Ube Mdtgan al Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. IC, No 71 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, January 10, 1989 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily Studeni BY MARION DAVIS The Martin Luther King Jr. Symposium Committee - organized by the University's vice-provost's office - is being criticized by students concerning their impact on the committee's decisions in observing the national holiday. "Students were involved in the 'process', but there was a conflict," said graduate student Todd Shaw, a committee member. "The lack of communication [between students and faculty] didn't create a good environment." The committee, which has organized the opening ceremony and closing events for "Diversity Day," is composed of 24 faculty decry. Diversity Day input members and two students. Prof. Homer Neal, chair of the Department of Physics and co-chair of the symposium committee, said the committee was was responsive to students. He added that he was unaware of any conflict, saying "Diversity Day" is for the students and they should get involved with the various activities. However Tracyc Matthews, also a student representative on the committee and a United Coalition Against Racist member, expressed further concern toward the MLK Symposium Committee. "The committee needed more represen- tation from the people who had been engaged in the struggle for the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday for the past couple of years." Matthews added she would often receive announcements concerning the committee meetings the day after the meeting had been held. LSA junior Cornelius Harris, chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Minority Affairs Committee, said the administration's lack of sufficient student representation on the committee shows its uninterested attitude. The University wants to have students involved in programs but does not want to give them input in the development and formation of the programs, he said. Neal responded saying the committee system was trying to be responsive to students when planning the agenda, noting students who were on the committee had a great deal of say. Although some students are disappointed with the lack of commitment the committee showed toward their opinions, they feel that the acknowledgement of Dr. King's struggle for civil rights is a good step. Matthews said, "It's a good start for the University to finally catch up with the rest of us (the students) on this idea." See Diversity, Page 2 Reagan unveils 1990 budget WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Reagan's $1.15 trillion budget for 1990, released yesterday, pro- poses millions of dollars in spending on Michigan projects, but the state could feel the pinch if Congress goes along with eliminating and cutting of federal programs. Among the largest potential eco- nomic losses to the state would come from reduced orders for M-1 A-1 tanks made by General Dynamics corp. in Warren, Mich. The Defense Department proposed reducing its 1990 tank order by 11 percent from the previous year, and by another 14 percent in 1991. Reagan proposed $33.1 million in spending on U.S. Army Corps of Engineers water projects in Michi- gan, but the budget contained no new projects. Military construction in the state See Budget, Page 2 High court may reverse Roe vs. Wade Hardship. Brighton-Midland United Van Lines employees Mark and chairs on the second floor of the UGLi. Rackham student come to the UGLi for its old, padded chairs. "Now it's study," she said. See Extras, page 2. JESSICA GREENE/Doily Bob Merchberger unwrap the new Janet Hudolin said she has always not worth coming to the UGLi to BY JESSICA STRICK WITH WIRE REPORTS The Supreme Court, 16 years after legalizing abortion nationwide, agreed yesterday to hear an appeal seeking reversal of its landmark 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision. The move alarmed pro-choice forces, prompting one feminist leader to declare "a state of emergency for the women of America." But there was nothing in the court's brief order to suggest the justices would reconsider the 1973 decision. The justices said they will study a federal appeals court ruling that struck down key provisions of a Missouri law regulating abortions. Missouri's law would ban abortions at public hospitals or other government-run facilities, ban public employees from assisting in an abortion, and prohibit the use of tax funds for "encouraging or counseling" women to have abortions. It would also require doctors to determine if fetuses older than 19 weeks could survive outside the womb and would declare that life begins at conception.. The Missouri law was challenged by the national office of Planned Parenthood and the Missouri chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. Missouri officials, spurred on and supported by Justice Department lawyers, are urging the high court to use the case to overturn its 1973 case of Roe vs. Wade. The court's decision, expected by July, could resolve the Missouri controversy without significantly changing the 1973 decision of other rulings on abortion. Locally, Right To Life member and Cornerstone Church Preacher Mike Caulk, recognized the Supreme Court's decision as positive momentum for the Pro-life movement. "People are beginning to understand that fetuses aren't just a disease or blobs of flesh but actual human beings," he said and added that Pro-lifers are "not trying to take away rights but trying to protect women." Concerning the probability of the Roe vs. Wade case being reversed, President of People's Campaign for Choice Molly Henry, a Social Work graduate student, said, "On purely ideological lines there is a big possibility, that it will be overturned." However, she added that the Supreme Court tends to be "very reluctant to overturn previous rulings." "It's scary in that what it will do is make each state have a different law," forcing women who want to have abortions to travel to states where it's legal, and "poor women will be left behind again." Eleanor S meal, president of the Fund for the Feminist Majority, said, "It's possible the court will not even consider the attack on Roe, but we think it's important that people know what could happen." If the 1973 decision were overturned, Smeal predicted, "at least six states would outlaw abortion immediately" and "about one-third of the states would revert to bans on abortion or greatly restrictive regulations." MSA members question release BY KRISTINE LALONDE Many Michigan Student Assembly represen- tatives expressed concern last night over the release of a report investigating LSA Rep. Zachary Kittrie to a source outside the assembly. MSA President Michael Phillips released the re- 9l port last week - before the assembly itself dis- cussed the investigation. Phillips said he will not release the report of possible ethics violations by Kittrie to the as- sembly until tomorrow. In a related incident, at the assembly's last meeting in December, representatives questioned Phillips' decision to tell the press that Kittrie was the representative under investigation prior to informing the assembly. "As an assembly member I should have a right to know what's going on and not have to read about it in the Daily," said Budget Priorities Chair Hillary Olsen. When asked why the information was released Phillips said, "Their (the assembly's) opinions have been biased to the facts, they just think Zack is a nice guy." Some assembly members said they would consider looking into the investigation itself and would question Phillips about it at tonight's weekly meeting. "I would not be surprised to see the assembly initiate an investigation as to the real motives behind this particular investigation," said Com- munications Chair Robert Bell. "If this is true (that the information was re- leased) then Mike Phillips has seriously out- stepped his bounds as the chief executive of the assembly." Phillips could not be reached for comment on Bell's statement. LSA Rep. Heide Hayes said, "We have to be responsible for actions of MSA and when infor- mation is released before we know about it, it reflects poorly (on the assembly)... It looks so poor, like we don't really care about what's go- ing on when we do." * Libyan official accuses Israel of keeping chemical weapons PARIS (AP) - Libya said yesterday the United States has launched a "vile campaign" against it with allegations over a chemical weapons plant, and accused Wash- ington of helping Israel stockpile nuclear, chemical and biological weapons. Foreign Minister Jalalah Azouz Ettalhi, speaking at an international conference on chemical weapons, dismissed U.S. charges that Libya has a chemical weapons plant as "clearly false." The Libyan minister mentioned the United States only once by name - to condemn the downing of two Libyan jet fighters last week - and referred to Israel as the "racist Zionist entity." He urged the international com- munity to condemn the incident Jan. 4 over the Mediterranean as a mili- tary aggression. The United States has said its action was in self-de- fense. Charges that Israel has nuclear weapons are at the heart of a cam- paign by Arab states to link bans on nuclear and chemical arms. Ettalhi said the U.S. position on chemical weapons was discrimina- tory. The united States and the Soviet Union admit to having large stock- piles of chemical weapons - the only two countries to make such an admission of about 20 nations pre- sumed to possess the weapons. Shiite Ni fight rial KFAR MELKI, Lebanon (AP) - Rival Shiite Moslem militia hacked each other to death in "horrific" fighting yesterday in which Syrian- backed guerrillas recaptured strategic ,W, villages from fundamentalists, police At least 80 people have been > xkilled and 200 wounded as the embattled villages changed hands in ~ house-to-house combat between the 4 mainstream Amal militia and fundamentalist Hezbollah since daybreak Sunday, police said. R It was the highest 36-hour toil since the power struggle began in April to dominate Lebanon's one million Shiites, the largest sect in x this nation of four million. Nearly ~ 500 people have been killed and COACH: 4 ICERS ARE SUSPECTS 'U' students press harassment charges BY MIKE GILL AND MONICA SMITH Four members of the Michigan hockey team are suspected of harassing two female University students on their way home from the NMr.rini-.Ra lrnnm Tan ' rordins charges under the University's anti- discrimination and harassment policy. "I don't like it," Berenson said. "Obviously, it's not something that anybody should do - particularly when vou're an athlete. This miiht