cl ble v 43UU IEaIIQ Ninety-six years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCVI - No. 92 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, February 10, 1986 Eight Pages I MSA ol reps.c By JERRY MARKON A Michigan Student Assembly official resigned last Friday because she was reprimanded by assembly leaders for violating an order not to speak to the media about an internal MSA matter, according to assembly representatives. Several MSA representatives criticized their leaders for restricting the right of Cheryl Bullard, a former MSA administrative coordinator, to speak freely about a controversy over an assem- bly member's possible conflict of interest. Bullard told the Daily two weeks ago that Lawrence Norris, chairman of MSA 's minority af- fairs committee, worked for Niara Sudarkasa, the University administrator responsible for minority affairs. MSA viewed the dual jobs as preventing Norris from independently evaluating University minority policies. MSA LEADERS were supported in repriman- ding Bullard by Pam Horne, a University official ficial resigns; hide leaders who supervised Bullard's work for MSA. Assem- bly members expressed concern that the Univer- sity can exert this influence over MSA's internal matters. Bullard refused to comment on her resignation. "I felt Cherie was treated very unjustly. She was revealing a conflict of interest and because of that it seems pressure was brought upon her," said Bruce Belcher, an assembly representative from Rackham. Belcher and others inside the assembly speculated that Bullard resigned in direct respon- se to a memo from Horne that criticized her for revealing details of the Norris episode. HORNE confirmed that she supported MSA leaders in their quest to keep the Norris incident out of the papers, and MSA President Paul Josephson defended the move as appropriate for a personnel matter. "During an internal office dispute, it's perfectly acceptable for a supervisor to tell someone not to bring it out into the public," said Josephson, who said both he and Vice President Phil Cole instruc- ted Bullard to keep quiet. Josephson also criticized Bullard for resigning with little notice, and for occasionally not showing up for work and failing to report her absences. "IT'S A CASE of gross misconduct that she resigned on two hours notice and refused to talk to me before she left," Josephson said. "When an employee walks out like she did, the University generally will not consider her for rehiring." "This year's MSA leadership had no intention of wasting student money on someone not coming in- to work," Josephson added, after describing how Bullard technically worked for the University, although MSA paid her salary. See MSA, Page 2 'M' COMEBACK SPOILED: Illini bruise Blue in OT, 83- 79 Doily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Dennis Watson, recipient of a Presidential Commendation, kicks off Black History Month at West Quad Friday night. 'Role model' kicks off ack History Month By ADAM MARTIN Special to the Daily CHAMPAIGN-A miracle was in sight. Instead, two crucial errors, nagging fatigue, and 16,353 Illini fans breathing hatred blinded the Michigan basketball team Saturday at Assembly Hall. When all was clear again, Illinois had grabbed an 83-79 overtime victory from the dishear- tened Wolverines. The end-what could have been Michigan's first win in Champaign in seven tries-was bitter. AHEAD BY TWO, 68-66, with 1:30 remaining in regulation, Michigan worked the ball to senior Rob Hender- son for an easy baseline jumper. Hen- derson's shot was blocked and the ball bounced out to Antoine Joubert who promptly missed a 20-footer. Joubert saw an open shot. What he didn't see was the 45-second clock, which was automatically reset after Henderson's attempt. When Joubert let it fly, 42 seconds remained in the 'The whole team worked hard to get it back to where we could win. It was a great comeback, and it's so frustrating to lose. You'd rather lose by 15 than come back and lose in overtime.' - Garde Thompson By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN "A cross between Bill Cosby and Jessie Jackson" kicked off Black History Month with some in- spiring words for black students Friday night. "Success can be measured by the degree of struggle it entails," said Dennis Watson, a black leader who has received a Presidential Commendation from President Reagan for being a positive role model for youth. Watson was named Outstanding Young Man of America in 1982 and 1985, and he has received more than 20 other awards for community service leadership. Stressing the importance of education, Watson said, "Racism is based upon ignorance, and if you don't know a people's history, yu can develop fallacies of its con- tributions." He emphasized the importance of Black History Mon- th. WATSON'S words are nationally known to inspire students as he tells them that "success in America is secured for black Americans." "The contributions that blacks made in spite of slavery are incredible," Watson said. "There is no excuse for black students of today." As Watson, who is the author of Survival Into the '80s and Beyond, told the audience about his formula for success, he used members of the audience to illustrate the im- pressions people form from daily interactions with each other. He asked one member of the audience to ask another member out on a date, then criticized the tactics employed in the request Watson said that inspiring con- fidence is the key to -developing good relationships. "Confidence is sometimes more valuable than knowledge if it is based upon knowledge," Watson said. TO OVERCOME racism, Watson said, "One of the first things that we need to do is to get rid of the word "minority", Watson con- tinued. "We are a majority on this earth, and we do not have a bone in our body-we have forgiven for our slavery.' Keynoter Angelou honors black ancestry By KURT SERBUS Speaking before a packed audience at Rackham Auditorium, author Maya Angelou said, "Remember.. . there's a differen- ce between being trained and being educated. Your chore, your charge is to make these not-quite-United States better by paying for someone else." The evening's keynote speaker began her speech commemorating Black History Month by paying tribute to American's black an- cestors and emphasizing the great lovethat has always existed in the black community. "THERE'S always been a con- tention that black people don't make love ...we begin to believe this propaganda. We hear there'sno love in the black community and we start to act upon it," she said after reading a selection of 19th century love songs and poetry illustrating the love that blacks have shared through time. See MAYA, Page 3 game, meaning Michigan could have stalled, but Joubert succumbed to what can easily be called a mental tragedy. "I thought the ball had to hit the rim for them to reset (the clock)," said an obviously confused Joubert, "and it didn't hit the rim. "WHEN ROB (Henderson) tipped it back to me, I knew there couldn't be more than two or three seconds left because we ran down the shot clock, and I didn't want time to run out." Illinois' 5-10 junior guard Tony Wysinger converted Joubert's miss into a foul-line jumper that tied the game at 68, and the Wolverines had time for a final shot. Thirteen seconds later, Michigan's point guard Gary Grant was the victim of another men- tal error. "I forced the tempo and I tried to create something that wasn't there," Grant said of his eight-foot pull-up in the lane that bounced in and out. "We could have gotten a better shot." COACH Bill Frieder agreed. "Grant took the last shot too quickly," he said. "We had five seconds to work harder for a better shot." But those five seconds slipped through the Wolverines' fingers, and fatigue leveled the final blow in over- time: Michigan never led in the extra period. After a Joubert runner cut Illinois' lead to two at 81-70, Wysinger nailed both ends of one-and-one, and Michigan was iced, frustrated, and broken. "The whole team worked hard to get it back to where we could win," said Garde Thompson, who returned: in the second half after limping off the; court in the first. "It was a great comeback, and it's so frustrating to lose. You'd rather lose by 15, than come back and lose in overtime." MICHIGAN'S errors, especially on national television, stand out. But the Wolverines would never have seen an edge-of-the-chair finish without manufacturing a comeback. See 'M,' Page 8 Congressman i By ROBERT STONE U.S. Rep. Newt Gingrich (R.-Ga.) told a group of Young Republicans Saturday that the GOP must become "the party of ideas and idealism if we are going to govern." Gingrich, renowned for his hell, fire, and brimstone oratory on the house floor, was in Ann Arbor stumping for Jack Kemp, the Republican front-runner in the 1988 presidential election. REFERRING TO Kemp, Gingrich said, "He has the quarterback's optimism to look up at the scoreboard as he did after Watergate and say, 'OK, we lost, so let's get a new playbook."' Gingrich defended Kemp's supply-side sympathies and attacked the "liberal welfare state." Gov. James Blan- chard, he said, is a "classic liberal welfare state Democrat" who has raised taxes 38 percent and expanded an oversized bureaucracy. The audience at the Briarwood Hilton included two Republican candidates for governor in 1988: Dick Chrysler and Daniel Murphy. '" irges idealism' GINGRICH said the liberal welfare state is organized around two fallacies: that people are victims of society or circumstances beyond their control, and that scarce resources require a central bureaucracy. However, Gingrich said, "It is impossible for the liberal welfare state to produce the economic growth and the advances in technology necessary to defend our freedom militarily against the Soviet Union or our jobs and take-home pay economically against Japan and the Pacific rim countries," Gingrich said. "The greatest weakness the Republican party has is we don't have enough people who can run the act of practical politics," Gingrich said. He added that he believes Kemp has the skills to do that. Gingrich, who represents the sixth district of Georgia, serves on the House Administration and Public Works Committee and on the Transportation Committee. Gingrich said he wasn't surprised by a recent federal court decision that says the Gramm-Rudmann deficit- reduction plan is unconstitutional, but he added that the budget has to be balanced on way or another. Gingrich ... supports Kemp CIA protesters By AMY MINDELL demonstrators, said After a four-hour deliberation jury's inability t Friday, jurors said they could not unanimous verdict a, unanimously decide on verdicts for 11 This is the third protesters, mostly students, who were demonstrators c charged with trespassing and ob- trespassing or dis structing a police officer while werenotconvicted. demonstrating against the CIA's Charges were d recruitment on campus last October. eleven demonstrato Judge George Alexander of the 15th research laboratory district court, declared a mistrial, judge declared a m and new proceedings will begin in mer, and four def March. with disorderly con HUGH MCGUINESS, one of the tober's CIA protest to face retrial in March he considers the to come to a victory. trial in which charged with orderly conduct ropped against rs at a University in 1983, after the istrial last sum- endants charged duct at last Oc- t were acquitted last month. McGuiness said that because the University cannot stifle dissent by arresting protesters, it will have to find a better way to discuss opposing views. . "WE DON'T have to protest," McGuinness said. "We can have these issues discussed by the whole com- munity." Still facing charges of trespassing are Dean Baker, Rackham Student Government president; McGuinness, a biology teaching assistant; LSA seniors Carey Garlick, Tamara Smith, and Claudia Green; LSA junior John Hartigan; graduate student Steve: Latta; and LSA senior Chris Faber, who was tried in absentia because he is in Nicaragua; and Ann Arbor residents Phyllis Flora and David Miklethun. Dave Buchen is charged with obstructing a police officer. Demonstrators were arrested Oct. 22 and 23 after gathering outside the University's Office of Career Plan- ning and Placement, where the CIA See JUDGE, Page 2 TODAY; Risqiue Ron as a contributing editor of Playboy magazine. The live audience responded with light applause. He followed up that question with: "How many people here think that I was asked to host the show because my father is the president of the United States?" That got a wild response of yells and whistles. In a later skit that the visitors share the feeling. Wilfred Griggs, director of Ancient Studies at BYU, said he can't help but chuckle at some of the comments he had heard about the exhibit he is credited with bringing to Utah. Just the other day there was a dear, sweet lady who had gone through the exhibit and just didn't understand -INSIDE FRAUD: Opinion looks at the United States' responsibility in the Philippines. See Page 4. i