4 Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 12, 1986 Michigan Review staff reports trashed papers By MARC CARREL Staff members of The Michigan Review, a conservative campus newspaper, have said that stacks of their publication have been thrown out by people opposed to the paper's political views. LSA sophomore Seth Klukoff, editor in chief of the Review, said he and other staff members have seen people attempting to "trash" the newspaper both this term and last April, when the Review began publishing again after a six-month hiatus. ANOTHER Review staff member, LSA sophomore Charles Lipsig, said at least 300 copies of the Review's January issues were thrown in a trash can in the Fishbowl 1/2% weeks ago. He added that he has observed other attempts to trash the Review and that several staff members and person no associated with the paper have seen similar incidents. The Review, which prints 15,000 copies each month, circulates the papers by placing them in public areas of the Univer- sity and in a number of stores around cam- pus. "I don't think that not having our own boxes contributed to the papers being thrown away," said Klukoff, who added that "we make an attempt not to put them on the ground." KLUKOFF said he knew some of those who are discarding the paper but he refused to identify them, saying only, "genrally they are from the far left politically." He called the alleged incidents "an exhibition of intolerance by people who don't agree with us," adding that this represents a form of censorship. "The people who trash the Review are afriad that people will read us and agree with us. Some of those trashing the paper can't accept what is said in the Review and don't know quite how to react. Rather than reacting intelligently, such as responding through letters, they throw away stacks of the Review," Klukoff said. According to Kluckoff, last April's trashings of the Review occurred because" a lot of people thought we were dead and were surprised to see us back." - This year, Klukoff said, the first issues had been well-received, but "when people saw the January issue with the title 'The Changing Republic' and the tease on the bot- tom 'Conservatism Today and Tomorrow,' they threw them away without opening them." Kuckoff said "there is a big misconcep- tion that we are from the far right. We have moderated. We do put in opposing viewpoin- ts and make an attempt to be open-minded." He added that he thinks this moderation has encouraged more people to accept the views expressed in the monthly newspaper. The Review receives funds, Kluckoff said, from outside corporations that give money to conservative college newspapers. It also gets some revenue from advertising, but receives no funds from the University. 'U' Record plans to print smaller paper By ,,7TSAN GRANT For the ,ext two weeks, readers of the University Record will be picking up a smaller paper from the stands. The weekly faculty newspaper which is funded by the University will contain only four of its usual eight pages this week and next week so that itcan stay within its budget. THE RECORD, which covers up- coming events, job opportunities, and general University news, is running on a $91,000 budget this year. Robert Potter, the director of University communications said the Record published several larger issues during the last six months and has to compensate for the added ex- MES SAGES FROM HART FEB. 14 Make someone happy on Valentine-'sDay with: 0 love notes 9 proposals/engagements * Valentine's Day greetings BUY A HEART FOR $3.00 For more info. Call 764-0557 pense by putting out the smaller issues. According to Wone Lee, operations manager of University News and In- formation Services, which publishes the paper, printing a four-page issue costs about $1,600. A 16-page issue which is the largest the Record has published, costs about $3,500. Police Notes Woman killed in fire An Ann Arbor woman was killed yesterday morning in a fire at her home on the 100 block of Longman Ave. At 1:22 a.m., Ann Arbor police of- ficers Frank Hoy and Mike Ritter smelled smoke while on patrol and traced it to the home of 45-year-old Roberta Wasserman, Police Sergeant Jan Soumala said. She was taken to the emergency room at the University hospital where she died from her injuries. Fire Chief John Thompson said that the fire department has not yet of- ficially determined the cause of the blaze but suspects that Wasserman might have set it herself. -Stephen Gregory Correction Cheryl Bullard is a former ad- ministrative coordinator for Michigan Student assembly, where she helped run the MSA offices. A story in Mon- day's Daily incorrectly called Bullard an MSA official. THE RECORD staff is considering a variety of other measures to ensure they keep within the budget in the future. One option involves publishing bi-weekley from March through August instead of April through August, as they do now. Other options include cancelling some issues or running fewer pages in each issue. So far no decision has been reached. Record editor Jane Elgass said she is concerned that smaller issues will hinder the paper's coverage. Although no one has complained abut the Record's smaller issues yet, she said that fewer pages make it more difficult to meet the readers' needs. THIS WEEK'S down- sized issue contained a calender of events, job listings, and research deadlines, but little news, Elgass said. "On page one, now we don't have the freedom to include other stories and we may not be able to cover some at all," she said. Some of the stories that had to be held because of the smaller issue "may never see the light of day," she added. Because the Record does not have the space to cover as many stories, .some of them have been written up as; press releases and have been picked up by other newspapers, according to Elgass. NEXT WEEK, however, the Record will publish a supplement on the University Hospital in addition to it's four page issue. The hospital funded the supplement. "We're just trying to save a little money where we can," said Potter. "We're not going to leave any impor- tant story out. If necessary we will print a larger issue." IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS MiehCon customers to get refund LANSING, Mich. - The Public Service Commission yesterday ap- proved a $56-million refund for customers of Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. and the rate-setting panel said it also wants to investigate the utility's profits. The PSC said the average residential customer will receive a one-time credit of approximately $30 during the March billings as a result of the refund. The refund, requested by MichCon, resulted from the sale of an office building and a significant decrease from August 1983 to August 1985 in the level of the utility's lost and unaccounted for gas. Meanwhile, the PSC ordered a hearing to determine, among other things, whether $56 million is the correct amount to be refunded. In addition, the PSC initiated a proceeding to determine whether Mich- Con's earnings are more than the level authorized by the PSC in the com- pany's last rate case. Pli ppine vote count delayed MANILA, Philippines - The National Assembly yesterday began the long-awaited official canvass of votes in the presidential election but called it off for lack of a quorum before a single vote could be tabulated. The unofficial count by the government's Commission on Elections showed President Ferdinand Marcos ahead with 5,899,873 votes or 52 per- cent and his rival, Corazon Aquino, with 5,384,368 or 48 percent, with 53 percent of the precincts counted following Friday's presidential elec- tions. However, the count by the independent poll-monitoring group the National Movement for Free Elections, or Namfrel, had Mrs. Aquino ahead with 6,933,989 or 52 percent against Marcos' 6,281,510 or 48 percent, with votes in 64 percent of the precincts counted. The country has 26 million registered voters. President Reagan, responding to the taint of fraud and violence clouding the Philippine election, asked a veteran diplomat yesterday to go to the Pacific nation-to "help nurture the hopes and possibilities of democracy." Walesa acquitted.of charges GDANSK, Poland - The state dropped slander charges against Solidarity leader Lech Walesa yesterday, and Walesa hailed the decision as the first step toward compromise by Poland's Communist government since it crushed the independent trade union. At the opening day of Walesa's trial, the prosecutor said the 12 election official who filed the complaint were "satisfied" by Walesa's statement in court that he did not intentionally slander them when he gave voter turnout figures for national elections lower than the official count. The three-judge panel in Gdansk provincial court suspended the case indefinitely, in effect ending the trial. The case arose from an October parliamentary election boycotted by Solidarity supporters. Solidarity set up its own voter counting operation to counter the government's claim that the elections had wide popular support. When the government said the turnout was nearly 79 percent. Solidarity issued figures saying only 66 percent of voters went to the polls. Walesa had faced up to two years in prison or a maximum fine of $2,900 if convicted. Poisoned Tylenol kills woman YONKERS, N.Y. - The death of a woman who took cyanide-laced Ex- tra-Strength Tylenol capsules prbably was an isolated incident, officials said yesterday, but stores in at least 34 states pulled the popular pain- killer off the shelves as a safety measure. The death Saturday of Diane Elsroth, of Peekskill, N.Y., was similar to seven unsolved killings in Chicago in 1982 blamed on ingestion of cyanide- tainted Tylenol capsules. Elsroth's death was listed as a homicide. Tylenol capsules were removed voluntarily from 1,000 A&P stores in 25 states and the District of Columbia, and other stores in Michigan and Illinois did the same. Two California chains, Vons and Ralphs, removed Tylenol from their more than 300 stores. No poison or tampering had been found in other bottles of Tylenol and "there is no evidence of any bottles being involved beyond the particular one," said Frank Young, commissioner of the Federal Fod and Drug Administration. CIA accused of human rights abuses in Central America LONDON - Amnesty International yesterday accused the CIA of en- couraging Contra guerrillas to torture and execute prisoners in Nicaragua and blamed both government and anti-government forces for human rights abuses. The worldwide human rights organization's report said Nicaragua's Sandinista government had eased some of its restrictions on personal freedoms, including censorship and rights to strike and hold public meetings. But Amnesty said many reported killings and disappearances remain unsolved. The London-based body said findings in its "Report on the Situation of Human Rights in Nicaragua" were based on four Amnesty International missions to the Central American country since the 1979 overthrow of Anastasio Somoza's government by the Sandinistas. Amnesty slammed the CIA's role in training the Honduran-based, anti- Sandinista Nicaraguan Democratic Force, called FDN, for the "selective assassination of civilian local government officials, police and military personnel." Vol XCVI -No.94. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. 4v 1 ~ skyS 4 I~~~~n S'ad ~0~ z:0~~~e\A O O \l\ \ e + ' #t8 1 MSA leaders ask chair to resign (Continued from Page 1) comment, but Norris this week denied threatening Bullard's life. Josephson would only comment that MSA's steering committee would be discussing the matter. Because of the unexpected closed session, MSA decided to wait until next week to discuss a plan to pay the assembly's president, vice president, and treasurer through the work-study program. Scharansky flies to wife in Israel (Continued from Page 1 Bridge, a green metal structure across the the Havel River between West Berlin and Potsdam in com-. munist East Germany. This one came 24 years and a day after American U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers and Kremlin master spy Rudolf Abel were exchanged there. SNOW WAS falling as Shcharansky crossed, wearing a fur hat and a broad smile. He was met by Richard Burt, U.S. ambassador to West Germany, and they shook hands at 10:57 a.m. on the span West Germans call the "bridge of spies." A U.S. official in Berlin identified the prisoners freed from the East as 117 1 r - -" ,. L' _-. n_. - . - n-a n . R st '.,,Kati .V :..a : a; . LxJ z. Editor in Chief.............. ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor........RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor..............JERRY MARKON Features Editor............ CHRISTY RIEDEL NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, RebeccaCBlumenstein, Marc Carrel, Dov Cohen. Laura Coughlin, Tim Daly, Nancy Driscoll, Rob Earle, Amy Goldstein, Susan Grant. Stephen Gregory, Steve Herz, Linda Holler, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Levy, Michael Lustig, Amy Mindell, Caroline Muller, Kery Murakami, Jill Oserowsky, Joe Pigott, Kurt Serbus, Martha Sevet- son, Cheryl Wistrom, Jackie Young. Opinion Page Editor ..........KAREN KLEIN Associate Opinion Page Editor ... HENRY PARK OPINION PAGE STAFF: Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Ephross, David Lewis, Peter Mooney, Susanne Skubik. Arts Editor ................. HOBEY ECHLIN Records......................BETH FERTIG Books ................... REBECCA CHUNG Sports Editor ............... BARB McQUADE Associate Sports Editors. DAVE ARETHA, MARK BOROWSKY, RICK KAPLAN, ADAM MARTIN, PHIL NUSSEL. SPORTS STAFF: Emily Bridgham, Debbie deFrances, Liam Flaherty, Jon Hartmann, Darren Jasey, Christian Martin, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Jerry Muth, Adam Ochlis, Duane Roose, Jeff Rush, Adam Schefter, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Volan. Business Manager ........ DAWN WILLACKER Display Sales Manger. .CYNTHIA NIXON Assistant Sales Manager .. KATHLEEN O'BRIEN Classified Manager....GAYLABROCKMAN Finance Manager.......... MIKE BAUGHMAN Marketing Manager ........... JAKE GAGNON DISPLAY SALES: Lori Baron, Eda Banjakul, Diane Bloom. Phil Educate. Albert Ellenich. Deb- 71 nomr/ mw/l n, lr rN MMIlsssE E