a t dr p. p Y a n .VOL Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom. I Lit igau :43 tti WARMER Cloudy and warmer with a chance of showers. High will be around 60. Lows in the mid 40s. XCI, No. 36 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 15, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages Canham blasts. days offenders ha 4r aa e~ l Daily Photo by. DAVID HAR RIS SECRETARY OF STATE Edmund Muskie challenged hecklers to join the JPeace Corps during his speech in celebration of its 20th anniversary yesterday. 2e shgh BDAVID MEYE R presidential candidate John Kennedy, standing on the same By spot, first announced his plan for the voluntary, inter- Secretary of State Edmund Muskie and other national service organization. - prominent officials struggled to speak over the sporadic Despite the interruptions, Muskie joined the other chants and jeers of about 45 demonstrators as over 2,500 of- speakers noting the past accomplishments of the Peace ficials, students, and former volunteers crowded in front of Corps and emphasizing the need to continue and expand the the Michigan Union for the ceremony commemorating the work of the Corps. 20th anniversary of the Peace Corps. It is vital to the future of this country and all of humanity Muskie and other speakers, including Sargent Shriver, that America join with the emerging nations in a renewed the Peace Corps' first director, Dick Celeste, the Corps' commitment to world development and peace, Muskie said. current director, and University President Harold Shapiro, MUSKIE LINKED the efforts of the Peace Corps directly were forced to pause on several occasions because of the to the security interests of the U.S. and said that inter- hecklers. At other times the officials directed comments to national turmoil might be avoided as a result of successful the protesters, including a challenge by Muskie for them to service from the Peace Corps. join the Corps. "For hopelessness breeds frustration; and with THE CEREMONY, held on the steps of the Michigan frustration can come violence, radicalism, and the ingre- Union, commemorated the night 20 years ago when Se MUSKIE, Page 5 / 'O By ARLYN AFREMOW It was unseasonably cold the night of.October 14, 1960, when University graduate students Alan anid Judy ________________Guskin stood outside the Michigan Union along with 10,000 other students awaiting the arrival of presidential candidate John Ken- nedy. Kennedy's speech was brief, but the Guskins were intrigued by his youthfulness and vigor. "Kennedy linked young en- thusiasm and involvement with the Third World, saying that the in- Daily Photo by JOHN HAGEN dividual action of young Americans could make a difference," Judy ALAN GUSKIN recalls John Kennedy's speech made on Oct. 14, 1960 which Guskin recalled yesterday after initiated the firmation of the Peace Corps. See COUPLE, Page 5 hazing incident, eve been punished By LORENZO BENET. University Athletic Director Don Canham said yesterday that disciplinary action had been taken against Michigan hockey players in- volved in the Sunday night hazing of several freshman squad members, one of whom was left drunk and naked in freezing weather outside Mary Markley Hall. Canham, who refused to elaborate on the nature of the punishment, reserved the right to levy further penalties. SOURCES CLOSE to the hockey team said they were told by Canham not to speak about the hazing incident. However, the athletic director said last night "if players want to talk, that's their business," adding that it is athletic department policy not to release information regarding any disciplinary action that is taken. "I've met with the hockey team, the players involved, and again with the team captains," Canham said. "There were sanctions taken and there could be more. This is a serious matter and hazing in any form will not be tolerated by this university. Thankfully, no one was injured in this incident. It will not happen again, I can assure everyone of that." Canham said the team captains issued a written apology to the Univer- sity, the athletic departnment, and the players who were hazed. "It's obvious they are fully aware of the seriousness of their grave mistake," he added. UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Harold Shapiro, who early yesterday said the incident was not serious because no one was seriously hurt, later said that the "University community is shocked at this deplorable disregard for the per- sonal safety and well-being of a fellow student. The University finds the behavior totally reprehensiible." He said it was unfortunate but under- standable that the victim has decided not to prosecute those who were responsible for the act. "Those who committed this act should be made to bear the full consequences of their ac- tions," he added. According to Markley Resident Ad- viser Steve Krahnke, the player was discovered lying on the doorstep of the residence hall at about 11:30 p.m. Sun- day night. The player was stark naked, shaved from the neck down, and shivering uncontrollably, Krahnke said. EARLIER IN THE evening of the hazing, the resident adviser said, the player had been left naked outside in the freezing weather for more than one hour. The player, whose name is being withheld by the Daily, was taken from his room earlier in the evening and brought to a player's house off-campus. Earlier this week, Krahnke said, the player had receivead telephone calls from teammates warning him that "the wolves are coming." Fifteen team members greeted the player upon his arrival at the off- campus house, Krahnke continued. The freshman and several other players who had made the squad the week before were then forced to strip and drink assorted liquors until they became sick, he said. THE TEAM MEMBERS took the player, who Krahnke said never drinks, outside "so he wouldn't vomit in the house.' He was left lying there on a sheet covered with shaving cream, jam, broken eggs, and after shave See CANHAM, Page 2 Hazing of freshmen hockey players: An annual event By DREW SHARP Hazing. The use of humiliation and physical abuse in the ritual of initiation of a person into an organization. It has been used by some fraternities in the past as a test of character and strength and also by a few athletic teams as a form of "welcoming" newcomers to the team. It is intended, say those who do the assaulting, to be a playful prank. On Sunday, about 15 Michigan hockey players initiated a new team member as part of an annual freshman hazing ritual. The freshman was stripped bare, shaved completely, smeared with jelly, and left exposed in freezing weather in front of Mary Markley Hall. SOME RESIDENTS of the dorm, spent more than an hour trying to raise the player's temperature. He had been forced to drink large amounts of gin, vodka, and beer. Such hazing is, not surprisingly, a harrowing experience. A former Michigan hockey player who was the victim of hazing last year described his experience yesterday. "Another guy and myself were eating at a McDonald's one night last year when we noticed this car circling around the building. We didn't pay much attention to it until we left the place," the player, who asked to remain unidentified, said. WHEN THE TWO left the restaurant, that same car stopped in front of them and three men jumped out and dragged. them into the vehicle. "They said that they were taking us to this guy's house," the player con- tinued. "When we got to the house, it was obvious that we were at their mer- cy. I mean what can you do when the situation is ?5 guys against two?" The freshmen were forced to drink a mixture which included chili, tabasco sauce, and Ex-Lax. The drink is called "Cubby Punch" and is meant to turn "cubs" into "wolves." What they couldn't finish was poured over their heads. Next, they were given the shaving treatment, in which all body hair was sheared. See HAZING, Page 2 MSA hot over Union reps By DAVID MEYER In the midst of a flurry of controversy over the criteria used to decide student ap- pointments to a group which provides input into the renovation of the Michigan Union, members of the Michigan Student Assembly last night attempted to rescind the appointments in question. The controversy surroun- ding the appointments is rooted in allegations made by some of the students denied nominations and by some MSA members that the nominations were decided on the basis of applicants' political attitudes-not qualifications. THE MOTION to rescind the appointments came after more than a week of con- troversy and internal political struggle within MSA. Supporters of the ap- pointments, however, suc- ceeded last night in securing the withdrawal of the Appointment decisions stir controversy rescission motion after raising questions over' a parliamentary rule restric- ting such motions. The appointments are likely to be the subject of in- tense MSA political in- fighting until a decision on the parliamentary question can be reached and the mat- ter is once again brought to the Assembly floor. SOME OF the students who have opposed the ap- pointments say the Per- manent Interviewing Com- mittee, the body within MSA that made the nominations and pushedmfor their ap- proval, was more concerned with gaining full student con- trol of the Union than with examining the true qualifications of the ap- plicants. Thus, the students allege, some students with greater qualifications for the positions were bypassed in an effort to stack the Union committee with members who were more committed to demanding full student control. Although PIC members deny the nominations were based on politics, one ap- plicant who was not nominated, Jeff Lebow, says he was not considered because he has worked with the University ad- ministration in the past and because he did not support PIC's demand for student control. LEBOW further alleged that the students appointed to the Union committee were too concerned with ac- cumulating student power and had forgotten the real issue at stake: creating a more effective Union to meet student needs. All other applicants con- tacted who were denied nominations agreed with Lebow that the interviewing process was focused on political attitudes and that the PIC members seemed to have already made up their minds on the nominations. One applicant, Tom Easthope Jr., did not receive an interview because of a misunderstanding in com- munications. David Trott, MSA vice- president for personnel and See MSA, Page 2 TOD AY Strange Solution HERE HAS BEEN a nagging problem at the Stanford University medical school lately, but doctors there think they've found a solution. For years, medical students had been paid $25 to donate sperm for artificial:insemination procedures. Un- fortunately, the sperm counts ended up consistently low, and many were unusable. "This all has to do with stress," Dr. Maynard Guderian mused from the med school. After weeks of pondering alternatives, a distinct group was found NOON woman is doing her part for the sake of humanity. She is identified only as Kathleen, and she has agreed to act as a surrogate mother and bear a child for a California man who has "wanted a family for a long time" but has rejected adoption or marriage. She is now at a genetic laboratory in Omaha, Neb. where she is to be artificially inseminated with sperm from Joseph Orbi, 30, of La Verne, Calif. Orbi has agreed to pay up to $10,000 in medical expenses, but Kathleen will receive no compensation for carrying and bearing the child. "I'm very happy the way I am right now," Orbi said. "If you get married just for the sake of having a child, then you're in trouble." Kathleen said that Mary McEachern-then a 16-year-old unwed mother-gave birth to a little girl she called Eleanor at a church home in Bay City. Mary's father insisted the child be put up for adoption, and young Mary never saw her baby again. Since then, both mother and daughter have been trying to find each other. The big break came in July, when Beverly (her adopted name) apd Mary made contact through a relative in Sterling. The two spoke to each other by telephone, and the big reunion was held last Sunday in Orlando, Fla. "I inherited a great big family," Mary said. "It's un- believable. It just seems like she's been lost and after all thse verc romn p nmv 1 1, said the discovery won't help anyone's sex life, but it may cure warts because of its blistering agent. Contrary to legend, the researchers said, spanish fly, an extract from the wings of beetles, has no sexual effect-and is poisonous. James Petersen, author of the "Playboy Adviser" column in Playboy Magazine, said he gets 70 letters per month inquiring about the sensual aspects of spanish fly. Referring to its alleged boost for sexual desire, Petersen said, "It's a folk tale ... it's one of those stories that has been going around for centuries and has never been verified." [ a 1' 11 i I