Star wars on Campus See Weekend magazine j:j; b r Ai r ian Ninety-six years of editorialfreedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, October 11, 1985 Vol. XCVI - No. 27 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Twelve Pages Blackouts continue on campus B ue set to battle for state supremacy By BRAD MORGAN Better than the Showdown in Mot- own better than the War to Settle the Score; it's time for the annual cross- town clash between Michigan and Michigan State, and this year it promises to be a doosey. Michigan State finally found its of- fense last week against Iowa, so sud- denly the game is no longer looking like the blowout some people thought it was going to be. Bobby McAllister played well against the Hawkeyes, and Lorenzo White seems to be starring in his own movie titled, Lorenzo: First Down, Part II, so sud- denly the long time rivalry is heating up. AS IF IT needed any extra fuel thrdwn on the fire. These teams always go at each other's throats with gusto, and with Michigan trying to p avenge last year's crushing 19-7 defeat and the Spartans trying to beat the Wolverines in back-to-back seasons for the first time since 1966- 67, the heat is on. "We're more fired up than we were last week because it's Michigan and it's a rivalry," said White. It's the game everyone is waiting for . .. it's tradition. When you come in here they tell you there's a team you want to beat most and that's Michigan." If anyone can lead the Spartans past Michigan, it's White. The scintillating sophomore out of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. has become one of the top run- ning backs in the country, leading the Spartan ground game with 664 yards on 137 carries. What's even more im- pressive is that, before the Iowa game, White was nearly MSU's lone See PERFECT, Page 12 By PHILIP CHIDEL University and Detroit Edison of- ficials are still searching for a cause of a series of power outages in the past month that have left several Univer- sity streets unlit raising student con- cern about safety on campus. Ron Mason, the general supervisor of customer marketing services at Detroit Edison, said there have been problems with damaged underground cables which supply power to the campus streetlights. "WE'VE (DETROIT Edison) had some problems with cable cutting," Mason said. "I don't say that (the outages) are results of cable cutting because we won't know until we get our reports back. But we have had a quite a rash of it this year." "To damage a cable, you can nick a cable ... (up to) four months before. . . the cable faults," Mason explained. "The weather has a lot to do with it. The more rain you get, the more faults you get. . . from damage that was done a long time ago." The outage of lighting in the Diag last weekend and the ongoing blackout along South University have been the most notable of numerous outages. Others include Thayer Street (MLB, Hill Auditorium area), Thom- pson Street (the front of West Quad), Huron Street (Frieze Building, Rackham Building area), and, on North Campus, Beal Avenue (Engineering Building area) OFFICIALS said they suspect that See BLACKOUTS, Page 2 Greek guts Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority struggle for a victory over Kappa Alpha Theta during yesterday's tug-of-war at Sigma Chi fraternity's Derby Days. The events, which also included ice-cream eating contests and initiation ceremonies, were organized by Sigma Chi and will help raise money to aid handicapped children. 'U' STUDENTS PLAN RALL Y ON DIA G Students across U.S By KERY MURAKAMI Chants of "Hey, hey, ho, ho, South African apartheid has got to go," will be heard on cam- puses across the nation today as students at over 100 colleges are expected to participate in a national day of protest against apartheid. At -the University, students from the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee will simulate a South African funeral march star- ting on the Diag at 11 a.m. A RALLY, featuring several speakers in- cluding State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Ar- bor), City Councilman Larry Hunter (D-First Ward), and Barbara Ransby, leader of the campus-based anti-apartheid group will take place on the Diag at noon. The University's Board of Regents voted last month to divest $4.5 million of stock in com- panies that do business in South Africa, bringing the University's total divestment to $49.5 million or 90 percent of the $50 million in-- South Africa-related stocks it held in 1983. Despite the regents action, Ransby urges students to participate in the rally. "A stand against apartheid is something that cannot be compromised. The regents' action, though it's clearly a step in the right direction, is an at- tempt to come up with a compromise," Ransby said. "EVEN A HALF a million dollars still in- vested detracts from the symbol of the action," she said. The rally here and at other colleges comes in Sto protes response to a call by the New York-based American Committee on Africa to join in a day of unity between colleges pushing for divest- ment. Today is also a Day of Solidarity with South African Political Prisoners, designated by the United Nations, said Joshua Nessen, national student coordinator of the ACA. Nessen added that the group is calling for a minute of silence at 1 p.m. (EST) today to present a united message. RANSBY SAID the rally would end with the silence, before moving to the Michigan Union for a series of workshops and discussions about apartheid at 3 p.m. The committee will also sponsor a series of teach-ins October 17, 18 and 19. At other campuses today, students are ex- t S. Africa pected to take action - radical action at some places. For example: Students at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., will cap off a week of protests today with an all-day teach-in, a boycott of classes, and a rally outside a meeting of the school's board of trustees..These students are trying to persuade the school to divest its $147 million in South Africa-related stocks. Wednesday 50 Cornell students were arrested during a sit-in at the main administratin building. In addition, four others were arrested on Monday and Tuesday; At the University of Colorado in Boulder, students will be holding a teach-in featuring a speech by Rep. Pat Schroeder (d-Colorado). ... ..... .............. ......... ....... ....... ............................................ ..........:.:..; ...............................,...., ... Y: "::: ":::::.l:.t':::.:Y:t'.Yi:.'.':."'.:Y:::. rcrc.... ........;..::.. ." Y'.".": rf 5 t .... ........... .......... .. ............ ... . ....... ......... .. .. .. ........ . ........ ... ............. ...... .... .......... .................... .... .::..; .................................. ... .... : . "... ... .. M1 ........... h:.. .V 1. 4. V .... .. ... : ....... ......5 ..................... . . .. .. ?... .... ........n .... t":.:L.,. .............: L:... .r; ....Y: r.:Y::..Y:.'.:YJ:: ""v:: .'::.......................rr.: r.:. J..:"..:. J. XN. h{"N::.:.." ....... "M1::.4 {'.M1 .:. . . .... .. . ..........t.... .. . N 51.. ... ...L ............. ...... .... .................... ....... ..... . .n ,, . . .. h 4 .......................... ............................... ... . .,.L ....... .......:............................................................. ................... ............................... t C. ........................... ........ ...,............. ...... ... ...t......... ...:.. ""::::.;.;...............;..... :. n.. ;.m :nY:nY::..; ...r::mY::r" ..:r .t.:,h:{}r. { p.. ; :ti. M1 : ., .. ... . .............1.... 'M'l player receives deferred sentence By ANDREW ERIKSEN Freshman basketball player Glen Rice was ordered to perform 72 hours of community service and pay $100 in connection with a Sept. 13 incident at Thompson and East Madison Streets in which he allegedly shoved a University student, knocking him to the ground. Rice received the deferred sentence on Sept. 27 in 15th District Court. He entered a plea of no contest to the charge of assault and battery. ACCORDING to court records, a plea of not guilty was originally en- tered by the court and a pre-trial hearing was then set for bct. 28. But the plea was latered changed to no contest and Rice was placed on the deferred sentence program. John Cahill, a second year law student and a resident director at West Quad, filed a complaint against Rice on Sept. 20. A warrent was then issued for Rice's arrest. Rice was arrested by Ann Arbor Police on Sept. 27. He was released on personal recognizance. IF A DEFENDENT successfully completes the terms of the deferred sentence program, no criminal record will result. A review for Rice is scheduled for March 28 in 15th District Court. The maximum penalty for assault and battery is 90 days in the County Jail and a fine of $100. Rice was named the best high school basketball player in the state last year. He attended Flint North- western High School. ................... .......... ... . ... .. ........ .....................,..,.. .,.................................................... ......lflf ..... .. . .... ... ... ..... ... ... ..... .... .t .. ..... .... .. .. ... ...... ... .,... ...... A. . t . ........... ......". ....."..: ..........t....5.............. ...... .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .:. IFC postpones Greek review panel By MELISSA BIRKS The Interfraternity Council last night voted to refer a proposal, which would combine a panel to help frater- nities and sororities plan events with a Panhellenic and IFC judiciary board, back to committee. The decision to postpone the vote was made pending clarification and improvements by the IFC con- stitutional committee of some of the proposal's points. YESTERDAY'S Daily incorrectly said the panel would be a type of court which would discipline individual Greek members accused of criminal acts. While the Greek Activities Review Panel (GARP) will act as a judical *body of IFC and Panhel, it will not deal with criminal acts, said Allan Lutes, president of IFC, and Anne Morgan, vice president of Panhel. "If disputes would fall into criminal or major civil violations, then the proper authorities would deal with those problems," Lutes said. "We don't handle criminal cases," Morgan added. ANOTHER function of GARP is "to eliminate past and possible future problems with events such as Greek Week and philanthropies." The panel will help with organizational problems to "improve the quality of the event," Lutes said. According to Lutes, GARP would help with providing the proper amount of security for an event, and a safe alcohol policy, such as providing alternative beverages. It would also help obtain proper licenses and per- mits for parties. GARP counsultation is optional. The most significant point of con- flict involves a clause which grants anonymity to any member pressing charges at the judiciary board. This clause, which was in the Panhellenic constitution, has never been passed by the IFC. "IT OBSTRUCTS due process of law" Lutes said, "namely that a per- son has the right to face his accuser and the right to cross examine." Morgan agrees. "They want to know who's pressing charges. I don't think that's so unreasonable," she said. The judiciary portion of the proposal is actually an already existing part of the IFC constitution which, according to Lutes, has been inactive for about the last two years because "IFC was lacking in organizational areas prior to 1984." IF PASSED, GARP will be open to any and all complaints and disputes between Greek chapters, between a Greek chapter and a non-Greek party, or between a chapter and IFC or Panhel. Lutes said he is certain that, although GARP specifically urges the conflicting parties to work out problems among themselves first, the judiciary party will become active af- ter passage as a mediating device. Greek members said they hope that GARP, if passed, will help keep Greek problems within the system at a minimum. U.S. intercepts plane of hijackers. ROME (AP) - An Egyptian African country, said the Washington military airplane carrying the four sources, who spoke on condition of Palestinians who hijacked an Italian anonymity. luxury liner landed at a NATO base in They said after landing in Sicily the Sicily early today, Italian officials plane was surrounded by U.S. Navy said. SEALS, a specially trained unit, who In Washington, administration and planned to take the terrorists off the intelligence sources said American plane and turn them over to Italian warplanes intercepted the Egyptian authorities. 737 jetliner while it was flying from At a press conference last night, Cairo to Tunisia, and forced it to land White House Press Secretary Larry in Sicily. Speakes said the U.S. government During the flight, the Tunisian would request that the Italian government - apparently heeding a government extradite the hijackers to U.S. request to deny the hijackers the United States for criminal sanctuary - refused they Egyptian prosecution for allegedly killing an plane permission to land in that North American aboard the ship. KTODAY- Run for more than fun IGMA NU Fraternity on campus is joining forces with its brother chapter in East Lansing Man or monster? ALLOWEEN ARRIVED early in East Pennsboro Township, Pennsylvania, as far as police are concerned. A few residents hairy creature, with long fangs and arms that extended below his knees. Three officers were sent to investigate and "one did hear the sound," Corbett said. "He described it as like a screech, but with a gutteral, deep down effect." But the chief said he believed the creature was a costumer prankster starting alittle early on Halloween. He was so convinced that after the INSIDE WEATHER: Sunshine with a high in the 60's. APARTHEID: Opinion supports UN day of protest. Page 4. 11 I