Ninety-nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. IC, No.11 Ann Arbor, Michigan- Thursday, September 22, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily DSS handicapped by broken buses BY ANNA BONDOC A student who must temporarily use crutches suf- fers from calloused hands after a 30 minute walk to the Diag and must find a ride to a night class on North Campus. When he called the office of Disabled Student Services for transportation, he was told, "I'm sorry - we simply cannot accommodate you right now." } DSS is legally required to provide transportation to both temporarily and permanently disabled faculty and students, said DSS Director Darlys Vander Beek. However, because of limited vehicles, DSS presently can only accommodate students whose doc- tors certify that they will be disabled for at least three months, she said. Vander Beek said about 120 disabled students - 20 of whom were permanently disabled - used DSS transportation services last year. She said DSS has no available figures concerning how many students who are disabled for less than three months have been de- nied service this year. The student mentioned above, an LSA senior who asked to remain anonymous, had arthroscopic knee surgery and requested DSS services on September 4. But he was refused two days later because he expected to be on crutches for less than three months. Vander Beek expressed regret and frustration for what she called the lack of "equitable services" and for "not meeting our legal responsibility." At present, DSS has only one 15-year-old wheelchair lift-equipped bus. Such vehicles usually wear out in seven to eight years. The bus, donated by Wayne State University, has a unstable lift held to- gether in places by coins and contains car parts taken from a bus which broke down in January, Vander Beek said. She said three taxi cabs supplement the bus service. DSS is awaiting the arrival of two new lift-equipped vans which were set to be delivered at the start of this term, but the manufacturer now says they won't be available until early November. Although she said the lack of transportation is tem- porary, Vander Beek could not specify the date when new vehicles would be bought. Cost figures for the See Buses, Page 2 KAREN HANDELMAN/Dally This Disabled Students Services van is supposed to pick up and take disabled students to class. FBI visit halted again BY RYAN TUTAK For the second time in less than two weeks, the law school post- poned an FBI recruitment drive, ap- parently worried that the bureau's allegedly elitist hiring policy would violate the school's recruitment standards. The law school, at first slotting the FBI to present a recruitment pitch Sept. 14, reset the date for Sept. 26 to ensure a "peaceful" environment for the FBI recruiter and the audience, law school Dean Lee Bollinger said last week. FBI agent Robert Mott said yes- terday afternoon that, as far as he knew, the recruiting session was not postponed. The Latin America Solidarity Committee, in an earlier letter to Bollinger, promised to "make every effort to prevent the FBI from re- cruiting" on campus. The National Lawyers Guild passed a resolution Sept. 7 which urged the law school to cancel the recruitment session permanently, citing specific cases where the FBI discriminated against minorities, ha- rassed various organizations, and engaged in "paramilitary operations designed to harass the Puerto Rican independence movement." Nancy Krieger, law school career planing and placement director, said the recruitment was postponed and that the faculty will decide in a spe- cial meeting tomorrow whether the school will allow the FBI to recruit. The law school faculty yesterday held an emergency meeting to dis- cuss the FBI recruitment, said Guild co-chair David Bachman, but faculty professors refused to discuss the agenda. "After the meeting, the sense I got from Dean Bollinger was that the faculty were troubled by what we said and they wanted some time to think about it," Bachman said.. The FBI currently faces two law suits for racist hiring policies. Ar Speaker's CIA leak attacked Charity begins on the Diag KAREN HANDELMAN/Dolly For the past eight years Ann Arbor resident Michael Kelley has been supporting the orphanage he established in South India. This week he collected money on the Diag, he said, because his personal savings have run out. Maine to hold Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional conservatives voiced outrage yesterday over House Speaker Jim Wright's disclosure of a purported U.S. covert operation in Nicaragua. President Reagan referred to Wright's comments as a "violation" and said the speaker had been indiscreet in telling reporters Tuesday that the CIA hired operatives inside Nicaragua to stir up demonstrations against the leftist government and damage peace efforts. The administration steadfastly refused to either confirm or deny Wright's report. Rep. Henry Hyde (R-Ill.) the ranking minority member of the House Intelligence Committee, called Wright's assertion "Sandinista propaganda." Hyde said he could neither confirm nor deny the disclosuretbut added: "What he said is news to me, and I serve on the Intelligence Committee...I sure as hell want to know who that testimony is from and under what circumstances he got it." Hyde said GOP House leaders would meet today with the Wright matter "high on the agenda." Asked whether there would be a call for an ethics probe, he said, "I think there- will be." House rules stipulate that information given to the House Intelligence Committee, which oversees the CIA and other spy agencies, is classified and may not be disclosed except under certain tightly controlled circumstances. Unauthorized disclosure is subject to investigation by the ethics committee. Wright is already being investigated by the committee on unrelated allegations. Sanctions for unauthorized disclosure of classified information can include removal from committee membership, censure, or expulsion from the House. Wilson Morris, a spokesman for Wright, said the matter had been blown out of proportion and that Wright had violated no rules in talking about the CIA activity. "CIA involvement in Nicaragua has been admitted by the CIA and the White House," Morris said. "It's been repeatedly documented. It's all in the public domain, and any member is free- to draw his own conclusions." Wright strongly believes that the Reagan administration has used the CIA and other avenues "to 'I sure as hell want to know who that testimony is from and under what circumstances he got it.' - Henry Hyde (R-Ill.) veterans' holida BY KELLY GAFFORD As a result of hard work and dedication, Colonel Charles Tackett is one step closer to achieving his dream. This month, Maine became the first state in the nation to pro- claim May 7 as Vietnam Veterans Memorial Day. Working out of the Michigan Student Assembly's office in the Michigan Union, Tackett recently mailed two resolutions concerning war veterans to 50 state governors and 100 U.S. senators. One of the proposals asks state officials to es- tablish a Vietnam Veterans' Holiday. He has already received responses from four governors and two Michigan legislators encouraging him to continue his efforts, yet Michigan was not the first state to establish the holiday. so Governor first to respond to Tackett's resolution Tackett, a long-time activist in veteran issues, gained much respect and enthusiasm from many people who doubted he would ever obtain the support that he needed for his dream to become a reality. "I think it's a landmark victory for the colonel," said Rob Bell, chair of the MSA communications com- mittee. "He has made the most ar- dent skeptics respect him," he said. According to Grace Houghton, an assistant to Maine Governor John McKernan, businesses and schools will remain open on this holiday, y May7 which will first be honored in 1989. Tackett started his mission five years ago with a march from Detroit to Washington, D.C. He has not al- ways been received in a positive way. In fact, when asked about the march and its outcome he recalled being beaten up on numerous occa- sions, and doused with lighted cigarettes. Five years later, he's being sup- ported by Ann Arbor, Detroit, and Ypsilanti city councils, as well as many national legislators. In addition, Tackett claims to have over 1,000,000 signatures in support of this holiday. Tackett, when asked about other states passing his resolution, replied, "I hope that they'll review (the reso- lutions) and I also hope that they'll pass them." intentionally foul up the peace negotiations," Morris said. In Nicaragua, Wright's disclosute brought banner headlines in the official Sandinista newspaper La Barricada: "Jim Wright Confirms: CIA Devises Plan Melton." The Nicaraguan government has consistently charged U.S. with interference in its internal affairs, and expelled U.S. Ambassador Richard Melton and seven diplomats in July following a violent demonstration in which 40 protesters were arrested. The Contras have asked that those protesters be released to create -a better climate for resumption of stalled peace talks. Shooting incites racial riots in La. INSIDE Dr. Ali A. Mazrui explores the relationship between Israel and South Africa. See Opinion, Page 4 Ellen Lesser smashes stereotypes in The Other Woman. See Arts, Page 9 A-squares know how to do-si-do like the pros I SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) - Hundreds of angry people burned stores and rioted in the streets after a white woman fatally shot a Black man, and Black leaders warned yes- terday against a recurrence of vio- ,ence. at its peak, said Police Chief Charles Gruber, but other police estimates said the total was 300 to 500 most of the time. No serious injuries were reported, attributed in part to Gruber's deci- BY ALEX GORDON "Swing your partner round and round, promenade go round the town..." Square dancing. To many people the words evoke vague memories of fifth grade gym class, when the teacher invariably fixed it so you had to "do-si-do" with the nv or girl von had a crush An "Calling is like chess, the moves are easy to learn, but the strategies needed to be a success are complex," he said. The club is structured like a class and to join one must sign up at the beginning of the semester. A couple of early sessions are open to the public so that anyone