Page 2-The Michigan Daily- Friday, November 16, 1990 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson PROTEST MOMt, WERE DO W VE tDOtT vlow AM T I 0NG -CO mutI: A~ RoA\DRUNNER Et. Nrv 0PP CE? MAASE 1 tiSN0tjok WWI,3kAT OF TI*XV - BEFRE7.00 AT NIGH~T. 10'L..VEM TO MAE N ME OMERWM Bu 10Ws THS S YUR Sc3L Mw0(T, Ct\\4IN . YOU Do WE WOK Nuts and Bolts COUL) YOU GO To) PLEA5E% PT H ELL, 7HATOUT? SQUIRT. r , by Judd Winick PN N " H n O Po d r c " d' _ "' f ....: t J j / j \ b - - _/"1L 1 /"! NON-SMOKER ADRF-N Ru5H4. )) ,E WEu t N 1 NM _-- ED F. Ii i _ fTIII (! _ Continued from page 1 Vaughn was treated for a sprained hand. After gaining consensus from the protesters outside, MSA President Jennifer Van Valey entered to tell students, "MSA does not support this. We want a peaceful protest. We do not want you to go upstairs." Students exited the building and gathered outside, where SRC Chair Corey Dolgon encouraged students to unite and said, "We fear the stu- dents upstairs are being arrested." At about 3 p.m., Ann Arbor po- lice - some wearing riot gear - entered the building but told the 22 students on the second floor that they were not taking immediate ac- tion. Pattrice Maurer of AIDS Coali- tion to Unleash Power (ACT-UP) called for a "non-violent protest. Do not fight the cops." Van Valey asked students to gather friends and be prepared to stay overnight outside the building to show solidarity with those inside. After stationing themselves in the president's office for more than 24 hours, SSC had a glimpse of hope when Henry Johnson, vice president for community relations, met with them around 3:45 p.m. Johnson was the first administra- tor to speak with the students since their initial confrontation with Ex- ecutive Director of University Rela- tions Walter Harrison on Wednesday afternoon. Protesters said no administrators or staff entered the second floor of- fice yesterday, with the exception of Shirley Clarkson, assistant to the president, who briefly appeared. Johnson crouched on the floor while students and media shutterbugs huddled around him. Four representatives spoke for the group, detailing their demands: The University must halt its plan to deputize and arm its own po- lice force. The University must establish a real task force on campus safety with equal student, faculty, and staff representation chosen by each con- stituency's representative body. The University must immedi- ately institute a policy-making body that insures students will play a rep- a m . - lf f RESTAURANT "26 YEARS EXPERIENCE" i i resentative and powerful role in the decisions that affect their lives. The University must rescind all policies concerning campus life enacted since the University Council's demise and resubmit them to this newly constructed body for future approval. The University Council was a body made up of students, faculty, and staff, which formulated campus-life policies. The Council was disbanded by the regents last December. An oversight committee must be established to supervise the train- ing and performance of current cam- pus security officers. This commit- tee must have the power to investi- gate complaints, issue sanctions, de- termine training and hiring proce- dures, and be comprised of students, faculty, and staff selected by their representative governing bodies and unions, and administrators. They added a sixth demand: that all protesters have amnesty for yes- terday's actions. Johnson said he was sure Duder- stadt knew of the demands but said he would bring the students' con- cerns to his attention. "Other than that, no commitment can be made," he said. The students asked Johnson to send administrators who have "decision-making authority to talk to us." Johnson returned within 30 min- utes with Mary Ann Swain, interim vice president for student services. "Contingent upon your leaving the building, a selected group of ad- ministrators and a select, limited number of students would meet after the holidays to discuss... decision- making of the University," Johnson said. Swain said, "The kind of situa- tion you have is not an opportunity, in my view, for a dialogue." SSC refused the conditions. Dawn Paulinski, a spokesperson for the group and a member of the Daily Opinion Staff, said only four students would speak in a public fo- rum with administrators, but they wanted the rest of the protesters there as well as the media. "We want to enter a binding deci- sion with the witness of the media," Paulinski said. "We're speaking for other students; we're not comfortable speaking without them, in private.. And frankly, we don't trust you without the media." Johnson said he was sorry SSC didn't trust the administration with- out the presence of media. Swain said the group was "playing to the media." Johnson and Swain then left and went behind closed doors to speak with Harrison at 4:40 p.m. DPSS Director Heatley and Ann (H1? JAN TOP GOLD MEDAL WINNER OF DETROIT COBO HALL NATIONAL CONTEST sponsored by Michigan Restaurant Association Michigan Chefs De Cuisine Association BLUE RIBBON BEST CHEF AWARD WINNER IN WASHINGTON D.C., VOTED #1 BEST ORIENTAL FOOD IN ANN ARBOR 1990-Michigan Daily VOTED #1 BEST CHINESE FOOD IN ANN ARBOR 1990-Ann Arbor News LUNCHEON SPECIAL 11:00 A.M. - 3:00 P.M. DINE IN OR TAKE OUT SERVICE Specializing in Szechuan, Hunan, and Peking Cuisine 1201 S. University, Ann Arbor - 668-2445 Open 7 Days a week 11 a.m. -10 p.m. Arbor Acting Police Chief William Hoover also met in the back offices which were off-limits to he press. Just after 5 p.m. Heatley entered the student-occupied office and an nounced the building was closed and that anyone not leaving peacefully within five minutes would be guilty of misdemeanor under the Michigan Trespass Statute. Five students left, and the re- maining 16 linked arms until police officers snapped photographs and questioned each individually. Four- teen of those "sitting in" had been there 26 and a half hours at the time of their arrest. "We have the rights of sea slugs with social security numbers," said Rackham student Jeff Hinte after be ing arrested. Harrison said he, Johnson, and Swain "decided to arrest the students because we believed things were a an impasse in negotiations." Harrison said Duderstadt was kept informed "in a vague way," and that the president had given permission to Harrison, Johnson, and Swain t use their best judgment. During a break in the Regents' meeting around 3:30 p.m., Duder'- stadt said, "It's not a coincidence that MSA elections are today. It's politi- cal opportunism... The students (protesting) are not representative of the community. You can't let their political agenda dictate." Harrison said vandalism and vio- lence - the chalk graffiti and the of ficer's injury - were contributing factors to the University's decision to allow the arrests, even though 14, if not all 16, of those arrested were not part of those activities. "The whole situation was out of control," he said. As far as meeting protesters' de- mands, he said, "the University pp- lice (deputization) is not negotiable. "The question I'm concerne with," he continued, "is how to find better ways to communicate with students, faculty, and staff." After being processed at the scene and escorted out of the building, the arrested students were released. City police said warrants will be issued, charging them with criminal tres- pass, and the protesters will be noti- fied of an arraignment date. Hundreds of students awaited the protesters' exit from the building. They blocked entry to the county sh- eriff's bus because they feared those arrested would be taken to police headquarters. Chief Hoover said the bus was for city officers, not stu- dents, to be taken to headquarters. The students then walked to the News and Information Services building, and joined with othe. protestors for a cross-campus march. During the protest, the possibil- ity of arrest for trespassing was dis- cussed. Many of the protesters out side the NIS Building said the arrests of those inside and the ensuing me- dia coverage would help the cause of SSC, but those inside, faced with the possibility of fines and a criminal record, expressed doubt. Some of the students and the se- curity officers engaged in a debate on deputization. The security personnel said that they often felt powerless to stop a crime in progress and had lit- tle recourse if their lives were threat ened. the beginning, not the end like the administration thought it would be,l said LSA junior Joyce Gresko. "This is setting the stage so students can become part of the process and make a change," said Mark Brush, LSA senior. Daily staffer Tami Pollak contributed to this report. 7P 01. booi jAWFULU 7 FOOD A- -9 15% off all H.H. Brown footwear * in stock & special orders included plus Religious Services AVAVAVAVA CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal Church at U-M) 218 N. Division (at Catherine) SUNDAY SCHEDULE Holy Eucharist-5 p.m. at St. Andrew's Supper-6 p.m. at Canterbury House The Rev. Virginia Peacock, Ph.D., Chaplain 665-0606 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER 502 E. Huron SUN.: Worship-9:55 a.m. WED.: Supper & Fellowship-5:30 p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. (Between Hill & South University) SUNDAYS Worship-9:30 & 11 a.m. Campus Faith Exploration Group-9:30 THURSDAYS: Campus Worship & Dinner-5:30 p.m. For information, call 662-4466 Amy Morrison, Campus Pastor GRACE BIBLE CHURCH 1300S. Maple (at Pauline) Pastors Kaufman, Koetsier, Lucas FUNDAMENTAL INDEPENDENT SUNDAY SCHEDULE 9:15 a.m., ALPHA-OMEGA COLLEGE CLASS Studies in the Book of Revelation 10:45 a.m., MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE Studies in the Book of Romans 6:00 p.m. EVENING SERVICE Studies in the Book of Genesis 1015 Michigan, off E. University Transportation is provided from all U-M and EMU dorms. Call Ken at 761-7070 for more information and schedules. LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA 801 South Forest (at Hill Street), 668-7622 SUNDAY: Worship-10 a.m. WEDNESDAY: Bible Study-6:30 p.m. Worship-7:30 p.m. Campus Pastor.John Rollefson ST. MARY'S STUDENT PARISH (A Roman Catholic Parrish at U-M) 331 Thompson Street SAT.: Weekend Liturgies-5 p.m., and SUN.-8:30 a.m., 10 a.m., 12 noon, and 5 p.m. FRI Confessions-4-5 p.m. THURS., Nov. 15: NEWMAN GATHERING-7 p.m. SUL, Nov. 18: THANKSGIVING DIN NER-6 p.m., ALL WELCOME CALL 663-0557 for information UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw SUNDAY: Worship-10:30 a.m. nAWtFmn A v. nf , m Continued from page 1 and locked and nothing but words was allowed to pass between the activists inside and their fellow- protesters outside. Anyone requiring the use of the restroom, in which there was a win- dow, was escorted by a security guard in order to maintain the separa- tion of the two protest groups. "We can leave, but we cannot reenter. All options are cut off," said LSA junior Sarah Remijan, one of the NIS protesters. Continued from page 1 HOUSE Tracy Ore, president of Rackham Student Government._ Activists said this protest is just the start of a long fight. "It's gaining momentum. I think it's just ssc ON LO TE FREE IYE BSTEFR The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates viaU.S.mail for falland winter$39 for two terms, $22 forone term. Campus delivery$28.00 fortwoterms. Prorated rates:$25 fortwo terms; $11 for one term. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. PHONE NUMBERS: News (313) 764-0552, Opinion 747-2814, Arts 763-0379, Sports 747-3336, Cir- culation 764-0558, Classified advertising 764-0557, Display advertsing 764-0554, Billing 764-0550 L- WITH EACH PAIR OF H. H. BROWN PURCHASED While supplies last. Fri., Nov. 16, 9am-8pm Sat., Nov. 17, 9 am-5:3Opm Factory representative will be on hand to show the complete line. 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