Arms control ,seminar to meet today BY MICHAEL LUSTIG U.S. and Soviet perspectives on arms control will be the topic of discussion at an afternoon seminar today. Jonathan Dean, a career foreign service officer who was U.S. ambassador to the Mutual Balanced Force Reduction Talks in 1985 and is associate director of the Union of Concerned Scientists, will give the keynote address at 1 p.m. at Rack- ham Amphitheater. Following the speech, several University professors and other scholars, including one from the Soviet Union, will participate in two panel discussions, one called "The History of Arms Control" and the second titled "Recent Develop- ients and Perspectives for the Fu- ture." Matt Gordon, an LSA senior and coordinator of the conference, said arms control was selected as the topic because of recent major devel- opments, especially with Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev taking the lead in negotiations. Most of the panelists are advo- cates of bi-lateral disarmament, Gor- don said. The discussions will largely be from the U.S. perspective, he said, but will also be comparative in nature. All discussions are free and open to the public. WANT TO GET OUT OF TOWN? I I Use and Read Classifieds For Travel Info. Call 764-0557 The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 22, 1989 - PageS5 Anti-abortionists plan to strike area clinics Friday BY LAURA COUNTS Good Friday has been designated a "National Day of Rescue" by Operation Rescue (OR), a militant anti-abortion group that tries to shut down women's health care clinics. Members of OR announced pub- licly Monday their plan to "rescue" - the group's term for its illegal attempts to forcibly close clinics by barring women from entering - three Detroit area clinics Friday. At 6 a.m. yesterday, members of the Ann Arbor Committee to Defend Abortion Rights (AACDAR) gath- ered at Planned Parenthood in Ypsi- lanti, where they suspected a "rescue" to occur, but members of OR never arrived. AACDAR members often try to show up at a clinic before OR members have time to block the en- trance, and they also provide escorts for women with appointments at the clinic. OR does not release in ad- vance the locations they plan to strike. "The pro-choice forces are mobi- lizing," said AACDAR member Joanna Porvin. "We will be there (Friday) to defend against these egre- gious attacks on reproductive rights, and we will be there in larger num- bers than they have ever seen." In a typical "rescue," OR mem- bers sit down in front of a clinic's doors, while others pray and chant hymns. When a woman attempts to enter the clinic, whether for an abor- tion or not, OR members try to pre- vent her from entering. In the past, women have been of- fered money by OR members for agreeing not to have an abortion. At the Summit clinic in Detroit last year, a brick was thrown through a window into a room where an abor- tion was being performed. Porvin said OR tries to liken its techniques to the peaceful protests of the Civil Rights movement, but "the Civil Rights Movement was to give people rights, and OR seeks to take rights away." Rhonda Laur of AACDAR added that OR also uses violent methods, and is almost exclusively white. The police have the legal duty to keep businesses open, but Laur said at previous "rescues," the police have been in open cooperation with OR and threatened to arrest AAC- DAR members. In response to OR's annouce- ment, AACDAR has planned a rally on the Diag Thursday at noon, and will meet for a clinic defense at 5:30 a.m. Friday at the Cube. CLASSIFIED ADSI Call 764-0557 Is Dukakis on this ballot? Tami Sirkin, an LSA junior, and Jaime Pludo, an LSA sophomore vote for their favorite candidates yesterday in the MSA election. Kalamazoo passes loitering law to cut drug trafficking KALAMAZOO (AP) -- The could receive a maximum $500 fine "We're not going to be sweeping American Civil Liberties Union has and 90 days in jail. through neighborhoods and arresting questioned the constitutionality of a As proposed, the ordinance everyone who happens to be stand- city ordinance calling for the arrest "unconstitutionally restricts freedom ing on a street corner," Cinabro said. { t of people who knowingly loiter in areas where drugs or drug paraphernalia are present. City commissioners on Monday unanimously adopted the ordinance which is designed to combat a growing drug problem in the city. Under the plan, those convicted of movement and freedom of association," Robert Travis, a local attorney and member of the board of directors for the area ACLU chapter, wrote in a letter to commissioners. City Attorney Robert Cinabro said the ordinance would be enforced carefully. Career Options After Graduation Psychology Majors Speakers to discuss various career paths in psychology 7 pm Wed. March 22 W. Lounge S. Quad Sponsored by the Undergraduate Psych Society 7 XWhVMAX XXYX MWAN )XXX (XXX XX /JUWxdWWW p PLASMA DONORS $ Earn extra cash $ Earn $20 on your first donation. You can earn up to $120 a month. Couples can earn up to 3 $240. Repeat donors who have not donated in the last 30 days receive an additional $5 bonus - -- ' '""'-r- for return visit. Mich~igan YPSILANTI PLASMA CENTER ^~ C 813 W. Michigan Ave., Ypsilanti MILES Monday thru Friday 8:00am-4:00pm Plasma donors are people helping people a' 9 / \'.////hWN+/CW NiAAA/lW\/XXM1Xlf7vYx vI/AAAANA/0XAAov't W STUDENT'S PRESIDENT CHOICE VICE-PRESIDENT ROBERT BELL JAMES McBAIN Under his chairmanship - The Communications Committee revitalized MSA's monthly news- letter, The Campus Report - Sponsored the first MSA Public- ity Drive - Coordinated the first MSA Safety Symposium " Coordinated the first scientific survey of student opinion at Michi- gan LSA SARA BILLMANN LEONARD KLEINOW KAREN LIBERTINY ROB LIPS PAUL MARQUARDT LANCE PACERNICK JON POLISH DANIEL QUICK GRETCHEN WALTER ART ELIZABETH MOLDENHAUER BUSINESS LAURA PETERSON Responsible for " Organizing MSA's first MTS Conference, MSA: TALKS, which is the fastest growing con- ference at Michigan " Currently, the chairman of the MSA Consulting Task Force, a committee designated to improve MSA's relationship with the Uni- versity community ENGINEERING ERIC FERGUSON STEVE FREEMAN NURSING EMILY PORTER LAW TIM BRINK VOTE ml -v - - W W - -- ~