y% Page 8-Wednesday, December 3, 1980-The Michigan Daily Alan Fanger Solution to Duran dilemma.. . . .. a change in purse structure? If I were a fight promoter, I might be feeling a bit leery of the profession after the gaffe that took place in the eighth round of last Tuesday's World Boxing Association welterweight championship bout in New Orleans. For the first time in the memories of most boxing fans, a fighter. appeared to quit and un- ceremoniously concede defeat to his opponent. Roberto Duran, over the course of one week, has become one of the most despised personalities on the international sports scene. Sugar Ray Leonard now holds what many observers are referring to as a "tainted" championship. SOME ARE saying Duran was paid off to leave the Superdome ring early. Others, -most notably those in his training entourage, maintain that the Panamanian ate too much in the hours leading up to the fight, and suffered ,severe stomach pains shortly after the opening bell sounded. Still others believe Duran fled the country to escape law en- forcement officials, who were allegedly prepared to arrest him' for tax evasion If it isn't silly, I'm going to assume here that Duran quit because he knew he couldn't fight Leonard as long as the challenger was controlling the strategic aspect of the fight. That is the reason Duran gave to reporters at a press conference last Friday. Now, for the question that has been asked so of- ten in the past week: What can be done to satisfy fans and promoters who fume incessantly when a fighter heads for the showers before the "appoin- ted" time? THE ANSWER: You can't prevent him from hanging up his gloves in frustration, but you can make it costly for him to do so. I refuse to challenge Duran's right to quit and surrender his crown to Leonard in the eighth round of that fight. And I will never challenge the right of any fighter to have a bout stopped in a similar situation. As sports fans, we tend to see the events that take place on the diamond, field, court, rink, or ring in black and white terms. We resolutely cling to the belief that an athlete who possesses superior mental and physical stamina is a 'wimp" if he cannot give 100 percent effort every time he takes center stage. ONE SIMPLY cannot judge, with any reasonable authority, the effort being expended by Duran during the early rounds of the fight. Only Duran knows that fact. While the champion wasn't battered around by Leonard, Duran-a punishing fighter who nor- mally controls the tempo of every bout in whichhe is a combatant-may very well have suffered psychological torment as he sensed that he was being continually outfoxed between the ropes. Mental anguish, like its physical counterpart, ten- ds to wear down human beings, and particularly athletes. Put yourself in Duran's position. If you were becoming a mental vegetable in the ring-if your concentration and intensity had deteriorated to the point where you felt that you were'!destined to be beaten-then calling it quits then and there eliminated the possibility of incurring severe in- jury and torture from your opponent. BOXING DEMANDS that the individual, who is without teammates to assist him in his pursuit, carry on with 100 percent intensity. If a fighter simply cannot perform under this tremendous burden, he needs to avail himself of a safe outlet of escape. Duran did just that, and while boxing suf- fers in the wake of his puzzling behavior, perhaps we can now form some ground rules for dealing with early departures like Duran's. First of all, through some means, an ad- judicating body must be established to determine the validity of specific instances of ring conduct. In Duran's case, he would have to show he had been worn down, in some way, by Leonard, to the point where he could not continue to fight. While granting refunds to fight patrons is not feasible (considering the myriad of guarantees that are established beforehand), perhaps it is time that the dollar value of ringside seats, closed circuit television rights, and subsequently, purses, be limited. Upon the recognition that a fighter is not always a sure bet to go 15 rounds without making a bee-line for the exit, both fans and promoters should realize that prize fights are a high-risk investment. A CHANGE in the purse structure, while not a surefire incentive to keep weary fighters in the ring, offers some encouragement. Rather than dividing up the gate according to the pre-fight stature of the boxers relative to one another, the winner of the specific bout would receive a sub- stantially larger share of the gate than the loser. Finally, an all-embracing federal boxing com- mission should be formed to replace existing state commissions. Current fight regulations vary significantly across states, and allow promoters to locate fights in states that have 'more relaxed statutes. South Carolina denies foul play COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP)-South talked with the coa Carolina football Coach Jim Carlen deals with attorne said yesterday that he has not violated the season. any NCAA rules and is not an agent for "I have said th Heisman Trophy winner George pletely trust him Rogers or anyone else. said. "I feel that I In a formal statement released vice on any proble through the university, Carlen said he Hale McMenam "has a responsibility to both my forcement divisio players and to the university that our telephone intervie student-athletes not become involved whether the organ in dealings that could affect their the matter. eligibility.". The NCAA co "Annually I advise my senior players ineligible for Sou in order to protect themselves that any Bowl game again contact by agents, attorneys, etc., be if it finds its rulesh channeled through me." Rogers, who led the nation in rushing from the New York downtown Athletic. AP Club Monday. The New York Daily News reported College B in Tuesday's editions that Rogers had 1. DePaul (38) said his coach offered to negotiate a 2. Kentucky (15) contract with a pro football team for 3. UCLA (4) him. The paper said such an agreement 4. Maryland (1) may be in violation of NCAA rules. 5. Indiana Earlier, Carlen said inl an interview 6. Oregon State (1) from his Columbia office that he had 7. Virginia (1) been acting as a buffer for Rogers. 8. Louisville , "I've always done this with my 9. Ohio State players," Carlen said. "I tell them 10. North Carolina during their junior years that if they 11. Arkansas need advice they can come to me. 12. Iowa, That's why I have the interview rule no 13. Notre Dame players can be contacted anytime after 14. Texas A&M 11 p.m. Monday without the coach's ap- 15. Louisiana State proval. It keeps the agents, civic 16. St. John's, N.Y. groups, the media, and advertising 17. Missouri people off the kids' backs." 18. Syracuse Rogers, in a formal statement 19. Brigham Young released with Carlen's, said he had 20. Georgetown, D. coach ach about not making eys or agents during hat I know I can com- (Carlen)," Rogers can go to him for ad- in of the NCAA's en- n refused to say in'a w from Mission, Kan. ization is looking into uld declare Roger uth Carolina's Gator st Pittsburgh Dec. 29 have been violated. STwenty Basketball 2-0 1-0 2-0 1-0 2-0 ) '- 2-0 0-1 1-0 3-0 2-1 2-0 0-1 1-0 2-1 2-0 2-1 1-0 ig 1-1 I.C. 1-2 1,171 1,002 941 890 861 805 789 724 719 501 450 388 302 264 202 190 107 1106 i-u AGREEMENT REACHED, TROOPS WITHDRAWN: S yria AMMAN, Jordan (AP)-Syria Jordan agreed on terms easing the e situation between the two coun yesterday and Syria immediatelyN drew some of its troops from the der. Jordanian officials, who declin be identified, said Syria withdrew gesture of good faith an unspec number of troops from the 50,8 ,Jordan ease tensions Survey finds U.S. teens favoring draft, againt ERA, abortion and ten- tries with- bor- ed to as a cified 00 it reportedly had deployed at the border. Jordan was reported earlier to have sent 30,000 troops to the border. THE OFFICIALS said the terms, proposed by Syria, were: * A written statement by Jordan saying it was not aiding the Moslem Brotherhood, a fanatical group engaged in anti-government activities in Syria. * Jordan's continued recognition of the Palestine Liberation Organization as the sole representative of the Palestinian people. The termns were relayed by Saudi Arabia's deputy premier, Prince Ab- dullah bin Abdel Aziz, who conferred with Jordan's King Hussein in Amman yesterday following two days of talks in Damascus with Syrian President Hafez Assad.' The officials said Hussein had no trouble accepting the terms because he had denied publicly Syrian allegations that he was supporting the Moslem Brotherhood. He also had never with- drawn his recognition of the PLO as the sole representative of the Palestinian people since he accepted it at the 1976 Arab summit in Rabat, they said. The observers saw Hussein's accep- tance as a goodwill gesture toward Syria. The recruiter for Sony Language Laboratory will interview interested applicants on December 5th for positions in teaching oral English in Japan. Make appointments at Career Planning and Placement Office. (3rd floor, SAB: Phone: 764-7460) SONY fI NUEL KIWEINIS CHIRISTMAS SILE Friday, Dec. 5, 1-8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 6, 9 a.m.-12 noon At Washington and First St. Ann Arbor Christmas decorations, toys and games will highlight the reusable merchandise on sale. Sponsored by Ann Arbor Kiwanis club to raise funds for community projects. City Parking Lot Adjacent. UNTIL NOW CHG3DSINGA COLLEERN WASEY~ There really wasn't much choice in Women's rings. But no more. Jostens now offer distinctively different fashion designs that will make your decision difficult. Like the Designer , Filigree and Petite Filigree shown here. All styles are available in 10K gold, 14K ' gold and Lustrium. See themĀ° Teenagers allegedly kill DePaul computer NEW YORK (UPI)-American teen-agers billed as tomorrow's leaders are against the equal rights amendment and legalized -abortion, favor mandatory draft registration and nuclear power, a survey repor- ted yesterday. In its 11th annual survey, the publishers of "Who's Who Among American High School Students," said they sent questionnaires to 50,000 students and received respon- ses from 24,000. THE POLL results mirrored the conservative swing in last month's elections. Eighty-eight percent said they believe "fighting inflation should be the government's top priority," and 86 percent want the upcoming Reagan administration's top foreign affairs priority to be "getting the hostages out of Iran." Seventy four percent said they would vote to limit property taxes. If property taxes were lowered in their communities, the majority would be willing to cut back on payments for welfare and public transportation. MORE THAN half said they felt civil disobedience is justified in defense of one's life and country, and 94 percent said they never used drugs, including marijuana. More than two-thirds said they believe in censorship of movies, television, books and magazines and 87 percent said they favor a traditional marriage. Eighty percent said they belong to an active religion, and 71 percent go to church regularly. THE STUDENTS answering the poll are among 340,000 listed in the latest edition of the "Who's Who Among American High School Students," no relation to Marquis' "Who's Who." Teen-agers get their biographies in the book on the strength of nominations from guidance coun- selors, principals, youth organizations and the publishing company-based on achievement in scholarship, contests and activities. The survey makes no claim to being scientific. It lists responses to a questionnaire designed to elicit opinions and knowledge of American government and business from 24,000 chosen high school juniors and seniors. CHICAGO (AP)-Two high school juniors are accused of shutting down a DePaul University computer by remote control for two days and then sending an electronic blackmail message threatening to do it again unless they were given a program worth about $580. "They did it because everyone said it couldn't be done," Douglas Ellis, an in- vestigator with the Chicago police financial crimes unit, :;aid yesterday. BRIAN CATLIN, 17, of Palatine, and a 16-year-old boy-both described by their principal as "B" students-are charged with theft of services, authorities said. Catlin is to appear Jan. 17 in misdemeanor court, and the juvenile, whose name was withheld by authorities, will appear Friday. "The way I understand it is that this type of thing is common," said Thomas Howard, principal of Fremd High School in suburban Palantine, where the youths allegedly used a teletype terminal to "talk" to the DePaul com- puter. "PEOPLE GO INTO company com- puters and stuff," he said. DePaul of- ficials said the students gained access to a "minicomputer" which was han- dling student payment records and professors' research but no records were destroyed. The school's main computer, which handles most of the university's business, was unaffected, they added. The shutdown during enrollment week from Sept'. 17 to Sept. 19 cost DePaul $22,252 in computer down-time, repairs and extra manpower, police said. Ellis said one of the youths built a computer terminal in his bedroom which they then programmed to gain access to the DePaul system. HOWARD SAID THE youths also gained unauthorized use of the DePaul computer from one of the high school's three teletype terminals. Those ter- minals are designed for students to use by, telephoning computers for science and math help, he said. Police became aware of the computer invasion on Sept. 29, when Glen Wilken, DePaul assistant. director of compute science, found a message on a terminal saying, "If you don't give us a mixed- assembly software program, we'll shut you down again." The school said the message was signed "system cruncher" and "Vladimir." THE PROGRAM REFERRED to in- the note apparently was a taped com- puter program which converts one computer language into another. Ellis said such "software" is worth from $500 to $680. Wilken notified police, who traced a telephone number the pirates left on the terminal. It led to a public bulletin board service for computer buffs. After reviewing reams of the ser- vice's printouts, police found a message' boasting that two high school students had shut down DePaul's system. Police contacted teachers in the area, and ac- cording to Ellis, they "knew right off the bat the couple of kids we had in mind." Ellis said the program devised by the students enabled them to enter three- digit random numbers into the DePaul minicomputer, searching for the com- bination of numbers to gain access to the system. University personnel said they have since changed the access codes to the computer. Mialmi policeman suspended for delay in fatal call 4 MIAMI (UPI)--A Miami police com- plaint officer who classified as routine an emergency call made by a 13-year- old girl minutes before she was raped and stabbed to death was relieved of duty yesterday while investigators reviewed a tape of the conversation. Glenn Metzler, the officer who han- dled the call on Dade County's 911 emergency number.Friday afternoon, was asked to explain his part in the in- cident to department heads. THERE IS A "good chance" Metzler could lose his job, said Clyde Burdick, commander at the Dade Emergency Communications Center. "She was so matter-of-fact and businesslike," Burdick said of the vic- tim, Rena Pollard. "Metzler should have asked more questions of the girl. He stereotyped the phone call. He forgot his basic training; every call is different. "He just painted the situation with the same brush as all the others," he said. RENA DIALED THE emergency number and quietly told Metzler someone was trying to break into her house. He asked her the standard questions-her name, address and telephone number-and assured her, "I'll send the police over." But Metzler, an 18-year police veteran, classified her call as a routine "34," a catch-all number for disturban- ces in which no one's life is in imminent danger. The police didn't arrive until 40 minutes later, when her mother called and reported her daughter had been raped and stabbed., "It was a heinous act," a medical examiner's investigator said. "She died of asphyxiation due to strangulation and multiple stab wounds. Also con- tributing to her death was a cranial in- jury due to blunt trauma." POLICE WERE LOOKING for a 15- year-old neighborhood boy who allegedly broke into the house earlier that day and fled after being confronted by the girl's mother in Rena's bedroom, holding a knife. COLONIAL PIPELINE COMPANY ATLANTA, GEORGIA JOB OPPORTUNITIES HYDRAULICS ANALYSIS LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS A chance to study and live in London A wide rane of subiects and courses is available in Central London for