Page 2--The Michigan Daily- Wednesday, April 15,1992 Olivet students plan to complete semester at home OLIVET, Mich. (AP) - Many Black students plan to take advan- tage of offers to complete their classes without returning to racially troubled Olivet College, a Black student leader said yesterday. "Our grades won't be as strong as they would have been had we re- mained on campus for the last three weeks of school," said Henry Hen- derson, a Southfield senior who leads the Black student protest. "But we chose to stand on prin- cipal, which isn't always popular." Tensions exploded on the cam- pus about 25 miles southwest of Lansing after an April 2 brawl be- tween 70 Black and white students in the lobby of Shipherd Hall dormi- tory. Two students were injured. Last week, Olivet officials ex- cused 183 students from classes for the week after 35 Black students proclaimed the campus unsafe and moved out of their dormitories. There are 50 Blacks among Olivet's 708 students. School offi- cials said they couldn't immediately determine yesterday how many Black students had returned to campus. School officials adopted 24-hour security for the college following a meeting with parents on Saturday. According to Henderson, five Black students stayed on campus, with the remainder either commut- ing to classes or - like him - fin- ishing the semester at home. Olivet's faculty members on Monday voted to allow students to 'Obviously, I think returning to classes is by far the best option for students ... - Lee Cooper Olivet Academic Dean request alternative course work for the semester ending April 28. Stu- dents must submit a written request by April 21. Instructors will respond to stu- dents' requests within 24 hours with a list of course work options, and students will have 48 hours to accept one of the options: "Obviously, I think returning to classes is by far the best option for students, because they would benefit from being in the standard classroom atmosphere and have continued contact with their instructors and other students," Academic Dean Lee Cooper said. Cooper said classroom alterna- tives include: Completing at home all as- signments for the semester and re- turning to campus for a final exam. Receiving a grade based on work completed by April 1, the day before the Shipherd brawl, and ei- ther waiving or taking a final exam on campus or at home by April 28. Receiving an incomplete grade, in the course but completing all as- signments and a final exam by Oct. 1. Withdrawing without penalty from the class. The April 2 fracas began after a white female student called for help from a mostly white fraternity in handling a dispute with her white boyfriend, who was outside her dorm room with two Black friends. The day before, there were false rumors on campus that a white fe- male student had been attacked by four Black male students. That night fires were set on two ends of a hall KROGER Continued from page 1 Kroger would lose $2 million per week in sales for the 5 Ann Arbor stores and 2 in Ypsilanti. He specu- lated that Kroger was down approx- imately 90 percent in sales due to the strike. Produce clerk David Seveska, who has worked for Kroger for 18 years, said there were exceptional amounts of public support. "We all wish to thank the public. We can not emphasize that enough." "If you are a good worker then a company will not get rid of you. In my experience the unions never saved me or my husband's job," said a Kroger shopper who chose not to honor the picket line and asked not to be identified. Approximately 7,800 employees at 65 Kroger stores in southeastern Michigan voted to reject the compa- ny's proposed contract. Contract ne- gotiations broke off April 3 and no new bargaining has been scheduled. Kroger's proposal called for elimination of 10 personal days a year for full-time employees and of- fered $1.50 an hour in wage in- creases spread over four years. Full- time employees would still have five personal days, six holidays and up to five weeks paid vacation, Kroger said. Workers now earn $4.50 to $10.37 an hour, depending on their work status. The previous contract expired Jan. 3. - Associated Press contributed to this report. BUSH Continued from page 1 Macomb went for Ronald Reagan by 2-1 margins and helped put Bush in office. However, the economic downturn has clouded Bush's prospects this year. Bush's campaign chair, Robert Teeter, said Michigan would be "a close state" and tough to win be- cause of the economic problems. But he added, "There's no reason to be- lieve we can't carry it." Surveys show that voters are looking for al- ternatives to the status quo. Seizing on the mood of voter alienation, Bush said, "If America is going to change, the government must change." Portraying himself as a reform- minded leader, Bush recalled pro- posals he unveiled 10 days ago "to cure the paralysis that grips the United States Congress" - includ- ing a limit on congressional terms. Playing to auto workers, Bush said, "A reformed government knows its limits, refusing to impose Michigan would be 'a close state' and tough to win, but 'There's no reason to believe we can't carry it.' - Robert Teeter Bush's campaign chair undue burdens on business and con- sumers alike." He reiterated that he would veto any congressional effort to mandate an increase in auto fuel efficiency standards. Bush also used the speech to flesh out the financing for previously announced jobs programs. He said he would seek $50 mil- lion for programs to streamline fed- eral job training and vocational pro- grams and $55 million for a job ap- prenticeship project to discourage young people from dropping out of school. Both programs had been an- nounced previously by Bush, but he had not specified their levels of financing. The administration said the money for streamlining would come from the $18 billion currently being spent on some 60 job training pro- grams administered by seven gov- ernment agencies. Bush also proposed spending up to $3.5 million for demonstration projects for youth apprenticeship programs in six states: California, Iowa, Maine, Michigan, Oregon and Wisconsin. " where live. several Black male students 0 Calvin and Hobbes MAkx"AO\JTHE LUAR~ SPACTION OF {O'JR NO . IMPAC . \W M OROSCOPE SN\D "(ANY )0 ?0U\-S \WILL BE tMP EENTD' oT ALL. To EXPECT A TYR POV.T K NEXXTh TIEOR SURE.. a I f MAT ARE NO BANX'S, K" ?ouc\ES txoNT Go To THEN ? SCWYoL., - 7IESE Q- TAE OIL$ A® by Bill Watterson MAYBE Tw-: (AAON MON ASCO YEm. 00 {OVJR 'tIf~s )C LON'WG STUFF ! WR~ONG ED of THE TELESCOPE. a Q p l} SOVIET Continued from page 1 Yeltsin's right-hand man, State Secretary Gennady Burbulis, told reporters. Lawmakers will have a chance to change their minds and amend the document today. Yeltsin had been at an impasse with the Congress since the legislative body opened April 6 in the Grand Kremlin Palace. The declaration was approved without debate at the climax of a second 'On the whole, I think this document would allow the executive branch to carry out further reforms.' - Yegor Gaidar Russian Vice Premier day of raucous cheering, bitter name-calling and sudden walkouts in the Kremlin. The margin of victory was extremely narrow, just six votes more than the 524 needed for a majority of the 1,046 lawmakers. Passage of the declaration came after Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady told reporters in Moscow the Congress was jeopardizing a $24 bil- lion aid package by taking "steps backwards in ... world confidence." ARMY SURPUS G'ET YOUWAllDROBE IN GEA R SHE: Ray Ban Sunglasses Discus Sweatshirt Cargo Fatigue Shorts Teva Sandals HE: Ray Ban Sunglasses Brooks Leather Jacket H.H. Brown Boots e 7 500 E.Liberty 2 (at Thompson) UAN 994-3572 WRITE FOR THE DAILY'SME ALY W4-0 . in a FR~zEE:; Dinner at .BELLA CIAO! Pi.' U ($50.00 limit) Comet to te sec fo o th drawg o a FEEdine aNilCao AIDm e in toc:"::y::hr..ugh .Ar : . i:.,,i:..::" ' i:l , . 1992! '. " " ; COURSEPACK Continued from page 1 According to an AAP news re- lease, Judge Hackett asserted the importance of copyright laws during the hearing and stated that the case involved "clear misappropriation" of these laws. Coordinated by the AAP, the lawsuit was filed on February 27 and pointed to six specific instances of infringement by Michigan Document Services. The case is part of a broad copyright enforcement program initiated by the AAP on be- half of its member publishing companies. "A substantial amount of creative energy, time and resources goes into the publication of books and other copyrighted works. Strong copyright protection is an essential component of the creative publishing process and this Association will continue its efforts to defend and strengthen this protection," said AAP President Nicholas Veliotes in the news release. Kurt Koenig, Vice President of Corporate Administration for Kinko's Copy Centers, was pleased by the AAP's action against copy- right violations. "The AAP's active enforcement of the copyright law now means that Kinko's and other copy centers will all be playing on a level field. The AAP and the publishing community have made their position clear, and it appears that those who fail to follow the law will continue to find them- selves the target of the AAP's en- forcement campaign," Koenig said in the release. Representatives from Michigan Document Services could not be reached for comment at press time. Some University students were unaware that a lawsuit has been filed against Michigan Document Services. Others said the store was necessary for buying coursepacks. "I went in there. I bought my coursepack, and I left. It didn't mat- ter to me. I had to have the coursep- ack," LSA first-year student Kristie Drake said. i rR( rp i Cr? 1 4 Here's to the Best of Ann Arbor: Greg Antilla Aizah Baharin Michael Barry Yasmin Choudhry Meghan Cleary Molina Das Kim Duffy Amy Fant Sheri Frankel Jason Gabel Rob Gelick Amy Herr Katy Kibbey Kristin Kirby Marv O'Connor Wbe £rihiau aiQ The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms by - students at the University of Michigan. On-campus subscriptions for spring/summer term are available for $9. No off-campus subscribtions are available for spring/surnmer. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 764-0552; Opinion 747-2814; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550: NEWS Henry Goldblatt, Managing Editor EDITORS: David Rheingold, Bethany Robertson, Stefanie Vlnes, Ken Walker LIST EDITOR: David Shepardeon STAFF: Laura Addedey, Lad Barager, Hope Calati, Bany Cohen, Ben Deci, Lauren Dormer, En Einhom, Ren4. Hulde, ,Loretta Lee, Andrew Levy, Robin Litwin, Nicole Malenfant, Sarah McCarthy, Travis McReyndds, Josh Mecider, Sheley Morrison, Meliqis Peerless, Karen Pier, Mona Oureshi, Karen Sabgir, Christopher Scherer, Gwen Shaffer, Purvi Shah, Jennifer Silverberg, Alan Suser, Karen Talaski, David Wartowsid, Chastity Wilson. OPINION Yael Citro, Geoffrey Earle, Amitava Mazumdar, Editors STAFF: Malt Adler, Jenny Alix, Renee Bushey, Daren Hubbard, David Leitner, Dave Rowe, David Shepardson, Daniel Stewart. SPORTS John Myo, Managing Editor EDITORS: Josh Dubow, Albert Lin, Jeff Williams STAFF: Meg Beleon. Andy DeKorte, Kimberly DeSempelaer, Matthew Dodge, Shawn DuFreene, Jeni Durst, Brett Forrest, Jim Foes, Ryan Herringlon, Mike Hil, Bruce Inosencio, Dan Linna, Rod Loewenthal, Sharon Lundy, Adam Miller, Rich Mitvalsky, Benadette Ramsey, Mike Rancilio, Tim Raidin, Greg Richardson, Chad Safran, Todd Schoeonhaus, Jeff Sheran, Tim Spolar, Andy Stable, Ken Sugura. Benson Taylor. ARTS Elizabeth Lenhard, Michael John Wilson, Editoin EDITORS: Mark Bineli (Fkn), Diane Froedan (Rne & Performing Arts), Alan J. Hogg, Jr. (Books), Jile Komom (Weekend eta. Anne te Petnjso (busio). STAFF: Caina Bacon.Greg BaeaMargo Bumgart,.Skot Bed, Meissa RoesBemardo,.Jon B0, AndrewJ. Cahn,.Jonathan Chai, Richard S. Davis, Gabriel Felberg, Rosanne Freed, Forrest Green III, Jessie Halladay, Aaron Hamburger, Stephen Henderson, Jonathan Higgins. Nima Hoda.,, Roger Ha, Made Jacobson, Andrea Kochudas, Kristen Knudsen. Rona Kobel, Chris Lepisy, Darcy Lockman, Jenny McKee, Kristen McMurphy, Amy Meng. John Morgan, Michelle Philip, Dan Poux, Austin Raoner. Jeff Roserberg, Valerie Shuman Chrstins Sovey, Scott Sterling"A"isa Strauss,"Carr'a'Wa'o, Michelle Wegr, Sarah Weidman, Josh Worth. PHOTO Kristoffer Gillette, Kenneth J. Smoler, Editou, STAFF: Anthony M. Croll, Michelle Guy, Doug Kanter, Heather Lowman, Sharon Muoher, Suzis Paley, Mlly Stevens. Paul Taylor. Stop by and see a Jostens representative, April 15-17 * 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. to CO|PIP from anohmnlOtP line of noid rinns 1 -11 low 9. - - g= LgM6 '.4 Tj I: DISPLAY SALES Shannon Burke, Manag ASSISTANT MANAGER: LaureWllnson WW i