Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom cl be 41i 4 au 1 Iai1Q Woolen Snow flurries in the morning with a high of 17 degrees. Vol. XCIV-No. 88 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, January 17, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Students slide into trouble on trays By SUE BARTO On cafeteria trays, in kiddie swim- ming pools, or even bare-bottomed, University students love to brave the rolling hills and dodge jutting trees in one of the few campus refuges, Nichols Arboretum. E But this year, students upholding the University tradition of "traying in the Arb" are dodging more than just trees. LOCAL OFFICIALS are trying to clamp down on students' late-night revelry by increasing security to enforce the arboretum's 10 p.m. curfew. And students are putting up a fight. In an almost comical game of cops and robbers, campus security officials order students out of the Arb after it closes while students feign compliance by hiding behind trees until the officials leave. Then the fun starts again., "We know we're being criticized and laughed at," says Gil Jaeger, the University's caretaker for the ar- boretum. "But sometimes big parties - I mean three or four barrels of beer and a hundred people - get started and things get out of hand." WHILE STUDENTS say the sledding is harmless fun, Jaeger points out that it has led to serious injuries and caused severe damage to the plants and trees in the arboretum. In an accident several years ago, a University student slid off a trail and hit an electrical wire. The accident resulted in permanent paralysis, Jaeger says. About five years ago, a University law student hit a tree while sledding in the arboretum and was in a coma for 18 months before he died, according to Jaeger. BUT STUDENTS are determined not to let the risks - or the University - ruin their fun. "It's a joke," says LSA senior John Woldenberg. "There's no way they'll ever, ever stop traying. People just hide in the forest." Jaeger admits it is futile for campus security to chase students out of the ar- boretum and added that only city police have the authority to write citations. BUSINESS SCHOOL senior Cathi Young agrees that it is silly for security to try to keep people out. Although campus officials have asked her to leave the Arb, Young kept sledding and the officials never returned. "We all just laughed and kept on (traying)," Young says. Signs posted at the arboretum en- trances on Geddes Road and near Markley dormitory state that the ar- boretum is closed from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. and that coasting, skiing, or building fires are prohibited. Jaeger says the signs are posted so that he has something to fall back on if someone gets hurt and decides to sue. "It gives us teeth in the law, so that if we really want to enforce it we can." BUT SOME students said they weren't aware of the curfew, and others simply ignore the signs. "In four years of frequenting the arb, I've never seen a sign," said Wolden- berg. "Don't worry about that sign," adds Russ Hill, a Ypsilanti resident who of- ten cross-country skis in the Arb. "They set a curfew but they don't mean it," he said. THE ARBORETUM, jointly owned by the University and the city, stret- ches approximately 135 acres from the Huron River to Geddes Road and in- cludes rare plants, birds, and pic- turesque landscape. But several trees have been See SLEDDERS, Page 2 Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Fresh snow and hilly fields lull this student to the Arboretum for an afternoon of traying, or sledding with a cafeteria tray. But such escapades can lead to serious injuries, University officials say. 1' Nuclear free-zone proposal won' t see city ballot By TRACEY MILLER A legal technicality will keep a pro- posal to make Ann Arbor a nuclear-free zone off the city election ballot in April, City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw said yesterday. Although supporters of the nuclear- free zone collectea the 5,000 signatures necessary to place the motion on the ballot and submitted the signed petitions to city hall before the Jan. 3 deadline, Laidlaw announced last week that the signatures were invalid because they had not been notarized. MEMBERS OF the Michigan Allian- ce for Disarmament (MAD), which sponsored the proposal and collected 5,800 voter signatures supporting the measure, said they were never told of the requirement. According to MAD member Janis Michael, City Councilman Lowell Peterson (D-1st Ward) spoke to Laidlaw about the language of the proposal but was not told that signatures collected on petitions needed to be notarized. Notarization is required under the Michigan Home Rule Act. CITY CLERK Winifred Northcross discovered the error while checking a regulation written by Laidlaw concer- ning the elections. Michael insists that MAD never received a copy of Laidlaw's memo, and neither did any other citizens group contacted by MAD. Northcross also found that a proposed charter amendment dealing with weatherization of rental property, which was defeated in last year's elec- tion, also did not have the signatures notarized. Northcross said her office is still checking the signatures on the MAD proposal. "I have been advised by the city administrator to let the lack of notarization become a second point af- ter the signatures," she said. "It is strictly a legal matter now." LAIDLAW said the proposal will not go on the ballot, and said he has heard that many of the signatures are invalid See CITY, Page 2 Reagan push-es arms From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Reagan, The declaring that "1984 is a year of oppor- negotiati tunities for peace," challenged the and conv Soviet Union yesterday to revive response nuclear arms control talks. Fears of -medium war prompted by harsh Soviet rhetoric, equipped the president added, are "understan- Reaga dable but profoundly mistaken." military1 In an otherwise conciliatory speech, "stridert Reagan criticized Soviet violations of recently. arms control agreements and the "These Kremlin's handling of human rights speak of issues. But he stated that as a result of increase the military buildup of his first three presiden years in office, "we are safer now." dable, bu REAGAN'S advisers acknowledged beyond tf that the speech was intended to dispel out: Am impressions of the president as credible "Warlike" - a perception which could safer pla hurt in an election year. less dang The speech was given before an will und audience of top government officials question c and members of Congress and Reagan delivered by satellite in time for meeting European evening news broadcasts. George "The opportunity for progress in ar- Minister, ms control exists; the Soviet leaders Stockholm should take advantage of it," Reagan Reagan said. solutions THE SOVIET news media dismissed fered nev Reagan's speech as "a pseudo- summit peacable tirade." Andropov for Doily Photo by DAN HABIB Tribute About 250 march down city streets Sunday behind a banner reading "We Shall Overcome" to commemorate what would have been Martin Luther King's 55th birthday. See story, page 3. ProfS, candi~dates say. debate had little eff ect Etiks, Soviets walked out of ons aimed at limiting nuclear entional arms late last year in to NATO deployment of U.S. -range, -nuclear warhead- missiles in Western Europe. n said the United States' buildup may account for the rhetoric from the Kremlin harsh words have led some to heightened uncertainty and an d danger of conflict," the it said. "This is understan- ut profoundly mistaken. Look he words, and one fact stands aerica's deterrence is more and it is making the world a ce; safer because now there is ger that the Soviet leadership erestimate our strength or our resolve." n's speech set the stage for a between Secretary of State Shultz and Soviet Foreign Andrei Gromyko tomorrow in M. n, however, proposed no new to the stalemate. He neither of- w concessions nor called for a with Soviet President Yuri v to ease tensions. By NEIL CHASE with wire reports Sunday's debate between the eight men vying for the Democratic presidential nomination could have had a significant impact on the campaigns, but the candidates and some University professors agree that the marathon at Dar- tmouth College did little to change the race. Frontrunner Walter Mondale, who had nothing to gain and everything to lose in the three-hour program, may have lost some of his attractiveness but was not severely hurt, said political science Prof. Gregory Markus. The former Vice President was the focus of a great deal of criticism from the seven candidates who are chasing him, and Markus said Sens. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina and Alan Cranston of California gained some necessary exposure in the process. Sen. Gary Hart said the debate also helped his long-shot candidacy because "people now know who I am." Rev. Jesse Jackson needed to show that he was a serious contender, and Markus said the sole black candidate was successful. "Jesse Jackson came off quite well and may have been the big winner of the debate," Markus said. "He was articulate in his responses and came off as a respectable kind of can- didate." Jackson, the only presidential hopeful to say he would definitely select a woman as his vice presidential candidate, said the program at Dartmouth.College "did not help to in- struct the people," and University Prof. Bunyon Bryant said viewers "never got any in-depth understanding of the issues and where people stood." Bryant, who leads a course on political strategies, said the structure of the debates and the similarity of most of the can- didates' positions made the discussion less effective. Political science department chairman John Kingdon said the debates probably were hindered by the small number of viewers who actually watched the whole program. The total number of people who watched the debate was not im- mediately known, but an informal poll of some 30 people in the Fishbowl yesterday revealed that none of them had seen it. Several candidates, however, said the dialogue was an ef- fective outlet for their opinions. "It was probably the most thorough airing of positions of the candidates we have had yet," said former South Dakota Sen.:George 1V4cGovern. See DEBATE, Page 3 Two women attacked in weekend assaults By CAROLINE MULLER One woman was raped near the campus area and another was sexually assaulted in South Quad on Saturday night, Ann Arbor police reported yesterday. According to Sgt. Harold Tinsey both the two unrelated attacks oc- curred around midnight. He said no. arrests have been made in either case. IN THE RAPE incident, an 18-year- old West Quad resident was attacked in the driveway of a residence near the intersection of Washtenaw and South University Avenues. According to police reports, the See S. QUAD, Page 3 TODAY Bathroom ears mHE RESTROOMS are quieter now behind the South Dakota House of Representatives'chamber. They used to be much better than the water cooler or the old picket fense for picking up juicy tid bits of infnrmatinn hut tht's all hn changed A full wall was were plotting. Perhaps we've lost a valuable source of in- formation while gaining some privacy," she said. Male legislators were more garrulous than their female counter- parts, according to Rep. Debra Anderson of Sioux Falls. "It seems so quiet in there," she said after the wall went up. "I always liked it when you could hear what the men were talking about." Q Teacher Smurf and the Smurfettes JUNIOR HIGH school principal who pledged to reward students for academic excellence has made good by Thursday morning. Green, doing his part, turned his face, neck, and arms blue and donned white shorts, blue shirts, white tights, a flopply white nightcap, and white shoes that turned up at the toes. He also stuck on a blue extended nose and a long white beard. Green said that pre-test pep rally and his odd behavior helped motivate students to do better on the tests. Plus, he said, Cobb teachers advised students to relax and avoid careless mistakes when taking the state exam. magazine, saying, "We have discovered there is a very serious streak in those people who are generally considered dumb." " 1937 - University Health Service put a quarantine on the infirmary to keep the 19 influenze patients from spreading the bug. * 1933 - Fearing competition with the Junior Hop, the Student Council ordered all dancing at fraternity parties to stop at 10 p.m. the night of the hop. 0 On the inside. { E , II