LoCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 10, 1997 - 5A 15 protest at local park for contracts By Katie Plona Daily Staff Reporter Before placing a road barricade that blocked one of only three entrances to the Barton Hills Village section in Ann Arbor, roughly 15 newspaper strikers planned their protest strategy in nearby Bandamer Park. "Our main purpose always is to get word out that we are locked out," said Dia Pearce, unit chair for the Newspapers Guild at the Detroit News. "Our goal is to get contracts.' Pearce said they protested yesterday in response to the companies' --The Detroit News, Detroit Free Press and the Detroit Newspaper Association - refusal to follow up on the union's con- tract offer. According to the protest fliers, "Heath Meriwether, Free Press pub- lisher and Barton Hills Village resi- dent, has been leading the company's deceitful media campaign against workers." During a February agreement, the union members offered to return to work after 20 months of resistance without settling theirscontracts. But Pearce said that not all strikers have been able to return. "We made an offer to return to our jobs'" Pearce said. "The company accepted our offer, but unfortunately, they called back a handful. So there are about 2,000 of us out." Soon after the protesters put a wire across the entranceway at Barton Shore Drive and Whitmore Lake Road, they pulled away in their cars, careful not to run into the police. Sgt. Don Steele of the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department said they were unable to track down the protesters, and police officers removed the barricade about 35 min- utes after it was secured by the pro- testers. "It's a public safety issue," Steele FUNDS Continued from Page 1A Martinez said she agreed with the removal because it is the "legislative position that universities set their own standards for residency." The subcommittee did not reach a con- sensus on a clause deleted by Engler that states, "Michigan residents shall compro- mise a substantial majority of each uni- versity's undergraduate population." Wilbanks said diversity at the University is not lacking. "We have not been supportive of a specific percentage of in-state and out- of-state students," Wilbanks said. "Our students en Also at yesterday's meeting, Glenn they must compete Stevens, theV director of the Japan Center for The ca Michigan Universities, affectt& requested an increase in fund- students. ing. The Japan Center for- Michigan Stater Universities is a consortium of all of Michigan's universities that sends e needest - Donald Gilmer rep. (R-Augusta) ter a world where on a very interna- tional basis," Stevens said. "It's also the only aca- demic program where Michigan universities all work together. Jordan Pollack, of the Office of international Programs, said that since 1989, about 35 University students have par- students to study in Japan. ticipated in the program. JONATH AN SLIMMER f Dily Protesters from the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News blocked a street yesterday in the neighborhood of Free Press Publisher Heath Merlwether. said. "This is unique. It's something in 22 years I've never encountered - blocking a road like that." Steele said they would keep an eye on the area all night, which he said is the best they can do. He also said his department has been in touch with the Meriwether family. "We have made contact with them and they're alright," Steele said. Les Adler, an Ann Arbor resident, waited in his car before turning around to head out from another exit. While Adler waited, protesters handed him a flier explaining their plight. "I'm supporting this," Adler said. "I've supported the strike all along." Adler said he was annoyed to learn that the Detroit newspapers have not taken back all of their employees. Barton Hills Village resident Chris Holmes said the protesters honked their car horns and possibly put fliers in residents' mailboxes. Holmes said she originally thought the four-car procession was a wedding party until one of the cars stopped and someone asked her if she wanted a flier. "They're probably taking a small risk," Holmes said. "I sort of see it as an adventure." Holmes said she has "seen them outside the lower gates two times before." However, Pearce said one of the rea- sons for the protest was "mainly because this is an area we haven't had a lot of visibility in." 4angler launches pilot program for at-risk school districts DETROIT (AP) - A new, privately funded education institute that is mod- eled after a successful pilot program was announced yesterday by Gov. John ngler as a resource for troubled school stricts. The nonprofit Institute for Education Reform, to be housed at Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti, will focus on helping school districts that struggle with low test scores and other problems to improve. "The Institute will draw upon the tremendous accomplishments of Oak Park Schools and other education inno- vations to provide a statewide resource Gr 'at-risk' schools interested in achieving success," Engler said at a news conference at Key Elementary School in Oak Park. Engler didn't help plan the insti- tute, and the state will be just one of several partners involved in it, along with Consumers Energy, EMU, the EMU Foundation and other business leaders. But the governor wanted to highlight the facility as a "center of excellence" that school districts could go to to avoid being taken over by the state, a highly controversial proposal Engler announced in January. Districts deemed academically bank- rupt, or fearing they could become so, could voluntarily contract with the institute and solve their problems with- out state oversight, Engler spokesper- son John Truscott told the Detroit Free Press for a story yesterday. "The governor said all along, it's not his goal to take over districts," Truscott said. "It's his goal to improve districts. But if all else fails, we can't just ignore the students in those districts that aren't improving." In its efforts to help schools, the insti- tute will use the same 16-step improve- ment plan developed and used in Oak Park, as well as in Albion, Saginaw and Muskegon Heights, by the Oak Park Education Initiative. YOUR DEGREE WILL TAKE YOU PLACES. As an officer in the U.S. Navy, you'll command your own future. You'll join top flight people working with the best in their field. And have the opportunity for world- wide travel. 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