Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom I P LIEr IEIIIQ Beach Morning clouds will give way to afternoon sunshine as the tem- perature hits the mid-40s. _ Vol. XUIV-No. 142 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, March 29, 1984 Fifteen Cents Ten Pane .. .. ... .cn V"gca Wolverines romp to NIT title MSA ends election esmoothly By MARCY FLEISHER The Michigan Student Assembly elections came to a relatively quiet, and smooth conclusion yesterday after a disorganized and hectic opening day on Tuesday. All scheduled polling booths were open yesterday and students reported few difficulties in voting. "IT'S BEEN A long election," said director Dave Surovell, referring to a long series of snags in Tuesday's fvoting. "I'm not happy with the way it went (Tuesday), but it went real well today." He estimated that 5,500 to 6,000 students voted in this year's election, a slight jump from last year's total of 5,000. On the opening day of the election, MSA found itself shor- thanded and was not able to open several booths which were supposed to be operating. SEVERAL CANDIDATES charged that the election was being conducted improperly. Scott Page of-the SMART par- ty called the election "a farce," while mark Weinstein, a candidate for IOU, said it was "very incompetently run." Yesterday, however, most of the candidates had toned * down their complaints as they waited for the results to te tallied. "The elections were not as bad as yesterday," said the YOU! party candidate Ron Senkowski, who said yesterday that Tuesday's problems were indicative of "how screwed up MSA is right now. "All the polls opened on time and it went a lot smoother," he said. Drew Plevin, a candidate under the LMNOP party and banner, echoed Senkowski. "The day went pretty well," Plevin said. "I don't think there is any reason to contest the elections unless they are. extremely close." Notre Dame demolished by Blue, 83-63 By JIM DWORMAN Special to the Daily NEW YORK - So what if they won the wrong tournament. The Michigan Wolverines are NIT champions and proud of it. The Wolverines captured the college basketball's oldest tournament last night with an 83-63 crushing of Notre Dame at Madison Square Garden. Michigan would have preferred to play in the NCAA championship but the con- solation prize thrilled coach Bill Frieder,nonetheless. "WE'RE REALLY happy to win this honor," Frieder said. "Our guys had a great game, a great tournament and a great season." Michigan broke a 28-28 second-half deadlock with a 20-2 burst that put the trophy in Ann Arbor. All-NIT center Roy Tarpley scored eight points during the spree. The Fighting Irish con- tributed to their own misery with six turnovers. "We were disappointed that we didn't jump out to a bigger lead earlier," said NIT-MVP Tim McCormick. "When we got that little spurt we showed that we have the potential to be an explosive AP Photo team." ght's 83-63 McoCORMICK LED Michigan with 28 ground is points, while Tarpley added 18, Eric Turner 16. Antoine Joubert chipped in 12 points and some nifty ballhandling. Notre Dame s Ken Barlow and Tom Sluby scored 18 and 19 points, respec- tively, in a losing cause. The Irish duo joined Tarpley, Southwestern Louisiana's Alonza Allen, and Virginia Tech's Dell Curry on. the All- Tournament team. The second-half outburst began after Notre Dame's Tim Kempton tied the score at 28 with a pair of free throws. McCormick then'buried a 17-foot jum- per and took a Kempton offensive foul at the other end of the court. MICHIGAN took. the ball and gunned home 16 straight points before Kempton broke the South Bend ice with a tip-in that made the score 48-32. The Wolverines came right back with a pair of Turner free throw and a Rich Rellford break away slam. Barlow and Sluby then canned two free throws each and, after McCormick hit a foul shot of his own, Sluby dropped home a jumper from the free throw line to make the score 53-38. THE TWO teams traded scores on the next few possessions until Kempton hit a pair of free throws and Sluby another jumper to pull Notre Dame to within 11, 59-48. But Joubert and McCormick an- See MVP, Page 9 Notre' Dame's Tom Sluby moves the ball past Michiga guard Antoine Joubert in last nig Wolverine victory in the NIT championship game at Madison Square Garden. In the back tournament MVP Tim McCormick. Gemayel convenes meeting a s fig hting continues From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - Hundreds of ar- tillery shells and rockets crashed into Christian and Moslem neighborhoods of Beirut yesterday, killing at least 37 people. President Amin Gemayel con- vened a meeting of factional leaders in an attempt to avert further bloodshed. The "higher political-security com- mittee" began its first meeting late in the evening at the Presidential Palace in suburban Baabda, following the wor- st day of violence since a cease-fire was declared March 13 by participants at a Lebanese reconciliation conference in Lausanne, Switzerland. BEIRUT WAS not the only site of violence. In the southern Lebanese - vilage of Jibchit, at least three civilians were killed and 10 wounded in a con- frontation at a mosque. Lebanese reports said Israeli forces killed six Shiite Moslem villagers who had thrown stones at the soldiers, but military sources in Tel Aviv said the forces involved were Israeli-supported Lebanese Christians. The Tel Aviv sources also put the death toll in Jibchit at three instead of six. The political-security committee was created during the Lausanne conferen- ce, and was designed to help enforce the cease-fire and disengage Lebanon's See FIGHTING, Page 2 Soviet artists compare, Russian, American culture By SUSAN MAKUCH "I don't expect anything from this country, but I'm going to give it everything I have just to be a part of it,'" world-famous dancer and choreographer Mikhail Baryshnikov told a packed audience at Rackham Auditorium last night. Baryshnikov, along with fellow Russian emigres poet Josef Brod- sky, novelist Sasha Sokolov, jour- nalist Serge Dovlatov, painter David Miretsky, and novelist Yuz Aleshkovsky, discussed Russian and American politics and freedom at a forum entitled, "Russian Culture and America." THE DISCUSSION offered each of the artists the opportunity to answer ,See BARYSHNIKOV, Page 7 Sit-in assault reports dropped By SANDY MASSERANG A member of the Progressive Student Network said yesterday he will not pur- sue an assault report against the University stemming from a March 7 sit-in, and the University has agreed to drop its assault reports against him: Tom Marx, who was arrested with 10 other PSN members in the protest, said yesterday he will not pursue his case against a University security official he said "tackled (him) to the ground." A SOURCE involved in negotiations; between police, the University, and the demonstrators, said "there were other allegations by one or more PSN mem- bers of assault, but it looks as if none will come to anything." The source said University security officials, in turn, have agreed not to pursue their assault reports against several PSN members. The 11 protesters still face trespassing charges from the sit-in at the laboratory of George Haddad, chairman of the Electrical and Com- puter Engineering Department. PSN CONTENDS that Haddad's work for the Pentagon is weapons-related and does not belong on campus. They say his research on solid state diodes and transistors, which has been spon- 'I think it's a fallacy that's been perpetrated by the media that we're attacking engineers and the engineering departments.' - Chris Hill PSN member sored by such groups as the U.S. Naval Weapons Center, is being used to help guide the Phoenix missile. Haddad has said his research could be used to help in the guidance systems, but that it has civilian applications as well. At a Campus Meet the Press session yesterday in the Michigan Union, six PSN members talked about defense research on campus, civil disobedien- ce, conflicts with engineering students, and their upcoming trial. "I PERSONALLY wasn't aware of the time involved," said LSA senior Julia Gittleman, "the legal system works very slowly." Gittleman who will graduate in April, said she now expects to have to stay in Ann Arbor this sum- mer for the trial. Responding to questions as to why PSN always makes demands in their sit-ins rather than negotiating, Git- tleman said two years of working within the system to get guidelines for non-classified research on campus proved futile when the regents turned down the proposal. Both the ad- ministration and faculty had endorsed the guidelines. "The peaceful democratic processes of this University, otherwise known as the Michigan Student Assembly and the faculty were pretty much ignored. The regents basically decided they wouldn't be listened to,'! said LSA senior Chris Hill. HILL SAID the regents' vote made a return to purely legislative efforts See PSN, Page 5 Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Russian ballet star Mikhail Baryshnikov takes time out to talk with his excited fans last night at Rackham Auditorium. He appeared in a panel discussion entitled "Russian Culture and America: A n Open Forum." TODAY Tornado test WHEN THE city's emergency tornado sirens sound this afternoon don't grab Toto and head for Oz, it's only a test. As part of Governor James Blanchard's third Be a leader A PPLICATIONS to lead, Women Studies 100 are being accepted today and tomorrow in Rm. 354 Lorch Hall. To qualify students must have taken Women Studies 100 or 240 and one additional course in the department. Ap- plications are available from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.1 are footprints, hair samples, eyewitness stories, and some shaky, unbelievable photographs," he said. Keller declined to pinpoint the area he will be searching with Vince Thomas, 21, of Sacramento, and james Wyatt, 27, of Gasquet. But Hal Mefford of the State Department of Fish and Game said Keller's expedition may be illegal. He said California law names the animals that hunters may kill and it is illegal to kill anything not on the list. Bigfoot is not listed. -1 Ballroom featuring such athletes as Inca Peru, El Scorpio, and Malcom "Mr. Soul" Monroe. Also on this date in history: *1910 - Several students said they planned to "walk the rails" to Chicago for spring break. * 1933 - A Daily editorial said the University may go from a first class to a fourth class institution due to a proposed cut of almost $3 million.in state aid. " 1970 - Members of the Black Action Movement (BAM) urged supporters to "close the University down" as negotiations between the University and BAM leaders