Nieyirto an/feeo 44vNinety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. IC, No. 57 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, November 29, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily U.N. to *decide trip to Geneva UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Arab nations said yesterday the General Assembly session will move to Geneva so PLO chief Yasser Arafat can address it, unless the United States reverses itself within 48 hours and grants him a visa. In Washington, the State De- partment said the U.S. decision to deny the visa was "firm and final." It gave reluctant consent to moving the debate on Palestinian issues, sche- duled to begin Thursday. U.N. legal counsel Carl-August Fleischhauer told a U.N. committee the United States was violating the 1947 U.S.-U.N. Headquarters Agreement, which requires the host country to grant visas to people invited by the United Nations. "The agreement does not contain a reservation of the right to bar the entry of those who represent, in the view of the host country, a threat to its sovereignty and security," the lawyer added Patricia Byrne, alternate U.S. representative, said the U.S. govern- ment disagreed with Fleischhauer's interpretation. She did not elaborate. The chair of the U.N. Committee on Relations with the Host Country, Ambassador Constantine Moushou- tas of Cyprus, said in a summation "the vast majority" of speakers felt the U.S. had violated the Headquarters Agreement. The committee took no action. Arab diplomats called the U.S. visa denial a "slap in the face." The Soviet Union and China, and U.S. allies Britain and France, said Arafat should be allowed to speak. Most nations urged Washington to reconsider, saying the U.S. action was harming prospects for peace in the Middle East. Woman kidnap BY MICAH SCHMIT Instead of entering a formal plea of guilty or not guilty at her arraignment yesterday, suspected baby kidnapper Sharon Newkirk simply said, "I want a lawyer." During Newkirk's brief arraignment yes- terday, police officials said she admitted to unhooking the baby's monitor and taking her. According to the police report, Newkirk had said she intended to move to Alabama Satur- day afternoon, after taking the baby. The baby, Debra Lynn Moore, was re- turned unharmed and in good condition to the University's C.S. Mott Children's Hospital Saturday. Newkirk, with her husband Robert, were arrested over the weekend at their home in Howell, Mich., for allegedly kidnapping one; of Kimberly Moore's two-and-a-half-month- old twins from Mott last Friday. Robert was later released. Debra Lynn and her twin brother were born Sept. 9, almost three months premature. Though they were originally scheduled to leave the hospital tomorrow, the kidnapping has delayed their release, said Moore, Debra Lynn's 17-year-old mother. The Newkirks were returning home early faces t 01 trial Saturday afternoon and had pulled into their driveway where Ann Arbor Police officers, waiting for them, surrounded the car and whisked Sharon away. The baby was found in the front seat of the Newkirks' car. "When they grabbed Sharon, I said, 'Hey take it easy, that's my wife, she just had a baby.' The police took her away so fast I didn't know what was going on," Robert Newkirk said in an interview yesterday. "When I got to jail then I knew she had abducted a baby," he said. "I couldn't believe it. I don't think she was in her right mind if she did it." According to Judy Edmundson, Robert Newkirk's sister, Robert passed a lie detector test early yesterday which led to his release yesterday afternoon. But Moore felt that the polygraph test was not sufficient to vindicate the husband. "I don't see how a lie detector test can hold up," she said. Robert said his wife, Sharon, will not tell him how she will plead at her preliminary examination Dec. 7 in Ann Arbor's 15th District Court. See Baby, Page 5 DAVID LUBLINER/Daily Sharon Newkirk enters 15th District Court in Ann Arbor to face an arraign- ment hearing on charges of kidnapping a baby from the University's C.S. Mott Children's Hospital Friday. A pre-trial hearing was scheduled for Dec. 7. MSA resurrects student court BY KRISTIN HOFFMAN The Central Student Judiciary, the judicial branch of the Michigan Student Assembly, is a little-known campus entity that is trying to regain its former stature. CSJ Chief Justice John Sotiroff claims the court was a powerful force on campus from the mid 1970s through the early 1980s. Somehow, interest in the CSJ died out, until virtually no one knew of its existence. Sotiroff said the administration was ignor- ing students' complaints, and that a strong CSJ was needed to give legitimacy to student decisions. "If the administration wants to do some- thing, they do it," he said. "I would hope that if something were decided by CSJ that the administration would uphold the decision." The CSJ operated through mid-1987, and even decided a case that spring affecting an MSA ballot question on PIRGIM, the envi- ronmental lobbying group. Justices were not appointed for the next academic year, and the CSJ essentially disappeared. Current MSA Parliamentarian Jeff Gau- thier, a Rackham graduate student, took charge of resurrecting CSJ last spring. He and Lauren Isenberg, a former CSJ member, in- terviewed students for the 10 open positions. Sotiroff, who was appointed last spring, was the only student still interested in serving this fall. Nine new members were interviewed and approved by MSA. The court is composed of five women and five men. The student court, which encompasses two other judicial panels, does not normally re- view decisions made by University officials, but will hear a case if students claim their right to due process or equal protection under the law has been violated by the University. One sub-court deals with MSA election disputes, while the other, the Court of Com- mon Pleas, has jurisdiction over non-aca- demic student disputes, conflicts between student groups, as well as student complaints with MSA. This body is currently defunct, but CSJ members are conducting a search for the five open seats. The most controversial case to come be- fore CSJ this term was a dispute between the Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee and the Cornerstone Christian Fellowship. In October, the assembly passed a resolu- tion rescinding its recognition of CCF after LaGROC protested the performance on the Diag of a song at a CCF-sponsored event which was labelled homophobic by LaGROC and MSA. The court overturned the decision, saying MSA denied the fellowship's due pro- cess. LaGROC has filed a new case, but a hearing date has not been set. See CSJ, Page 2 Gov: Politics spur U.S. to ignore unfair trade WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan Administration refused to protect United States auto parts manufacturers from unfair foreign competition in order to help Canada's Conservative Party win a hotly contested election, Michigan Gov. James Blanchard said yesterday. The U.S. trade representative, Clayton Yeutter, earlier this month rejected a petition filed by the state alleging the Canadian government was harming U.S. parts makers' ability to compete by offering duty rebates to foreign automakers. Blanchard tied the trade repre- sentative's action to Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's efforts to retain his party's majority in Parlia- ment. Last week's Canadian election turned into a referendum on a free- trade agreement with the U.S.. The leader of the Liberal Party, John Turner, accused Mulroney of selling out to the Americans at Canada's expense. Mulroney countered the state could do to try to win a reversal of the decision, particularly since the President-elect George Bush is un- likely to alter trade policies after his inauguration in January. Although parts manufacturers will suffer, the Michigan economy will be a net gainer under the free- trade agreement, which would elimi- nate most tariffs on goods passing between the United States and Ca- nada, Blanchard said. Canada gives duty rebates on autos to foreign manufacturers in return for the use of Canadian parts in their cars, a practice the Michigan complaint asserted constituted discri- mination against U.S. manufacturers. In rejecting the complaint, Yeutter said the state government had no right to file such a petition since it wasn't directly harmed by the Canadian practice. He also said the issue was addressed in the free-trade agreement, which would end the duty rebates in 1996. Blanchard ... decries U.S. trade policy agreement would be good for the economy. "My guess is they rejected our complaint in order to help Mulroney win the election," Blanchard said in Washington before entering a meet- ing of the Democratic Leadership Council. Blanchard said he saw little the DAVID LUBLINER/Dolly Opening d ay CRISP worker Larry McBride hands out a computer printout to a newly-registered student. Registration for winter term classes began yesterday. SACUA debates panel to review faculty code Court says husbands can't stop abortions BY ALYSSA LUSTIGMAN A somewhat divided faculty advi- sory panel yesterday began creating the committee which will attempt to suggest an acceptable discriminatory harassment policy for faculty and b staff. The committee will report back to the assembly at its January meeting. But some SACUA members, like chair Beth Reed, are opposed to the idea of the committee. She said she is worried that it could provoke "a battle" among the faculty or between committee). We don't have the power to redraft the policy," Reed said. Some faculty members are con- cerned about specific points in the policy, such as defining academic freedom, protecting against false ac- WASHINGTON (AP) - In a case involving a Michigan couple, the Supreme Court yesterday refused to grant husbands legal power to prevent their wives from having an abortion. The court, without comment, re- Shawn Lewis' abortion. Yesterday's decision involved a formal appeal by Carlton Lewis to get the Court to consider the issue of whether a hus- band has the right to block his wife's abortion. Shawn Lewis was granted a di-