Ninety-five Years off Editorial Freedom E Lfit a 13 a 4&F Enclitic Sunny with a chance of showers and a high near 70.. Vol. XCV, No. 24 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, October 3, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages T Secretary of Labor pleads innocent Sister Cindy Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH Sister Cindy, wife of Brother Jed, helps entertain the audience on the biag yesterday as Brother Jed accuses the onlookers of acting on instinct like animals instead of using our reason like humans. "The influence of alcohol and drugs has made the students of this country so horny that'they would even have sex with someone they knew had herpes," said Jed. Jed gave an animated account of his life.of sin, and.tolWl how the Bible had changed his life some ten years ago. The highlight of the harangue came when an onlooker accused Jed of getting rich at religion's expense. Jed didn't deny he was rich but instead replied, "Money itself is not evil,, only the love of money." NEW YORK (AP) - Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan and nine other people pleaded in- nocent yesterday to stealing $8 million from New York City on a subway con- struction contract awarded two years before Donovan joined the Reagan ad- ministration. Donovan - believed to be the first sit- ting Cabinet member ever indicted - appeared in state Supreme Court in the Bronx along with his nine codefendants, who include a Democratic state senator. All pleaded innocent to a 137- count indictment charging them with one count of grand larceny, 125 counts of falsifying business records and 11 counts of false filings. THE LABOR secretary and nine other defendants were each charged with one count of second-degree lar- ceny, 125 counts of falsifying business records and 11 counts of offering false instruments for filing. Bronx District Attorney Mario Merola said the amount of money in- volved in the alleged larceny was. $8 million. Conviction on the grand lar- ceny count carries a maximum jail term of seven years, while the other counts carry four-year sentences. The grand larceny charge carries a maximum penalty on conviction of seven years in prisons The other counts each carry-four-year maximums. THE INDICTMENT'also named as defendants the Schiavone Construction Co. of Secaucus, N.J., of which Donovan was executive vice president, and Jopel Contracting and Trucking Corp. of the Bronx, one of whose owners was the indicted state senator, Joseph Galiber. The indictment said the money was stolen from the city Transit Authority, which gave a $186 million contract to Schiavone as the primary contractor. Schiavone allegedly padded payments it made to Jopel, a subcontractor. "They engaged in a scheme whereby they filed inflated, phony, false records with the Transit Authority," Bronx District Attorney Mario Merola said. Donovan said afterward that Merola "may have won today's battle by the I KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Alan Trammell sparked the. Detroit attack by driving in three runs with a homer, triple and single while Jack Morris pit-. ched seven strong innings last night as the Tigers ripped the Kansas City Royals 8-1 in the opening game of the American League Championship Series. Cubs crush Padres, 13-0, in NL playoff opener. See story, Page 8. Utmp onI THE TIGERS, baseball's most dominant team during the regular season, pounded out 14, hits - in- cluding home runs by Larry Herndon and Lance Parrish - and will go for a second victory in the best- of-five series Wednesday night when they send Dan Petry. against 20-year-old rookie Bret Saberhagen. Petry was 18-8 this year while Saberhagen was 10-11 but 3-1 against Detroit. Game One was worked by a fill-ih crew of six um- pires, who replaced striking regular umps. There was only one controversial call, involving a sixth-in- ning groundout by Frank White that appeared to pull first baseman Darrell Evans off the bag, but that play had no effect on the game. Morris retired the first seven Royals and had a 3-0 lead before Don Slaught singled cleanly to center with one out in the third. An out later, Willie Wilson also singled and after Pat Sheridan fouled off two full- Coco 8-1 count pitches and then walked to load the bases, Morris faced his biggest challenge. BUT HE got out of it as George Brett hit a sinking liner to right field that Kirk Gibson caught with a sliding grab to retire the Royals. From then on, Morris, 19-1l during the season, was in command. He set down nine more consecutive bat- ters until Jorge Orta led off the seventh with a triple and scored on Darryl Motley's groundout for Kansas City's only run to make it 5-1. Morris left the game after the seventh inning with a blister on the middle finger of his pitching hand. Willie Hernandez pitched two hitless innings in shutting down the AL West champion Royals, who were 84-78 during the regular season but disappointed a sellout crowd of 41,973 in dropping the playoff opener on a gorgeous night. Donovan ... pleads innocent misuse of his office, but I guarantee you that he will not win the war." HE SAID he was shocked to learn that none of the questions he was asked during his appearance before the grand See DONOVAN, Page 2 Mondale' demandsl action LITTLE ROCK, Ark.(UPI) - Walter Mondale demanded yesterday that Ronald Reagan immediately in- vestigate charges against Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan and remove him from office if there are reasonable grounds. "If he doesn'.t do that, it will strengthen the case he is insensitive to the public trust," Mondale said, step- ping up his attack on the president's leadership ability. See MONDALE, Page 2 Trammell, who also walked twice in reaching base all five times he came to the plate, smacked an RBI- triple to key a two-run first inning and Morris made it stand up. 'U' exercise program is no sweat for students By JERRY MARKON Do you feel like a cow when you leave your dormitory cafeteria? Do . you raid the refrigerator, snack bar, or grocery store in desperate search of Pop Tarts, pizza, Oreo cookies and other fattening late-night snacks? Do you think CCRB stands for Certified College Ravenous Binges? If your answer to one or more of these questions is yes, you may be a victim of the dreaded "Freshman 10 Syndrome." FACED WITH overwhelming workloads, social demands, and new responsibilities, freshmen often find that their nightly exercise consists of waddling down to the dorm snack bar. Although weekends take students beyond these limited perimeters, excessive consumption of alcohol often provides additional poundage. Men gain an average of 9.1 pounds during their first year in college while women gain an average of 9 pounds, according to a survey of 2,400 Pen- *nsylvania State undergraduates which was released in Sep- tember. The survey also showed a six to seven pound gain each year among older students. Whether students lived on or off cam- pus was not a factor in weight change, according to the sur- vey, refuting-the well-known stereotype about starchy dorm food. EXERCISE plays a major role in avoiding the "Battle I'm here to exercise my brain.' - Tom Abraham LSA freshman of the Bulge." "People who exercise regularly will have lower weight fluctuations," said Prof. Adam Drewnowski of the School of Public Health, who is currently coducting a survey at the University on eating disorders. He added that overeating is often a stress reaction to new college respon- sibilities. "(Exercise) is a safety-valve escape from stress . . . that helps both physically and mentally," Drewnowski said. Dr. Robert Winfield, also from the School of Public Health, attaches similar importance to exercise as a "stress- management tool." ALTHOUGH he said he believes exercise should be kept in See EXERCISE, Page 5 4 Doily Photo by STU WEIULNBALM Lance Ross, sophomore, lifts while Harold Hermelee, sophomore, spots during an exercise session at the CCRB. k TODAY- Up a tree and assign the men a precinct. Hastings called that "hogwash" and a violation of his clients' constitutional rights. He asked the high court to order the county to register the men: Ricky Albrecht, David Barber, Craig French, and Patrick Green. Hastings said an estimated 2,500 to 3,000 people in Santa Barbara County are disen- franchised through the requirement that they hold per- manent addresses. Up, up, and away store Sunday and unexpectedly floated 15 miles before crashing at a farm about two hours later, said Undersheriff Ron Morison. At some time during the flight, Fyfe started to lose altitude, Morrison said. He did not have a parachute and cut himself loose from the balloons when he realized he was about to crash into a farm building. "He decided rather than hit the building he would bail out," Morrison said. "He's pretty damn lucky. It could have been a whole lot worse." Fyfe reportedly reached an altitude as high as 8,000 feet during the flight, officials said. reserved spot at Wrigley Field-box seat 103, row 13,~aisle 239-for the first game. Goat and tavern owner Sam Sianis, who has seat 104, will be guests of the Cubs. Cubs legend has it that in 1945, Sianis' uncle, tavern founder William "Billy Goat" Sianis, put a hex on the Cubs, making the team forever pennant-proof, all because his goat was kept out of a World Series game at Wrigley Field. In 1970, Willian Sianis died. In 1981, after the Cubs invited a Sianis goat to a game, Sam Sianis lifted the hex. This year the Cubs made it to post-season play for the first time since 1945. .. I k i