The Michigan Daily - Saturday, August 6, 1983 - Page 3 Grand jury called in Chin case By HALLE CZECHOWSKI Currently, the group is waiting to D The U.S. Justice Department an- nounced Thursday a special grand jury will investiage the death of a Chinese- American man to determine if his civil rights were violated. The announcement followed a month- long FBI investigation into the death of Vincent Chin, a 27-year-old Royal Oak man. CHIN WAS beaten to death with a baseball bat in June 1982, following an argument with two men, Ronald Ebens and his stepson Michael Nitz, both of East Detroit. Witnesses have said the argument, which took place in a Highland Park bar, was racially motivated. Ebens and Nitz were originally charged with second degree murder, but the charges were reduced to man- slaughter after plea bargaining. U' ninority coordinator position delayed By JACKIE YOUNG Two weeks ago the University an- nounced it would strengthen its efforts to recruit and maintain minority students by appointing a new ad- ministration in the fall to take charge of the problem. A job description for the new post was supposed to have come out earlier in the week, but the "new priority" has already run into the summer doldrums. "EVERYBODY'S on vacation this summer and it is practically impossible to get anything done," said Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Billy Frye. Frye said the University's executive officers were scheduled to decide on the exact responsibilities of the new ad- ministrator, but the meeting plans fell through. Frye said he now expects to have a job description to put before the Regen- ts in September. THE SPECIFIC duties of the new position have not been outlined, but one task will include heading up a council on minority affairs made up of students and faculty, Frye said earlier. Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson, said the administrator will try to make the University "more accountable and more effective" in recruiting and maintaining minority students on campus. One of the biggest problems with the University's minority efforts is its dismal record for enrolling black students and keeping them at the University once they've enrolled. In 1977, black students made up 6.9 percent of the student body, a number that declined to 5.2 percent last year. Black undergraduates also have a 50 percent attrition rate, according to statistics compiled by the Affirmative Action Office, compared to a 30 percent rate for white undergraduates. Frye said the University has not begun looking for a person to fill the r new post yet. He did not know if there would be a nationwide search to fill the position or if someone from within the University would take the job. 'It's only step one - the war isn't over yet.' -Liza Chan Attorney EBENS PLEADED guilty and Nitz pleaded no contest to the charges. In March 1983, Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Charles Kaufman senten- ced each man to three years' probation and fined them each $3,780. The decision enraged Asian- Americans across the nation, who say they feel Kaufman based his decision on misleading or insufficient evidence, since there was no trial and no prosecuting attorney present at the sen- tencing. If the grand jury finds enough evidence to indict Ebens and Nitz for civil rights violations, they could be tried under federal statutes and face possible life imprisonment if convicted. MEANWHILE, members of the American Citizens for Justice, a primarily Asian-American group, have mounted a legal battle to change the sentences of the two men. The group fought this spring to con- vince Kaufman to withdraw his senten- ce, but was unsuccessful. hear if the State Supreme Court will handle an appeal of the case. ATTORNEY Marc Susselman, who is handling the case on the state level, said that Thursday's decision would hve no legal effect on the case in the state's courts. Former State Supreme Court Justice Thomas Brennan will handle the case if it goes to the state's high court. Liza Chan, the attorney for the American Citizens for Justice on the federal level, said she was excited by the decision, but added that Chin's sup- porters still have a long way to go. "IT'S ONLY step one - the war isn't over yet," she said. Members of the American Citizens for Justice have spent the summer touring the country, accompanied by Chin's mother, to raise support for their cause. Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Anti-Reagan demonstrators brought buttons and banners to the Federal Building Thursday as they protested U.S. in- tervention in Central America and deportment of Salvadoran refugees seeking political asylum in the U.S. Psae Protestors sla- Reagan s policies By JACKIE YOUNG A dozen members of several local organizations toted signs and banners in front of the Federal Building Thur- sday, calling for an end to U.S. military maneuvers and the buildup of troops in the Pacific, Caribbean, and Cen- tral America. "These maneuvers are totally without precedent. The U.S. naval task force is the largest assembled since the height of the Vietnam war," said rally participant Mark Esper, a member of the Latin American Solidarity Committee. "WE HAVE NO illusions about what this means. It means another war in Central America," he added. Esper joined members of the Black Student Union, Michigan Student Assembly, and All People Congress in the rally. There were no speakers at the protest, but Esp- er said a rally held next Thursday at the Federal Building, in conjunction with demonstrations nationwide, will probably be larger. Protesters a this week's rally said they will continue demonstrating until all troop and ship deployments to Central America are halted. DEMONSTATOR and University biology Prof. John Vandermeer, who has just completed a book on the war in Nicaragua, said he felt President Reagan's policies are hurting the country more than they are helping it. "From what I have heard and can attest to, U.S. policy in Nicaragua is having the opposite effect of what Reagan intended it to have," said Vandermeer, who has visited Nicaragua several times and plans another visit soon. The Sandinistas are being forced to make repressive laws, such as increased censorship of the press, to fight the internal strife caused by U.S. military aid to rebel troops, Vandermeer said. VANDERMEER and other rally participants are calling for a halt to U.S. military aid to El Salvador, Hon- duras, and Guatemala; an end to U.S. "war threats" against Nicaragua; and peace talks with all countries in- volved in the conflict in El Salvador. Some rally participants said they also want the U.S. to grant Salvadoran refugees temporary asylum until it is politically safe for them to return home. Demonstrators carried petitions condemning Mexicana Airlines, the Mexican firm the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Services uses to fly deported refugees back to El Salvador. Esper said several hundred signatures have been collected since people began circulating this petition and another against U.S. aid to El Salvador last June. JANNY HUISMAN, MSA's administrative coordinator, said she thinks the set of rallies will be a good method for letting Reagan know where the American public stands on See REAGAN'S, Page 7