Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom iL71 b IC Sir 41 ti1 Barbecue Sunny, with highs in the mid-50s. L_ OVoI. XCIV--No. 151 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, April 8, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Students take plunge into lime Jello By GREGORY HUTTON While most of Ann Arbor spent yesterday afternoon relaxing in the sun, one group of University studen- ts decided to get a jump on summery by going for a swim - in a tub full of% lime Jello. Members of P} Beta Phi sorority and Phi Gamma Delta fraternity took turns diving into an 800 gallon vat of cold, green gelatin in order to" retrieve numbered golf balls at the third annual Jello Jump to raise money for the Muscular Dystrophy Association. The golf balls represented prizes that were raffled off at the event. Af- ter a name was drawn, one of the fraternity or sorority members jumped into the Jello to find out what, prize the winner would receive. One of the organizers of the event,: Sharri Odenheimer, described ther Jello as "gross" after being throwrt into the vat, but said she felt they immersion was worthwhile because itwas benefiting a good cause. f Although the first two Jello Jumps were held in snow and twenty degreef temperatures, the weather was favorable for this year's event. "Last year you couldn't feel a thing once you got out of the Jello," $ said Pi Beta Phi member Starr Cor- nell.yL In spite of the warm weather, most of the onlookers had little desire to join the fun. One skeptical Daily Photo by DAN HABIB spectator wondered "why civilized LSA junior Kirk Hudson emerges from a vat of green Jello yesterday during the third annual Jello Jump at the corner people would do such a thing." of South University and East University. The jump, a fundraiser for the Muscular Dystrophy Association, was co- See STUDENTS, Page 2 sponsored by Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mondale gains big win in Wisconsin From the Associated Press Wisconsin Democrats, caucusing to ap- portion 78 national convention delegates, gave Walter Mondale a big victory yester- day while the former vice president was in Pennsylvania blasting Sen. Gary Hart for sponsoring "bail out" legislation for a Colorado firm. All three candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination were campaigning in Pennsylvania, where 172 delegates are at stake in Tuesday's primary. WINDING UP his day in Pittsburgh, Mondale said he was "obviously very pleased" with the victory in Wisconsin where "we had anticipated a very close con- test." But he said he didn't think it would have much impact in Pennsylvania because "I believe that voters jealously guard the right" to make their-own choices. In the Wisconsin presidential preference vote last Tuesday, Hart received 46 percent, Mondale 43 percent and Jackson 10 percent: But Republicans could vote in that contest and the result was far different yesterday when only Democrats could participate. WITH 98 percent of the raw votes counted, the totals were: Mondale 17,020 or 57 per- cent; Hart 9,138 or 11 percent; Jackson 3,271 or 11 percent. In Pennsylvania, Hart told a rally at a Scranton train station that Mon- dale and President Reagan both "are deaf to the lessons of the past and blind to the possibilities of the future." He said both the Reagan administration and the. Carter administration, in which Mondale served as vice president, are responsible for Pennsylvania's high unem- ployment and sagging steel industry. "BOTH THE Carter-Mondale and Reagan programs have failed Pennsylvania and our whole country," Hart said. "The old leader- ship of both parties offers no hope for ou; future and for our children's future." Pennsylvania's overall unemployment rate fell from 9.8 percent to 8.9 percent from February to March, but that is still well above the national seasonally adjusted rate of 7.8 percent. Mondale, addressing students at Bryn Mawr College, said it is absurd that Reagan has "dredged up that astounding, discredited notion that a president should not be subject to criticism in the conduct of foreign affairs." "I INTEND to continue my criticisms where they're valid," he said. "The idea that somehow the public process should be suspended and paralyzed in the most impor- tant issue of our time is a total absurdity. Foreign policy belongs to everybody." He was commenting on Reagan's spech Friday in which the president said Congress was guilty of "second guessing" his peace efforts in the Middle East and that congressional critics had "severely un- demined" the administration in that part of the world. Mondale said he would not react that way in the White House. 'As president of the United States, I expect Congress to be heard from and I expect the American people to be heard from,'' he said. Mondale's speech to the college audience dealt almost exclusively with foreign policy, including another dig at Hart on arms con- trol. He reiterated his assertion that Hart "has not passed the threshold of credibility on the nuclear freeze. It is impossible to follow these twists and turns on the critical issue of arms control." Parents discuss gay children By GEORGEA KOVANIS Barbara's daughter, a University student, will probably never wear the wedding dress her mother has kept for years. Her daughter is a lesbian, and Barbara says she accepts that lifestyle. "The child who has come out (of the closet) is the child you've always had," Barbara told a group of homosexuals and parents of gays yesterday during the third annual Exploring Gay Issues Conference in Hutchins Hall yesterday. (Directors of the conference asked that participants' full names not be used.) ACCORDING to most gay students on campus, telling family members of their homosexuality can be a difficult, heart-wrenching experience. Many times, it leaves brothers, sisters, and parents feeling bitter, frustrated, and confused. "My first thought was, what's wrong If you have a lousy relationship with (parents), telling them you're gay isn't going to help.' -Homosexual male with my son, what did we do wrong," said Joyce, whose son is gay. "Six years ago, I hated him for telling us," she said. But today, Joyce says she has come to accept her son's homosexuality. "If I had to (go through) it again, I wish he would have told me 10 years sooner so I could have helped him more," she said. Often times, parents' reactions are diverse. "I remember in my case there was a feeling of relief," said Jack, Joyce's husband, explaining that their son had been difficult to get along with before he came out to them. "I ALWAYS thought that he was gay, but if he wasn't going to talk about it, I wasn't," said one woman of her gay son. "We just all accepted it like we ac- cept breathing in and out," she added. According to Barbara, one thing that assisted her in coping with her daughter's coming out was the fact that her- daughter didn't alienate her or frown upon her for being straight. "It helped me a lot to know that (my daughter) still enjoyed the fact that I'm heterosexual," she said. However, many parents have not come to grips with their child's homosexuality and cannot be suppor- tive of them. "I'M GLAD that my son came out. He's relieved and I'm relieved," said one man whose son is gay. But, he ad- ded, "Should I be happy that I am the father of a gay son? I don't know if I'll ever be happy that I'm the father of a gay," he said. "(My father) now feels he is losing a son," said one gay male, adding that his father has urged him to seek psychiatric counseling in an effort to change his sexual preference. 'No, I don't expect my parents to be happy and pick up the banner and say 'Yay, (he'd) gay," he said. "The first thing my mother said to me is 'why are you doing this to me? My whole world is falling apart,' " said one gay male. See PARENTS, Page 3 CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Challenger's 14 million seeds, some only involve exposing large astronauts tossed a bus-size bundle of experiments numbers of coating materials to space, others study overboard yesterday to be smacked by meteors, cosmic rays. Many materials are being tested as pelted by cosmic rays and corroded by oxygen atoms possible space station components. until hauled in by another crew in 10 months. ABOUT 12 million tomato seeds and 2 million other The development of the Long Duration Exposure vegetable, herb and flower seeds - including squash, Facility (LDEF) made room in the shuttle's cargo eggplant, basil, oregano, and petunias - were sealed bay for today's daredevil attempt to retrieve a crip- in plastic bags and stored layers in eight aluminum pled satellite for repair. canisters aboard the satellite. 1""THAT WORKED just like they said it was going As the satellite orbits Earth, the seeds will be ex- O n d to," shuttle commander Robert Crippen said after posed to the radiation and vacuum of space. Scien- LDEF, an 11-ton smorgasbord of experiments, was tists want to know how this harsh environment affec- cast adrift nearly 300 miles above Hawaii. ts the germination and mutation rates of the seeds. i"It was steady as the rock of Gibraltar and just Once the seeds are returned from space, the s teabout as big," Crippen said. Television showed the George Park Seed Co. will divide them into 130,000 a aluminum cylinder, 30 feet long and 15 feet wide, packets. They will distribute those packets along with floating away, one end pointing toward Earth. See ASTRONAUTS, Page 2 'Some are as simple as checking the survivability of SeATOATPg .................................. Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Haagen dogz This man shares an ice cream cone with his poodle Peanut yesterday on the corner of South University and East University. TODAY Pick up that crap! TS A DIRTY job, but Steve Dannenberg has to do it. By night, Dannenberg is a 20-year-old student in a Nehraska nmminito enll . hut by dav. he's the dog __ _ because they want their yard to be neat," he said. "With a service like this, they don't have to get rid of their dog." Dannenberg charges $9.95 a month to service one dog, an additional $3 for a second dog, and $2 for each additional dog. . I Fans file suit A. MARRIED COUPLE in Townson, Md. claiming they of the night last week. Local officials were not warned about the Colts' nighttime departure which the suit charges was designed "to humiliate and degrade" fans. The Sachses said the move has caused them "to suffer severe depression, severe physical and emotional disability, severe disturbance of mental and emotional tranquility and mental distress of a very serious kind." The suit, believed to be the first filed by fans against National Football League franchise, seeks $5 million in compensatory damages and $25 million in punitive damages. Asked whether she expected to win the suit, Mrs. Sachse said "Not ran 1., Dn.. a .., aka n., .a n4t nanran- .... ainrc.9 " 1936 - Two fraternities petitioned the Inferfraternity Council's executive committee to reinstate Hell Week. " 1968 - 200 students marched from the Diag to the National Guard Armory to protest the planned deployment of troops from the armory to control riots in Detroit. * 1980 - A Second Chance bouncer was arraigned for assault after allegedly kicking and punching a customer with four other bouncers on March 29. 2 On the inside... I ;I I I