The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 3, 1991 - Page 3 Attorneys paint opposing portraits of Smith in rape trial WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. "For the first time, we're not (AP) - William Kennedy Smith going to be tried by the newspapers listened solemnly yesterday as a in this case," Black said. "For the prosecutor depicted him as a cruel first time we're going to be able to and vicious rapist, and his attorney say what happened. When you hear portrayed him as a man who made it, you will conclude that this love to a willing woman in the young man is not guilty." moonlight. Some 500 reporters had creden- The differing versions of the sex- tials to cover the case and TV crews ual encounter came after a judge de- with dozens of satellite dishes took cided not to let three other women over a parking lot near the court- testify about their claims that house. Smith had sexually assaulted them The lawyers spoke after Circuit in the 1980s. The ruling deflated the Judge Mary Lupo rejected the prose- prosecutor's efforts to show that cution's bid to present evidence Smith had a history of abusing from three women who said they women. had been sexually attacked by Smith "The evidence will demonstrate in the 1980s. that the defendant's conduct was The judge gave no explanation not only cruel, violent and against why she rejected a bid to prove that her will, it was most importantly Smith had a history of attacking criminal under the laws of pretty, unescorted brunettes after Florida," Assistant State Attorney charming his way into their confi- Moira Lasch told the jury of three dence women and three men. The Florida woman who alleges "They got into foreplay and they Smith raped her is a 30-year-old made love," defense lawyer Roy brunette and met him at a Palm Black said. "It was a totally consen- Beach disco. He invited her back to sual act of love between two peo- the estate where she says she was ple." raped on Easter weekend 1991. Lasch told of a woman lured to Smith, nephew of Sen. Edward the Kennedy estate only to be raped Kennedy, is charged with sexual bat- and pursued by a "ferocious" young tery and battery and could receive a man who told her no one would be- maximum of 4.5 years in prison if lieve her if she claimed rape. convicted. "She had expectations here that His mother, Jean Kennedy Smith, were not fulfilled," Black said. sat in a front row and frequently "One of the key issues in this leaned forward to confer with her case is credibility, " he told the ju son. Later, she was excluded from "You have to determine if this alle- court at the prosecutor's request be- gation is true." cause she may be a witness later. U.S. soldier sentenced for Desert Storm spying Ad hits Rutgers, Wisconsin press Targum runs it with opposing views; Cardinal rejects the revisionists by Gwen Shaffer Daily Higher Education Reporter Two more college newspapers have been approached by Bradley Smith and his Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust to publish an advertisement that claims the Holocaust did not happen. But they are responding in very different ways. The Daily Targum, at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J., is running the advertisement as an opinion piece in today's paper, and surrounding it with opposing edito- rials. Conversely, editors at the University of Wisconsin's Daily Cardinal chose not to print the ad- vertisement at all because they do not agree with the sentiments it ex- presses. Joshua Rolnick, editor in chief of the Targum, said he is running the advertisement because exposing the lies it contains is better than pre- tending such views don't exist. The Targum is not accepting money for running the advertisement and was "encouraged" by Smith to run the advertisement as an op-ed piece, Rolnick said. "Rather than hide this hate- speech, we felt the most responsible thing to do would be to disclaim it with four times as much opposing opinion," Rolnick said. Beside the advertisement, the Targum is running an editorial and a letter written by a rabbi, which is an "emotional appeal" to this type of hatred and which says that Smith's debate has no place in the newspaper, Rolnick said. In addition, the Tar- gum is running a letter from a Holocaust historian that refutes the revisionists' claims point by point. "By running the ad, the Targum is calling for people to mobilize. Hopefully, people will direct their outrage into organizing against and squelching anti-Semitism," Rolnick said. The Daily Cardinal, however, is not printing the advertisement be- cause staffers do not feel that Smith's ideas deserve the publicity, and because the editorial page gener- ally does not run editorials that dis- agree with the staff's opinion, said Opinion Page Editor Meghan Hen- son. "The business and editorial staffs looked at the ad and decided we did not feel comfortable print- ing it. We don't agree with it and don't feel that (Smith's) message needs to be heard," Henson said. "The things Bradley Smith claims4 are not our viewpoint." Henson said that while you can- not always ignore opposing opin- ions, she believes this viewpoint could be refused. "But every paper has a right to run it," she added. "What Rutgers is. doing is more responsible." The ad spurred controversy after it was published in the Daily, the Cornell Sun, the Duke Chronicle, and the Daily Northwestern. It is; scheduled to run next month in the: Daily Texan at the University of. Texas at Austin. Student newspa- pers at Brown, Harvard, Yale, the University of Pennsylvania and Georgetown have refused to publish it. Wisconsin's other student paper, The Badger-Herald, also refused the, ad. n s a # Breaking away LSA junior Elayne Chou battles yesterday's cold winds on her way to class. New group seeks University reform s HEIDELBERG, Germany (AP) - An American soldier has admit- ted he spied for Jordan during the Desert Storm buildup and was sen- tenced to 34 years in prison, the U.S. Army said yesterday. Army headquarters in Heidel- berg said Spc. Albert Sombolay also admitted getting in touch with Iraqi officials. He pleaded guilty to charges of espionage and contacting the enemy. S Sombolay was paid "about $1,300 for his activities," the Army said. Sombolay was arrested March 29 And sentenced in July, but informa- tion about the case was delayed so investigators could continue the probe, the Army statement said. It provided no other details. "During an investigation prior * to his arrest, Sombolay had told an undercover agent he had initiated contact with the Jordanian and Iraqi embassies in Belgium and Germany in December 1990," the American military said. At the time, the United States and its allies were building up troop strength in Saudi Arabia before launching Desert Storm, the offensive to drive Iraq out of Kuwait. The statement continued: "He subsequently admitted to providing Desert Storm deployment informa- tion, identification documents and samples of U.S. Army chemical pro- tection equipment to a foreign intelligence officer from Jordan." Sombolay also offered to photo- graph his unit's activities in Saudi Arabia, according to the statement. U.S. Army spokesperson Jim Boyle said he did not know the sol- dier's hometown. Sombolay served in an artillery unit and was based with the 8th Infantry Division, which has its headquarters in the central German city of Bad Kreuznach. The spokesperson did not say whether the information he provided was damaging. by Tami Pollak Daily Staff Reporter In the wake of a the conference on "political correctness" - PC - some University faculty and stu- dents have organized a new group to pursue their goals of multicultural- ism and curriculum reform on cam- pus. When the conference ended, the discussions did not, especially for those who helped shape the weekend forum. Now those who want to en- sure the debate continues have formed the U-M Network for Cul- tural Democracy, which will be hav- ing its second meeting tomorrow. The group, which consists largely of conference organizers but also drew about 10 to 15 new people to its first meeting two weeks ago, does not exist just to foster debate amongst its members. "Offensively, we're trying to encourage democratic reforms on campus," said communications pro- fessor Richard Campbell, a confer- ence organizer and a network mem- ber. "Defensively, we will answer charges like, 'left wing though po- lice control campus,' which just aren't true." And while Campbell said the group will offer support for those fighting for a multicultural cur- riculum at the University, graduate student Lori Stark, who helped or- ganize the conference and is a mem- ber of the new group, said the net- work wants to do just that - net- work. "At the first meeting, we orga- nized a writing group," Stark said. "We are trying to get our view out into 'the mediawhich keeps attack- ing our efforts." Another graduate student, Thomas Oko, said the network in- tends to organize a speakers list that either University or non-University groups could call on when dis- cussing issues such as multicultur- alism, curriculum reform or affir- mative action. Stark, on the one hand, said she wants to work primarily toward opening up the University, both in terms of curriculum and in terms of opening the classroom to a broader range of people - to people who "have historically had less oppor- tunity to pursue higher education." Oko, however, said he is inter- ested in more national and interna- tional ramifications of multicul- turalism. "I'm involved in Mideastern studies, and I became in- terested in the issues during the Gulf War and the very chauvinistic and paternalistic role the U.S. played." Bush counters criticisms of inactivity on economy' WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush sought to counter criticism of inaction on the economy yesterday by ordering the govern- ment to try to do a better job with unemployment, job-training and other help programs. But Bush refused to offer any new proposals, saying, "We're not going to do anything dumb." Representatives from the hard- hit real estate and housing indus- tries told the president they needed special help. They argued that the president was noncommittal, giving no signs that he was prepared to announce any new steps before his January State of the Union address. The National Association of Realtors said the typical American family's ability to buy a home rose to its high'est level in more than 14; years in October, but also said such: families often found themselves, intimidated by the economy. In other economic reports: Corporate purchasing execu- tives surveyed last month said pro- duction and orders for new business. had lost momentum. The National Association of Purchasing Management said its monthly index of business activity dropped to 50.1 percent from 53.5 percent in, October; and, * The Commerce Department said construction spending rose 1 percent in October, a small gain but the fourth in a row for the longest string of advances in five years. .......... 4 - - ............ . Corrections DPS stands for the Department of Public Safety. This information was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. C. Boyden Gray's name was misspelled in an editorial in last Tues- day's Daily. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today The 1991-92 SALA RY SUPPL EMENT is now available at the STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BUtL DING 420 Maynard 9:00- 5:00 Mon. Fri $6_per copy.$8.mailed Salary Supplements Are Not Refund able' SCOREKEEPERS SPORTS BAR & GRILL ALL SPORTING EVENTS " BIG SCREEN 30 TV'S-" DARTBOARDS-" POOL TABLES ........ TUES. & THURS. .. . .*. 0 Meetings Time and Relative Dimensions in Ann Arbor, weekly mtg. 2439 Mason, 8 p.m. Housing Rights Coalition. M LB B137, 7:30. Christian Science Organization. League, ask at front desk for location, 6:15. Students Against Driving Drunk. Union, rm 1209, 7 p.m. Science Research Club, monthly mtg. 165 Chrysler Center, 7:30. Speakers "The Caucasus: Mountain of Na- tions," Joseph McCadden. Interna- tional Center, noon. Melanie Peyser. Lane Hall, rm 200, 4 p.m. Furthermore Safewalk, night-time safety walking service. Sun-Thur, 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. and Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. V .. 1 AllT . *T __ ...11 M C ntn IJ" r walking service. Sun-Thur 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. and Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Stop by 2333 Bursley or call 763- WALK. Kaffeestunde, German coffee hour, every Tuesday. MLB 3rd floor conf rm, 4:30-6. ECB Peer Writing Tutors. An- gell/Mason Computing Center, 7-11. Church Street, 7-9. U-M SwimrClub, Tuesday workout. IM Pool, 6:30-8:30. Women's Rugby, Tuesday practice. Mitchell Field, 5:45-8 p.m. "Keeping in Mind: the University of Michigan During the McCarthy Era," film. Angell Aud B, 9 p.m. "Revolution in Russia, 1905," SPARK Revolutionary History Series. MLB Rm B122, 7-8. The Yawp literary magazine is accept- ing manuscripts and artwork in 1210 Angell. "Against Greed," submissions ac- cepted. $100 will be donated to charity fnr Pathart-pantAle. mnrkr Th to Rert $ 2.00 PITCHERS .994 LONG ISLAND ICED TEAS .... . . . NO COVER .... . . . . 310 Maynard St. (Formerly Dooley's) 21 + Over after 8 PM +. UI ____________:...........______________. ...;._____________.... $5.95 (Plus Tax) Valid only at: U/M Central Campus 546 Packard/Hill 665-6005 COTTAGE INN PIZZA CERTIFICATE MEDIUM DEEP DISH PIZZA (With 1 Topping) $5.95 (Plus Tax) MEDIUM DEEP LET'S GO BLUE! -_i xiii U f