Yesterday, the University Board of Regents showed that it has already made up its mind regarding deputization. Yesterday's hearings were not public in any sense of the word. Eamon Grennan is an enlightened Irish poet who leaves nothing to be desired. He will read his poetry today at the Rackham Amphitheatre. Chris Webber's 23 points and 12 rebounds led the Michigan men's basketball team to a 95-70 victory over the Minnesota Golden Gophers. Today Mostly cloudy; High: 40, Low: 31 Tomorrow Cloudy, showers; High 43, Low 27 Jr 41 tfl cm tti One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vol. CII, No. 81 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, February 20, 1992 Copyright01 992 College town reps. * discuss problems by Erin Einhorn Daily City Reporter LANSING - Michigan cities which are home to large public uni- versities face many similar prob- lems, said Ann Arbor Mayor Liz Brater who met with representatives from five other Michigan cities yes- terday to establish "networking" and "share information." Brater organized the first meet- ing of the University Cities Caucus which convened in Lansing in con- junction with the biannual conven- tion of the Michigan Municipal League. "I thought we could share in- formation about interaction be- tween the city and the university and discuss special issues involved with having a university in the city," Brater said. The Michigan Municipal League is a forum for local officials to dis- cuss municipal issues and exchange ideas. Brater said she felt additional collaboration with similarly-struc- tured cities would be helpful. "There are particular problems with being a university city that were not being talked about," Brater said. It is difficult to govern a city when the property in the center be- longs to the state and is not within city jurisdiction, Brater added. "I sometimes feel, being the mayor of Ann Arbor, the way the mayor of Rome must feel in rela- tion to the Vatican," Brater said. One of the primary objectives of the caucus, which plans to meet See CITIES, Page 7 Eight speak at 'U' cop hearing by Melissa Peerless and Purvi Shah Daily Administration Reporters A University Board of Regents public hearing on the transfer of deputization to the regents was moved from the Michigan League to the Alumni Center yesterday, and only scheduled speakers and members of the press were allowed to enter after deputization opponents overtook the original location. While about 100 protesters pounded on the glass walls of the Alumni Center, the re- gents heard testimony from eight of the 24 people who were registered to address the Board. LSA senior Aaron Noble began to address the regents, but stopped mid-speech. "These hearings should be public, but they are not. I can't go on. I have nothing to say," he said. First-year Law student and president of the campus American Civil Liberties Union David Schwartz was the next person to ad- dress the regents. He criticized the financial burden which the police force places on the University and called on the regents to create a legally-required oversight committee pow- erful enough to hold the University police of- ficers accountable for their actions. Regent Paul Brown (R-Petoskey) argued that the cost difference is negligible and said that a University police force addressing campus issues is more effective than relying on the Ann Arbor police. Brown said, "I think that our specially- trained officers will do a better job. Their whole experience is going to be on campus." The five deputization proponents who ad- dressed the regents also stressed the necessity of having a police force whose first responsi- bility is the University. "I think that it's a blessing for the regents to gain power over the deputized police force," said LSA junior Cameron Henke. "We are a community, and we need police who will be accountable to us first." Third-year Law student and MSA Student Right Commission Chair Michael Warren said that as long as the University has a police See HEARINGS, Page 2 Regents Phillip Power (D-Ann Arbor) and Shirley McFee (R-Battle Creek) walk from the Michigan League to the Alumni Center after yesterday's deputization hearings were moved. Protesters force regents to relocate hearing by Melissa Peerless and SHIT (Students Halting when University police officers sity. We will force them to listen to ten to us," Ochoa added. Daily Administration Reporter Institutionalized Terrorism) pulled guns on an unarmed African us," he added. Ede Fox of the PPC to ld the More than 200 students stormed the Michigan League Ballroom yes- terday, shutting down the University Board of Regents' first public hearing on the transfer of deputization authority from the Washtenaw County Sheriff to the Board. The regents were forced to relo- cate their meeting to the Alumni Center. The Coalition of Students Against Deputization - composed of the Black Student Union (BSU), Progressive People of Color (PPC), Happens - began to gather in front of the League an hour before the hearing was set to begin. Kevin Ryan, of the BSU's Political Action Committee, called the hearing process ridiculous and unnecessary. "We shouldn't be here today. It's bullshit. They won't meet with young angry African Americans. But we are here, so we are going to do what we have to do," he said. Ryan said that deputization was primarily a concern for students of color, and cited an incident last fall Your white bread regents are supposed to be shaping this university. We will force them to listen to us.' - Kevin Ryan BSU American man suspected of being involved in a fight. "Your white bread regents are supposed to be shaping this univer- LSA senior and Michigan Student Assembly Rep. Todd Ochoa addressed the crowd next. "I don't like megaphones. They make you sound authoritarian and that's what we are trying to defeat," he said. Ochoa said that the University has 24 "police on-the-beat types" and plans to deputize 14 administra- tive detectives. "We have to make Jim 'I'm Illegal' Duderstadt and (Regent) Deane 'Once I'm Elected I'm Not Accountable to Anyone' Baker lis- crowd, "The regents think they own this town. It is up to us to show them that they don't." During Fox's speech, a member of the Revolutionary Workers' League (RWL) began calling for the protesters to occupy a building and shut down the University. Several verbal retorts were ex- changed between the RWL and the other protesters, and then Richard Clay of the BSU took the mega- phone. "You know who your leaders See PROTEST ,Page 2 I -- Speakers remember horrors of WWII internment camps by Joshua Meckler Daily Staff Reporter Speakers painted a picture of hardship and confused loyalty in the face of oppression during a fo- rum last night commemorating the 50th anniversary of the presidential order which consigned Japanese Americans to detention camps on the West coast. Former internee Dr. Yuzuru Takeshita, a University professor and chair of the Depratment of Population Planning and International Health at the School of Public Health, spent four years in internment camps. "I have spent 50 years grappling with the issue, and I'm just now finding the words to express what it meant to me as a person," he said. Takeshita said he faced "humiliating experiences" when war broke out. One event he cited occurred on Dec. 8, following the Pearl Harbor bombing, when his eighth-grade civics teacher asked all the Japanese-American students in the class to turn in their boy scout knives, flashlights and compasses. Another experience he shared happened while he was waiting at a train station in Salt Lake City to go to an internment camp in Topaz, Utah. As he was waiting, a train carrying soldiers pulled into the sta- tion. "We were taunted, and there were catcalls and abusive language. Vigil marks interne by Mona Qureshi Daily Staff Reporterj Approximately 50 University community members gathered on the Diag last night for a candlelight vigil in remembrance of the 50th anniversary of the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. University Professor Yuzuru Takeshita, a former internee and chairperson of the Department of Population Planning and International Health at the School of Public Health, was the featured speaker. He said Japanese Americans should remember their ancestors who fought for them. We shut the shades and cried. That was a humiliation that to this day still hurts." Another former internee, Michigan State Art Department Chair Dr. Sadao Omoto, said he was part of the first group of people taken to the internment camps in See INTERNMENT, Page 2 !nent anniversary "I would like to remember and honor those who gave their last ounce to the country - to take a quote from Lincoln - 'that be- trayed them,"' Takeshita said. "I remember the handful of people ... who dared to stand up for me. They are all true heroes to me." A moment of silence followed Takeshita's speech - dedicated, as LSA junior Joanne Shen said, "to the Japanese Americans incarcer- ated 50 years ago, to remember their scars, and to vow never to let this happen again." Shen is the as- sistant programming director of the University of Michigan Asian American Coalition. Candidates seek new campaign tactics The Associated Press President Bush, stung by the strength of Patrick Buchanan's in- surgent New Hampshire challenge, vowed yesterday to "take this guy on in every single state." Democrats fanned out from the first primary state searching for campaign break- throughs elsewhere. The results of New Hampshire resonated through both national par- ties yesterday. The voters made it a contest on the GOP side. "I've been very kind and gentle. I'll still be kind, and I'm now debat- ing how gentle to be," Bush said in his first public remarks on Tuesday's 58-40 win over Buchanan. Buchanan asserted he would not be snuffed out by Bush's huge and well-financed campaign. "Now the battle for New Hampshire is over, and the battle for America begins," he said. The winner of the five-way Democratic race, former Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas, headed South with a challenge simi- lar to Buchanan's. Tsongas was the top vote-getter - with 35 percent and Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton survived charges of marital infidelity and avoiding the draft to net 26 percent. As a result of victory, Tsongas said he would be able to raise the Library Science graduate student Bill Teicher reads a copy of the WWII internment orders in the Wedge Room in West Quad last night. Terri Hudson: not th by Liz Vogel Terri Hudson wears a suit and glasses. He could be mistaken for a University professor. *s"I am not the stereotypical homeless bum," Hudson says. letter. "It will make a much greater impact then a letter or a telephone call," he said. Hudson says he gave up his mate- rial possessions to see if the world e 'stereotypical "I didn't get hired because I am $110. After b impoverished and homeless and cense and busi there is a prejudice about it," said he was at Hudson said. nesses with a s He was determined to collect Hudson wa enough money to get his business video camera ........t ...«t. t - - --nn nv .rot kr -v hir. uying a business li- iness clothes, Hudson ble to approach busi- tronger image. s finally able to buy a and business cards af- PAd at the uei'lplherr want to eventually build a survival vehicle, an ark, because the ozone is thinning out," he says. "I am trying free enterprise from nothing," Hudson says. Hudson said he believes he will he successful and is nlanning on homeless bum