Ninety-five years of editorial freedom Vol. XCV, 'No. 39-S Copysight 1985 Th Michigan, Daily Friday, July 26, 1985 Fifteen Cents Twelve Pages Police work not all cops and robbers ride with Officer Jim Tieman, who has been on the force for 12 sergeant read through a list of wanted criminals, recently This is the city: Ann Arbor, Michigan. On July 24, years. released prisoners, and inter-department memos. Daily staff writer Laura Bischoff cruised the streets of .3:15 p.m.: After I met Tieman, we went downstairs to the .4 p.m.: Tieman and I got into the police car and checked Ann Arbor in police car Adam 31, and she learned that locker room to find a radio for me. All civilian riders are everything before hitting the road. It was the only time the required to carry a police walkie-talkie so they can radio for whole night that we got to have the lights flashing. A foot- it's not always as exciting as "Dragnet." This...is her help in an emergency. They didn't, however, provide me with patrol officer hitched a ride from us to campus and then we story. a bullet-proof vest, which many officers were wearing under started cruising the campus area. "3 p.m.: I arrived at the Ann Arbor Police Department in their shirts. The University pays the city about $500,000 for police protec- City Hall and reported to the duty command officer. He han- In a room just beyond the lockers, we joined six other of- tion because it doesn't have its own police force like most Big ded me a waiver to sign, which releases the city from all ficers at a briefing. It seemed like a scene from "Hill Street 1 liability if "something" should happen to me. I was assigned to Blues," except the room wasn't packed or loud and dirty. The See REPORTER, Page 2 Violence in South Africa causes U.N. deliberation JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (UPI) - Security forces who have arrested 795 people under a five- day state of emergency opened fire on a crowd of 4,000 stone-throwing black mourners, killing four of them and wounding 16 others, police said yesterday. In New York, the U.N. Security Council scheduled an urgent meeting to consider requests by France that U.N. members suspend investments in South Africa and prohibit nuclear agreements to protest the gover- nment's policies of apartheid, or racial segregation, and the state of emergency. France Wednesday recalled its South African ambassador and suspended new investments to the country in protest of President Pieter Botha's decision to impose the state of emergency Sunday. Washington's response was muted, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the ad- ministration is reviewing the situaiton in South Africa," but is not conducting "a wholesale review of our policy." West Germany, opposition par- ties urged the government to im- pose sanctions against South Africa. But a Foreign Ministry spokesman said West Germany would prefer to act in concert with other Western European nations. In the black township of Daveyton, 25 miles east of Johan- nesburg, soldiers and police armed with shotguns and rifles fired on mourners leaving a funeral late Wednesday. The crowd was stoning an army patrol and had in- jured one soldier, police said. A spokesman said "a large mob stoned an army patrol," injuring one soldier." "A police patrol arrived on the scene and assisted in dispersing the mob with shotgun and rifle fire," he said. "Two black males and two black females were fatally wounded and 13 black males and three black females were woun- ded.' Police said a 16-year-old youth was shot by a soldier in Cape Province yesterday as an army unit tried to disperse a crowd of blacks who threw stones at their armored vehicle. He was the fifth black killed by security forces in less than 24 hours. THE DEATHS Wednesday and Thursday brought to 16 the number See U.N., Page 2 Daily Photo by DARRIAN SMITH This fair-goer ends her quest for the "best hotdog in town" at Le Dog's yesterday. In search of..the hot dog By THOMAS HRACH delicacies not so American. The 400,000 people who flock to the AN INFORMAL survey amids Art Fair over its four days can't live yesterday's crowd showed that Italiar an bread alone. So amidst the art on sausage, gyros, and eggrolls have all three fair routes, visitors are bom- stolen the hearts of many loyal hol barded with fast good eats and drinks. dog eaters. But most of the outdoor food stands "We want to introduce people to a have given up on the traditional hot form of upscale eating," said Johi dog and have gone with such See HOT DOGS, Page 9 'U' uses S.A. investment dividends for scholarship By KERY MURAKAMI Regents' 1983 decision to divest all but The University is using nearly $5 million in South African-related in- $2,000 it has received directly from vestments, said Regent Nellie Varner investments in companies that do (D-Detroit). business with South Africa to help Varner said the money for the, send a black South African transfer students was port of a compromise: student throughhthe rngineering betwen board memers who ante school, said Norm Herbert, the total divetment and those who op- University's investment officer. posed any divestment. But Herbert said the money does "IT (THE decision not to divest not represent returns the University totally) is made more palatable to me gets from its investments in com- because it does say that the earnings panies - like General Motors - that that we do receive from companies do business in South Africa. Instead, that do business in South Africa will the money spent on the student is be used for educational benefits of proportional to how much companies South Africans," she said two years make as a result of their activities in' ago in voting for the compromise South Africa. resolution. USING this money to help black The student, Talukanyami South African students at the Univer- Tshivase, an engineering school' sit was a key nart of the Board of See'U,' Pae 4 1, " - - - - y W 1 L a a v a. v :. .v , v a os ' Strike Two Watercolors Watched Who'll suffer most from a baseball Look for a high in the 80's with a chan- The Daily's art fair coverage continues strike - the players, the owners, or ce of sprinkles in the morning. with an analysis of people watching at the fans? Opinion, Page 5 the fair. Page 8