HAC takes over house for homeless by Karen Akerlof Daily Staff Writer Chanting, "One, two, three, four - what the hell are we out here for? Five, six, seven, eight - affordable rent just can't wait!" a small band of people marched from City Hall to 337 S. Ashley St. last night and took over the empty, dilapidated house next to the Kline's parking lot. Homeless men and women, members of the Home- less Action Committee (HAC), and University students were among the group of about 50 people who protested in front of City Hall before leaving to occupy the Ash- ley St. house. The committee members organized the City Hall protest, believing they would be able to speak at the City Council meeting and protest the planned $9 mil- lion parking structure behind Kline's, to be financed by the Ann Arbor's Downtown Development Authority. ut last night's council meeting was held at another lo- cation. Larry Fox, a HAC member, told a group of protesters outside City Hall that the parking structure is "all to facilitate future development. We think that is just rubbing solvent in the wound." Brian Larken, a worker at the Ann Arbor Shelter As- sociation, said the occupation of the yellow and green house was the first time the homeless have appropriated an empty house in Ann Arbor, an action common in large cities such as Philadelphia. The S. Ashley house has been empty for at least a year, said a neighbor. Mable Helber owned the house, the neighbor said, but had not occupied it for at least a year, and relatives care for the grass. The Michigan Daily- Tuesday, November 14, 1989 - Page 3 Ex-Panther speaks on '60s activism by Mike Sobel Daily Staff Writer ,JU I MAN m ,L Richard Stillwell protests the budget priorities of the Ann Arbor City Council last night at City Hall. The Ann Arbor Homeless Action Committee staged the protest to express dissatisfaction with what group members called the city's loyalty to constructing new parking spaces rather than subsidizing low-income homes. The house is scattered with Helber's remembrances. Her black-and-white photographs lay in a red box on a table. A squashed penny engraved with her name and the house's address lay next to it. A woman's clothes were scattered around the living room, still partially folded. The house is one of three downtown houses to be removed in the spring to make way for the parking structure. Two of the houses will be destroyed, and an- other moved to an empty lot on Ashley, said HAC member Renuka Uthappa. Laura Dresser, a University graduate student, said the committee plans to house homeless people in the build- ing for as long as the city lets them stay. The house has no utilities, but Dresser said they would use a generator and small heaters. "It is a lot more liveable than the streets," she said. Dresser said they could be in the house for three hours, or "forever. It is conceivable that the city could come tonight." Philip Porter, one of the house's first new residents, held his hand up carefully to show the white bandage wrapped around the stumps of three fingers. Porter has diabetes. His hand is slowly dying of gangrene. "I just want a place to sit down and eat. A place to clean it (his wounded hand) and rewrap it," Porter said. A former Black Panther Party member told about 150 students last night that "you can't be a student who just goes to class everyday... it is your challenge "to change the world" at the Law Quad's Hutchins Hall. Ron Scott, along with Abayomi Azikiwe, a repre- sentative from the Pan-African Students Union ant a Wayne State University graduate student, spoke about_ the Black Panther movement in the '60s and called for continued student activism in the '90s. - The United Coalition Against Racism sponsored the ; event. Both speakers traced the origins and development of the Black Panther movement in the '60s. Azikiwe called the group "the first to advocate a break with U.S. cap-. talism." Because the U.S. government considered the - group subversive, it initiated a series of FBI, CIA and local police attacks on the Panthers, he said. . Scott stressed that "the Black Panther Party was a political movement," and that its military side grew out of a "necessity to move the party forward." .. Scott talked about his days as a young party member in Detroit, contrasting the group's free breakfast pro-. grams for school children with the armed urban conflicts between the group and local police. Azikiwe said many Panthers are still in prison today and called for yowlg activists to help them. In light of what Azikiwe said he sees as an increase in homelessness, unemployement and racist violence in the U.S., students must study the lessons of the '60s in order to predict the trends of the '90s. "The U.S. is going to become more aggressive,hi _ exploiting people both internationally as well as domestically," he said. "It is important to draw lir*J between capitalism and in the states and the racist apartheid regime in South Africa."' . Scott attacked what he sees as the media's present contempt for '60s radicalism. "People somewhere are at- tempting to recreate history for you so you lose tihp. control and the context of the struggle," he said. He asserted that the news media first expanded na- tionally by covering the .civil rights struggle in the South during the '60s. "The news media gained its commercial teeth by covering the struggle," he said. "There was no national news in '58." Scott concluded his speech on a hopeful note. "When I look at your faces I see the bases of what started the Black Panther Party," he said. "I see in this room the potential and opportunity for change." 'U' student by Mark Katz Daily Staff Writer LSA sophomore Anne Gail Gilman sold quite a few knives last summer. Fifty-six thousand dollars worth, to be exact. For three and a half months, Gilman - a salesperson for the Richmond, Va.- based Vector Marketing Company - went from house to house on a referral system giving presentations on Cutco ouse carving knives. In all, she made &ore than 325 presentations and collected ; wins $1,000 in sales contest about 275 sales. Gilman won a national summer-long competition against roughly 20,000 Vec- tor salespeople for selling the knives. For her efforts, Vector representatives yester- day presented her with a $1,000 check and donated another $1,000 to the University in her name. When she took the job at the begin- ning of the summer, Gilman didn't even ponder winning the award. "I needed a summer job, so I took it," she said. "After my first week of work, I discovered that I was actually pretty good. I started setting goals for myself, and eventually became number one." Gilman attributed her success to "enthusiasm, persistence, consistency, and professionalism, and a strong desire to win." She said she plans to open her own Vector Marketing office this summer. Vector Marketing, a division of Alcas cutlery corporation, gives out scholar- ships to its best sales representatives three times a year, providing $22,500 for the fund. Scholarships range from $500 to $1,000, with the best sales representa- tive in each of the fall, winter, and sum- mer terms, receiving the largest award plus a gift of $1,000 to their university. The $1,000 check to the University, accepted by Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs Robert Holmes, will be put into the University's general gift ac- count. Holmes said in accordance with the company's wishes, "it will probably be passed along to the Business School, where they will determine its applica- tion." THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Ex-agent Philip Agee to discuss his 12-ytar association with 'The Company' Meeting Student Struggle, for Soviet Jewry - 6:30 p.m. at Hillel Michigan Student Assembly - 7:30 p.m. in Union Rm. 3909 Sigma Iota Rho - international honors society; 7 p.m. in Haven 6th floor student lounge Iranian Student Cultural Club - 7:30 p.m. in League Rm. C; a non-political group; all welcome Students Concerned About Animal Rights - 7 p.m. in East Quad Rm. 124 Indian-Pakistani American Student Council - 6:30 p.m. in Union Rm. 2203 Time and Relative Dimensions in Ann Arbor - 8 p.m. in 2439 Mason Society of Minority Engineers - membership meeting; 6-7 p.m. in 1500 EECS; Debbie Smith of Detroit Edison speaks on "How to Hire Yourself an Employer: Ingre- dients for Interviewing" The Yawp - the Undergraduate English Association-sponsored publication; 7 p.m. in Union Rm. 4000 A German Club - 6 p.m. in MLB 2011 Public Health Student Associa- tion - noon in Rm. 3000 of SPHI Ann Arbor Coalition to De- fend Abortion Rights - 5:15 is new member orientation; 5:30 regular meeting; at the Union 'Lesbian and Gay Men's Rights ,Organizing Committee - 7 'p.m. to set agenda, 7:30 for regu- lar meeting; Union Rm. 3100 Speakers "An Artist Dealing With the Art Establishment" - Faith Ringgold; noon in 1524 Rackham "Comments on Czech Litera- ture Today" - Zdenek Urbanek; noon in the MLB Conference Rm. on the 3d floor 'Great Writers Series - Ethan Canin; 7:30 p.m. at Hillel; tickets for $8 ($5 for students) available a the ri.n "Nicaragua: The Forthcoming Elections" - Dr. Leroy Cap- paert the leader of the Nicaragua Sister City Movement; noon at the International Center "Nationality and Politics in the Soviet Baltic" - Tonu Parming of the U of Toronto; 4 p.m. in Lane Hall 200 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 The Summer Job Search - 4:10-5 p.m. in CP&P Rm. 1 Free tutoring - for all lower- level math, science and engineer- ing casses; 7-11pm in UGLi Rm. 3/)7 ard 7-llpm in Dow Bldg. Its zzanine Videos on world hunger - "Chance for Change" and "Business of Hunger" at 7:30 p.m. in 219 Angell ECB peer writing tutors - available at Angell-Haven and 611 Computing Centers from 7 to 11 p.m.; Sunday through Thursday Store FrontChurches in De- troit - Center for Afro-American and African Studies; 200 W. Engine.; 8am-5pm Color National Artists' Book Project - features artists' books of more than 200 American Women of Color; in the Slusser Gallery; l0a.m.-5 p.m. Photo exhibit of racial violence in the U.S. - in Rm. 3 of East Engineering; 10-3 daily Women of Courage: An Exhibi- tion of Photographs by Judith Sedwick - portraits of 55 Black American women; Grad. Library North Lobby; 8am-5pm Arpilleras from Peru and Chile - distinctive fabric wall-hangings by women from Latin America; Residential College; 1-5 p.m. Spark Revolutionary History Series -"Strike! Early Struggles ,C .1- -..- In 1968, Philip Agee resigned after 12 years as a CIA operations officer, and began exposing what he called the anti-Constitutional crimes committed by the CIA. "When I joined the CIA I be- lieved in the need for its existence," Agee wrote in his 1975 book Inside the Company: CIA Diary. "After 12 years with the agency I finally un- derstood how much suffering it was causing, that millions of people all over the world had been killed or had had their lives destroyed by the CIA and the institutions it supports. I couldn't sit by and do nothing..." Tonight at 8 p.m. in the Natural Science Building, Agee will speak about the experiences he had with the CIA in Ecuador, Uruguay, Mex- ico, and Washington. In his book, Agee saidhecon- demns not the CIA as much as the greedy U.S. government that needs the CIA as a necessary evil. "American capitalism, based as it is on exploitation of the poor, with its fundamental motivation in per- sonal greed, simply cannot survive without force - without a secret po- lice force," he wrote. Funded by the Latin American Solidarity Committee, Agee's speech at the University will be the second in two months by an ex-CIA agent who has gone public. - by Britt Isaly THE ARMENIAN STUDENTS CLUB AT UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN-ANN ARBOR Invites undergraduate and graduatera students to a presentation on THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1989 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN-ANN ARBOR 2203 MICHIGAN UNION ANN ARBOR, MI 7:00 P.M. Director Peter Abajlan will speak about the program and offer a video presentation In addition, former Interns will discuss the value of their experiences in Washington, D.C. Admission is free. For further information about the program please call the Armenian Assembly (202) 393-3434 xI JOSTENS GOLD RING SALE IS COMING! The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC Wed. Nov. 15 Thurs. Nov. 16 Thurs.-Sun. Nov. 16-19 Arts Chorale Paul Rardin, conductor Music of Bernstein, Dawson, Dello Joio; Perea: The Canticle of the Sun Hill Auditorium, 8 PM Jazz Combos and Northcoast-- UM Jazz Ensemble Music in a jazz cafe atmosphere North Campus Commons Dining Hall, 8 PM La Bohdme--Opera Theatre See ad, or call 764-0450 for tickets Order your college ring NOW. Stop by and see a Jostens representative, Monday, Nov. 13 thru Friday, Nov. 17, a d ._n .. - a.._.11 Long Time Since Yesterday-- University Players See ad, or call 764-0450 for tickets Michinan MnartF-aqt i