W :ATE TODAY Cloudy, windy, warm; High: 74, Low: 53. TOMORROW Warm with showers; High: 74, Low: 50. £o &4 it I uuuu 4: The Femmes blister in the sun. See ARTS Page 5. One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vol. CII, No. 19 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 24, 1991 coprl G:1991 heMi an Dily Shamir tolead Israel in summit DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Hard-line Israeli and Arab leaders solidified their positions yesterday in preparation for next week's Mideast peace conference. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir announced he would lead the Israeli negotiat- ing team, and Syria sought Arab consensus to block any separate peace accords with the Jewish state. At a meeting of foreign ministers in Damascus, the four Arab participants most directly involved in the talks reportedly agreed not to negotiate separately with Israel. Syria was also seeking assurances from Persian Gulf and North African nations that they wouldn't recognize Israel until it ceded ground on issues like the occupied territories and Jewish settlement building. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir stunned Israeli politicians by announcing that he will head his delegation at the Madrid talks, indicating he wanted to make sure his hard-line views would dominate Israel's positions. The more dovish minister, David Levy, said he would skip the confer- ence and criticized Shamir for nam- ing his own people to head negotiat- ing teams. Among the representa- tives Shamir reportedly was taking to Madrid was deputy foreign min- ister Benjamin Netanyahu, a politi- cal rival of Levy. The White House announced that all parties had accepted the invita- tion to the conference,,which opens next Wednesday, and urged them to go to Madrid "with an open mind." Syria and Lebanon apparently were the last Arab states to accept the Soviet and U.S. invitations to the conference. Officials close to the meeting in Damascus said representatives of See MIDEAST, Page 7 'U' says cops drew weapons appropriately. by Melissa Peerless Daily Crime Reporter Over the objections of some stu- dents, the University has deter- mined that its police officers be- haved properly in the first incident which prompted them to draw their guns. The University's Safety and Se- curity Advisory Committee -(SSAC) yesterday formally made public its support for the decision by University police officers to draw guns in the Sept. 17 arrest of Kenya Teate at Angell Hall. The committee - which is chaired by Architecture Professor James Snyder - issued a press re- lease through the offices of Provost Gilbert Whitaker and Vice Presi- dent and Chief Financial Officer Farris Womak yesterday. The advisory committee re- viewed the results of the University Department of Public Safety and Se- curity's (DPSS) internal investiga- tion, to determine if the investiga- tion was complete or if there was any violation of DPSS policies or procedures. The release said: "DPS policy al- lows an officer the discretion to draw a weapon '... where an ordi- nary and prudent officer would rea- sonably fear for his or her own safety or the safety of others."'" The committee found that both officers involved acted appropri- ately with regard to these guidelines. The findings were immediately called into question by student ac- tivists opposed to campus police, in- cluding Michigan Student Assem- bly Rackham Rep. Jeff Hinte. "The fact that the committee does not do investigations indepen- dent of DPSS takes legitimacy from their findings," he said, adding, "Professor Snyder's committee was hand-picked by Provost Whitaker." The press release described the incident as follows: the suspect was confronted in a dead end hallway. He moved toward the officer before the officer drew his gun, but sub- mitted to arrest without a fight. When the second officer arrived at the scene and saw the first officer's gun drawn, he drew his gun as backup. Throughout the incident, the of- ficers involved knew that the sus- pect had an outstanding felony war- rant but did not know if the suspect was armed, the committee said. The release concluded, "SSAC believes that this was in fact the situation at the time and that the of- ficers acted appropriately." The committee also said witness accounts and the lack of citizen See COMMITTEE, Page 2 Save the LP LSA senior Stephanie Brail spins the disks for the University's radio station, WCBN, yesterday afternoon in the Student Activities Building. Former S Carolina president charged with sex harassment by Gwen Shaffer Daily Higher Education Reporter Four former University of South Carolina students claim that ex- President James lHolderman made sexual advances toward them while he was in office, a Charlotte news- paper reported Monday. Holderman has denied all charges of improper behavior. After the Charlotte Observer reported the charges, Holderman - who is on unpaid leave of absence from the university - checked into a local hospital for depression and exhaustion. The four men accusing Holderman served as his interns during the 1980s. Holderman's term as president ran from September 1977 to June 1990. "The university's current presi- dent, John Palms, has requested that any students or faculty with infor- mation relating to the claims please come forward," said Debra Allen, a university spokesperson. Allen said rumors are circulat- ing that some university trustees may have heard about the sexual ha- rassment but failed to act upon their suspicions. In a written statement, Palms said, "I am most troubled and dis- tressed by this and by the possibil- ity that faculty, staff, or students may have been rebuffed in attempt- ing to address these matters at the time, or on any subsequent occasion." In May, Holderman pleaded See CHARGES, Page 2 Helms pushes art ... ;. 4 . 'U' grads protest D.C. alumni party Daily Staff Reporter Nine University alumni are protesting the Washington D.C. Alumni Club's decision to hold a party at the embassy of the People's Republic of China, continuing' a nationwide dispute over U.S. policy toward China. The embassy party, planned for tomorrow night, is an annual club function meant to serve as a social event and a cultural exchange. Thomas Ehr, a 1984 alumnus, and eight other recent alumni, wrote a letter to Mike Waring, the presi- dent of the club, protesting the lo- cation of the party, which they said implies that the University en- dorses human rights violations committed by the Chinese government. Ehr spoke to Waring before writing the letter. "(Waring) said, 'We have these events to learn about different cul- tures,' and I said, 'You don't learn about culture standing around and drinking,'" Ehr said. "I want this thing not to happen." Ehr, a U.S. government em- ployee, said he did not pay his dues for membership in the Alumni Club this year because of the party. Waring said he raised Ehr's com- plaints at a monthly alumni board meeting, but members decided the party would still be held. "I sympathize with his concerns about the People's Republic of China," Waring said. "We just have a disagreement about what to do about those concerns." He said the club hosts about 50 functions each year, including an embassy party as an opportunity to learn about other cultures. "If you believe we should be sending a message to this govern- ment, might we not better sit down with them and express our views about them?" Waring said. "Couldn't he make that voice louder by being there in person?" He added that the alumni could accomplish more by facing the Chinese people than by not dealing with them at all. Waring also pointed out that the U.S. govern- ment, while disagreeing with many Chinese policies, has not stopped trade or communication with China. In a second letter to Waring, Ehr said, "What we seek is to let the PRC government representatives know that we find the PRC's egre- gious, widespread human rights abuses abhorrent and in complete contradiction to everything for which we believe the University of Michigan stands." He also said that a social event with such a government is inconsis- tent with the mission of the kind of higher learning found at the University. Marsha Evans, director of exter- nal activities at the campus Alumni Association, said, "I think that's what educated people do - express their views. I would expect that from University graduates. "That's what Michigan taught us - listen to opposing viewpoints See CHINA, Page 2 restrictl10 by Stefanie Vines Daily Government Reporter+ U.S. representatives and senators voted in a conference committee last week not to restrict the type of art that can be supported by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) - despite strong support for such limits in both the House and Senate. Debate in the conference com- mittee centered on an amendment, proposed by Sen. Jesse Helms (R- N.C.), which barred support for any projects that "depict or describe, in a patently offensive way, sexual or excretory activities, or organs." Although the amendment was defeated in committee, it will be debated today when the conference's report is voted on in the House. Republican representatives are ex- pected to oppose any funding from the NEA for art which they regard as "obscene." Opponents of Helms' amend- ment say it is a violation of the First Amendment, while propo- nents feel the government is justi- fied in deciding where funding for art should be spent. Tony Blankley, the press secre- ins again tary for Rep. Newt Gingrich (R- Ga.), said Congress should have the right to decide which art is appro- priate for government funding. "This is not an issue of censor- ship; it is an issue of what the tax- payers' money should be spent on. Lawmakers decide what they consti- tute as obscene and then vote based on that decision," he said. "Because the lawmakers represent the tax- payers, they then have the right to decide what the taxpayers' money should be spent on." Blankley said Gingrich today will introduce an amendment simi- lar to the one Helms offered ii the Senate. John Frohnmayer, chair of the NEA, questioned the legality of al- lowing the government to decide what is obscene. "I have grave doubts about the constitutionality of this measure," he said in a press release. But University law Professor Richard Friedman said the govern- ment does have the right to restrict funding for certain types of art. "The Supreme Court would hold that it could be legitimate for See ART, Page 2 Residents protest Cuts in Biologists search for new meaning in parasitic life Fruit flies used as unsuspecting wasp incubators by Andrew Levy Daily Research Reporter Parasitic relationships weigh heavily on the minds of one husband-and-wife research team at the University. No, they're not com- plaining about who pays the bills. They're talking about the relationship between Lep- topilina hematoma wasps and common labo- ratory fruit flies. University biologists Tahir and Rose Rizki first published their findings on the .. vi,,tnr Pr th is rehntinnhin in 19RA cells go around the thing and it forms a cap- sule. Once something is inside the capsule, it cannot escape," he said "We've been working for many, many years - since1950 or so - but there was this question that there was this wasp that lays its egg in the maggot. Since this egg is a foreign cell in the maggot, these cells should recognize it. So the question is 'How can this egg survive inside the body of the flv. when it has this defense system against welfare DETROIT (AP) - Two dozen people whose General Assistance welfare benefits were cut by Gov. John Engler took to the streets yes- terday, urging a city moratorium on evictions and utility shutoffs. Protesters said Engler's cuts would force 35,000 poor Detroiters F ~ t