M Page 2 - The Michigan Daily- Tuesday, July 17, 1984 Polish court clears police of negligence WARSAW, Poland (AP) - A court yesterday acquitted two policemen in the beating death of a 19-year-old Solidarity supporter, but convicted two ambulance drivers of negligence in the case. All four originally were indicted on charges of beating the teen-ager to death. SOLIDARITY SUPPORTERS who said police were responsible for the death of Grzegorz Przemyk condemned the verdict. As the decisions were read, the dead man's father and about 30 family friends quietly walked out of the packed courtroom in protest. Janusz Jankowski, chairman of the three-man judicial panel, looked up but continued reading the verdicts as the protesters filed out. "So they finally proved there is no justice in this country," one woman said as she left. She asked not to be identified. An estimated 200 people were in the courtroom for the verdict. PRZEMYK'S MOTHER, Barbara Sadowska, was not present, although she attended almost every session of the trial. Ina statement on the first day of the trial, Sadowska, an opposition poet, charged authorities with covering up for the police. Solidarity leader Lech Walesa con- demned the killing in a statement read during Przemyk's funeral, but he was on vacation with his family and unavailable for comment. Two doctors charged with negligence in treating Przemyk committed an "unintended offense" and the charges against them were dropped under an amnesty passed by Parliament a year ago, the judge ruled. PRZEMYK'S DEATH became a symbol for Solidarity supporters who cited it as an example of brutality used by police to crush the outlawed labor federation. An estimated 20,000 mourners attended his funeral in War- saw on May 19, 1983, in a peaceful protest against police brutality. Przemyk was detained in Warsaw the evening of May 12, 1983 for disorderly conduct. He was taken from the police station by ambulance to the Hoza first aid station and then released. He died two days later. The trial, which began May 31, received prominent attention from Poland's official news media, including almost nightly coverage of the testimony on the evening news broad- cast. The court ruled the ambulance atten- dants, who drove Przemyk to the first aid station, had endangered his life through negligence and improper care, but said it could not determine the killer. 0 0 REBECCA KNIGHT/Daily The new addition to the University's School of Music, located on North Campus, is scheduled to open next year and will provide more space and facilities for music and dance students. music school addition will expand stage facilities New Zealand wants U.S. treaty altered From AP and UPI meeting, overshadowed by the New WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Zealand Labor Party's election victory Secretary of State George Shultz yeste- Saturday on a platform calling for a day defended the United States' defense renegotiated treaty banning nuclear- alliance with New Zealand and armed and nuclear-powered ships from Australia as an "unshakeable relation- the nation's ports. ship" despite demands to have the NEW ZEALAND officials said the treaty renegotiated. nuc'-,tr ships issue did not arise during Shultz made the comments at the the first day of the two-day meeting, opening of an annual ANZUS alliance See NEW ZEALAND, Page 4 By GREG HUTTON An addition to the Earl V. Moore building, home of the University's School of Music, will be among the new structures to appear on campus in the next year. With ,construction still on schedule, the new addition should be open by January 1985 - expanding the facilities for music and dance students to rehearse and performs large productions in a more professional atmosphere, according to Morris Risenhoover, assistant dean in the music school. RISENHOOVER, chief advisor to the construction site, said since the stage of the new vocal arts center is the exact size of the stage at the Power Center, performers will have the opportunity to rehearse in more realistic setting than in a classroom, where most now rehearse. Included in the new structure will be two auditoriums: a 120-seat organ recital studio boasting an organ built in Boston specifically for the University and a 166-seat vocal arts center for the music school productions. The new addition will also house the Stearns Collection - a collection of nineteenth century exotic in- struments. University graduate Maurice Allen, the architect for the addition, attempted to maintain original ar- chitectural style of the Moore Building in the new addition. The addition is funded entirely by private donations from both cor- porations and individuals. The cost of the structure will be $1.8 million. To date, $1.1 million has been raised. 0 0 HAPPENINGS Tuesday HRD-course, "Managing Change," 10 a.m., LSA, call 764-7410. CEW-course, "Refreshing Student Skills," 1610 Washtenaw, call 764-9481. Nutrition Services-weight control class, noon, Output Building. Music-Six Concertos for Two Keyboards, 8 p.m., The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Ann Arbor Go Club-meeting, 1433 Mason. CEW-Job Hunt Club, noon, 350 S. Thayer. Performance Network-The Opera, 8:30 p.m., 408 W. Washington. Wednesday HRD-course, "Tell someone: A Program to Combat Sexual Harrassmen," 1p.m., LSA. Voice-Original music by Lisa Wolf and Karen Pernick, 8 p.m., Dominick's. CEW-course, "Refreshing Student Skills," 1610 Washtenaw. Nutrition Services-weight control class, noon, Output Building. Music-Martin Jean, 8 p.m., Hill. Medicine-workshop in scientific illustration, 8:30 a.m., Kresge I. Alcoholics - meeting, 1:30 p.m., Alanon Club. Farm Labor-meeting, 5:30 p.m., Michigan Union. Science Fiction Club-meeting, 8:15 p.m., League. CFT-Bye Bye Brazil, 7:30 p.m.; Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands, 9:30 p.m., Michigan. Chamber Orchestra-Haydn Festival, noon, Liberty Plaza. Performance Network-The Opera, 8:30 p.m., 408 W. Washington. Frisbee-practice, 5:30 p.m., Fuller. Thursday PTP-Claire Bloom, "These Are Women," 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. SOAP-Music at Mid Day Series, pianist John Jarrett, 12:15 p.m., Union. HRD-COURSE, "Effective Business Writing," 1 p.m.; "Building Speed Reading Skills," 10 a.m.; "Management of Stress for Managers and Super- visors," 8:30 p.m., LSA. CEW-course-"Refreshing Student Skills," 1610 Washtenaw. Sailing Club-meeting, 7:45 p.m., W. Engineering. Turner Geriatric Clinic-"A Day in the Park," 10:30 a.m., Riverside Park. Music-Carol Teti, Byron Pearson, 8 p.m., New Alexandra Music Building, EMU. Labor-Collective Bargaining and Workplace Participation, 3 p.m. League-American Heritage Night, New York, 5 p.m., Cafeteria. . Dancers-7 p.m., Forrest Hills Community Cen- ter. Psychiatry-Anxiety disorders support group, 7:30 p.m., Children's Psychiatric Hospital. Bible-Chapel, 12:30 p.m., Main Hospital. AAFC-Satyrican, 7 p.m., Lorch. CFT-Bye Bye Brazil, 7:30 p.m.; Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands, 9:30 p.m., Michigan. Chamber Orchestra-Haydn Festival, noon, Liberty Plaza. Performance Network-The Opera, 8:30 p.m., 408 W. Washington. 0 Send announcements to Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.