I The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, December 12, 1989 - Page 5 Speakers allege Pittsfield police brutalized citizen by Heather Fee area earlier that night. try to understand everything tha Daily Staff Writer "Sorry, but you've got the wrong happened to him related to the Pitts- t i- About 40 people expressed outrage yesterday about an incident involving Pittsfield Township resi- dent Willie Simmons, who alleged that township police stopped him last month and said "Get out of the car, nigger... Get out or we'll blow you away." Simmons told the crowd that po- lice pinned him against his car and held a gun to his head while they searched the inside and trunk of the car on Nov. 11 at 2:30 a.m.. Simmons, who was driving with a 14-year-old Black male friend said he questioned the officers as to why they pulled him over. He said, "What's the deal, what have we done?" Eventually, he discovered they were searching for a gun which had been shot off in the Scenic Lake person," Simmons said he told the officers. "I went to Showcase Cin- ema - I still have my ticket stub - and I just dropped my sisters off; you can call my house and check." Police checked Simmons plates and identification and eventually let him go. Simmons and more than 10 other people, including members of the United Coalition Against Racism, expressed their outrage to the Pitts- field Township Board of Trustees during a meeting last night. Pittsfield Township Director of Public Safety Ray Lecornu, who was present at last night's meeting, said he will interview Simmons on Wednesday and determine whether to open an investigation. "When I meet with him, I will field police," Lecornu said yesterday. "I want to get to the bottom of it." Simmons' wrote a letter to Lecornu, who administers both the Pittsfield police and fire departments, earlier this month to protest the al- leged brutality. When the Board opened the mi- crophone for public comments, members of the United Coalition Against Racism, some concerned University of Michigan students, Simmons' mother, and a few citi- zens of Pittsfield and Ann Arbor spoke. Most people questioned what the board was going to do in re- sponse to the incident. Because of the format of the meeting, however, the board refused to answer questions and only allowed statements from the crowd. What form Bush Helzberg watches Aaron Rochlen play ping-pong in the Club 600 of South Quad. Both are LSA first-year students. .Campus readers react negatively to Detroit JOA by Eric Phillips The Joint Operating Agreement between The Detroit News and The Detroit Free Press has received negative reviews from University headers. The 100-year JOA, which began November 27, created many changes for readers of both Detroit papers. The Free Press now is the only morning paper delivered in the De- troit area. During weekends, readers receive one paper, The Detroit News t ind Free Press. LSA first-year student Jim Lucas, a Free Press reader, sees one advan- tage to the JOA: "There still is a Free Press. Without the JOA, The Free Press wouldn't have survived." But many students have criticized the new arrangement. Some are upset because their newspaper now is delivered later in the morning or in the afternoon. "So far, I haven't liked the JOA because the paper comes too late, and I'm used to reading it in the morning," said LSA junior Erika Gravlin, a Free Press subscriber. Larry Bohr, an engineering sophomore, said, "We used to get our News at three in the morning, so whenever we went outside, it was there. Now The News comes in the afternoon, so we have tried to cancel our subscription to The News and change to The Free Press." He added, "In The News, I liked reading "The Far Side," but I guess I'll give up "The Far Side" and get the morning paper." Others dislike the weekend merger of the two papers into one joint edition. "It stinks," said LSA sophomore Paresh Bhavsar, a News subscriber. "I don't like the fact that they switch sections between The Free Press and The News. "I don't like The Free Press writers; I like The News writers, and that's why I subscribed to The News in the first place." Gravlin also had complaints about the weekend editions. "The Sunday paper was a mess; it was too chopped up, and it didn't seem to flow. There was too much advertis- ing, and stories didn't seem in- depth," she said. Joe Grimm, reader representative for The Free Press, said the paper has received complaints about con- tent and delivery. "There's a lot of confusion, and a lot of people are upset that their regular Free Press sections are not where they used to be. We've had delivery problems too, and that has exacerbated the sit- uation. "I've talked to a lot of people who are switching to The Free Press because they have to have a morning paper. In the newsstands The News no longer has an advan- tage, either, because now both pa- pers cost the same," he said. Tim White, publisher of The Ann Arbor News, agreed that the JOA will hurt The Detroit News. "Our research tells us that readers of Detroit papers are what we call cycle driven, meaning that they are largely concerned with the time their news- paper arrives. Therefore, I expect that a lot of people are switching from The News to The Free Press," he said. SAYITINTHE... DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Earthquake-an eye-popping, mind-boggling, action-packed trip through the world's most fantastic special effects. Experience it and you still face King Kong, Jaws, Conan's' 18 foot-fire-breathing dragon, and a chance to join Capt. Kirk and Mr. Spock in the incredible live STAR TREK' Adventure. 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