The Michigan Daily Vol. XCIII, No. 3-S Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, May 10, 1983 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Detroit rally protests beating death By HALLE CZECHOWSKI Special to the Daily DETROIT-More than 800 people gathered in Detroit's Kennedy Square yesterday to protest the lenient senten- ces given to two men who admitted to beating a Chinese-American man to death with a baseball bat last year. The rally, which drew more than 80 supporters from Ann Arbor, was triggered by the manslaughter senten- ces given to Ronald Ebens and his step- son, Michael Nitz, who killed Vincent Chen in a fight last June. Some wit- nesses say the fight was racially David Norden, the head of the Under motivated. the UGLi was built 27 years ago. The PROTESTORS ALSO demonstrated in New York yesterday, and groups issued statements of solidarity in U n d erg charged with second degree murder, but pleaded guilty to manslaughter after the charges were reducedthrough They were each fined $3,780 and sen- to u d tenced to three years' probation last March by Wayne County Circuit Court By KAREN TENS Judge Charles Kaufman. THE RALLY, sponsored by the When the rush of students returns American Citizens for Justice, a newly- dergraduate Library won't be ugly anyt formed group from Detroit included After 27 years of being the butt o speakers from Asian-American building will soon be a place where stud organizations, civil rights groups, and joy studying. local politicians. TO REMEDY the shortage of study "I want justice for my son Vincent," campus, the Regents approved a $50 said Chin's mother, Lily Chin, thanking refurbish the interior of the undergradu the supporters their help. The renovations include: See RALLY, Page 2 " 300 additional seats; The arms race: From the Associated Press deterrence, threatens to finally outrun First of a three-part series man's grasp: " In the past decade, a time of sup- Today, two generations into the age posed arms limitation, multiple of nuclear warfare, the specter of a warheads have sprouted atop nuclear Soviet "first strike," a pre-emptive missiles. The total of U.S. strategic blow knocking out the core of the U.S. warheads has doubled to 9,600 and of missile force, haunts the strategic Soviet warheads quadrupled to 8,700. planning of America's leaders. " To counter a perceived Soviet first- And in the mirror-imaging that strike capability, the United States marks the nuclear era, the potential for plans to build weapons so accurate and a U.S. first strike - substitute Siberian powerful, such as the MX missile, that steppes for North Dakotan grainfields they themselves would then - confronts nuclear thinkers in the theoretically pose a new first-strike Kremlin. threat to the Soviets. " Some strategic thinkers suggest a TECHNOLOGY leapfrogs itself so decision to retaliate against Soviet at- rapidly 38 years after Hiroshima that tack not be made by the president in his the "balance of terror," as Winston "situation room" but be more Churchill called the grim fact of mutual automatic, based on a computer's Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS graduate Library, sits in his office - the only room repainted in the building since building will undergo a $500,000 renovation this summer. raduate Library rgo renovations A. in the fall, the Un- more. A campus jokes, the ents may actually en- space for students on 10,000 plan in April to ate library. " new carpeting for the basement, first and second floors; " paint for the walls, ceilings and bookshelves; a redesigned circulation desk. Head of the Undergraduate Library David Norden said he hopes the changes will draw more studens to the building. "I HOPE improving the physical environment of the building will make the library a more pleasant place to study," he said. "We'd like to get away from our reputation as the 'UGLi'." The library will not close for the renovations, expected to begin sometime in June, Norden said, but the work will go on See UNDERGRADUATE, Page 7 Who will win? M analysis of data indicating incoming missiles. MANY ARGUE nuclear war is so horrible that neither superpower would start one. But these frightening triphammers, the risks of catastrophic mistake, the sheer destructive power on hand - the equivalent of three tons of TNT for each person on Earth - make manking more fearful every year. "It is out of control," Roger Molan- der, head of Ground Zero, a public education group on arms control, said in Washington. "I don't think we have much time ... I will raise a toast if I am able to discuss this problem someday with my grandchildren." The 42-year-old Molander has a unique insight - he was a White House nuclear-arms specialist for seven years. IN 1983, the cosmic chess game has entered a crucial new phase. At the negotiating table, U.S. and Soviet representatives search for ways to reduce arsenals. But specialists more and more question the traditional approaches of arms control, and at the same time spectacular new weapons systems loom just over the horizon, threatening to leave the work of the diplomats hopelessly behind. Across Europe, meanwhile, popular resistance to a new arms race in mid- dle-range missiles may boil over. AND IN the United States, the boosters of the "freeze" pledge to put See NUCLEAR, Page 3