The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 10,1989 - Page 3 Councils discuss* .minority lounges by Marion Davis Daily Minority Issues Reporter Representatives of the University Housing Minority Councils defended the notion of minority lounges in response to a recent Consider magazine article labeling the lounges as "segregated by design." The representatives met last Friday to discuss issues facing campus minorities. "The University doesn't seem to be worrying about us," said Black Student Union member Carl Banks, stressing the importance of forming *a support system. "We have to take care of ourselves." The main order of the meeting was a recent Consider magazine article labelling the minority lounges as "segregated by design." The article, written by Glenn Kotcher, chair of the College Republicans and the Conservative Coalition, accused the lounges of promoting segregation and hindering the process of breaking down racial barriers. Consider printed the article opposite a pro-lounge piece written by Delro Harris, chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Minority Affairs Commission. At the meeting, council members maintained that non- minority students are not turned away from the lounges. Rather, they U.S. to produce new chemical weapons ,, WASHINGTON (AP)- The United States will continue produc- ing new chemical weapons over a 10-year period even if it signs an in- ternational treaty to abolish all poi- son gas stockpiles an administration official said yesterday. The text of the treaty being nego- tiated by about 40 nations in Geneva proposes that all production be stopped immediately and that plants be rendered inoperable. However, the administration will seek modifications to ensure that it can keep its stockpiles up to date as it scales them down, said the official who declined to be identified. The United States will continue producing new chemical weapons over a 10-year period even if it signs an international treaty to abolish all poison gas stockpiles. President Bush in a Sept. 25 speech to the United Nations, said that once a global treaty is signed the United States will destroy 98 percent of its chemical weapons over an eight year period, if the Soviet Union takes identical action. Bush said the remaining stock- piles would be destroyed over the, next two years, if "all nations ca- pable of building chemical weapons sign that total ban treaty." The US stockpiles consist of "unitary" weapons, many of which are leaking and deemed unsafe. Congress has instructed the ad- ministration to destroy the unitary weapons as newer binary weapons, are being produced. "You do not want to get eight years down the road and have only unitary, leaking old weapons left," the official said. "As long as you're going to have any you ought to try. to make sure the ones you have are as safe as possible." The official said the U.S. inten- - tion of continuing to produce the weapons was made known to the Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze during talks last month in Wyoming with Secretary of State James Baker. Day of atonement JONATHANLSS/Daitv The Michigan Union Ballroom hosts services for Yom Kippur, the Jewish high holidays, yesterday. said, the lounges are most often utilized by Black students because they were "fought for and earned" by Black students in the 1972 Black Action Movement. Francis Matthews, president of the Black Student Union, said any attack on the lounges is an attack on the "rights of Black students to come together." The minority lounges were origi- nally named "Afro-American lounges" but were later changed to "minority lounges" by the University in 1981 to include all minority groups. Kotcher's Consider article asserted, "While whites are not specifically barred from theses lounges, imagine how uncomfort- able a black student would feel in a 'white lounge'... Their most disturb- ing feature is that while they are de- signed to give shelter, in the end they promote only alienation and suspicion among the races." In his pro-lounge article, Harris addressed the argument that the lounges make others feel able. uncomfort- "The point is not to make others feel uncomfortable," he wrote, "but if being exposed to another side of Americana makes you uneasy, then where does the problem lie?" In other meetings business repre- sentatives of the 11 councils voted to form inter-dorm study groups, co- ordinate Minority Council Social Nights, organize cafeteria "eat-in" days and times, and air an educa- tional film series. GE 'Inmates serving short terms crowd state prisons 'T IT!: FEORflE LANSING (AP) - Michigan's new prisons are filling up with petty thieves and drug addicts serving short sentences rather than with violent criminals, admission figures show. Records from the Michigan De- partment of Corrections show the ~umnber of prison inmates serving minimum terms of one year or less has tripled in the last five years, from 807 in 1984 to nearly 2,427 in 1988. But the number of inmates serv- ing minimum terms of five years has grown more slowly, from 1,881 to 2,134, Booth Newspapers reported yesterday. "We clearly have a problem of the shorter-term, less-violent of- fender who doesn't necessarily need to be in a state facility," said Shelby Solomon, state budget director. Michigan's prison population has djubled to more than 29,000 since 1984 following a $900 million prison expansion program. But the newspaper group said figures show inmates, most of whom have been sentenced .for drug or for property offenses, serving sen- tences of two years or less made up 54 percent of 9,934 new prisoners in 1988. The number of new inmates serv- ing time for drug sale and possession jumped fourfold and the number serving one-year terms for larceny, breaking and entering, and receiving stolen property more than doubled in five years. Local jails, faced with overcrowd- ing of their own, have been asking local judges to send felons with small sentences to state facilities. "The judges are very cognizant of our problems," said Sheriff Philip Heffron of Kent County, which sends almost all of its felons to the state because its jail is full of indi- viduals awaiting trial. The Personal Column MICHIGAN DAILY CLASStF ED ADS I . ..Si I I....." r ;r;."r { r.ES S -A "..r r Former CIA agent to discuss his experiences with the U.S. government COMPUTER ACCESSORY SALE' A former Central Intelligence Agency agent will discuss his gov- einment experience and his belief that the agency is not acting within the limits of the U.S. Constitution, tonight at 8 p.m. in the Michigan Union Ballroom. John Stockwell, hired by the CIA in 1964, quit after 12 years on the job because of the injustices he be- lieved the CIA was committing in such places as Africa, Vietnam, Nicaragua, Angola, Afghanistan and Iran. Instead of upholding the Con- stitution, Stockwell argues that the CIA works against and around it. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Society of Minority Engineers - membership meeting, 6:30- 8:30 p.m. in 1500 EECS with Dr. Ralph Story speaking on "Show and Tell: Corporate Pre- sentation and Communication Styles" Lesbian and Gay Rights Orga- nizing Committee - 7:30 p.m. (7 p.m. to set agenda) in Rm. 3100 of the Union Time and Relative Dimensions in Ann Arbor - 8 p.m. in Rm. 2439 Mason Michigan Student Assembly - 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 3909 of the Union Students Concerned About Animal Rights - 7 p.m. in Rm. 124 of East Quad Iranian Student Cultural Club - this non-political group meets at 7:30 in Rm. C of the League Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry - 6:30 p.m. at Hillel Speakers Victor Denenberg (U of Con- necticut) - "Corpus Callosum: Effects of early experience, sex and neonatal hormones in the rat"; 12:30 p.m. in 1057 MHRI Fred Bookstein (research sci- entist) - "The Statistician as an Artist: Geometry and the Aesthet- ics of Quantification"; a brown Jim Woodward (editor of Labor Notes) - "Labor Fights Back: the Pittston Strike"; at 7:30 p.m. at the Guild House Francine Prose (author) - the author reads from her works; 4 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater John Stockwell (former CIA agent) - 8 p.m. in the Union Ballroom Furthermore Safewalk - the night-time walk- ing service is open seven days a week from 8:00 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.; 936-1000 Northwalk - North campus night-time walking service, Rm. 2333 Bursley; 8 p.m. - 1:30 a.m. or call 763-WALK ECB peer writing tutors - available at the Angell-Haven and 611 Computing Centers from 7- 11 p.m., Sunday through Thurs- day Lewis "Buster" Simpson - public space artist is in Ann Ar- bor for a week-long residency; co- ordinating an interdisciplinary charette "Why Be a Marxist?" - part of the SPARK Revolutionary Series; 7-8 p.m. in Rm. 122 MLB AEtna - representatives from AEtna will be at the Union Welker Rm. from 4-6 p.m. Mainstreet Comedy Showcase - Open Mic. Night; $3; 8:30 Faced with a choice to make between his country and his job, he decided on his country. "The oaths were contradictory," he told Campus Voice magazine, "and I opted - after much soul- searching - to uphold the law of the land and the Constitution." Stockwell was first recruited by the CIA in 1959 as a liberal arts ma- jor at the University of Texas at Austin. Hired in 1964 because of his fluency in various languages and his familiarity with central Africa, John Stockwell rose toward the top of the agency, earning the Medal of Merit, the CIA's second highest award, in 1973. - Britt lsaly FOR THE BEST: Crew Cuts-Flat Tops Princetonrs-Military THE DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State 668-9329 "50 years of service- "Tuesday is $2.00 United Artists Day" All day Tuesday. Due to contractual obligations ts, offer can not be honored during the first two wees of a First Run En"a"ement. FUJI FILM FLOPPY DISK -~ - *3.5" Double Density $1199 3.5" High Density $2499 PAPER GALORE! "500 Sheets $795 "1000 Sheets $1195 "2500 Sheets $2495 eLetter Quality eContinuous Sheets DUST COVERS for CPU's and Printers *Macintosh '*IBM PS/2* *Laserjet II *lmageWriterll* eMany more available! $1299 DISKETTE HOLDER \ HOLDS \ \ UP TO V30 \N DISKS AMARAYTM MEDIAMATE Quality. $599 COMPLETE MODEM SOLUTIONS! " IBM® w/ProdigyTM Software and 2400B Hayes Modem $ 15600 eMacintosh 2400B with Software and all Cables $24900 October 9th and 10th MACINTOSH CARRYING CASE e High Quality eRich Navy Color e Room for Extended Keyboard * SPECIAL SALE * $5495 SURGE & SPIKE PROTECTOR "6 fully grounded outlets eMaster Power Switch $999 RIBBONS *lmageWriter II $599 " Epson® LQ510 $999 1A____-!1L1- I I