EXTRA! Look for a special edition of the Daily tomorrow . with deputization protest and MSA election coverage. £F4v a EXTRA! Look for a special edition of the Daily tomorrow with deputization protest and MSA election coverage. Vol. Cl, No. 53 Ann Arbor, Michigan -Friday, November 16, 1990ig Students by Josephine Ballenger Daily Crime Reporter Sixteen students were arrested and a public safety officer was injured following a rally yesterday to protest the deputization of campus security officers. The movement began Wednesday t 3 p.m. when about 35 students from Students for a Safer Campus (SSC) began their sit-in at President James Duderstadt's office in the Fleming Administration Building. Students called for the University to reverse its decision to arm campus security officer and demanded more student input into University deci- sions. The anti-deputization movement continued at 1 p.m. with a rally in Regents Plaza yesterday, which drew more than 400 students. The demonstration - sponsored by Michigan Student Assembly's Students Rights Commission (SRC) - lasted about one hour before a few students forced their way inside the building's unlocked eastside door. * Despite campus security officers' resistance, students propped open the. door and half the crowd stampeded into the Fleming Building. Once inside, students ran up and down the hallways, writing with chalk on the brick walls, pounding on doors, and chanting. The rest of the crowd remained outside the building, at the west and east entrances. *aInfighting among students soon began, as protesters debated going to the second floor, staying on the first floor, or leaving the building. Stu- dents debated whether to use force or remain peaceful. Some students said those who wanted to use violence were from the Revolutionary Workers' League, not SSC or SRC. No one at the time claimed to be from RWL. Students attempted to get to the second floor, where more than 20 SSC protesters were still staging a sit-in, but the stairwell door was locked. protest University alumnus Henry Hardy and several students tried to shove their way through the door while two security officers physically barred their entry. Most of the protesters opposed the move, but a few gained entry and fled upstairs. Director of Department of Public Safety and Security Leo Heatley eventually joined officers S. Rich- mond and Paul Vaughn, helping to end the struggle. Heatley later said See PROTEST, Page 2 'i ' U, cops Regents turn away Si by Sarah Schweitzer Daily Administration Reporter Students on the speakers list for the public question-and-answer ses- sion of the monthly University's Board of Regents meeting were turned away by University security officers yesterday. That action may have violated the state's guarantee of open meetings of public bodies. The question-and-answer session was originally scheduled to be held in the Anderson Room of the Michigan Union, but was moved to Crisler Arena. The location was changed in order to reduce "the threat to safety" posed Ludents by student protestors outside the Fleming Administration Building, according to a resolution read by Re- gent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) at the opening of the meeting. Ten people were scheduled to ad- dress the regents, but none spoke. The regents had moved their meeting from the Fleming Building, where it is normally held, to the Crisler Arena. Regent Phil Power (D-Ann Ar- bor) said the University believed its decision to change the location of the public comments session was within legal boundaries. Power said the University offi- See COMMENTS, page 12 Fourteen stage protest in 'U' information building *by Matthew Pulliam Daily Staff Reporter Fourteen students, protesting al- legedly misleading statements in The University Record, staged a sit- in for more than four hours at the News and Information Services Building yesterday. The students chose to test the limits of security tolerance and left at 6:29 p.m., an hour and a half after *the building's closing time and only two minutes before arrest warrants were to be issued. The protest, organized by Stu- dents for a Safer Campus (SSC), fo- cused on the results of a campus safety survey issued by the Institute for Social Research and printed in the Nov. 12 Record, and was held in tandem with the sit-in and rally at the Fleming Administration Build- ing. The survey indicated strong stu- dent support for "development of a University police force," a result SSC claims is not representative of current student opinions. About 70 percent of the students voting in last spring's Michigan Student Assembly elections indicated opposition to a deputized campus police force. Rackham graduate student Patrick Kennelly, who took part in the sit- in, said that he is fearful of the im- plications of an armed police force on campus. "When people are armed, there is the potential for a fatal mis- understanding," he said. The activists, who entered the building at 2 p.m., sat in the main first-floor hallway and discussed their goals and demands with each other and Director of News and Informa- tion Services Joseph Owsley. In response to the SSC's argu- ment that the University regents made decisions "behind the students' backs," Owsley said, "The students aren't here to govern. The regents are here to govern." The direction of the protest and the fate of the protesters inside the NIS Building came into question around 3:30 p.m. when security announced that the building was.to be placed in a state of "lock-down," in which case only NIS employees, administration officials, and security personnel would be allowed to enter. Windows and doors were closed See SSC, Page 2 aRIAN CANTONI/Daily Protesters sitting in front of the Fleming Building yesterday (top). Elsewhere on Regents' Plaza, John Youtt, an LSA senior, waved in victory after writing with chalk on the top of the Cube. For more photos, see Page 12. Spending a night in the Administration Building by Ian Hoffman and Noele Vance Daily News Editors For 26 hours students outside the Fleming Administration Building knew nothing of those occupying the president's offic except what could be communicated by hand sig- nals, taped messages and an occa- sional cellular telephone call. LSA sophomore Roger Saylor and engineering sophomore Grant Wilcox were among the 45 original students who took over the building late Wednesday afternoon. The fol- lowing is their account of the events that transpired during the first t evening.. 3 p.m. - One student requests an appointment with President Duder- stadt and is denied. Forty-five people enter the lobby of Duderstadt's of- fice. "The secretary was quite baffled. She didn't know what to do. We gave them a list of demands," Saylor said. Walter Harrison, executive direc- * tor of University Relations, read the big felony charge," Wilcox said. Shortly thereafter, the building's telephones were disabled. 5:30 p.m. - Students bide their time playing music on tin cups and shaking containers with seeds. As- sistant to the President Shirley Clarkson monitors the students while reading a stack of newspapers. "Shirley wasn't mad or anything. She seemed to be joking a lot; I don't know if that's her manner or what," Saylor said. 6:30 p.m. - Students receive re- ports that no one is allowed upstairs without a press pass. CNN reporters bring students food. 8 p.m. - Department of Public Safety and Security Officer Robert Patrick arrives. "Patrick was mingling, he would sit in groups talking to people. He told someone not to eat nuts because of the cholesterol," Saylor said. 8:30 p.m. - The first security guard comes on duty. "He was a very kind and consider- ate officer; he let us do what we Fortress Fleming ready for protest by Amanda Neuman Daily Staff Reporter The fortress-like Fleming Administration Building in Regents Plaza, which students took over in the last two days, is well-equipped to withstand protests. The building, designed by architect Alden Dow and completed in 1968, was inspired by the modern Dutch artist, Mondrian, whose works called for the division of a cube into an abstract pattern. Its solid appearance is enhanced by the total absence of windows on the the first level except for the two Romanesque-arched entrances. The asymmetrical win- dows on the upper levels are like gunslits, too small for a person to fit through. Rumors have circulated for years that the building was designed to keep out protesters such as those who were active on campus in the 1960s. Orientation leaders impart the rumor that the Flem- ing Building was designed to be riot-proof. Supposedly, the windows are at foot-level so rock-throwing students could not target administrators inside during protests. But University administrators say otherwise. "It was a purely aesthetic decision on the part of the architect," said University Planner Fred Mayer. The de- sign was made well before the unrest of the 1960s, he added. derground steam tunnels that winds beneath the surface of the campus and connects to the Fleming Building. The grapevine purports that there is a motion detector where the tunnels near the building. Some say the tunnels provide a way for the president and the Board of Regents to enter and exit the Fleming Building secretly. The rumors allege that the tunnels connect to the president's house on South University Street. Mayer discarded these allegations, saying the sole function of the steam tunnels, which lead to and from a central heating plant on Washtenaw and Huron Streets, is to distribute heat to University Buildings. The Fleming Building, which contains the offices of the president and of several vice presidents, is also said to have a security system which can seal the entrances to and the stairwells within the building in a moment's notice. But this is pure speculation, said Executive Director of University Relations Walter Harrison. There is, however, an alarm system which extends throughout the tunnel network, Harrison said. Once called "The Administration Building," the structure was renamed in 1980 in honor of former Uni- versity President Robben Fleming, who served from Approximately 600 chanting students marched down State St. and South University Ave. to University President James Duderstat's house last night to stage a sit-in on his front lawn. The march and sit-in were a continuation of yesterday's protest of University police deputization. Students used the sit-in to plan their future course of action. Today at noon protesters are calling for a general meeting on State St. in front of the Union to plan future action. Protesters will propose a general student strike from classes on Monday. The group will also be taking suggestions from students concerning future plans. The protesters set up a committee to write a general letter to University students explaining the deputization issue. Protesters stressed the urgency of the situation. "As of 9:30 tonight there is a state of activism declared on campus." said Jennifer Van Valey, President of Michigan Student Assembly. Students emphasized the continuation of non-violent forms of action and activism to supplement today's rally. "We should be boycotting classes, camping out as long as it takes, sending a letter to all U of M students, and getting ideas out to other campuses," said LSA senior Linda Rosenfeld. "We want to go to the dorms room-to-room. We want to try to - start reinstating a council of students ... that has veto power over regents' decisions. We think that this can bring more people out," said LSA senior Emily Holzman. Students agreed that the deputization protest served as a manifestation of vedneral student