Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom E 4F -or an 4Iai1Q Breakout Clearing with a high in the 40s Vol. XCV, No. 149 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, April 7, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Runaway man may have jumped off bridge By THOMAS HRACH Police called off a search of the Huron River early yesterday morning after a man who apparently jumped from a bridge into the water was found in good condition at a nearby grocery store. The unidentified 21-year-old man disappeared on his way to a psychiatric examination at University Hospitals Friday afternoon, according to Ann Ar- bor Police Sgt. Gary Kistka. AROUND 9 p.m. Friday night, Kistka said a passerby reported seeing someone jump into the river from a bridge on Fuller Road near Maiden Lane behind the hospitals. Joined by divers and a helicopter from the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department, police searched the river for several hours. Kistka said their ef- forts were hampered by high winds and swiftly-flowing water. The search was terminated when the man was found at the Kroger grocery store at Plymouth and Green Roads around 2 a.m. yesterday. He was wearing wet clothing and at first admit- ted having jumped from the bridge. He later denied it, Kistka said. Kistka said police were "75 percent sure" that they had found the man who jumped. "We're not positive that it was the same person," he said, "but it does all seem to add up." The search was teminated when the man was found because of the extremely hazardous conditions. After finding the man, police took him to the University Hospitals See MAN, Page 3 Military takes power in Sudan CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) - Sudan's military commander seized power in a bloodless coup yesterday while pro- American President Jaafar Numeiry was visiting Egypt and immediately imposed martial law in the North African nation. Defense Minister and military com- mander Abdul Rahman Shar al-Dahab banned Numeiry, Sudan's president since 1969, from returning to the nation. where thousands of civilians protesting food price hikes rebelled against his fundamentalist Islamic regime. NUMIERY, 55 who met with Presid- ent Reagan earlier this week, cut short a U.S. visit and stopped in Cairo en route hime yesterday, but he was refused permission to fly back to the Sudanese capital of Khartoum because of the risk, With Numeiry stranded in Egypt, Khartoum's new leaders declared a state of emergency and suspended Sudan's constitution, including sharia, the strict Islamic law backed by Numeiry that calls for floggings for possession of alcohol and amputations for robbery. In Santa Barbara, Calif., Where President REagan is vacationing, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said, "We're watching the situation closely and monitoring even- ts." IN WASHINGTON, a state depar- tment spokesman said, "Our embassy reported the situation to be calm in Khartdum. There have been no reports of violence, no reports of any violence or injuries to American citizens or other Western residents in Sudan." In addition to al-Dahab, the Sudanese Embassy in-Kenya said the other main plotters were Deputy Defense Minister Taj el Din Abdullah and Tawfik Khalil, a Defense Ministry official. Political observers said it appeared the consumer price hikes, which led to weeklong demonstrations and a general strike in Khartoum that paralyzed the nation, triggered the military takeover. LIBYAN leader Moammar Khadafy, who had urged the Sudanese people to revolt, immediately announced diplomatic recognition of Sudan's new military administration - becoming the first world leader to do so - but there was no indicaiton Libya was in- volved in the takeover. Reports from Khartoum, a city of more than 1 million people, were not available. Most commercial com- munications with Khartoum were cut and the city's airport remained closed for a third day. But diplomats and other analyts in Cairo said the capital appeared to be calm after three straight days of demonstrations over Numeiry's 16-year rule and the government's recent in- crease in food prices. On Friday, the British Broadcasting Corp. reported a "state of total paralysis" and a fuel shortage in Khar- toum. Ibrahim Taha Ayub, Sudan's am- See MILITARY, Page 3 Daily Photo by DARRIAN SMITH Easter bear? Workers at Moes Sport Shop on N. University altered the Easter tradition a bit when they planted - not a bunny - but a bear in green plastic grass and sat it in the store window. Then they went a step further and stuck a sign reading "Jelly Beans are NOT Easter eggs" at the bear's feet. ..*.. .......'...,.................................. ...nft ...... .3.. .:..aL.............. ........ ............f..... .. , . ., : v' ,., ..$M m, , .. ... , . .l . . ..... . . . ..v.. . . . . . . :. v....... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . ... «.«..v.n. ~ ... .......«.....v ....................... v: .....n . . . . . . . .:.,... .... .......:... ... .. .. ... .. .. Beirut: Ten * years of war stems from tangled past The Old Testament book of Habakkuk warned the Israelites, "for the violence of Lebanon shall cover thee. " Today violence covers Lebanon and indeed, that ancient country has been a frequent battleground, often over religion. But in the civil war that began 10 years ago this month alliances have shifted so many times that even some Lebanese forget what was behind one bat- tle or another. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Near the corner of Rue Sadat and Rue Emile Edde in West Beirut is one of the few unscathed monuments to Lebanon's past. It is not a grand building, nor a statue of a national hero. It's a small metal box, decorated with the country's cedar tree symbol that somehow has kept its green paint through the years. A SLOT AT the front and the words "Letter Box" in French and Arabic are a reminder that - once upon a time in Lebanon - there existed something resembling civic order. A card or letter dropped into a public mailbox would arrive across town or across the world. Police made arrests, traffic lights flashed red or green, people took disputes to courts founded on French justice, a sturdy national museum guarded remnants of Lebanon's ancient past. In 10 years, such things have themselves become history, lost in a so-called civil war that erupted on April 13, 1975, with an attem- pted assassination and a reprisal ambush on a bus. THIRTY-ONE people were killed that first day, since then, more than 100,000 See SECT, Page 2 py ::, v:,:..;; .. :::rte: } ::.: ..:: ",v :.,,,e "::.v:::.. ..;.; .. ..: .:: .. .:..:...::: ,:::... v.....:.. .,...::. ..... ::.... .._....'.v :: ~"n.v.:<:"::: .... ;.",:"": .. .. .. U .>3 .. Q.', . k: \.v ,..... ..f3.> .h v:.. .v. .., ..v.... .... .......: .......... .:v :v.v....,,.,. } v:v,... ': ::::w: ........ :y.,.""v, .tt:vv;,..... .... n... ..+. M. 1 .... .. ... .. ... . ....x.... .i ..... ,..: .m .......... ... .......... .......... L .}... «:.: .. {"; .v: :,vv::: ,t .. v v:; .,;..v."::w. ... ., ;}.. , : ,., ,hJ.. }.. v v....lv:. v:g .... ... ...... ..... '''SC,,..{ir .v.. ..M :::v.:::::::.: .}........, ....... ...f .. .:.. ::v:x,:'0't.....: :..:.... :":: .,. ,. ... ,. .. } ..., :x}, .....:...... ... ,...; .. :...::.v::: . .:;.....:..itr:. : ....... .. C .................. £} } . ..,, ~ . ..: ... 4 .... ,. .. ...... .... . t ...tt y~S ........ 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Musselman's art is a form that jux- taposes pop culture and antiquity in a way that exposes the enduring realities of the human condition. Several local art collectors admire the intentions behind his work, but politely refuse to exhibit it. "His art has an earth quality about it," said Autumn Thomas, president of the Ann Arbor Association for the Per- forming Arts. "Lee's art is new, unique, and brings out feelings and emotions we otherwise might not consider." But Michael Brown; curator of the gallery at the Ann Arbor Art Association, said: "We positively sup- port Lee's work and some of his work with seasonal themes have been well- received by customers, but we get thousands of art works to jury and we have very limited space here." Musselman says he has been told his art "wasn't suitable" and that it is "too overwhelming," 4s well. Leonora Seid, education director at the Ann Arbor Art Associatiop, offered an explanation as to why Musselman's designs are so controversial. "Lee's work has a lot of humor and serious meaning in it, but he focuses on the human form and incorporates human characteristics," she said. "That, perhaps, enforces some con- frontation with human life." That's not difficult to see. In one collage he entitles "Sunday at Brunch," Musselman planted a reclining naked male stocking doll beside a black cat applique. The doll's nudity, Musselman explains, is seen as his "stripping away from the materialistic world," while the cat is See ARTIST, Page 2 Born in Ypsilanti, the 28-year-old grew up in the Upper Peninsula before moving to Ann Arbor in 1980 to take art courses at a now-defunct studio down- town. But since his arrival, art has taken a backseat to the numerous odd jobs Musselman has been forced to work to support himself. To make things worse, the designs he has found time to create out of fabric and antique knick-knacks have been rejected by- Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH Local artist Lee Musselman shows an elementary school girl how to stitch cloth to make a doll at the Ann Arbor Art Association.Local gallery curators say Musselman's own work is "new and unique," but refuse to buy it. I --' --- -To DAY |I Stuffing unlimited F RATERNITY presidents at the University and at schools all over the nation have opened their mail recently to find the following message: "Imagine the possibilities. Your very own moun- tain gorilla greeting guests in the narlor. A shiras w N.. ' Nti.' N1 smoking a cigar. Down the road in Columbus, an Ohio State University student found just the thing he needed: a moosehead to hang in his bedroom. As Jim points out in his letter, "instead of that old boring cliche about coming up to look at your etchings, you can really impress your date by asking, 'Hey, wanna come upstairs and see my game cock?' the game is to be promoted from a corrections officer to warden by answering questions and collecting points. Rolling a die, players move along spaces labeled "Tower Assignment," "Execution Chamber" or "Administrative Segregation." The worst square is "Federal Court Order," which carries a fine of 20 points or a demotion. The first execution by electrocution, by the way, was in 1890 as a promotional scheme for an electric company in New York. > \lN X.kJW EAl'.. .I I