HIGHER EDUCATION The Michigan Daily Tuesday, April 11, 2000 - 5 *George Washington U. cancels classes for protest Bailamos By Steven Postal The GW Hatchet (GeorgeWashington University) AmIlL WASHINGTON (U-WIRE) - George Washington University announced Friday it will close this weekend and Monday, April 17, because of anticipated protests of World Bank and International Mone- tary Fund meetings. GW administrators met with Met- ropolitan Police Chief Charles Ram- sey last week to prepare for the protests. Late Friday, a memo Oreleased to the GW community announced the closing. "As a direct result of discussions with (MPD) who have assessed ... the impact of the World Bank/IMF meet- ings on traffic in the area, the univer- sity has made the decision to close from Friday at 10 p.m. until Tuesday, April 18, at 8 a.m," according to the memo. Access to residence halls and the Marvin Center will be restricted to GW students and staff. Beginning yesterday, "the overnight guest policy for non-GW students will be suspend- ed." Students must have a GWorld card to be signed into a residence hall. One of the objectives of the closure is to minimize traffic around Foggy Bottom, where the meetings will take place, university officials said. The *IMF and World Bank offices are locat- ed on 18th and 19th streets near sever- al university buildings. MPD spokesman Sgt. Joe Gentile said MPD is still in the planning stages for the expected protests. All officers will be on duty and officers will be assigned to the expected demonstrations, he said, although he would not disclose the number of officers that will be assigned to the demonstrations. Civil Disturbance Units were activated Sunday and will continue to patrol through the end of the meetings. "Students should expect large inconveniences because of large crowds on the streets," Gentile said. He said a permit to protest had not been approved as of Thursday and MPD continues to meet with the demonstrators. The protesters "have advised us they intend to have a peaceful demonstra- tion," he said. Gentile said streets will be closed around the IMF and the World Bank, though Thursday. He could not say which streets are expected to close. A preliminary list of street closures and blockades were released yesterday, he said. The preliminary list is expected to expand, he said. "Our actions will be very much dependent on the group" Gentile said. At a Tuesday press conference, IMF Acting Managing Director Stanley Fischer said the meeting planners are taking planned protests seriously. He said authorities arc ensuring that the meetings can go on without disruption, but he said activities will not be "absolutely normal." "The material that is being dis- cussed at these meetings is very important for the operation of the world economy, for the people who live in the world economy," Fischer said. "And you don't really expect that whatever contingency plans we might or might not have would be made pub- lic at this stage" Protesters already have begun to arrive and protest in certain areas of Washington, D.C. The World Bank and IMF meetings will begin tomor- row morning. According to MPD's Website, businesses in the vicinity of the meetings should prepare for street closures and other potential disrup- tions. "Construction sites should be secured, including all equipment and supplies," according to the Website. MPD also advises businesses to develop a plan in case buildings and windows need to be secured. At GW, all events scheduled for after Friday at 10 p.m. are canceled except for events in Lisner Auditorium and the Marvin Center. There will only be one entrance and exit for the Mar- vin Center, and GWorld cardholders will be allowed into the Marvin Cen- ter. Ash/ey M. Hlehercontributd to this report. WRC Continued from Page 1 Advisory Committee on Labor Stan- dards and Human Rights, was in New York as a conference participant. "I think it was a good first meeting -- a lot of ideas were exchanged,' Root said. But perhaps most importantly, the conference also signified a change in the previously adversarial relationship between student activists and the admin- istrators of their schools. "Administrators and students were more than willing to cooperate and dis- cuss how to combine efforts to make the WRC work," Romer-Friedman said. But whatever strides were made in New York, the battles continue on other campuses across the nation. Three more anti-sweatshop organiz- ers were arrested at the University of Oregon, bringing the total number of arrests to 14 at Oregon. Oregon student Sarah Jacobsen, a spokeswoman for the campus' anti- sweatshop group, said the students are "absolutely ready" to take more action, but anticipates University of Oregon President Dave Frohnmayer will "be forced to act on the WRC sometime by the end of this week." As of last night, students were meet- ing with Frohnmayer to discuss the WRC and their other demands, includ- ing a request for greater student repre- sentation on university decisions. About 30 students at the University of Iowa were forcibly removed after a six day occupation of the school's Jessup Hall on Saturday. Five students were arrested, but no one was hurt during the confrontation. Ned Bertz, one of the stu- dents arrested, said the students had no warning of the police raid, although they had met with administrators until 7 p.m. the night of the raid. Bertz said the students will continue their action until the University of Iowa drops its affiliation with the Fair Labor Association. "We're going to put the FLA on trial," he said. The FLA is a White House-spon- sored group that has come under fire by critics who contend the group's corpo- rate ties make the coalition weak. Purdue Students Against Sweatshops ended their hunger strike Friday after 11 days of fasting. Purdue University Presi- dent Steven Beering agreed to join the WRC by Sept. 30 if the organization has met certain stipulations. Students at Yale University continue their sit-in outside Woodridge Hall, the New Haven, Conn. school's main administration building. Ari Holtzblatt, spokesman for Yale Students Against Sweatshops said Yale President Richard Levin has been "generally unresponsive to the WRC" Holtzblatt said the students are pre- pared to stay camped outside indefi- nitely. JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily University alum Julia Jablonski takes Latin dance lessons in the Michigan Union's University Club. Student accused of killing newborn child By Jen Bonds The Breeze (James Madison University) HARRISONBURG, Va. (U-WIRE) - A James Madison University nursing student was arrested Friday in Harrisonburg after she allegedly left her now-deceased newborn in a portable toilet at a rural Delaware construc- tion site. Freshman Abigail Caliboso is being charged as a fugitive by the Harrisonburg Police Department, and with manslaughter and second-degree conspiracy by Delaware State Police. Also charged was Chantilly resi- '*dent Jose Ocampo, Caliboso's boyfriend and alleged father of the baby, Delaware State Police said. According to Delaware Police spokesman Cpl. Walter Newton, Caliboso and Ocampo rented a motel room in Fairfax County on Baby left in rural Delaware March 26, where Caliboso allegedly gave birth to a baby. Later that day, the couple reportedly drove north on Interstate 95 to Delaware. They exited the interstate and found the remote construc- tion site in Bear, where they allegedly left the infant and drove back to Virginia. According to Delaware police, staff mem- bers from Rockingham Memorial Hospital treated Caliboso for post-delivery complica- tions. When medical staff couldn't account for the child, they contacted Harrisonburg Police. Harrisonburg detectives interviewed Cali- boso and determined that there were substan- tial similarities between her newborn and the infant found in Delaware. She was discharged from the hospital after the arrest and is now being held without bail in Rockingham County Jai . Ocampo was arrested at his family's home in Chantilly and is being held without bail at the Fairfax Adult Detention Center. A full term, 8-pound baby girl was found at 6:45 a.m. in Delaware by a construction work- er on March 27. Authorities said she was between 24 and 48 hours old. Officials concluded that the baby was delivered alive, but do not know if the baby was still alive when she was abandoned, Newton said. Delaware officials said they aren't sure why the couple chose to leave their baby th ere. "We don't know why they came to Delaware," Newton said. "As of now, we don't know of any relatives that live in this area." Delaware is one of 27 states considering leg- islation to protect parents who leave newborns in a safe place. Four newborns have been abandoned in the state since 1995, three of whom died. Fairfax County Police received a complaint from the cleaning staff of the motel after "strange" remnants were found in the room, Delaware Police said. The room was searched but police did not disclose what was found. Caliboso kept her pregnancy a secret from everyone, said her roommate, who asked to remain anonymous. - -_ ---- ---- ---- -K :f ? lf Don't leave campus without one. Apple iMac DV Simple setup and operation to get on the Internet in 10 minutes, right out of the box. Stay in touch with your friends and student organizations all summer! M