Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom C I be Sit ioau 41) ttiij Ark A chance of thundershowers and heavy rain today. High in the mid-50s. Vol. XCV, No. 67 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan- Tuesday, November27, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Students won't get ADVICE for anodherlO days Tar pley 's 21 topple tough By JERRY MARKON ADVICE, a student-financed course evaluation booklet published by the Michigan Student Assembly, may be unavailable until as late as Dec. 6 - just six days before the end of CRISP. Members of the MSA's Course Evaluations Committee attribute the delay to a malfunctioning computer program that had to be rewritten, and program director Richard Layman said that this caused the publication to miss several deadlines. AS A RESULT, he said, the booklet was bumped off schedule at a Jackson printing company. But the main reason for the booklet's delay appears to be a case of personal burn-out. "Frankly, I'm tired of it," said Layman, who has worked on nine con- secutive issues, dating back to 1981. "I HAVE other things I want to do in my life, too, so I haven't put in the ef- fort and diligence that I should have," he added. Although ADVICE is no longer "the biggest priority in my ex- tra-curricular life," Layman said he was forced to serve another year against his will because a promised replacment, whose name he would not reveal, backed out. When questioned about the fact that students directly paid for $10,424 of the Course Evaluation Committee's $11,374 revenue intake in the 1982-83 academic year, Layman responded, "Ten grand is nothing. You can't do anything with ten grand." The student revenue was obtained from MSA's $4.75 charge per term on each student's tuition bill - 17 cents was allocated for course evaluation, according to MSA treasurer Bill Mellin. LAYMAN said he believes that the course evaluation program has been continually hampered by a small budget. He said other schools provide more money for similar projects and pointed to the University of California at Los Angeles' budget of $25,000. Since UCLA's course evaluation booklet is only published once a year with 5,000 copies, and ADVICE is printed both terms with 10,000 copies, Layman reminds students of "how much they're getting for their money." Nonetheless, he said that "it's reprehensible that ADVICE is basically going to miss filling the needs of many students who use it." AND THIS year's guide will contain fewer course evaluations than in the past. The material published in ADVICE is gained from course evaluations distributed voluntarily by professors contacted by the MSA committee. The evaluations are provided by the Cen- ter for Research on Learning and Teaching. The center processes the data, and MSA then compiles it into booklet format. "The first thing a professor thinks about at the beginning of the term is definitely not classroom evaluation," Layman said, adding that each professor must be contacted individually every semester to assure evaluation. See COURSE, Page 7 Titans, By JOE EWING What a difference Roy Tarpley can make. The junior center shot, drove and slammed for 21 second-half points after sitting out most of the first half with foul trouble to lead Michigan to an 80-66 win in its season opener against Detroit last night at Crisler Arena. AFTER Tarpley committed two per- sonal fouls in the first four minutes of the first half, Bill Frieder's club found itself in the position where it would have to adapt to playing with a hole in the middle. But the Wolverines just couldn't adapt. They fumbled and bumbled their way through the first twenty minutes, tur- ning the ball over nine times and shooting only 40 percent from the floor. At halftime, they found themselves down 31-29. One indication of how bad things got was when Butch Wade stole the ball at mid-court, broke in all alone and then slammed a dunk attempt off the iron. "I thought I heard footsteps," claimed Wade. "I thought someone was coming to take me out. I got nervous and tried to flush it down really quick and it bounced back out." THE SECOND half started pretty much the same way, with Detroit up- 80-66 ping its lead to 35-31 before Tarpley and crew took over five minutes into the half and ran off 23 points to the Titans' eight in a span of seven minutes. "It took Tarpley awhile to get his first basket," said Frieder. "But when he did, he played extremely well. In the second half we scored on nine of our first 10 possessions and we were a little more patient on offense." And in the first half they didn't get much from Tarpley. "OUR DEFENSE had a lot to do with that," claimed Detroit head coach Don Sicko. "Not letting him catch the ball low. (It was) old-fashioned beat him to the spot." During the first half the Titans held the Michigan big man scoreless and allowed him only two rebounds. "We've got Tarpley playing for the first time as the man they're trying to contain," explained Frieder of Tar- pley's first half. "He's a marked man." BUT THEN the Michigan mentor did a few things to get his 'center back into the game in the second half and the change was phenomenal. Frieder chose to go to Tarpley early and boost his con- tidence, a move that also gave the rest of his squad a shot in the arm. See 'M,' Page 8 Michigan forward Butch Wade battles Kevin McAdoo (21) of The University of Detroit for a rebound in action from last night's 80-66 Wolverine victory, the season opener for both teams. McAdoo's Titan teammate Eric Jackson looks on. Library rules may bar homeless By ARONA PEARLSTEIN The Ann Arbor Public Library's new rules of con- duct may be used to bar vagrants from the main library on South Fifth Avenue and its three branches, some members of the local American Civil Liberties Union charge Two rules in particular anger the Washtenaw Coun- ty chapter of the ACLU. One allows library officials to remove an individual from the library because of "extremely poor personal hygiene." Another rule prohibits sleeping in the library for more than 10 minutes. "HOW IS HYGIENE being defined?" asked Jean King, chairwoman of the local ACLU. "How does it violate other patrons' use of the library? How does sleeping interfere with someone else's use of the library?" "I don't think anyone would object to library rules," said another ACLU member, Stanley Pollack. "But there are rules aimed against street people." The Ann Arbor Board of Education asked the Lawyers Committee of the local ACLU to review the rules. But ACLU members failed to discuss their ob- jections with the board before the rules were adopted on Nov. 14, King said. LIBRARY officials and board members say the rules, which also prohibit fighting, eating, and damaging library property, are aimed at protecting the safety of patrons and staff. The rules were sparked by reports of sexual harassment of patrons and staff by other library 'How is hygiene being defined? How does it violate other patrons' use of the library? How does sleeping interfere with someone else's use of the library?' - ACLU chairwoman Jean King users and a fight between two patrons last February which pointed up the need for behavior guidelines for the library's users, according to library director Ramon Hernandez. Board members say the rules don't discriminate against vagrants, but admit that they could be used to close the library's doors to certain individuals. "I DON'T THINK it's asking too much for proper hygiene," said board of education member Larry Hackney. He recalled one incident where a person had vomited on his clothing, and was sleeping in the library. "We're in a situation where we're concerned whether a sleeping person is well or not. We feel we have a responsibility to (patrons)," Hernandez said. Sleepers will only be asked to leave the library af- ter two warnings, Hernandez said, and only if the building is crowded or if the sleeper looks ill. OTHER LIBRARIES in the county do not have conduct rules, but the Ypsilanti District Library of- ficials are drafting a policy similar to Ann Arbor's. And if the Manchester Township Library had a conduct policy, it too would probably mirror the Ann Arbor library, according to director Margaret Goodrich. Goodrich said the new rules don't discriminate against the city's street people. But she said street people "are always a problem in an urban library. If you let people in who stink, you could be violating the right of the patrons." The library will have to present a report on enfor- cement of the rules to the board each month begin- ning in January, Hernandez said. And board mem- bers will check up on the library staff periodically to make sure the rules are not abused, said Martha Krehbiel, another board member. ACLU members are taking a "wait-and-see" ap- proach to the new rules, Pollack said. "We just have to see if (the rules) will be enforced selectively or not," he said. :.::::::.::..:.:....................................................._., Comatose girl wakes to reveal identity SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) - For two thought was their daughter and even were injured when a school bus weeks, relatives and officials thought viewed her body. carrying the Aurelia High School girls Patricia Noonan had been killed and MRS. LAKE sat by her side for two basketball team collided Nov. 10 with a her friend Shawn Lake critically in- weeks, and I don't know why she didn't car near Aurelia. jured in a crash that also killed both realize it wasn't her own child," said Police originally identified the vic- their fathers. Then the. injured girl Mrs. Boyd McFarland, Noonan's gran- tims as Lenis Lake, 42, of Primghar; awoke from a coma and startled both dmother. John Noonan, 45, of Hartley; and families by saying, "I'm Patty, Patty, "We're really stunned," she added. Noonan's daughter, Patricia. Patty." onn's duhe, arca Ofials ."We're so happy for our family, but we Authorities said Miss Lake was taken to Officials said yesterday that they feel so badly for Mrs. Lake." Marian Health Center in Sioux City. were trying to determine how the iden- tities of the two 16-year-old girls had An Iowa Highway Patrol spokesman Lt. Jim Hein of the state Highway become so confused. Lake's mother said police confirmed through finger- Patrol said officers established a ten- kept a vigil at the bedside of the prints yesterday that the girl in the tative identification of the crash vic- comatose girl without realizing that it hospital was Patricia Noonan, not tims "from information available to us was not her daughter, while the Noonan Shawn Lake. at the scene of the accident. But he family held a funeral for the girl they THREE PEOPLE were killed and 16 See OFFICIALS, Page 2 S S D V 5 Daily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL A CRISP employee prepares for the onslaught of students who will register for winter term in the next two weeks. They will not have the help of AD- VICE, however, since the MSA-published course evaluation guide won't be available until over a week after registration has begun. TODAY Eligibility "is one where the forces of supply and demand work in many of the same inexorable ways as they do in deter- mining the prices of stocks or bonds or widgets," said authors Charles Westoff and Noreen Goldman. The authors used marriage statistics, 1980 U.S. Census data and their own "demographic refinements" to come up with the figures. The refinements included adjusting information for homosexuals, confirmed singles and others unlikely to marry. After San Diego, the highest number of eligible men inhabit Houston, San Francisco, New Orleans and Los Angeles. Areas with poor ratios for husband-hunters are imagine one with a silly hat?; Pandas are quite fat; How about that?" wrote 9-year-old Shannon Wong-Lerner, who dined on bacon and eggs Saturday while the pandas enjoyed apples, fresh bamboo and a bowl of porridge. Pandas are "my favorite animal," said Shannon, who also visited Yun Yun and Ying Xin at the Los Angeles Zoo before the pandas came to San Francisco earlier this month. Another winner, Loretta Singhaus of Carmel, penned: "To Ying Xin and Yun Yun: San Francisco is wooing thee; Please woo each other; So that there may be three." targets represent sin, he says. Lystland, who visited a Cheyenne church Sunday, said his weapon against evil is appropriate. "If you were going to war, how would you fight the enemy? You'd use a gun. This is what I'm using to fight the devil," said Lystland, a former pipefitter who became an evangelist in 1981. E I i I