Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom cl ble £ ir lb ~IaII Headache Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and a high near 60. 1Vol. XCIV-No. 49 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, November 2, 1983 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages Flounders: Since 1926, a sport without rules ping up to the 1o By JERRY ALIOTTA flights above t Three times a week for the past 57 then back up to years, several University professors, lot of time, Flo graduates, and Ann Arbor townsmen And wearing have been meeting at the IM Building player down w pool, during the half-hour reserved for opponent. "Th them, to play their version of water to carry aroun polo. Naked. UNIVERSIT They are the Flounders, a club for- Eastern Michig med in 1926 by Michigan swimming Kurt Lauckner coach Matt Mann who play a game ponent is swim which combines Big Time Wrestling has a suit on, h and water polo. "It's easier FLOUNDERS PLAY in the raw for wears a suit,"] convenience and efficiency. "It isn't But nudity c that we set out to be a bunch of a guy by somet nudists," said Ralph Loomis, to, you're goin humanities professor and Flounder sin- ces," Lauckne ce 1959. MOST FLOU With only half an hour to play, run- pay attention t University to begin S. African divestment By THOMAS MILLER After seven months of review, the investment office soon will begin divesting the University's stock in companies doing business in racially-segregated South Africa, a top University official said yesterday. At a meeting of his faculty and student advisory committee, James Brinkerhoff, vice president and chief financial officer, said the University will begin this month to make the first major sales of stock, an action ordered by the regents in April. ONLY A SMALL portion of the estimated $54 million of University stock invested in companies with South African operations has been sold so far. Those shares were sold for strictly financial reasons during the summer, University officials have said. Brinkerhoff said the tentative schedule calls for $7 million to $8 million worth ot stock to be sold in each of the next six to seven months. He said he is waiting on reports from the University's investment managers on reinvestment possibilities. "I will not allow the sale of any stock until I know what the reinvestment plans are," Brinkerhoff told the committee. BRINKERHOFF attributed the delay in selling the University's holdings to the problem of singling out which firms are headquartered in Michigan or have a "substantial" number of employees in the state - which exempts them from divestment, according to the regents' action. "We had a rought time getting the employment in- formation from the Michigan Employment Security Commission," Brinkerhoff said. But he added that "the regents' resolution set no timetable for divest- ment." Three companies involved in South Africa in the University's portfolio are headquartered in Michigan - Ford Motor Co., General Motors Corp., and Dow Chemical Co. BRINKERHOFF said he has identified four other firms - General Electric Co., International Business Machines Corp., E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., and Minnesota, Mining, and Manufacturing Co. (3M) - as being "major employers" in the state. He said he defined a major employer as a company with 500 or more employees in Michigan. He said only a portion of the University's stocks in these companies would be sold, based on financial fac- tors. At the same meeting, Brinkerhoff urged the commit- tee to examine the University's policy on corporate proxy votes. The University's present policy of always voting with management on issues of social respon- sibility has been criticized recently by editorial colum- ns in the Daily and by some University faculty mem- bers. Brinkerhoff told the committee that one option they might consider would be for the University to abstain from voting on any social issues. "There is an argument for the University to abstain from these votes. In terms of the social responsibility issues, the University might be better off to leave those issues open," he said. ockerroom (located two he pool) to change and rechange would waste a unders say. a suit can also slow a vhen trying to escape an at's one more wet thing d," Loomis said. TY GRADUATE and gan University professor explained that if an op- nming ahead of him and e'll be easy to catch. to grab onto a guy if he he said. an be risky. "If you grab thing he doesn't want you ag to pay the consequen- r said. UNDERS say they don't o the nudity. "What's the difference between walking around the lockerroom naked or taking showers together and not wearing a suit," said Flounder Bill Burgard, a 1978 art school graduate. Since Flounders lack uniforms, one team wears white water polo skullcaps, making the necessary team distinction of "hats" and "skins." The game is played diagonally across the width of the pool with a water polo ball. To score a goal, players slam the ball into the pool gutter between designated yard markings. BUT FLOUNDERS don't keep score. In fact, Flounders don't have any fixed rules except "You can't hold a married man under water for more than five minutes," Loomis said. See PROFS, Page 3 Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER University professors flounder around at the IM pool Monday. __ _ __ _ 1 i.. House votes to in limit stay Grenada From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The House called on President Reagan yesterday to withdraw troops from Grenada within 60 days as provided in the War Powers Act which Congress passed during the Vietnam era to prevent lengthy, undeclared wars. The vote was 403-23. The Sente approved identical wording last Friday by a 64-20 margin, but the unrelated measure it was attached to was killed. That sets up another Senate vote, possibly this week, specifically on the War Powers issue. A SPOKESMAN said the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee would move quickly on the resolution and send it to the floor for a new vote. As the fighting tailed off in Grenada, the invasion became an issue of harsh partisan dispute yesterday with Republican leaders rallying around the president and House Speaker Thomas O'Neill Jr. questioning whether -Reagan read the available intelligence about the island. Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee said the first invasion of Grenada came with the arrival of Cuban troops. "In my view, Fidel Castro invaded Grenada," Baker said. "And there were upwards of 1,000 Cuban troops there and nobody should think that they were just construction workers. ADMINISTRATION officials said at one time there were more than 1,000 Cubans on the island, but later revised that downward to perhaps no more than 784 Castro acknowledged were there. Baker and other GOP Senators and House members were briefed at the White House on the situation in Grenada by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and Gen. John Vessey, chairman of the military Joint Chiefs of Staff. A special fact-finding group of House members will travel to Grenada on Friday to look into the intelligence available to U.S., forces-before the invasion. AND THEN, O'Neill said of Reagan, "I often wonder if he reads the intelligence reports." O'Neill said earlier this week he believes Reagan has been looking for a reason for two years to invade Grenada. He told repor- ters yesterday he was "worried about Reagan's macho attitude" and what he termed a tendency to favor "gunboat diplomacy." "O'Neill has said the invasion was a violation of international law unless it was specifically to rescue threatened Americans and that he believes this was a secon- dary concern of the ad- ministration. A NEW WAR Powers vote is required in the Senate because of the defeat Monday night of a debt ceiling bill to which the 60-day withdrawal requirement was at- tached. Under the War Powers Act, U.S. troops must be pulled out of combat situation within 60 days unless Congress provides specific authority for a longer stay. See U.S. TROOPS, Page 2 Carried away AP Photo A screaming protester is dragged away yesterday outside Greenham Common air base near London. After the protest, Britain's defense secretary. Michael Heseltine, said that if the protesters continue to illegally break into the base, the guards could be forced to shoot them. See story page 3. House approves WASHINGTON (AP) - The hotly debated MX 175, an effort missile program overcame another challenge Force from en yesterday as the House voted 217-208 to approve for B-1B bomb( $2.1 billion to produce the first 21 of the intercon- It was anothi tinental nuclear weapons. and once-canc After an hour-long debate in which MX ad- scale. vocates said the Reagan administration has IN THE Mx made sincere efforts in arms control and op- Tenn.), a lea ponents remained deeply skeptical, members have been key defeated an amendment by Rep. Joseph Addab- administration bo (D-N.Y.) that would have stripped the the White H production money from a $247 billion defense posture in retu spending bill. "The presid THE VOTE was the closest call that the this unprecedi program has had this year in the House. Mem- must live up to bers had approved production by a 13-vote But opponen margin in a military authorization bill in July giant, 10-warh and had freed impounded money for the project nuclear balan( by 53 votes in April. could not affor Earlier in the afternoon, the administration 100 MX "Peaci chalked up another major gain in its strategic ADDABBO modernization program by turning aside, 247- advance-procu $2.1 billionforMX by Addabbo to prevent the Air ntering into multi-year contracts ers. er indication that the long-debated eled program will continue at full X debate, Rep. Albert Gore, (D- der of moderate Democrats who players in negotiations with the n, ticked off 15 concessions he said ouse made in its arms-control rn for support for the MX. ent so far has lived up to his end of ented bargain, and the Congress its end," Gore said. nts reiterated their view that the ead missiles are dangerous to the ce and that the nation's treasury d the ultimate $27.5 billion cost for ekeepers." wanted to strip $438.7 million in urement items for the B-1 from the bill and thus prevent the Air Force from being able to commit itself to bomber purchases several years in advance. Addabbo, chairman of the House defense appropriations subcommittee, contended that the B-1B was not ready for ad- vance procurement because the first plane will not fly until next October and operational testing will not be completed until after that. By approving multi-year spending, he argued, "Congress will be locked into this program and will lose fiscal control" over it. But Rep. Jack Edwards (R-Ala.), and other advocates replied that a Reagan administration pledge to hold the total cost of the 100-plane B-B program to $20.5 billion in 1981 dollars was con- tingent on approval of the multi-year feature. "If you give them that excuse to get out from under that blanket, I can't tell you how much the B-1 would cost," Edwards said. The bill contains nearly $6.2 billion for the B-lB program in the fiscal year that began Oct. 1, in- cluding $3.76 billion to build 10 of the planes. Addabbo ... tried to halt funds TODAY Sigh of relief ARKLEY RESIDENTS breathed a sigh of relief yesterday - the dorm is still intact and all who reside there are still alive. According to the in- famous "Resident Hall Rumor," which has been cir- culating on campus for the past few days, noted astrologist Jeanne Dixon predicted in her column in the National Enquirer (or was it the Star?) that on Halloween 55 people .....la .. 1:1..1 « . 0-T...aaa a. .e ..h~lln hnz - e a Mra saying, "We survived." At press time, there was no eviden- ce that any Big Ten buildings had been leveled or that students had succumbed as the astrologer allegedly predic- ted. Q j A JOGGER ON the Hawaiian island of Kauai says he found two bottles containing messages, one apparently thrown from a freighter 16 years ago and the other from a schnol in Janan. The message in one bottle. dated May 27. Cross country THE STUDENTS at Dallesport Elementary School in Oregon are running from Portland to Portland, which' might not seem like much of a run-except one Portland is in Oregon and the other is in Maine. And that's a distance of 3,150 miles. But to do it the 165 kids don't even have to leave the schoolyard. They do all their running during recess and at lunch. All the distances run are being kept track of and added up until the 3,150-mile goal is reached. Verlon Smith. the school's physical education instructor, Also on this date in history: *1953 - University sororities, fraternities and co-ops asked the city to legalize three-gallon milk delivery con- tainers, saying that the current five-gallon containers were too big to fit in refrigerators. * 1966 - Trays disappeared from dorm cafeterias as the first snow of the year blanketed Ann Arbor. * 1975 - 'Ann Arbor city council rejected a proposal to freeze city rents by a 7-4 vote. I I I