C I bt Sir4 imn 4Iaii Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, December 10, 1985 Vol. XCVI - No. 67 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily 'M'claws Cougars for clean 79-62 win By TOM KEANEY Nothing flashy, just big guys beating up on little guys. In what can only be called a well- rounded effort, Michigan soundly efeated Chicago State 79-62 last night at Crisler Arena. IT WAS a prohibitive victory yes, but not the way the score might in- dicate. The Cougars were no pushovers, but they were overmat- ched. "I enjoyed playing this game because they were a very quick team, like a bunch of piranhas," said Michigan head coach Bill Frieder. "We had to work hard for what we got. They kept us on our toes." There were no long strings of unan- swered points for the Wolverines, no two-handed monster jams, but Michigan quietly controlled nearly every aspect of the game. ALSO PLEASANT. from Bill Frieder's standpoint was the all-of- the-sudden offensive production of See BLUE, Page 8 PIRGIM Eight Pages pushes for optional fee By EVE BECKER The Public Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM) plans to seek student support for a new fee system which would charge each student two dollars per term, unless the student specifically requests otherwise. PIRGIM members yesterday sent a letter to James Brinkerhoff, the University's vice president and chief financial officer, announcing a plan- ned February petition drive which must solicit over 50 percent of the student body to put the group's new plan on either student's tuition bills or Student Verification Forms. PIRGIM MEMBERS remained un- certain which option they would pur- sue, but any petition to put the organization on the tuition bills must be approved by the regents, one of whom yesterday expressed opposition to the plan. PIRGIM, a student-run citizen group concerned with statewide and campus legislative issues, had received funding for 14 years from Student Verification Forms, where each student indicated whether they wanted to make a two dollar con- tribution.. Last February, however, the regen- ts voted 6-1 to end this funding con- tract with the University, and PIRGIM members insist the donation system they were forced to employ has hurt the group's image and finan- cialstatus. GARY KALMAN, campus staff for PIRGIM, said the drop in student support no longer enables the organization to be a strong force in the community. "We just can't keep operating the way we've been. It just doesn't do what a PIRG is set up to do," Kalman said. He emphasized that a successful petition drive would help restore PIRGIM's image as an effective student organization. "THE STUDENTS will be part of a majority supporting PIRGIM. The difference is the message it will give students," Kalman predicted. Steve Johnson, the chair of PIRGIM's state and local boards of directors, agreed that the current period of funding by donation ruined PIRGIM's image because, he said, group members harassed studentsi;in registration lines with pleas for a con- tribution. Both Johnson and Kalman seem confident that the student body will prove sympathetic to their plight, however, even though only 11.6 per- cent of the student paid the PIRGIM fee as recently as 1984. JOHNSON FEELS "this is something that for the most part students agree with," because "PIRGIM is an independent group not under the dominion of the ad- ministration." He added that a system in which students are automatically charged for PIRGIM would resemble 'a See PIRGIM, Page 6 Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Wading through the Chicago State defense, Butch Wade lays in two of his team and season high 17 points. Wade shot an impressive 66 percent from the floor and 83 percent from the line. ". . . S.".: ". . . ..i: vv . Minority students push for unity By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Students representing different minority associations are meeting in- formally to unify and combat a "lack of support" from the University. This is the first time that such a group has met to discuss problems at the University. The members of the group feel that the University treats each minority group separately and dif- ferently. Members say this treatment creates an atmosphere of competition between the different minorities. "THE NEED to develop central issues instead of diversity is crucial," said Dean Goto, one of the vice presidents of the Asian American Association. ' bomb may have. national link 4""YJ 'J 11.1".W i':r ....:.. ""::.:..................r..........:w::....:..:.-....................................... .... .....~ ...................... ...." 1 .J VJJ.. . J ..J .4."J...".."J 'JJJ.S . L.1.. . . . ..^":f. ...1......1.... ... .:.. . 1. " .:J}'. 1 a".. vf " r.. J......:"" .... r."..S .15 Prof. performs Dickens to promote peace By MARTHA SEVETSON Snow was falling softly outside the windows of the South Quad lounge last Thursday. Inside, students were seated in front of a crackling fire, whispering as they waited for the dignified arrival of a storyteller from Christmases past. Their whispers faded when Charles Profile Dickens, carrying a book and a glass of water, entered the lounge a few minutes later and took his place at a desk draped with a red velvet cloth. THE BEARDED figure dressed in a black tuxedo didn't tell his audience he was actually English Prof. Bert Hor- ' nback, launching into a reading of A Christmas Carol, the tale of a miser who learns the spirit of giving to others one lonely Christmas. But the sandy-haired, 49-year-old professor did ask his listeners to repeat after him words Dickens might have said: "Christmas doesn't belong to just one season of the year; when we learn to live by Christmas, we will make this world a very different place." _J After the performance ended an hour later, Hornback changed his clothes back to jeans and a cotton shirt. Then he put on a brass belt buckle shaped in a peace sign - a symbol that while Hornback had shif- ted his appearance to the 20th cen- tury, he had retained the 19th century social critic's ideals. LIKE DICKENS, Hornback believes in making the world a better place through peace and personal choice to do what is "right," rather than through revolution. "(Dickens) determined that change could come through personal and metaphysical revolution," Hornback explained earlier in an interview at his home. "I really do think that if ever we can manage to think straight, we could change the world." Hornback said his interest in Dickens began when he was a graduate student in English at Notre Dame. Hornback had once considered a career in journalism, a profession Dickens himself pursued as a budding writer. Our Mutual Friend was the first work of Dickens Hornback read as a graduate student. The following summer he read all of Dickens' other books, David Copperfield, a novel See ENGLISH, Page 2 English Prof. Bert Hornback performs as Charles Dickens, inset, to promote the real meaning of Christmas. TODAY- Grinch like T AST SATURDAY night, sometime after mid- heard shuffling upstairs and some men laughing, butj we didn't think it was unusual because it was 'Saturday night,"she said. Later she noticed that the tree was missing from the lounge and a trail of broken ornamen- ts led to truck tracks in front of the building. Walsh said the residents were expecting a ransom note for the tree but never got one. "It was kind of tacky for someone toI take nur tre eand we hone it wasn't anv of niir friends." with a scanner and television screen to inspect the chimney's insides. "Now we can see the real condition of the chimneys," said Hostedler, 32, who started Clean-Sweep two years ago. "We can see things that just couldn't be seen before." While his assistant, Michael Dobies manipulates a pole to lower a 12-inch scanner down the chimney, Hostedler sits in front of a screen observing the nictures and giving instructions. INSIDE RESPONSE: Opinion discusses proposal for a required course against racism. See Page 4. CRACKLING: Arts reviews progressive an ! i l " _. . 1 . ii i