Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. IC, No. 64 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, December 8, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily Four men streak in sorority BYVERA SONGWE An acquaintance of four nude fraternity members who raided the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house on Nov. 29 said the men were members of the Zeta Beta Tau pledge class. The source, who wished to remain anonymous, heard the men joking about the incident. ZBT is not denying or affirming the charge. "I am not saying it wasn't a member of my fraternity, but if it was done it was done individually," said Adam Dishell, an LSA sophomore and incoming president of the fraternity. When asked if he was denying the allegations he said, "We do not condone such behavior." Mike Barone, a LSA junior and member of the same fraternity, said, "I have an 80 percent idea of who it was that did it." But he refused to give any names. On Monday, the sorority voted to file a criminal complaint against fraternity members who streaked naked through the house' during a 3:30 a.m. raid, bursting into private rooms, rummaging through underwear drawers and betting women to sign their posteriors. Ann Arbor police, who refused to release the complaint yesterday, say a number of charges may apply, including disorderly conduct and indecent exposure. Members of the sorority were ordered yesterday to stop talking to the press. "We have taken a no comment stand on the issue," said Michele Knapp, president of the 117-member house. The sorority has issued conflicting statements about what really happened. Although some members have said the fraternity members raided the house to steal their Greek letters from the roof, Knapp denies this fact. The raid began when Dorice Kupper, the Gamma Phi Beta housekeeper, opened the door for a man asking for assistance with his homework, said Sgt. Tom Cadwell. When the door was opened, three or four naked men brushed through and began a big stampede waking sleeping sisters other reports say. Cadwell said police reports show that a resident of the sorority house called police to report that a group of naked men were attempting to steal the Greek letters from the roof. Julie Steiner, director of the University's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, said "I can't believe in 1988 men on this campus are engaging in this sort of harassing and threatening behavior." Derek Koenig, an LSA senior and president of the Sigma Chi fraternity thinks it's "unfortunate" that fraternity members perform such acts. "With all the rape incidents on campus, the only place women can feel secure is in their homes." - The Associated Press contributed to this report. A student notices word "Israeli" was night or yesterday JOSE JUAkEZ/DaUy vandalism on the Tagar-erected school bus in the Diag yesterday. The added to "Stop All Terrorism" on the side of the bus sometime Tuesday morning. Vandals deface pro-Israel school bus shanty in Diag BY TARA GRUZEN The events keep escalating. The pro-Israel Tagar bus in the Diag which carried the statement "Stop All Terrorism" was vandalized sometime yesterday and reworded to say "Stop All Israeli Terrorism." This incident occurred the night after the shanty and board honoring Palestinians killed in Israeli-occupied territories was covered with swastikas and anti- Semitic statements. The incident occurred between 10 p.m. Tuesday night and 8 a.m. yesterday morning, said Cindy Straub, the interim administrator for the University's anti-. harassment policy. Tagar filed a complaint with Straub yesterday. "We are taking (the events) very seriously," said Straub, who is conducting an investigation with the University's Department of Public Safety. Keith Hope, president of Tagar, said the vandalization of the Tagar bus was probably a reaction to what happened the night before. "It is not a mere coincidence that this happened the night after the shanty (erected by the Palestine Solidarity Committee and Arab Student League) was vandalized," said Hope. However, he said he was almost sure the people who vandalized Tagar's bus did not also paint the swastikas on the shanty. "The vandalism on the shanty and on the board was anti-Jews whereas the vandalism last night (on the Tagar bus) was * anti- Israel," Hope said. Hilary Shadroui, a member of the Palestine Solidarity Committee said, "The vandalism was certainly not done by anyone from PSC. It is wrong for anyone to vandalize anyone's structures on the diag." Straub said the investigation will include posting flyers so anyone who saw suspicious people around the Diag either Monday or Tuesday night will report it. Since the University's anti-ha- rassment policy is victim- oriented, Straub said Tagar can chose how to handle perpetrators if they are caught. U.S.S.R. may cut troops Gorbachev adds fuel to arms control talks NEW YORK (AP) - Mikhail Gorbachev gave new momentum to arms control talks yesterday with his announcement that the Red Army would reduce its forces by 10 percent and pull 50,000 of its troops, along with tanks and cannons, from Eastern Europe. U.S. analysts have been predicting such a move for month, believing it could further boost Gorbachev's popularity in the West and allow him to divert needed funds from the military to the domestic sector. Gorbachev praised U.S. willingness to discuss arms reductions and said that "the Soviet leadership has de- cided to demonstrate once again its readiness to rein- force this healthy process not only in words but in deeds." "Within the next two years, their numerical strength will be reduced by 500,000 men," he said near the end of a lengthy address to the U.N. General As- sembly. The Soviet Armed Forces total about 5.6 million men and women. "The numbers of conventional armaments will also be substantially reduced," he said. "This will be done unilaterally." Gorbachev said the Soviets would pull 50,000 troops out of East Germany, Czechoslovakia and Hungary, reducing by about 10 percent the number of forward-deployed Red Army forces arrayed against the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. President Ronald Reagan, after he and President- elect George Bush met over lunch with the Soviet leader, said, "I heartily approve" of the Kremlin troop decision. In Washington, Michigan Sen. Carl Levin said yesterday that the importance of the reduction depends on where the cuts occur and what kind of equipment is involved. Levin, a Democrat and chair of the Senate conven- tional forces subcommittee, hewed to the generally cautious congressional response to Gorbachev's an- nouncement. "We ought to welcome this," Levin said. "It is a significant move. It leaves a lot of disparities to be addressed. We don't know how significant a move it is until we know precisely where those forces are that will be removed." Gorbachev said thousands of tanks would be pulled out of Eastern Europe by 1991. MSA 'rescinds ) resolution on Tagar BY KRISTINE LALONDE The pro-Israel group Tagar may retain its status as a recognized stu- dent group as a result of an action taken by the Michigan Student As- sembly late Tuesday night. r On Nov. 23 the assembly re- solved to de-recognize Tagar if it did not complete certain requirements. But MSA rescinded the resolution 3> Tuesday because of questionable parliamentary procedure. A recognized student group has access to MSA funding, University office space and designated publicity areas such as Diag boards. Originally, the assembly called for Tagar's de-recognition because of a slogan painted on a bus constructed by the group in the Diag Nov. 14 See Tagar, Page 2 LaGROC: 'U' must change AIDS policies BY LISA WINER As the kick-off of a long-term fight against AIDS, the Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee yesterday demanded improvements in University policies concer- ning AIDS. About 35 students participated in a Diag rally, and about half the group marched to University Hospital where they picketed the front entrance. The group has drawn up eight demands which ask the University to take an increased role in AIDS research, treatment, and edu- cation. Spokespeople from the University admi- nistration and Medical Center would not respond to the demands yesterday because they have not yet received them from LaGROC. "We are not going to talk about demands. We are going to talk about issues," Associate Vice President of Academic Affairs Mary Ann Swain said. Successful demonstrations around the country - such as the one which closed the Federal Drug Administration for a few hours - inspired LaGROC members and spurred them into action. "The administration of the University of Michigan would like us to think that their University is completely separate and distinct from the reality of (AIDS)... that AIDS is something far off, something someone else is dealing with quite adequately. Something they can still remain silent on," said LaGROC member Wendy Sharp. "But... silence equals complicity. Silence equals death." Swain said the University was one of the first to provide anonymous AIDS testing. "I think the University has taken a leadership role in response to this awful health problem we are facing," she said. The hospital has received a grant to build a bio-containment facility, which is "an absolute necessity for any kinds of AIDS research" and will contain the infectious AIDS virus, said Dr. Irwin Goldstein, asso- ciate dean for research and graduate studies at the Medical School. "There is hell of a lot of money out there (for AIDS research), and we are going to ap- ply for it," he said. LaGROC condemned the hospital for lay- offs of those staff members working with AIDS. Hospital spokesperson Katherine Cureton said about 14 workers lost their positions, See AIDS, Page 3 Members of the Diag to UniversityA the the AIDS JOSE JUAREZ/Da0ly Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee march from University Hospital yesterday, demanding improvements in policies. Nobel Prize winner to receive degree BY SCOTT LAHDE Without student input, the University has decided to award honorary degrees to Soviet poet and 1987 Nobel Prize winner Joseph Brodsky and former Rackham dean other administrators, six faculty members and two alumni. Brodsky, Who will speak at the commencement exercises, will be receiving a Doctorate of Humane T m..ew c . _sn - 0n.... T 9 n.,:. -:.w the selection process. "If we would have known that the first meeting was so crucial, we would have responded quicker," said Virginia Chang, former Chair of Campus Governance. Althn,,ah M RA hmttA fn,,r that we had to show September to participate." up in As a former University poet-in- residence, Brodsky won the Nobel Prize for literature last year. He was born in Leningrad, and after serving m U\~ ~