Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom V' Ali ian :4IaiI i MURKY Skies will be mostly cloudy with a high temperature in the upper 50s. I " 1 Vol. XCI, No. 23 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 23, 1980 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Hazed player, star center quit hockey team By LORENZO BENET "Jamie's gotten very far behind in The freshman hockey player who his studies with all the publicity," ex- was the focus of last week's hazing in- plained Giordano. "He can come back cident and Michigan's high-scoring to the team when he's all caught up with center Bruno Baseotto have both left his studies. He has two midterms this the team in the wake of publicity week." surrounding the initiations. However, sources close to the team The freshman player, J.T. Todd, said said Todd will not return this season. yesterday he quit the team in order to On the night of October 12, Todd was spend more time on his studies in the given large quantities of alcohol in a School of Engineering. player's house off campus in what had "HOCKEY TAKES UP too much become an annual ritural of initiation of times" Todd said. "I'm leaving strictly first year players. He allegedly was for academic reasons." stripped, shaved, covered with jam, Baseotto, who tied for second among eggs, cologne, and left outside in near Wolverine scorers last season, returned freezing weather. to his home in Calgary, Alberta Monday THE HOCKEY TEAM released a and immediately joined the Calgary statement last week that said facts Wranglers of the Western Junior surrounding the incident were "grossly League. Baseotto's mother said he quit distorted." The statement included the .. . opts for pros the team to "play semi-pro hockey" signatures of Todd and the four other - and was upset over the "negative and freshmen who were hazed. will be suspended from further play. unfair" publicity surrounding the THREE PLAYERS involved in the Canham said last night he was aware hazing indicent. hazing, captain Tim Manning, alter- that Todd had left the team for Baseotto, who was practicing with nate captain John Blum, and senior academic reasons, but refused to com- the Calgary team last night, could not left-wing Jeff Mars, were suspended by ment further on the matter. be reached for comment. . University Athletic Director Don BASEOTTO, A sophomore at the ASSISTANT HOCKEY coach John Canham from the team's opening series University, was the leading scorer Giordano, who is supervising the team last weekend against Bowling Green among returning Wolverine players. A while head coach Wilf Martin State University. In addition, the center with a keen eye for the net, he recooperates from stomach ailments, athletic director banned players from scored 31 goals last season, most of confirmed that Todd and Baseotto left local bars for the season and said if any them from short range, and tallied 45 the team. player violates the bar restrictions, he See HOCKEY, Page 9 A WIDE SELECTION of costumes will be available 'at the annual Halloween costume sale today and tomorrow in the Frieze Building. Money raised will help buy costume shop equipment for the Theatre Department. Used costum'-es beco me irick- or reat garb, By ANNETTE STARON A nickel won't buy much anymore, but today and tomor-, row it could purchase a variety of items ranging from a pair of shoes-to raggy shirts. The annual Halloween costume sale, hosted by, the University Theatre Program, will offer "lots of good things," said Zelma Weisfeld, a Theatre and Drama professor. "Good things" includes velvet jackets, Chinese clothing, silk dresser, and even some medieval costumes. PRICES FOR THE goodies range from five cents to $50. Items from recent department productions are also on sale, including some costumes that Weisfeld designed. "The best things go very, very early," cautioned Donald Hart, a graduate student in directing, "but they do save some good things and bring them out later." "HATS GO FAST and so do capes, masks, and wigs," Weisfeld added. Complete costumes are also for sale, but Weisfeld said often "people like to make up their own costumes," and come to the sale for ideas. Money raised from the sale'will help buy costume shop equipment. Last year's proceeds helped pay costuming costs for the department's production of The Lion and the Jewel, and also bought dressmaker forms for the shop. "They are necessities (for the shop) but not necessities you can budget into a show," Weisfeld explained The racks of costumes and boxes of doodads will line the hallway near room 1528 in the Frieze Building, between 9 a.m. and5np.m. today andtmrnorrow. *Pursell, O'Reilly agree Tisch cut is dangerous By SUE INGLIS Kathleen O'Reilly and Carl Pursell may be at odds on many political issues, but the two contenders for the Second Congressional District seat agree that one issue is important enough to override partisan con- siderations. They both agree that passage of Proposal D, the Tisch tax cut amen- dment, would be a disaster for the con- stituents and for the Universtiy in general. gCAMPUS IGNORANCE about the proposed amendment is "ironic con- sidering the devastating impact" its passage would have, on University students, Democratic challenger O'Reilly said at a press conference in the Michigan Union yesterday. "I don't know of any student who is looking forward to doubling or tripling of tuition," O'Reilly said. Although he could not be at the anti- Tisch press conference because of a previous engagement, Pursell also has strongly expressed his opposition to the plan that would cut property taxes in half while requiring the state to reim- burse local governments for lost revenue. O'REILLY SAID she feels a strong bi-partisan effort is necessary to defeat the Tisch amendment under which she said funding for higher education would be cut by 60 percent leaving only enough money to fund Michigan State University, Wayne State University, and the University of Michigan at half of the present levels, and no state money at all for the other state colleges and universities. Iran says redyto meet hostage release terms From AP and UPI Iranian leaders said yesterday that the United States appears ready to meet their conditions for release of the 52 hostages, and the Americans could be freed as early as next Monday, reports from Tehran said. The indications of progress from Tehran were not confirmed by U.S. of- ficials in Washington, who reacted skeptically to some aspects of the reports. State Department spokesman John Trattner repeatedly refused to answer reporters' questions about whether the United States considered itself to have met the four conditions laid down by Khomeini. Trattner said, however, that the at- mosphere of optimism about a resolution of the hostage crisis "arises from facts which are simply, not in view." Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai reportedly told a news conference in Tehran the Carter administration seems prepared to comply with the Iranian demands. Rajai was reported to have told reporters the United States appears ready to accept four conditions-set down by Iranian leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini-for the hostages' freedom: See HOSTAGE, Page 9 O'Reilly ... Proposal D disastrous Tisch claims rivals misusing public funds LANSING (UPI)-Tax cut crusader Robert Tisch said yesterday he is con- templating court action to halt alleged use of public funds in the campaign against his tax cut amendment. At the same time, a coalition of feminist organizations charged Proposal D would destroy the progress women have made in Michigan, while the Michigan Council of Churches an- nounced its opposition to all three tax plans. Tisch last week accused Wayne State. University of using public funds to fight his amendment through press releases and other means and asked Attorney General Frank Kelley and Secretary of State Richard Austin to take action against the school. NEITHER OFFICE has yet respon- ded. In addition, Tisch supporters have charged state officials use government cars to travel to and from rallies where they speak out against the measure. Milliken has insisted it is ap- See TISCH, Page 2 Fans flock AP Photo Phillies fans jam 20 blocks of Broad Street in downtown Philadelphia yesterday morning greeting the 1980 World Champion Philadelphia Phillies. The Phillies were on parade after defeating the Kansas City Royals, 4-1, Tuesday night to win the 1980 World Series in six games. TOD AY Net a Zuga CAN'T SEE the ball," said the man wearing, red long underwear, and a white and blue, mask after he sliced the empty air with his tennis racquet. Excercising on the Palmer Field tennis courts, the Masked Zuga commented on the state of the world and Mosher-Jordan. "With the (drinking) age at 21." he said, taking a backhanded swat at the tennis -V High heels, low weight Where does one go to find sardines in tomato sauce, high- heeled shoes, brassieres, briefcases, and weight-reducing powder? To the Afghan refugee camps in Pakistan, of cour- se. Thousands of Afghanians who fled their homeland when the Soviet Union moved in troops to support the Marxist ,government threatened by rebel attacks, and western nations answered the emergency call for supplies in some odd ways. Sixteen thousand cans of weight-loss powder' came from World Medical Relief, Inc., of Detroit. "This sort of stuff won't even sell on the black market," said an the case of Galileo Galilea, the sixteenth century scientist condemned for heresy by the Roman Catholic Church. Ac- cording to Archbishop Paul Poupard, acting president of the Vatican Secretariat for Non-Believers, the action is being taken on the "precise wish" of Pope John Paul II. Last year the pope said the scientist had been wrongly con- demned for maintaining that the earth was not the center of the universe. Galileo believed the sun of this solar system to be the center of the universe, an idea which landed him in prison and under house arrest. Until now, the Vatican has not considered lifting the sanctions against the long-dead atrnnnmer Tn an addres to 900 nrelites at the world of his nonrepresentational works, "My drawings are as rare as exotic postage stamps. I'm a Sunday painter who's offering his work to the public, It's great to take a venture with absolutely no risk." So it goes. Hopefully the sirens of Titan will not drag him to the rocks. Colornk y world . Oh, we think you'll never see a poem as lovely as a tree in Michigan this week. The fall color deserves a few oohs and ahhs in Ann Arbor, Stoney Creek, and Holly. The Automobile Club of Michigan also reports the trees are put- ;nf a 0nn*n 1 tbni -,hcn,,b . cminf a i ne frn i-,,alrnn t o I I I I