I Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, November 11, 1984 Memorial reflects mood NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) - The designer of the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial in Washington says she wan- ted "to make the point that there were no heroes or villains in this war, that it was unlike any other major war in our history." Maya Ying Lin, a second-year student at Yale University's school of architecture, chose a stark design: two black granite walls sunk into a bank of earth and coming together in a huge V, inscribed with the names of the more than 58,000 Americans killed or missing in the war. "At first, people said that the memorial was too abstract, too morbid, too inhuman," Lin recalled last week in an interview with The Associated Press. "Then they went and saw it, saw their faces reflected in the granite bet- ween the carved names, and they realized it was the most human kind of memorial that you could have. "The memorial represented a great maturing in our attitudes towards war," she said, "but we've been sliding back over recent years." An addition to the memorial, a statue of three soldiers was unveiled this weekend. The statue is placed so it ap- pears the soldiers are walking through a small grove toward the memorial. Lin, who did not participate in the statue design, said the idea came from "people who wanted to politicize the memorial, to give it a heroic John Wayne image." She said the sculpture was not heroic because the men had "dazed" expressions and would have little effect on her design because it was situated on a plaza out of sight of the monument itself. After winning a national competition of war to determine the memorial's design as a senior undergraduate at Yale, Lin, 25, of Athens, Ohio, designed sets for a professional jazz opera and for a public television program on art. She is currently studying for a master's degree in architecture. Veterans receive new memorial IN BRIEF (Continued from Page 1) to serve as commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, said, "I pray we can use this event as a signal to end any remaining division among veterans." Yesterday's events included an out- door concert on the Mall by Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, a can- dlelight vigil for Vietnam veterans missing in action and the isuance of a postage stamp in honor of all those lost in Southeast Asia. This year's salute, as well as the one in 1982, was organized by veterans themselves. The idea for a memorial was also born by a group of vets, who formed the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund to see it become a reality. BOB FORTIER, 35, who came to town for this year's salute with a van full of buddies from Pawtucket, R.I., said, "I remember returning home from Vietnam in 1969 to be greeted by people who spit at us and called us 'baby killers.' "Now," he said, "It's suddenly cool to be a Vietnam Veteran. Guys are coming out of the closet to say, 'I'm a vet,' including some who were never even there.'" At the outset, there was some con- troversy about the memorials design, selected in a competition. The winner was Maya Ying Lin, then a 21-year-old architecture student at Yale Univer- sity. Many complained the stark black walls, forming a wide "V" set deep into the ground, appeared to be a sign of shame rather than honor. The statue was added to ease com- plaints, most of which have long since vanished. Nicaragua prepares for possible attack MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) - Government office workers have been instructed to fight U.S. soldiers in their neighborhoods at night if the United States invades Nicaragua, a government newspaper said yesterday. To prepare for the alleged imminent invasion, the leftist Sandinista government had said it would begin yesterday to issue rifles and train students in defense tactics. But a tour of the city at mid-morning revealed no training sessions at any of the various militia drill grounds scattered throughout the capital. JUNTA coordinator Daniel Orgega, reiterating allegations that U.S. spy planes had violated Nicaraguan air space last week, was deliverying another invasion warning to reporters yesterday morning when a noise like a sonic boom rattled windows in the capital. Sandinista officials have said that three previous, similar booms - the first on Oct. 31 and the other two on Nov. 8 and 9 - were caused by U.S. spy planes breaking the sound barrier over Nicaragua. Ortega, with his right hand in the air for emphasis, was telling reporters at a breakfast meeting about the alleged spy planes when a boom interrupted his remarks. "THIS IS AN impludent violation of our air space," Ortega said. "We are living in the most critical moment since the triumph of the revolution, more critical than last Novem- ber," he said, referring to the alert ordered after the U.S. in- vasion of Grenada in October 1983. Tensions worsened last week when the Reagan ad- ministration warned Nicaragua against receiving arms shipments from the Soviet Union. A Soviet freighter docked at Corinto, a port on Nicaragua's Pacific coast, on Wed- nesday, and Reagan administration officials said they believed the vessel was delivering MiG fighter planes. But a White House official, who spoke on Friday on con- dition of anonymity, conceded that the administration lacked proof for its claims. A KNOWLEDGEABLE source, who also spoke Friday on condition of anonymity, said the Soviet ship Bakuriana might have delivered one or two Mi8 helicopters and maybe one Mi24 helicopter. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Lebanon halts troop withdrawal, BEIRUT, Lebanon - Lebanon suspended troop withdrawal negotiations with Israel yesterday and said no more talks will be held until the Israeli army frees four Shiite Moslem militia leaders arrested in south Lebanon. Announcements by Prime Minister Rashid Karami and by Shiite Moslem leader Nabih Berri, the Cabinet minister for south Lebanon, made it unlikely that the just-started negotiations would resume as scheduled tomorrow in' the southern Lebanese village of Naqoura. After a 90-minute conference with President Amin Gemayel, Karami told reporters, "We are for the talks in Naqoura, but we are also for the freedom and security of our people in the south," occupied by Israel since June 1982. A spokesman for Israeli Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin responded in Tel Aviv, Israel. "We've come to the talks to seek a solution for ending the Israeli army's presence in Lebanon," said Nachman Shai. "It should be clear that we will also continue to take all measures to prevent attacks on Israeli soldiers in Lebanon, including dealing with those elements who incite attacks." U.S.-supplied warplanes bomb Salvadoran leftist rebel targets SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - U.S.-supplied warplanes bombed suspec- ted rebel positions yesterday as troops battled guerrillas for a second day northwest of Suchitoto, the scene of intense fighting the rebels say killed or wounded 100 troops. Leftist rebels also ordered drivers to stay off the highways tomorrow, warning any vehicle would be a potential rebel target as the insurgents. staged their second sabotage campaign to bring traffic to a standstill since peace talks were held Oct. 15 in La Palma. U.S.-supplied A-37 "Dragonfly" warjets flew over Guazapa Volcano early yesterday, bombing suspected leftist guerrilla positions on the volcano near Suchitoto that has served as a rebel stronghold through most of the more than 5-year-old war between rebels and the U.S.-backed government. IRA plot prompts security hike LONDON - Scotland Yard, prompted by fears of a new Irish Republican Army bombing campaign, yesterday increased security nationwide and reportedly doubled the guard on the royal family to protect them during a high-profile weekend. There was no official announcement of the measures, but British news reports said authorities had received intelligence from Northern Ireland saying the outlawed IRA was plotting an attack on par with last month's at- tempt on the lives of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and members of her Cabinet. The IRA, fighting to oust British troops from Northern Ireland, has war- ned it will continue its campaign and has targeted leading British figures, in cluding members of the royal family. Heightened security was visible yesterday around military installations and government offices nationwide. Ill. slayer continues threats LINCOLN, Ill. - Police have stepped up patrols at eight elementary schools after an anonymous caller claimed to have committed the Halloween slayings of two cousins in nearby Decatur and warned he would strike again, authorities said. Meanwhile, Decatur police said a 7-year-old girl who was abducted with the victims but not harmed was taken into protective custody Friday and placed in a home at an undisclosed location. Decatur Police Chief Patrick Vaughan said 7-year-old Patricia Hall was put in protective custody because of "the continuing nature of this in- vestigation and the concern that there is a potential for harm by unknown person or persons against a minor child in connection with this case." Police said Patricia will not immediately be returned to her mother, Ear- nestine Gordon. Patricia had been under police guard at Decatur Memorial Hospital since she was found in a closet in a vacant apartment building two days after she and the other girls disappeared while trick-or-treating. Shutde launches second satellite CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The crew of the space shuttle Discovery made it "two for two" yesterday by launching a second satellite to clear the cargo bay for daring spacewalk rescues of a pair of automated relay stations marooned in orbit. The Symcom communications satellite sailed out of Discovery's hold like' a giant Frisbee and 45 minutes later soared thousands of miles higher on the' push of a rocket that flashed to life in full view of the astronauts. The crew then readied equipment for the first spacewalk tomorrow and quickly encountered a minor but perplexing snag - one of two headlights on each spacesuit helmet did not work. Flight director Larry Bourgeois said the spacewalks could be accom- plished with just one light - and none if necessary - because there are enough lights in Discovery's open cargo bay for the astronauts to work by during the 40-minute night portion of each orbit. 14 14 4 4 4 Ortega ... protests spy planes Bonne Anniversaire. Stanford police accuse athlete of stripping woman 4 Join Collected Works' Birthday Celebration Sunday, November 11, 1984 Special Savings throughout the Store Natural Fiber Apparel for Women and Men " 325 E. Liberty 9 Ann Arbor " 995-4222 STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) - Police are investigating charges that a 215- pound football player tried to rip the clothes off a woman student at a frater- nity party while his friends were "cheering him on." Campus police sought an arrest warrant from the Santa Clara County District Attorney's office for David Keane, 21, of Littleton, Colo., a 6-2, 215- pound sophomore and tight end on Stan- ford's varsity football team. Keane also is a member of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, officials said. "He was ripping my clothes off and all his friends were gathered around in a circle cheering him on," Charlotte Lowson of New York, an 18-year-old freshwoman at Stanford University, said Friday. Campus Police Chief Marvin Herrington said there were three other similar incidents at the party involving Keane, who reportedly was drinking. Lowson said she was attacked after she and three other coeds went to the Beta Theta Pi fraternity party late Thursday night and Keane grabbed her and pulled her to the dance floor, she said. "I tore away from him and hid in the bathroom," she said, but when she came out he grabbed her again and pulled her on top of him. "I was struggling desperately and I looked up at the crowd and said, 'Can't somebody please help?' " she said. She said about 10 young men surrounding them just laughed. Finally, she said, two freshwoman friends, Jill Higgins, 18, of Great Falls, Mont., and Cathy Zerboni, 18, of Aptos, Calif., tried to help her. "I tried to tear him off her," Higgins said. "I dug my nails into his neck but he totally ignored it." Mike Hein, 18, a freshman from An- chorage, Alaska, said he helped the young women and "with all three of us, he finally managed to get her free and we all ran out of the house.'' The campus police chief quoted Keane as saying, "I think I'm in trouble. I was drinking and can't remember anything." The fraternity denied that Keane was a member. "We tried to kick the guy out but he was too big," said a member of the fraternity. Corrections Dan Kaller, a member of Weatherization as Responsible Main- tenance (WARM) said the group should not have trouble meeting the Jan. 3, 1985 deadline for getting the 5,000 signatures needed to place a weatherization proposal on the city's April ballot. The group has gained 1,100 signatures so far. A story in yesterday's Daily listed the wr'ong number of signatures received so far and in- correctly stated that the group should have trouble gathering 5,000 names by the deadline. Engineering Prof. Theodore Birdsall is seeking approval of a research project he wants to propose to the National Science Foundation. A story in yesterday's Daily incorrectly stated that he intended to make the proposal to the Department of Defense. 14 4 14 Sabube Iat The I4{ekgan Daie ol be fRiEbt-gan ttil NOW HIRING UM students only Part - time work available in all Food Service areas. Apply in Person, Rm. 2400, Michigan Union -..... N I -.m Vol. XCV - No.58 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967X) is published Tuesday through SundayL during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub, scription rates: September through April - $16.50 in Ann Arbor; $29.00 outside the city; May through August - $4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second-class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor; Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndi- cate andCollege Press Service, and United Students Press Service. Editor in chief ............ ........... BILL SPINDLE Sports Editor ......................MIKE MCGRAW Managing Editors ................. CHERYL BAACKE Associate Sports Editors ............J.JEFF BERGIDA KATIE BLACKWEUL NEIL CHASE PAUL HELGREf1 Associate News Editors ............ LAURIE DELATER DOUGLAS B. GEORGEA KOVANIS STEVE WISE THOMAS MILLER Personnel Editor .S...........SUE BARTO SPORTS STAFF: Dove Aretho, Mark Borowski, Jog Opinion Page Editors ................. JAMES BOYD Ewing, Chris Gerbosi. Jim Gindin. Skip Goodman, JACKIE YOUNG Steve Herz, Rick Kaplan, Tom Keaney, Tim Makinen, NEWS STAFF: Laura Bischoff, Dov Cohen, Stephanie Adam Martin. Scott McKinloy, Barb McQuade. Brad DeGroote, Nancy Dolinko, Mary Beth Doyle, Lily Eng, Morgan. Jerry Muth. Phil Nussel. 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