The Michigan Daily -Wednesday, November 21, 1990- Page 3 Aide links Riegle to *Keating "scandal WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Donald Riegle's attorney and a , Senate aide clashed Tuesday over the Michigan Democrat's role in arrang- ng a meeting with the top national banking regulator about Charles H. Keating Jr.'s embattled savings and loan. Gwendolyn van Paasschen, an economics aide to Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) testified before the Senate Ethics Committee that "Senator Riegle was involved in set- ting up a meeting" with Edwin ,Gray, former head of the Federal .Rome Loan Bank Board. Riegle, chair of the Senate tBanking Committee, has down- layed his part in two meetings be- tween senators and federal regulators ii April 1987. The meetings are key issues in an Ethics Committee probe of five senators' ties to Keating, a mjajor political contributor who sought their help in battling the regulators. Van Paasschen was among many witnesses who will testify before the committees in coming weeks as it examines complex details of the sen- 'ators' dealings with Keating. Thomas C. Green, a Washington -ttorney representing Riegle, grilled van Paasschen about her version of events. Green said in an interview later that the aide was "clearly specu- * lating. She has nothing probative to say about Senator Riegle at all."' Van Paasschen told the commit- fee Monday that McCain had spoken of Riegle's involvement in setting up a meeting with Gray on April 2, ;1987. Riegle was the only one of five senators under investigation who didn't attend, but the McCain aide said her boss and Riegle had dis- ussed the proposed meeting on the "Senate floor. Under questioning by Green yes- 'terday, van Paasschen acknowledged she did not know Riegle personally and had never discussed the Keating Smatterwith him. In tense exchanges, Green also -elicited from van Paasschen thatashe did not remember being told any- thing about the Keating affair from 11 Riegle's staff. °;Van Paasschen said in addition to 'McCain's account of his talks with 'Riegle, she formed her opinions about Riegle's involvement in part from a letter to Riegle sent by Jack Atchison, an accountant whose firm was retained by Lincoln S&L. The letter, sent to Riegle on - March 13, 1987, vouched for Lincoln's financial soundness and *operating practices. The thrift col- lapsed in 1989, and the government bailout of depositors is expected to cost taxpayers $2 billion. Green asked van Paasschen whether her opinions of Riegle's role was based on "personal knowl- edge." "Other than those conversations (with McCain and the DeConci aide), no," she said. 'U's red scare profs. ask ANTHONY M. CROLUDaily for broa LANSING (AP) - A former University of Michigan professor disciplined during the red scare in 1954 said yesterday the school's plans for an annual lecture on aca- demic freedom are a weak gesture of remorse. "A lecture on academic freedom is a little like a lecture on mother- hood," said Mark Nickerson, profes- sor emeritus at McGill University in Montreal. The Michigan Faculty Senate voted Monday to establish the lec- ture in the names of professors Nickerson, H. Chandler Davis, and Clement Markert. The three were suspended without pay by former-President Harlan Hatcher after they refused to testify before a subcommittee of the U.S. House Committee on Un-American Activities about their association with Communists. Davis and Nickerson eventually were fired. Markert, who fought for the Communists during the Spanish Civil War, was reinstated as an as- sistant professor of zoology and later won tenure at the university. der reparations A year ago, the Michigan Faculty none of the faculty groups or s Senate Assembly and the local chap- officials involved in disciplinin ter of the American Association of three ever apologized. University Professors (AAUP) asked that the school's board of regents "If now any of these agenci make reparations or some other sort press regret at this violation of of compensation to the three. demic freedom, that will impro" atmosphere of freedom at the ca The AAUP plans to raise and in the country," he said. $10,000 to $15,000 for an endow- ment for the lecture, said Wilfred "The Senate's setting up a sf Kaplan, executive secretary. lectureship appears to be a gesti Nickerson, a pharmacology pro- this direction. Whether it is fessor, said the lecture will have lit- ciently clear-cut to do the jobi tie value without some acknowl- for me to judge." edgement from the university that it erred. Hatcher declined to commen A visiting professorship for un- Kaplan said he would hav popular causes, one year's severance ferred that the regents had tak pay with interest, or honorary de- tion, but Regent Deane Baker st grees conferred at a public convoca- doesn't know if the board wil tion would be more fitting, take up the matter again. Nickerson said. Kaplan said a brief synopsis of "It's my personal opinion the 1954 case will be included in the this matter, in its original cas program for the annual lecture as a in review, was handled app prmd. ately," he said. He said it was that the disciplined faculty s Davis, professor of mathematics academic freedom which wa at the University of Toronto, said available in Communist countr Journal entry Adrianne Camero, an LSA first-year student, writes in her English journal while enjoying the unseasonably warm afternoon sun. Iraq to release German hostages Associated Press chool ng the es ex- f aca- ve the mpus pecial ure in suffi- is not t. e pre- en ac- aid he 1 ever n that e and ropri- ironic ought as un- ies. Iraqi lawmakers voted yesterday to allow all German hostages to leave Iraq and occupied Kuwait, fol- lowing a personal request by Saddam Hussein. There was only one dis- senting vote. The vote came after 90 minutes of debate, during which the lawmak- ers heard from at least 10 of the "guests," as Iraq calls foreigners barred from leaving since the Aug. 2 invasion of Kuwait. The hostages who addressed the National Assembly said freeing the Germans would encourage European countries and the United States to show their willingness to avert war and negotiate a settlement to the Persian Gulf crisis. Parliament speaker Saadi Mahdi Saleh said there were 124 Germans remaining in Iraq and Kuwait. No specific arrangements were made for their departure. In Paris, German Foreign Minister Hans Dietrich Genscher said of Iraq's action: "I believe we should appreciate above all that the hostages are to be freed." The gulf crisis continued to dom- inate the unofficial agenda in Paris at the 34-nation Conference on Cooperation and Security in Europe. French President Francois Mit- terrand's spokesperson, Hubert Vedrine, said the conference would not issue any statements on the cri- sis. President Bush flies to Saudi Arabia today to meet with Saudi leaders. He plans to spend Thanksgiving with U.S. forces in the region. The president voiced optimism that he would be successful in over- coming Soviet objections to a U.N. resolution authorizing the use of military force against Iraq. "Just be patient and all will be well," he told reporters when asked about Soviet President Mikhail Gorbechev's reluctance. In Washington yesterday, a group of 45 Democratic lawmakers filed a lawsuit to try to force Bush to seek authority from Congress before ordering a U.S. military attack to drive Iraqi troops out of Kuwait. HAC stages all-night protest at City Hall by Matthew Pulliam ANTHONY M. CROUDaIly Wieners Barry Biniarz pushes his hot dog cart to a State St. location. Daily StafftReporter Armed with a coffin, grave mark- ers, and a giant banner of a tomb- stone, 12 activists staged a sit-in at the Ann Arbor City Council cham- bers through Monday night. The protesters, members of the Homeless Action Committee, voiced their objection to the city's planned demolition of two houses on S. Ashley and W. William streets oc- cupied by homeless people. The cof- fin and grave markers represent the "deaths" of the two houses. The protest lasted until 7:30 a.m. yesterday, when members left peace- fully. "We're sleeping in City Council chambers to show that there is inade- quate housing, and that City Council is doing nothing about it by demol- ishing houses," said Leslie Mead, a Azania is another name for South Africa; it is not within South Africa. THE LIST e What's happening in Ann Arbor today natural resources junior. HAC presented a list of demands to City Council with the hope of preventing the houses' destruction. The demands included that the two houses not be destroyed and that the City establish more than 1,000 units of housing for Ann Arbor's low-in- come residents. The City of Ann Arbor has planned to build parking spaces where the houses now stand. After expressing their intentions to stay in the Council chambers un- til arrested, the protesters set up sleeping bags and a board game while others held a candlelight vigil behind Mayor Gerald Jernigan's seat. The police attending the Council meeting said they would allow the sit-in to continue through the night but that the protesters would be asked to leave early yesterday morn- ing. "They kick people out of night shelters early (in the morning) as well," said LSA senior Jon Jurva. City Council members did not stay after the conclusion of the regu- lar meeting, but councilmember Ingrid Sheldon (R-2nd Ward) said, "I'm very much committed to the project. I do think they (HAC) raised legitimate concerns. I don't think the remedy lies with not constructing the structure." Ann Arbor resident Jeff Gearhart, referring to the plight of the home- less in Ann Arbor, said, "The city doesn't want these people. What they have done is systematically displaced peoples." At 8:30 a.m. yesterday HAC members attended the eviction hear- ings of two women currently living in the house on Ashley, one of those slated for destruction. SAY IT IN THE-... DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ,, MOSCOW (AP) - The Communist Party newspaper Pravda yesterday took a grim inventory of the Soviet pantry for the winter and warned that "almost everywhere, supplies are worse than last year." Although it predicted there would be no "real hunger" in the coming months, Pravda said the food that Russians traditionally count on, such as cabbage and beets, will be in short supply. "'Cabbage soup and porridge is our food.' It's a famous Russian proverb. It appears that now we can't even get this humble portion," Pravda correspondent A. Platoshkin wrote. Leningrad Mayor Anatoly Sobchak on Monday made a public appeal to the West for emergency food for his city, the second-largest in the Soviet Union, to avoid famine President Mikhail Gorbachev, who is lining up Western aid for his nation during his current trip abroad, admitted in a speech to the national legislature Friday that the country faces critical shortages at the start of winter but insisted the government has enough supplies. The Pravda correspondent said he agreed with Gorbachev's assessment that there were adequate reserves, although he also wrote that "what's in storage doesn't mean it makes it to the table." Pravda said there should be enough bread for the nation after the government bought 66 million tons of grain, which is more than last year. But vegetables, potatoes and other foods were in short supply. The reason for the shortages, ac- cording to Pravda, is that enterprises in the various republics are disobey- Soviets face low pantry for winter ing orders from the central govern- ment to fulfill their quotas. As the Soviet republics push for local control over their economies, political structures and culture, they are disregarding orders from the cen- tral government. This has caused the "paralysis of power" that has stalled Gorbachev's reforms and led him on Saturday to propose restructuring the executive branch of government and put it entirely under his control. He said Saturday an emergency program would be drafted within two weeks to try to solve the country's food shortage. In the vast Russian republic, which has more than half the coun- try's population, the potato suppiy is little more than half of what is needed, Pravda reported. Potatoes are known as the "second bread" because of their imn- portance in the Russian daet. Editor's note.- The List automat- ically runs weekly events unless a group informs us that it will not meet at the regular time. Be warn- ed that weekly events in today's List may not be meeting after all. Although no one from these groups contacted us to withdraw their no- tice, Poe can assume that there are cancellations due to the break. Meetings EQIRC Social Group for Les- bians, Bisexuals and Gay Men, weekly meeting. Call 763- 4186 (days) or 763-2788 (nights) for location. 9-11:00. La Parlotte (The French Con- versation Club), weekly meet- ing. MLB 4th Floor Commons, 4- 6:00. Latin American Solidarity Committee, weekly meeting. niques in Capillary Electro- phoresis," sponsored by Chem. Dept.; Dave Pallister, speaker. Rm. 1650, 4:00. Furthermore Safewalk functions 8-1:30 Sun.- Thurs., 8-11:30 Fri.-Sat. Call 936- 1000 or stop by 102 UGLi. Northwalk functions 8-1:30 Sun.- Thurs., 8-12:00 Fri.-Sat. Call 763- WALK or stop by 2333 Bursley.. ECB Peer Writing Tutors avali- ble to help with your papers Sunday- Thursday, Angell/Haven Computing Center, 7-11:00. U of M Shorin-Ryu Karate-do Club, weekly practice. Call 994- 3620 for info. CCRB Martial Arts Rm., 8:30-9:30. U of M Cycling Club, weekly women's ride. For info call Robin Pena (764-1723). Leaves steps of Hill Aud. at 3:30. Central American Beans & '$tu rtnis xa- Helping is Learning -5 M d p By donating plasma, you are helping hemophiliacs as well as other patients to enjoy a healthy productive life. Now, more than ever, we need your help. At Cutter Biological we are committed to improving the quality of life world-wide. Through education and service YOU can help 1vrs ' 4% % Mchigan's I I