Fraternity poster barred from The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 30, 1990 - Page 3 'U'housing by Diane Cook Daily Women's Issues Reporter When Residential College Senior Monica Siewart approached the doors *of the Modern Languages Building, a poster with a photo of a man gazing out a window caught her eye. In the dialogue, the man reminisced about a great party the night before. He couldn't remember if the phone number he got was from "the blond, the redhead, or the one with the sexy voice. God what a voice," the cap- tion read. Siewart said she found the poster *sexist and ripped it down. When she took it to a trash can, she found about ten others near the brim of the can. "I debated whether or not I should take it down. I thought it was so of- fensive, (that) I put it in the garbage, which was already full of them," Siewart said. Siewart said she called the Inter- fraternity Council to complain. An alumnus who answered the phone said they had debated running the poster, but the fraternity who posted it, Delta Upsilon, decided it was not sexist, she said. Housing officials agreed with Siewart and refused to allow the fra- ternity to put up the poster. Although Assistant Director of Housing Education Alan Levy would not disclose which residence hall di- rector made the decision, he said the director viewed the poster as a viola- tion of the University's interim anti- harrassment policy. "I find it extremely offensive. The fact that it was slick and done by an ad agency made it even worse," said Levy. "It's a perfect ex- ample of the image portrayed of women in advertising." Tom Richards, president of Delta Upsilon, said the poster was not of- fensive because "people do that (exchange phone numbers) all the time." Richards said the Housing De- partment barred the poster from one of the residence halls because the di- rector found it "offensive." "I think it's an issue of censor- ship," Richards said. Levy said the housing office takes an educational angle with such incidents, stressing the reasons why they deem such a poster offensive. The housing offices' current guide- lines for posting require that the posters "be in good taste" and do not gender, sexual orientation, or reli- gion." He said interpretation of the ac- ceptability of the posters is at the 'I find it extremely offensive. The fact that it was slick and done by an ad agency made it even worse. It's a perfect example of the image portrayed of women in advertising.' -Alan Levy Assistant Director of Housing Education promote the use of alcohol or discretion of the directors of each res- "denigrate individuals based on race, idence hall. Task force to study minority retention, recruitment at 'U' by Mark Katz Daily Minority Issues Reporter K I\c'4 - - .I LLtH/I8Iy Is that pen a phallic symbol? In a classic case of the super ego dominating the impulsive id first-year LSA student Jon Carlson signs up for some mandatory psychology experiments. Carlson unfortunately was too late to get in on the experiment testing the effect of watching the Beverly Hillbillies on one's ability to perform simple spatial reasoning. The University announced yester- day the formation of a task force to explore minority student recruitment and retention. The Commission on Student Re- cruitment and Graduation will con- sist of 24 staff, faculty members, and deans from different schools. Currently Black enrollment at the University is 6.5 percent. Blacks make up 10 percent of college-bound students in the state. All minority groups, except Asian Americans, have a higher dropout rate than whites. The task force will be divided into two committees. One will ex- amine University policy issues, the other will establish the strategies and tactics to execute the policy. Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Charles Vest, who will chair the committee on policy Police Sergeant Alan Hartwig. The University Towers resident was al- legedly having a dispute with a friend of his who had been staying with him. A verbal argument followed the resident's attempt to evict his friend by placing the latter's personal be- longings into the hall. The friend then pulled a handgun from his jacket and pointed it at the resident's head, police reports said. No shots were fired and no in- juries were reported, Hartwig added. By the time the police arrived, the assailant had taken his belongings and fled the building. Building resi- dents have complained of similar disturbances from the same apartment in the past, police reports also noted. by Mike Sobel issues, originally announced inten- tions to put together a task force last October. Vest said while most task forces at the University are "primarily aimed at studying (problems) and making recommendations, we're try- ing to put something together that will have an action-oriented agenda." "All the schools are doing differ- ent things (for minority recruitment and retention). No one has actually sat down and said what works and what doesn't work," said Office of Minority Affairs Director John Mat- lock, who co-chairs the strategies committee with Assistant Vice Pres- ident for Academic Affairs Robert Holmes. United Coalition Against Racism member Tracye Matthews expressed concern about the absence of student representation on the task force. "It would seem only logical that if you're trying to keep students of color (at the University), you would ask them what to do," she said. UCAR, the University of Michi- gan Asian Student Coalition, the Socially Active Latino Student As- sociation, the Puerto Rican Student Association, the Minority Organiza- tion of Rackham, and the Black Greek Association will meet with administrators from different offices today to demand that a separate office for minority retention be established. "There needs to be more than a task force," Matthews said. "There has to be a serious, long-term insti- tutional commitment to address these issues." However, Matlock said the Commission will have the ability to address and change institutional poli- cies that hinder the recruitment and retention of minority students. "The commission (will have the author- ity) to implement strategies for get- ting the job done," he said. Student shoves officer following *Burger King brawl Police arrested an 18-year-old Al- ice Lloyd resident early Sunday after the youth shoved aside an Ann Arbor police officer during an attempt to assault several Ann Arbor youths, police reports said. The student and some friends al- legedly got into a fight with a group of youths at the Burger King on E. Liberty St. earlier in the evening. Around 2 a.m., the student, ac- companied by his friends, approached Ann Arbor Staff Sergeant Henry Jinkerson on State St..in front of Angell Hall. The student began shouting that Colombian * BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - Drug traffickers gave up 2,200 pounds of dynamite yesterday and said they had kidnapped a diplomat who was the Colombian consul in Miami for 18 years. A statement delivered to the RCN radio network said Roberto Garci- Pena, Colombia's consul to Miami since 1988, was abducted Friday and M -" ME the occupants of a car, which Jinker- son had stopped, were the ones who had beaten him earlier. When Jinker- son tried to keep the student and his friends from approaching the vehicle, the student shoved the officer, police reports said. Jinkerson and several other offi- cers restrained the student, took him into custody and booked him on charges of hindering and obstructing a police officer, the reports added. The student, whose arraignment date is set for Feb. 13, was released on bond. Police are pursuing an in- vestigation of the initial incident, Sergeant Alan Hartwig said. U. Tower resident pulls gun on friend A resident of University Towers on South University Ave. was threatened with a gun last Thursday night, police reports said. Just before midnight Thursday, police received reports of a distur- bance on the ninth floor of the apartment building said Ann Arbor traffickers surrender dynamite would be freed today with a peace message for President Virgilio Barco. A bus loaded with dynamite was found in Medellin, the northwestern city and leading center of the drug trade. The traffickers telephoned re- porters and said they were turning over the explosives to show sincer- ity in offering to end a five-month- old war that cost at least 209 lives. Since Barco declared war on the cocaine gangs August 18 following the assassination of a leading presi- dential candidate, drug dealers have carried out 262 bombings and other terrorist acts. Colombia is plagued by guerrilla violence, with rebels ambushing an army patrol Sunday, killing five sol- diers and wounding seven. The attack occurred near Mesetas, 80 miles southeast of Bogota, and two gueril- las of the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces group also died, the army said. There are six insurgent groups in Colombia and so far this year guerrilla violence has killed 24 po- licemen, 12 soldiers and 19 guerril- las. In a news release, Medellin police said the dynamite found in the bus yesterday was not connected to deto- nators. Also in the bus was a statement saying the traffickers would continue giving up explosives. It was signed the Extraditables, the name adopted by drug dealers trying to force the government to abandon extradition of Colombian suspects to the United States. The statement accused the na- tional anti-narcotics police of torture and murder and claimed, without giv- ing details, the police had murdered 10 men arrested on suspicion of be- ing hired killers. Perles protest' Michigan State University graduate student Dennis Martell urges a group of students yesterday to protest the recent decision to give football Coach George Perles a dual role as athletic director. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Dept. of Recreational Sports Caving Trip - 7 p.m. in the NCRB Conference Rm. LaGROC - The Lesbian and Gay Males' Rights Organizing Com- mittee meets at 7:30 p.m. in Union 3000; 7 p.m. to set agenda Asian American Women's Journal - 5 p.m. in the Afro- American Lounge of South Quad Recycle UM - mass meeting from 8-9 p.m. in 1040 DANA Student Struggle for Oppressed Jewry - mass meeting at 6:30 in Hillel Women's Club Lacrosse - 4-6 p.m. at the Coliseum (5th. and Hill) Iranian Student Cultural Club - the non-political, non-religious group meets at 7:45 in the League Speakers "Malcolm X and the Islamic Movement in the U.S." - Iman Jamil Al-amin (formerly 1960s civil rights activist H. Rap stitute Fellow Keith Morrison will discuss the affect of patronage on museum collections; coffee and tea provided "The Puerto Rican Plebiscite and the Struggle Against Colo- nialism" -Prof. John Vander- meer speaks at 7:30 in the Guild House Furthermore ECB Peer Writing Tutors - available for help from 7-11 p.m. at the Angell and 611 Church St. computing centers Spark Revolutionary History Series - "The Lost Revolution: Germany 1918-1923"; 7-8 pm. in MLB B122 Safewalk - the night-time safety. walking service runs form 8pm- 1:30am in Rm. 102 UGLi or call 936-1000 Northwalk - the north-campus night-time walking service runs from 8pm-1:30am in Bursley 2333, or call 763-WALK Career Planning & Placement Programs - Introduction to s . W O ob5r3 f taktpX~pw~sil, Computic K and The University of Michigan ®E Offie of Minority Affairs IN HIGHER present...a. EDUCATION Present. Beyond the Dream II: A Celebration of Black History February 1, 1990 - 1:oo pm - 3:oo pm I IN& £NOy i IN N Beyond The Dream will highlight achievements and focus on contemporaryissues in the areas of Education. History, Civil Rights and Politics. Businessand Economics. Arts and Literature, and Entertainment. With participation by- +George J. McKenna +Santee Ruffin .Julianne Malveaux -Wilhelmina Delco *Angela Davis *Marcia Ann Gillespie .Bernice King .Jack Gravely *Bernice Johnson Reagon .Percy Sutton .Robert Maynard .Cathy Hughes 'Sylvia P. Mundy -Ernie Barnes .Joseph Holston -Sonia Sanchez 'Yvonne Browne 'Phoebe Beasley .guincy Troop -Kirk Whalum :Warrington Hudlin .Kashif .Freddy Jackson :Sweet Honey in the Rock " Doug E. Fresh & The Get Fresh Crew 3 University of Michigan-Ann Arbor Campus Locations: Eellg.Iiff uiim - Dental School - Chryslr Cnter- North Campus Regent's Room (Fleming Administration Bldg.) - Central Campus Sponsored By: I * Resume Packages * Quality Thesis Copies * Course Packets e Fax Service " Term Paper Copies " Collating/Binding " Passport Photos " Color Copies the copy center 1. 20 00 fInstant Passport Photos