Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. IC, No.78 Ann Abiin TusyJ ay91989 Ch ily V. CN.78Ann Arbor, Michigan -Thursday, January 19 99Copyright 1989. The Michigan Daily GEO hopes *rally will Emergency City panel begin BY SCOTT LAHDE The Graduate Employees Organization will show the Univer- sity they are anxious to bargain their 1989-91 contract, by carrying a symbolic table from the Diag to the Fleming Building today at noon. One of GEO's primary goals for the new contract is a clause prohibiting the "Ten-Term Rule," which limits the number of terms a graduate student can earn money from teaching. LSA Dean Peter Steiner imposed the rule as an academic policy dur- ing the summer of 1987. GEO maintains that the rule is also an employment policy, and therefore must be a subject of contract negoti- ations. "I don't think the 'U' will budge on this issue; we must not budge on this either," said Don Demetriades, GEO president. Steiner refused to comment yes- terday about the new contract's im- pact on the ten-term rule. The GEO presented their pro- posal to the University on Dec. 9, nearly three months before their current contract expires March 1. The University has yet to respond with a counterproposal. Assistant Vice-President for Aca- demic Affairs Coleen Dolan-Greene, who represents the University in bargaining, was unavailable for comment yesterday. The GEO proposal contains sev- eral other demands, including: -salary increases of 12% for 1989-90, and 9% for 1990-91; -mandatory pay for LSA's TA training, instead of pay or credit at the discretion of each department; -a University-wide cap on talks discussion section sizes to 20 stu- dents, instead of allowing the de- partments to set their own class size; -the "non-assessment of tuition" for graduate students instead of tu- ition waivers, in order to shield them from future possible waiver taxes; and .allowing TAs to accumulate credit toward health benefits and eligibility for tuition relief, when they are working under the mini- mum employment level or spending above 50% of their work week teaching. Demetriades, as well as the ma- jority of the GEO Steering Commit- tee, said the ten-term rule affects more graduate students than any other issue. Graduate students usu- ally take between five and 11 years to complete their degree, and the rule restricts them financially, while LSA offers no suggestions for speeding up their process. The rule, Demetriades added, may prove to be the GEO's most ef- fective weapon in bargaining this contract. "This could be something like the full-tuition waiver two years ago," said Demetriades. Negotiations for the GEO's cur- rent contract, held in the spring of 19'7, were forced into mediation over the full tuition waiver issue. The University avoided a strike by agreeing to implement the tuition waiver over a period of three years. The steering committee's eight members agree that graduate stu- dents need a salary increase, citing the inflation rate, Ann Arbor's high cost of living, and the lack of pay to examine I Miami riot MIAMI (AP) - City commissioners voted unanimously Wednesday to appoint a panel to investigate an interracial slaying, touching off two nights of rioting by blacks, leaving one person dead and buildings burned and looted. The vote during an emergency session came amid warnings from black leaders that only quick action to ease racial tension could prevent more violence. The panel will investigate the Monday slaying of Clement Lloyd, a 23 year old black motorcyclist shot in the head by a white policeman as Lloyd and a friend sped through Miami's black Overtown section. The panel was created at the suggestion of Miller Dawkins, the lone black on the five member city commission, who wanted a board consisting of five policeman and five Overtown residents with Mayor Xavier Suarez as chairman. "I'd like to tell them to give us a chance to work this out, and to work on all our other ills, such as poor housing, poor education, joblessness," he said. "And they have to work with us instead of creating other problems like they are doing now." Some 700 police officers in riot gear arrested an estimated 175 people overnight, most for looting. No damage estimate was immediately available. The events left seven people shot, one fatally, and about 20 buildings burned. Numerous others were looted in Overtown and black Liberty City. All was quiet by midday yesterday except for sporadic gunfire in the Liberty City neighborhood, and there were no plans for a curfew. But black leaders warned Suarez before the commission meeting that blacks will no longer accept empty promises. The violence interrupted Miami's preparations for a gala celebration for Sunday's Super Bowl at Joe Robbie Stadium north of the city. The FBI, the State Attorney's Office, and the police internal review board are also investigating the police shooting. It also claimed the life of the motorcyclist's passenger, who died Tuesday of head injuries suffered in the subsequent crash. William Lozano, the police officer who shot the motorcyclist, was relieved of duty with pay pending the investigation. City workers entered the riot-torn neighborhoods yesterday to begin cleaning the streets. Most schools that closed Tuesday reopened, although administrators said they expected to send teachers and students home early. The violence began Monday night in Overtown as crowds throwing rocks and bottles, firing rifles and setting fires. On Tuesday violence broke out when a white man in a luxury car fired into a crowd of blacks in Overtown, wounding one man. On Tuesday night, a teenager was shot to death in an argument over a looted office check-writing machine, police said. Others shot included two suspected snipers hit in the legs by police, a 7 year old girl hit by a sniper and a policeman whose bulletproof vest stopped a shotgun pellet, police said. ALEXANDRA BREZ/Daily And there'll still be a wait TAI Construction Management employees work to finish the new Angell- Mason computer center. They hope to be done by the end of next week. increases over the last two years. Gay men form support group BY KRISTIN HOFFMAN Gay Black men suffer a double burden of discrimi- nation and are isolated from the Black community be- cause of the prevalence of homophobia and racism in American society, said University alumnus Ulester Douglas. Because of a perceived lack of support gay Blacks receive from the gay community, Douglas and Darnell Smith have decided to start a support group to reach out to these men. Smith is an LSA senior who has participated in the Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee and led "gay raps" for the Lesbian/Gay Males Program Office. The two founders decided to leave the name and direction up the group. "We would like the group itself to make those decisions," said Douglas. "We don't really have any designs for what type of group it will be." Smith said it is necessary to keep the group focused on Black issues, in conjunction with gay issues. "We need to develop a sense of our own Black identity, as well as facing the problems of being a gay man," said Smith. "I need to feel good about myself as a black gay man. We need to empower ourselves," he said. "That's not to say that my white friends aren't wonderful people, but they aren't necessarily aware of the fact that as a Black gay man I have issues and con- cerns that are different from a white gay man." When asked if their group would make ties with other gay or lesbian groups, Douglas said "We would like to build a coalition with all other types of groups... but we have to build our own identity first." Douglas also elaborated on the problem of a Black identity. "We don't have an identity. Blacks have not been allowed to find an identity. To get a piece of the American pie you are forced to give up a sense of who you are," he said. "We have to get together again and start liking ourselves. We have to stop relying on the white community to make changes; they're not going to. We have to start taking care of ourselves, we have to empower ourselves." "Our issues would get lost in a bigger group; we need to focus on issues that concern Black gay men," Douglas said. Douglas noted that there is a lack of support from most Blacks for Black gay men, and that gay issues are not addressed by the rest of the Black community. "Black lesbians and gay people have a lot to offer, we can make a big contribution," he said. "Until we discover who we are, accept and love who we are as Black gay men, we'll be lost," Douglas said. "We won't be able to survive. You can't have a successful relationship until you're comfortable and happy with who you are. We want this group to be here for people who need support, who need to reach out and talk." The group will meet at 8:30 p.m. on the third floor of the Michigan Union, in the staff library, located next to counselling services. Expert speaks on drug abuse BY STACEY GRAY "It makes me feel good," is often the rationale for people abusing their bodies by overindulging in sex, food, or drugs, according to Dr. Robert Dupont, a former director of the White House Special Action Office for Drug Abuse Prevention. Dupont, who served under both presidents Nixon and Carter, spoke last night at the School of Public Health at a forum entitled "Substance Abuse on Campus". He drew a crowd of more than 70 faculty, students, and staff. Committee formed to search for new Engineering dean BY MARION DAVIS The College of Engineering ap- pears closer to its quest for a dean. Yesterday, a committee including seven faculty members, one alum- nus, and a graduate student was formed to fill the position vacated by Charles Vest when he was elevated to Vice President for Academic Af- fairs and Provost. Prof. Daniel Atkins is serving as interim dean until a permanent re- placement is found. The lack of an undergraduate representative on the committee has disappointed engineering senior Brian Rashap, president of the Engi- neering Council. "Some of the concerns of under- graduate students may be over- looked," said Rashan who nresides defended the committee's makeup, saying it contains "a proper mix to represent all interests of the school." Rashap said that since undergraduates spend more time in the classroom than graduate students, they could provide the committee with a better outlook of undergraduate concerns. "The committee sees it from a lecturers' point of view, but students see it from their (own) point of view," said Rashap. Committee members were nomi- nated by faculty peers who responded to a letter sent to them last December by Robert Holbrook, then interim vice president for academic affairs. Committee members said they sues facing the college during the next five years." "They will help the committee in the development of their views as to See Dean, Page 2 a r y2< x I ~nau~nne~r wnrrei~