinger said he favored the statement because "nobody here wishes to condone the violation of the rules we have." However, "it is very important to not let the improper methods detract from the issues." PSYCHOLOGY Prof. William. Stebbins, a former chair of SACUA, said, "There's a tension over how far you can go" in protest. This, however, can lead to a "grey area" that brings out the question, "how do you decide, and who decides, who has gone too far?" he said. Current SACUA Chair Harris McClamroch said the group is not taking a new direction just because a statement was approved in one day. P H IL O SPHY Prof. Peter Railton, chair of the Civil Liberties Board, said while the University has an interest in maintaining order at job interviews, they are "a privilege, not a right.... It's misleading to formulate the issue as a right to free, unrestricted interviews. "Whether we condemn it or not, we should be clear as to what part is objectionable," Railton said. Director of Public Safety Leo Heatley said he was out of town when the protests took place and was not familiar with the statement. He would not comment further. VP's memo negates'U Council option (continued from Page 1) decision and has allowed the debate to stagnate without producing results. Council co-chairs, Prof. Shaw Livermore and LSA senior David Newblatt, said they have received no word from Fleming on reconvening the council, which has met only once since October. Both also said they had not been asked for input in revising the first draft. FLEMING'S new draft detailed academic sanctions - disciplinary warnings, reprimands, community service, mandatory class attendance, suspension, and expulsion - for students judged guilty by a hearing panel of two students and one faculty member. The Vice President of Student Services, however, would have the final say in reviewing cases and appeals. The revised draft divided the list of prohibited behavior into three parts. At public places like the Diag or The Daily, he said, "The broadest range of speech and expression will be tolerated in these areas." In areas such as libraries, classrooms, and study centers, sexual or discriminatory} harassment which interferes with "an individual's academic efforts" would be punished. Finally, he said, the current housing policies allow for; expulsion from residence halls. The hearing panel, and then the Vice President for Student Services would make the final decisions on the "alleged violation and theI appropriate sanction," Fleming wrote. CLASSIFIED A By MICAH SCHMIT The departure of the Danish News Co. adult book store last week from its N. Fourth St. location was welcomed by its former business neighbors. But residents on S. Ashley St., where the store may move, said they were worried the quality of their neighborhood would; be hurt. The city and the Danish News Co. adult book store have been involved in a court battle the past six years over whether it should be allowed to stay at its N. Fourth St. location. But the store's eviction last Thursday was for a simpler reason. J. D. Hall, owner of the building located at 209 N. Fourth St., said he evicted the Danish News Co. owner, Terry Whitman, because he paid his rent inconsistently. According to a+ civil suit which Hall recently won, Whitman had accumulated a $9600 debt over the past two years. Whitman is appealing the decision. WHITMAN has been unavailable for comment. Liz Glynn, an employee at the Wildflower Bakery located across the street from the Danish News Co's old location, said she was glad to see it go, "Erotica is okay but not when it portrays violence against women." She said the store contained numerous books that portrayed women being tied or hung and raped. DAN Calderon, a n o t h e r employee of the bakery, echoed the opinions of many when he said the book store should have the constitutional right to exist. "But I'm your typical hypocrite. I don't want it in my back yard," he said. Julie Steiner, director of the University's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, said adult book stores should not be banned, but people should "look at and separate what or how people should act in real life." She said that much pornography perpetuates the exploitive abuse of women. TIM Wilson, owner of the other agreement with the h Lingoes didn't obj moving his store i "As long as Whitma city zoning ordina nothing that I can d said. He said he was" the possibility of ana moving into his hous his feelings about move was"immateri He said he is u illicit activites in th Ann Arbor adult book store - said Lingoes has b Wolverine Video - said he responding to code v understands that Whitman plains to DAVID Marvin, move his store to a house at 334 Maryridgeway Sw South Ashley. The house is now located on the other vacant, needing work on its interior S. Ashley house, sa to be brought up to code, said unfortunate to have Charlotte Payne, of the Ann Arbor door but he didn't pi Housing Commission. the business actually Rob Buffman, an employee at But City Attorney Barberman barber shop located next said yesterday h to the Ashley house, said he does ammendment to th not want Whitman to move in next laws that bars adult b door because up until a year-and-a- commerical zones o half ago he thinks the house was business district, m used for prostitution, adding that he store from moving in saw police officers answer numerous The city had tri calls directed at the "vacant" house. store from its N. Fou "I have no question that the upon its opening s hooking will return if the bookstore based on a similar an does move in next door," he said. Whitman won an ap JAMES Lingoes, owner of the removal in 1986 house and professor emeritus of technicality. psychology at the University, said he inherited the house from a "bad Laidlaw said th debt." Whitman has three years left was redrafted and wa on a five year lease contract it would hold up in c Nearly seven years after its controversial opening, the Danish News Company's adult bookstore and arcade has been evicted from its 209 N. Fourth Street location. Owner of adult bookstore evicted after years of battle ouse, he said. ject to Whitman nto the house. in complies with ances there iS do about it," he "neutral" about adult book store e and added that the potential naware of any e house. Payne been prompt in iolations. an employee at eets which is side of the 334 aid it would be the store next [an to protest =if opened. Bruce Laidlawy he thought a e city's zoning book stores from utside the main night keep the nto the house.: ed to evict the urth St. location even years ago amendment, but peal against his based on a e ammendment as optimistic that ourt. Doily Photo by JESSICA GREENE Seona MacReamoinn (right) gives first year LSA student Bryan Traynor information about the "Work in Britain and Ireland" program sponsored by the Council for International Educational Exchange. MacReamoinn, a representative from Dublin, was answering questions in the Union yesterday afternoon. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today ____ College ends takeover AMHERST, Mass. (AP) - Mi- nority students drew up a contract yesterday to end the eight-day takeover of a Hampshire College building that was held to protest racism at the private liberal arts school. "We all want it over," said Anita Fearman, a spokesperson for the 40 Black, Hispanic, Indian, and other minority students who have occupied a dormitory office since Feb. 23.- A tentative agreement was ham- mered out late Monday in meetings with the school's president and'two other administrators. Speakers Melvin Ramey - "A Design o f the Long Jump: A Biomechanics Approach," a department of kine- siology seminar, 12:10-1:00 p.m., CCRB, room 1260. Bill Caldicott - "The Arms Race From Both Sides: An Inter- national Perspective," 7:30 p.m., Rackham Ampitheatre. Janusz Morkowski - Exam- ples of Polish Culture and History from the Polish Museum in Rap- perswil, Switzerland, 7:30 p.m., 3050 Frieze Building. Professor Gale Stokes - "Literacy, Cognition, and the Function of Nationalism," noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall. "Nineteenth Century Serbia - So what?" Anthony Cassell - "Dante and the Interpretive Imperative," 4:10 p.m., MLB, 3rd floor conference room. Professor James Berger - "Robust Bayesian Analysis," and coffee, 3:30 p.m., 1443. Meetings ganic) seminar - W i t h Professor Robert Williams, Col- orado State University, 4 p.m., room 1300. Career Planning and Place- ment - Preregistration for the summer job fair, 3200 SAB. UMASC - The UM Asian student coalition, 7 p.m., general meeting, 2413 Mason Hall. University Lutheran Chapel - Mid Week Lent Service, 7:30 p.m., 1511 Washtenaw. Bioengineering Research i n an Industrial Setting - With Greg McPherson, 3M, 3:45, 1017 Dow Building. Furthermore Open Mike Night - Your own performance time on the Ark stage for 12 lucky people. Hosted by Matt Watroba of WDET. Doors open at 7:30 p.m., show starts at 8:00 p.m. at 637 -1/2 S. Main. P.D.Q. Bach - An evening of musical madness featuring Profes- sor Peter Shickele with the Ann Arbor Chamber Orchestra, 8 p.m., Michigan Theatre, tickets $20, $14, $10. HEALTH & FITNESS I- * Free Pregnancy Testing * Free Counseling -- " Gynecology " Birth Control " Abortion Hualth Care ClniC of Ann Arbor 2512 Carpenter * 971-1970 ** What's' W.4 Hpen ing %; H a Is Recreational Sports " VOLLEYBALL OFFICIALS CLINIC .__ ._._____yW _ _. Protesters said they expected to CALnLh764-ork7 continue occupying the building un- til today despite the apparent agree- ment. JUST A SHORT WALK FROM CENTRAL CAMPUS ftl4wo &. I a :3 1