Students too busy to learn See Weekend Magazine Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom Cl I E LIE 43UU 1 Iai1 Better Mostly sunny with a high of about 30 degrees. Vol. XCIV-No. 119 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, March 2, 1984 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages Trpley, 'M'bury Badgers, *84-75 By PAUL HELGREN Instead of playing over their heads, this time the Wisconsin Badgers got in over their heads, falling to a taller and more talented Michigan team, 84-75 at Crisler Arena last night. Unlike last Jan. 14 when Steve Yoder's undersized mix of plodders and scrappers surprised Michigan 71-64, this one was never any contest. If you rdon't believe it, just ask Yoder. "IT LOOKED to me like a pretty good mismatch tonight, I don't know about you guys (the media)," said Yoder, ap- parently not too surprised by last night's result. "I'm a little bit of a realist. I look out there and I see some pretty good, people playing for Viichigan, especially inside." Yoder characterized the game with lucid accuracy. Except for one period See BLUE, Page 10 Gays call for action Frustrated activists rally in Shapiro's office By GEORGEA KOVANIS About 55 activists, pushing for a" campus non-discrimination policy for gays, showed their impatience with the University yesterday by marching from the Diag to the office of University President Harold Shapiro. Members of Lesbian and Gay Rights On Campus (LaGROC) first asked University administrators 15 months ago for a policy prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual preference. At last month's meeting of the University regents, the group set a deadline for administrators to issue the policy statement by yesterday. THE GROUP IS TIRED of waiting, members said. "There is discrimination occurring and as long as the administration doesn't have a policy they are facilitating this discrimination," said Diana DeVries yesterday during the rally. "Things can happen so we don't have to live this way...we don't want pity, we want a policy." Still, however, the group failed to get a policy. Shapiro said it was unfor- tunate that the process took so long but refused to say when he might issue such a policy. CHANTING "GAY rights now" and "The people, united, have never been See GAY, Page 3 Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF Gay rights activists yesterday ask University President Harold Shapiro to speed up his work on a policy which would prohibit the University from discriminating on the basis of sexual preference. Library bills By RACHEL GOTTLIEB, Trying to improve University library, services by computerizing the cir- culation system seems to have created more problems than it's eliminated. For the first six months the Geac system was in operation, a computer quirk prevented the library from sen- ding students fine notices for overdue books. BUT solving that problem last month only created another. Now students are receiving overdue notices - only the fines are for books they didn't check out the cost - one bill as caused a few studen shock. The Daily hasl students who were1 $400 for overdue boo checked out or had a IN ALL the cas students the price library to replace ti the standard 25 cen fee. Kevin Namey, a ji of Engineering, sai bill to replace a bo unsuspecting t of the library. And weeks earlier. high as $400 - has Eilee Gaughan, a sophomore in the its' jaws to drop in Residential College, said she received an "outrageous" $50 bill for a book she learned of eight "never even heard of". billed from $50 to LSA SOPHOMORE Jim Schoenburg oks they had never returned a book to the GraduateLibrary lready returned. Feb. 7 = one day before Geac ironed ses Geae charged out the problem that prevented it from it would cost the mailing overdue notices - and then he books instead of received a bill for $50 to replace the 1t per day overdue book. The unlucky recipient of the $400 bill unior in the College was charged for the cost of replacing d he received a $50 eight books. Another student received a ok he returned two $100 bill and three others were each students charged $50 fines. Although Joan Spaide, supervisor of circulation at the Graduate Library, said she wasn't aware of the problem, students won't have to pay the fines. Spaide said the problem will be corrected as soon as possible. "All we want is our books back," she said. "We're not interested in charging people outrageous amounts of money. Geac is programmed to send students a warning notice one week after a book is due, said David McDonald, head of the library systems office. If a student doesn't return the book within a week, a second notice is sent, he said. Hollings Askew leave race From AP and UPI Askew joined him an the sidelines. Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina and former Florida "This is the last day and the last mile," Askew told an af- Gov. Reubin Askew withdrew yesterday as candidates for the Thiss test nd the e," Aew t h presidential nomination, cutting the Democratic field to five t n n contenders going into "Super Tuesday" with its jackpot of people." morethan540 elegtes.Askew. got only 1 percent in .New Hampshire and told a more than 500 delegates. .Miami news conference, "I tried to be true to myself and my Hollings and Askew, both broke and badly beaten in Iowa deepest convictions. and New Hampshire, pulled out, leaving former Vice THREE OF the survivors - Hart, Glenn and Jackson - President Walter Mondale, Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado, Sen. stumped through the South which has primaries in Alabama, John Glenn of Ohio, Jesse Jackson and former Sen. George Georgia and Florida on Super Tuesday - March 13. McGovern in contention., MCGOVERN, the Democratic presidential candidate in Askew's withdrawal could have a major impact on the 197CGalsoVEayNwithedawaftrtheMassahusd e tsadida Florida primary where the latest polls showed him running.a 1972, also may withdraw after the Massachusetts primary, weak second behind Mondale but ahead of Glenn and Hart. Mondale was in Washington yesterday and planned to Hollings, the tart-tongued Southerner, announced his campaign in Maine and Georgia today. decision in Washington, following weak showings in the Iowa GLENN spoke to the Alabama Legislature at the state caucuses and New Hampshire: . Capitol in Montgomery, while Hart stopped at the city's air- Hollings said he was "stepping aside" and told a news con- port for a news conference at which he said, "I don't expect ference that he no longer had the money to continue and that to be rejected in the South." his candidacy "didn't get through to enough people." See DEMOCRATS, Page 6 SEVERAL hours after Hollings made his announcement,SeDEORTPg6 Tied down Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF An East Quad resident studies in the Quad's Greene Lounge. All the furniture in the lounge has been chained to the floor in order to prevent it from ending up in dorm rooms. ort arou in west side yard Askew ..says he was "candid" . n .. .... . . .. ..n............................................::...............n..............v..v.........::.....:::wv.v::::":.v.....x:..... .*.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..:'"i{+i: iL~iv . . . . . . . . .. . .t......... ........ . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . ... . . . . ........................... .. .................. ....*.... .... . ....ti... ............... .............v..r...*... . ..................................................v........*.,........*...*.........t............. .... \. ...... 'v,....v..n........ . .... .... ................... . r........... .. .n.. ' . ....... .......... ............ . . . ..x ...... ......... ................. ..... ...............,......-.- . . . . . ............-.-.........-............................................ . . . . . . Cook dies following 38 years with fraternity By MARCY FLEISHER For the past 38 years Albert "Wildcat" Wall was more than just a cook for Phi Gamma Delta frater- nity members. His ukelele playing and singing was the star attrac- tion at many fraternity parties. And if any fraternity members had a little too much to drink, Wall would offer to drive their dates home. BUT last Wednesday night, during spring vacation, the 87-year-old Wall died in his sleep. Wall made a strong impression on many generations of Phi Gamma Delta members, says fraternity President Scott Almquist. "Albert Wall was the most incredible person and tradition that this house has ever - and will ever see," Almquist said. "No one will ever be able to replace him." WALL donated his body to the University's Myiedical School. He is survived by one daughter, Bettie Wilson who lives in Ann Arbor, and a son, Richard, who lives in Cleveland, Ohio. Wilson said that nothing meant more to her father than the fraternity and he considered it his home. Wall was considered one of the family, according to Almquist. "Wildcat thought that the fraternal experience was the best thing in the world for a college guy. He See PHI,'Page 5 By NANCY GOTTESMAN A local Vietnam veteran's souvenir mortar shell caused quite a stir this Wednesday when a neighbor found it on the lawn and called in the bomb squad. The tale started eighteen years ago in South Vietnam where Ann Arbor resident Gary Lillie was caught in the midst of a nighttime fire fight with Viet Cong soldiers. Lillie was in a foxhole. THE VIET Cong were attempting to shoot down American helicopters above him, Lillie recalls. And while he was nestled in the foxhole, an empty shell casing thumped to earth only ten feet away from him. He wasn't so much afraid of it blowing up, since it probably had already exploded in the air, he said. But any closer and the five to ten pound cast iron shell may have done him in. "A little puff of wind and I might have been dead," he said. LILLIE brought the shell with him as a momento when he returned home in 1966. Eighteen yearslater, he accidently See SHELL, Page 2 .. .. ...v..~.... ..... . .{.v................... ........... .... ..... ::'"i::?.v.r'.r". . .. .. .. .. .... ............................................................ ......................:........... ................. ....................... ........... .............,...:............',. ... :. .: ................. ... ...................... ....... ............ ... .,.................... ............... ..... ................... .............. .................... ............................. -... .... ...... .. ... ... . ... n . ... ...:. .................. Special delivery OMINO'S PIZZA may deliver, but Cottage Inn had snappier service Wednesday night, making a special stop at the Night Owl van. Packed with at least 20 tired and cold riders, the van' was pizza every night on the route, one hungry freeloader asked, "What nights do you drive?" e?" Chest hair C HESTS ARE best left hidden by buttoned shirts in Novi. At least that's what a hairdresser says who is seeking more than $200,000 in damages after a hair salon fired him last year. Rick Debrincat, 37, claims he was "blackballed" by area hair salons after the firing, and for- hair salon, and according to Debrincat's suit, a Dayton Hudson representative called his boss a few days later and demanded an apology or Debrincat's job. Debrincat said he refused to apologize and was fired in October. El Ice breakers . OR A $50 prize, canoists have the chance to break I'through ice, make six portages, and paddle down 30 miles of the Huron River, from Lake Portage to Ypsilanti. Canoesport of Ann Arbor, the event sponsor, will give the top prize to the first hardy pair to finish the course, and to The Daily almanac ON THIS DATE in 1955, MSU's student newspaper announced it would stop referring to the school as Michigan State College because it "deserves to be called a university since it is one in every sense of the word." Also on this date in history: " 1948 - The Student Affairs Committee voted to ask the regents to "clarifydand liberalize" the University's ban on political speeches. " 1964 - LSA's faculty voted 2-1 to approve the Residen- ; .,n y pp > i i