Page 2--Wednesday, October 15, 1980--The Michigan Daily :::..........,.,.......,.. ....,.....,,...,,,:,,..: , ........ .............,...:>:,tx::: :: :.::8:i;?:::51}:rY:' k: Ssii},: i%: ?5: ::h' ' nt v;:' : . ft ?'xf: ; r .$.....Y... ., ...... : f. .. .. }, .. .. {.. .. r;.... .: .. {..: ":........ x ....... .. ....."? ." ... ........ .... ..... ... ... r.'}:.k}?:'ri"i4}r">:.;t... .} ..... {.. ?: -'}. ..:-" , a" .: i: OR ...... ....... f... :. ++.. : .. ... nf.:f'{: k": .. rn... .! R.. .. .. . i -.:" .."....... .. %"v: ":..: $".". .. .:r "n{S ::'"?rv .. .:'v ..n" .niv: r: ": f.": }":.n}......... ... .. r:.... .. v. r ?'. n.. ,.... ,...... :. !. ,.. ....... fv.. r:.....n .{..: ....f.. v,."xv.":{":?\"? }}: :"}y.:.......r rS}.. ,. .o-. .. .. : .. ...:.... .. .... r r .. .. r..r. ,. r .. .... ... ...... ...n.. .... .,........! .. .: r"....:.r..... f....... .. ... .. 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He said that although the applicants' "attitudes toward what we are trying to accomplish" was a con- sideration, the nominations were not decided on the basis of politics or the applicants' past affiliation with the University administration. "THIS BOARD has to be a cohesive bond. It can't be a group of fragmented people," Trott said. "We (PIC) just felt that there were other people that would serve the goals of the committee bet- ter." One applicant who was appointed, David Schaper, who has led the drive for student input into the Union renovation, disagreed with Trott that politics did not play a role in the nominations. "There was a political decision made," Schaper said. "The issue of student representation on the board is important, (and if you wish to serve on that board) then you should support a pro-student position." Lebow does not represent a pro- student position, Schaper contends. "Jeff Lebow speaks on behalf of the admninistration," Schaper said, adding that that was why Lebow was not con- sidered for a nomination to Union committee. Canham blasts hazing; says punishments levied (Continued from Page 1) lotion, the resident adviser said. "The jam and eggs were stolen from his room," he added. Three team members then loaded the player into the trunk of a gold Plymouth Duster, drove him around campus, and left him naked on the residence hall doorstep, Krahnke said. "The sides of his head had been shaved as well as his genital area," he said. "There were nicks all over his body. He was chattering so much we couldn't even put a thermometer in his mouth," Krahnke said. "HIS BODY WAS blue and he was very, very cold," the resident adviser continued. "His temperature didn't return to normal until three hours after we brought him in." Krahnke said the player refused to be taken to the hospital. "We were at a loss about what to do," he added. One of the residents on the player's floor notified two University housing security of- ficers and asked them to check the player's vital signs, Krahnke said. According to Housing Security Direc- tor David Foulkes, two housing security officers went to the victim's room, wrapped him in a dozen blankets, and placed him in a warm tub. "The player ,.made it clear to the housing officials that . he did not want to be taken to a hospital and was not going to prosecute the players involved," he said. One resident on the player's floor said the teammembers who brought him in told everyone present "not to worry about it." Krahnke said the team- members were not very concerned. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Iraq continues fierce attack BASRA, Iraq-Iraq yesterday rained artillery fire on Abadan, site of the Middle East's biggest oil refinery, and poured more soldiers and tanks into a ground attack that has driven to within three to five miles of the Iranian city. On the Iraqi bank of the Shatt-Al-Arab waterway, an Iraqi spokesperson said every one of the 152 oil storage tanks in Abadan had been hit since the was began. More artillery rounds smashed into them yesterday, and balls of fire erupted through the palls of thick black smoke rising from them. An Iraqi spokesperson said the fiercely burning fires were belching out so much smoke, fire, and poisonous fumes that it would be unsafe to send persons into the city. Jamaican candidate killed KINGSTON, Jamaica-A leading government candidate for parliament in the Oct. 30 elections was shot to death in a politically motivated gunfight, police and party officials said yesterday. The governing Peoples National Party and the opposition Jamaica Labor Party issued statements blaming each other for the killing of Roy McGann, parliamentary secretary in the ministry of security. A police spokesman said it appeared that McGann and a police officer who was his bodyguard died yesterday in "a political confrontation betweent members of the opposing parties." News of Mcann's death, which came on the morning of Nomination Day when all candidates are officially declared, raised fears of a resurgence of political violence on this 146-mile-long Caribbean island south of Cuba. Parochial school's action, ruled unconstitutional RICHMOND, Va.-A church-run school acted unconstitutionally when it expelled a white girl for her friendship with a black youth, a federal ap- peals court ruled yesterday. The decision by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a lower court ruling which held that the Marumsco Christian School in Woodbridge observed a legitimate religious doctrine that opposed interracial relation- ships," the appeals court said. "The district court was clearly erroneous in finding that Marumsco holds a bona fide religious belief concerning the prohibition of interracial relationships," the appeals court said. Egypt, Israel reopen talks WASHINGTON-After a five-month suspension, Egypt and Israel for- mally reopened negotiations yesterday on how to give more than one million Palestinian Arabs a larger voice in determining their future. As the talks resumed under U.S. auspices, Israel offered to give Palestinians living on the West Bank of the Jordan River and in Gaza a role in determining land policy in the occupied territories. Before talks opened, American mediators met with the Egyptian side to try to work out a formal Egyptian position. The original draft apparently reflected no substantive change in policy. 'DES daughters' can sue WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court yesterday opened the door for so-called "DES daughters" to recover substantial money damages from drug companies that made the cancer-inducing drug used to prevent miscarriages. The women contracted various types of cancer because their mothers took DES. The high court yesterday refused to hear an appeal by the drug com- panies from a California Supreme Court ruling that divided liability for the cancer among the various companies that made DES. Court okays broadcast of Abscam videotapes WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court yesterday cleared the way for television broadcast of the Abscam videotapes that led to the bribery convic- tion of former Rep. Michael Myers and his expulsion from Congress. . The court rejected arguments by the Pennsylvania Democrat and his thee co-defendants that airing the tapes would hurt their chances in ap- pealing the Aug. 30 convictions. The justices refused to stay an appeals court ruling that the public has a right to see the tapes, and that ABC, CBS, and NBC could obtain copies of them. Death toll in Algerian quake officially tops 3000 AL ASNAM, Algiers-Rescue workers sifting through rubble in this earthquake-damaged city found 1,408 moregbodies, bringing the death toll to over 3,000, a police spokesperson said yesterday. A few people were found alive. The police spokesperson said "thousands" of victims were believed still buried under the ruins of Al Asnam and many smaller towns and villages in a radius of 30 miles of the city, four days after a killer earthquake devastated the area. 9 A p a 0y1r 90510 x\0k? nTe Airbigwn 1mai1u Volume XCI, No. 36 Wednesday, October 15, 1980 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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