Cub, Tiger playoff fever heats up ' By SEAN JACKSON Cubs or Tigers? That seems to be the only question that matters these days as the Chicago Cubs and the Detroit Tigers both move closer to the World Series. THE UNIVERSITY draws nearly 23,000 students from the state of Michigan and 11,000 from Illinois, leaving a lot of Cubbie fans and even more Tiger fans who would probably rather watch their squads in the playoffs than be buried in books in the library., Unfortunately, classes are not cancelled for the major league baseball playoffs; nevertheless, that's not stopping some students from watching their favorite team. "Yeah, I watched the game (Tigers' first game against the Kansas City Royals), and I let my homework slide," said LSA freshperson Mike Mandrea. OTHER LOYAL fans have different ways of balancing homework with watching their favorite club. "You can study and watch, but the studying is not that in- tense - but the rooting definitely is," said Todd Johnson, a sophomore in engineering. For LSA freshpersons Julie Shersmith and Julie Zick, Tiger updates between studying will have to suffice. "WE WILL just go down every once in awhile," Shersmith said, adding that the roommates probably will wait until the deciding game to watch a contest in its entirety. One cubs fan, LSA freshperson Ed Krauss, said he was able to watch both the National League playoff contests. "I wat- ched both games, my two o'clock class was cancelled (yesterday) ... probably because of the game." If there were a Dedicated Cub Fan Award on campus, third year law student Stacey Fisher would stand a good chance of winning. "I'M A THIRD generation Cub fan," she said while sitting on the grass outside the Law Library in a Cubs t-shirt. Fisher said she took a train home to Kalamazoo and drove into Chicago with her parents for the opening game of the Cubs- San Diego Padres series. "I had to miss some classes, it was worth it. . . seeing (Cub pitcher Rick) Sutcliffe hit a home run is worth it. It's history . .. This is only law school," Fisher said. See CUBS, Page 2 Ninety-five Years of Frisky Editorial Freedom Sunny to partly sunny today with highs in the middle sixties. Vol. XCV,,'No.25 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan- Thursday, October 4, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Resident IRS says advisor s x body found inArb By GEORGEA KOVANIS The body of a 22-year-old South Quad resident advisor was found in the Nichols Arboretum before 8 a.m. yesterday, Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Jan Suomala said. Karen Duffy, an eighth- floor Thron- son resident advisor, died of a gunshot wound to the head, said Robert Hen- dricks, the county's deputy medical xaminer. He said her death, which oc- curred at about 2 a.m. yesterday mor- ning, was a suicide. ARBORETUM caretakers phoned the police 'after the body was discovered near the Huron River, which runs through the Arboretum, Suomala said. Duffy had been missing since Sunday night, said Mary Antieau, South Quad building director. Tuesday night a missing person report was filed. According to Antieau, Duffy left a ote which said goodbye to her parents and brother. A HANDGUN was found at the scene, Suomala said. Last night, South Quad's resident staff began telling Thronson House members about the situation. See R.A., Page 2 Bush back. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - The In- ternal Revenue Service, following an audit of George Bush's 1981 tax returns, directed the vice president to pay an additional $198,000 in taxes and in- terest, his attorneys revealed yester- day. The IRS -required most of the ad- ditional payments - now being contes- ted by Bush - after disallowing a tax deferral the vice president had claimed on profits from the sale of his Houston residence. The tax agency also required that part of a $91,852 campaign fund surplus that Bush' received be counted as income. BUSH AND his wife Barbara paid $245,491 in federal income taxes in 1981. His attorneys said he is contesting, $144,128 of the additional tax payment,. plus $54,000 in interest that he was required to pay following the audit. Attorney Dean Burch said the IRS ruling will be appealed and will be carried to tax court if required. "We're likely to get it turned down by the IRS," said Bob Yorty, an attorney who ac- companied Burch. Bush said at a news conference early yesterday that he was causing the tax returns to be released because of per- sistent media interest. "I hope everybody's insatiable curiosity is owes taxe s resolved," said Bush. Specifically, the IRS ruled: Bush was wrong in deferring taxes on the profits - he made in selling his Houston house. Bush tried to defer such taxes on grounds that he'd bought 4 more expensive house in Maine, but the IRS said the Maine house didn't count because Bush's main residence was in Washington. " The vice president erred in taking tax deductions for a contribution to the Republican National Committee that came not from money he earned, but from a surplus of 1980 campaign donations. Deductions for fixing up the vice presidential offices were allowable, the IRS said, so long as the contributions were added to Bush's income. The surplus campaign funds were left over from Bush's attempt to gain the Republican presidential nomination. At the end of the campaign, about $85,000 was deposited in two accounts in Washington. The funds, plus interest earned, were then used to refurbish the vice presidential offices, ($26,362) pay certain vice presidential "expenses, ($30,234) and pay late campaign expen- ses ($2,449). The balance of $32,807 was contributed to the Republican National Committee. Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON, Bottoms up Pledges of Alpha Phi sorority celebrate their admittance into the house yesterday evening. Bids, invitations to join the sorority, were given out yesterday. Brown U. ponders suicide pills By NANCY DOLINKO Brown University students are asking that cyanide pills be provided by the college for them to use to commit suicide in the event of a nuclear war. The proposal, which will be voted on next week by students at the Providen- ce, R.I. school, is a nonbinding referen- dum, so the college will not have to &bide by it if it passes, school officials pointed out. THE MOVEMENT to stock the university's health service with the pills is the work of four students who read about a doctor in Cambridge, England who was offering suicide pills to his patients as a way to avoid facing a nuclear holocaust. Jason Salzman, an organizer of. the proposal, said the referendum begah as a way to "get people thinking about Vuclear war." "We're doing this to raise con- sciousness on the real proposition that nuclear war will destroy civilization," Salzman said. "Nuclear war is a very serious issue that should be associated with suicide." 'We're doing this to raise consciousness on the real proposition that nuclear war will destroy civilization . .- . Nuclear war is a very serious issue that should be associated with suicide.' - Jason Salzman proposal organizer from university officials. Dr. Sumner Hoffman, the director of Brown University Health Services, called the proposal "ridiculous." Hoffman said the university-has no intention of abiding by the student vote. And as a physician, he said the proposal goes against his ethics. - "Our job is to cure and prolong (life)," Hoffman said. "Who will carry on if everyone takes a pill? To eliminate all life by taking suicide pills makes no sense at all. Rather than taking the fatalistic approach, I think we, as an educational institution, should be teaching people how to prevent nuclear war from happening." Despite the negative reaction from the university's administration, spon- sors of the proposal are not 'discouraged. "Apathy towards nuclear war is growing. Politicians and the gover- nment are ignoring large, public demonstrations," said Ralph Walsh, a proposal organizer. "We want to do something to prevent (nuclear war)," Walsh said. Detroit nips K.C. in extra KANSAS CITY (AP) - John Grubb sliced a two-run double to right cen- terfield off Kansas City reliever Dan Quisenberry to give the Detroit Tigers a 5-3 win in the top of the eleventh inning of last night's second game of the American League Cham- pionship Series. Hal McRae jolted Tigers bullpen ace Willie Hernandez with an RBI double in the eighth inning to forge a 3-3 tie and send the contest into extra in- nings. TIGER STARTER DAN Petry held the Royals hitless through the first three innings while the Tigers jumped to a 2-0 lead in the first. Lou Whitaker reached base on a fielding error by Concepcion, who ran in to pick up the inningOs slow roller but dropped the ball before he could throw. Gibson and Parrish then RIugged run-scoring doubles into right field for a 2-0 Tiger advantage. Kirk Gibson unloaded a 420-foot home run over the center field fence in the third inning to give the Tigers a 3-0 lead. The Royals finally broke through against Petry in the fourth. With one out, Pat Sheridan drew a walk and went to third when George Brett lined a single into center. Jorge Orta then bounced to Whitaker, who stepped on the bag at secohd for the force on Brett but was late to first in the double play attempt. Sheridan scored on the play to slice the lead to 3-1. ANOTHER student who helped start the proposal, Remy Coeytaux, said he wasn't sure if he would actually take a pill if the situation arose, but added that their goal was to educate people about the nuclear threat.. "We're getting people' to look at nuclear war in a different way," Coeytaux said. "We're equating nuclear war with suicide." About 700 Brown students, 13% of the undergraduate population, signed a petition to have the referendum placed on next week's ballot for the student council election. THE ISSUE has drawn criticism ToDAY- Something fishy creatures had to be native to Hawaii waters, culturally im- portant and easily seen in their natural habitat. Every Hawaii resident and visitor to the islands can-vote for one of the nominees or write in an alternative. Ballots will be distributed to school children, appear on a supermarket's grocery bags and run in the Honolulu Advertiserj newspaper. The voting deadline is Nov. 30., Something wormy Lees-McRae College in Banner Elk and will include many craft booths, mountain foods and traditional music of the area. Besides the $500 first prize for the wooly worm that wins the featured race, prizes will also be given to those dressed in the most authentic costume. Spaced out simulate the weightlessness of space. Why do they only want men? "It's not aesthetic for a woman to do it," said Dr. Bryan Myers, Stanford associate professor of medicine. The volunteers, he said. will have to stay in the tub for the full three hours. To urinate, they will have to stand - keeping their feet in the water with a lot of people standing around watching. "Men are used to that. Women are not," Myers said. i I i