cl Nete yt t Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom IaiI3 !oI. XCVII - No. 18 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, September 29, 1986 Ten Pages Swallowing hard, wins ai By MARK BOROWSKY Wolverine fans who expected a main course of Air Wolverine last Saturday against Florida State left hungry. For those who ordered from the ususal Michigan menu, i.e. running and defense, Michigan's 20-18 Homecoming victory over the Seminoles was just their bill of fare. MICHIGAN running backs served up 213 yards on 49 carries, while controlling the ball 36 minutes to the Seminoles' 24. Furthermore, the maligned Wolverine defense allowed a total of 285 yards. Fattening indeed, but 100 yards under their two game average of 387. The defense also had one fumble recovery and three interceptions, two by Ivan Hicks, which is more than gravy. Such play makes Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler want second helpings. "The most pleasing victory we've had this year," Schembechler said after Michigan had cooked up its third victory against no defeats. "I'm not saying we're a great team or anything like that, but I feel good about our ballclub.. "BETTER THAN I have after the previous two games." Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh added food for thought. , "Coach Schembechler said to us s yesterday that we'll find out d where this team's at," Harbaugh M' igain said. "It gives us a lot of confidence beating one of the best teams in the country." IT IS easier for Michigan to feel better, as its first two victories over Notre Dame and Oregon State were rather hard to digest. But in front of 105,507 at Michigan Stadium, the Wolverines made the Seminoles (now 1-2-1) look like an appetizer before the main meal - the Big Ten season which starts next week at Wisconsin. The opposition won't feast much with the running of Jamie Morris. The junior tailback ran for 99 yards on 19 carries. Gerald White added 37 yards on 10 carries. One went for a first-quarter. touchdown that gave theWolverines an early 7-0 lead. Although Morris didn't play most of the fourth quarter due to a bruised knee, his replacement, Thomas Wilcher, ran for 54 yards on nine carries (all in the fourth quarter), including a seven-yard touchdown scoot with 1:27 remaining in the game to put the Wolverines ahead, 20-10, and the icing on the cake. INSTEAD of replacing Morris with White at tailback, Schembchler opted for a fresh pair of legs in the fourth quarter. "Wilcher came in and sparked us," Schembechler said of the 5-10, 188 pound running back. "He's a strong, hard-running kid." "I thought Wilcher was a good move for them," concurred See~BLUE, Page 9 Bogus cheerleader Business school senior Tom Pezzetti is lead away by officers Saturday during the Michigan vs. Florida State football game. A cheerleader from Florida State told officers that her uniform had been stolen from her hotel room, and she pointed out Pezzetti in the crowd, according to Capt. Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Donald Carnahan of the Ann Arbor Police Department. Pezzetti was released pending investigation, but he may face charges of larceny from a building. The maximum penalty is up to five years imprisonment. F i 'U, to discuss By STEVE KNOPPER A Committee formed last week to review the University's policy of granting honorary degrees may discuss discontinuing honorary degrees altogether, according to a memo committee members received from University President Harold Shapiro. The first meeting date of the new committee has not been determined, according to John . D'Arms, committee chairman and Dean of Rackham Graduate School, but he is currently "trying to get it established." D'ARMS said the committee should be "prepared to consider a number of options, from a reaffirmation of current policy to discontinuing the honorary degree policy." The honorary degree review committee was created due to controversy last April when jailed South A was not consi University c honorary degre degree due to Mandela was life sentence. LSA senior review comm: honorary deg alternative," people" to Ann HE SAID,h "a lot of thing going into the Kraus woul requiring ho person to be be African leader Nelson Mandela go so far with the Mandela degree (last April), dered for an honorary degree. then run into the policy," He said. Krau. officials said recipients of denounced the "bureaucracy" which blocke ees must be present to obtain the the University from granting Mandela the of a Board of Regents bylaw. degree. jailed in 1962, and is serving a Students and faculty protesteded the bylaw and many later gave- Mandela a degree o Joseph Kraus, a member of the their own in a ceremony on the Diag before las ittee, said getting rid of the year's commencement ceremonies. trees would be "an unsavory THE REVIEW committee's purpose because it brought "exciting according to Shapiro's memo, will be "tc Arbor. conduct a careful and comprehensive however, the committee will have examination of the objectives, policies, an< s to discuss" and that he is not procedures surrounding the awarding of meetings with a set agenda. honorary degrees at The University of d have liked the regental bylaw Michigan and to offer recommendations norees to receive degrees in concerning future University policy anc tter publicized. "It was a shame to See 'U', Page 5 V F fI 5t Christian militiamen defeat former chief BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)- Christian militia hardliners crushed a comeback attempt by an ousted, pro-Syrian commander yesterday in 24 hours of street battles in Christian east Beirut, .People' s Food Co-op offers unusual food By JYOTSNA SREENIVASAN Where can you find four different kinds of brown rice, whole-grain noodles flavored with spinach and tomatoes, *sesame butter, and more herbs and spices than you've ever heard of- all in bulk? Try one of the two stores of the People's Food Cooperative. "A co-operative is a member- owned or worker-owned business," explains Kirsten Jensen, member services director of the People's Food Co-op. The co- op started in 1971 as a small store on State Street carrying "about eight products," according to Jensen. By 1975 the store was so successful it moved to a larger building on Packard Street and opened a second store on Fourth Avenue. JENSEN CALLS the People's. Food Co-op a "new-wave" co-op. "It started as a continuation of the radicalism of the late '60s, when people didn't trust big establishments and wanted to take things into their own hands," she said. A co-op's purpose is to serve the people, not to make a profit, Jensen added. The People's Food Co-op is a retail store which buys from several main suppliers, including a warehouse called the Michigan Federation of Food Cooperatives. "We try to support local growers," says Jensen, "and we try to focus on 'clean' foods- things that don't contain preservatives pesticides, and artificial ingredients." In addition to bulk food, the stores also carry produce, dairy products, and time-saving mixes of natural foods. WHILE ANYONE can shop at. the co-op, members are entitled to a discount on food and a vote in electing the board of directors and establishing policies. Over the summer the co-op changed its method of membership from an annual $10 fee to a $60 lifetime, refundable deposit. Members automatically get a 5 percent discount, but if they See CO-OP, Page 5 which police said killed 62 people and wounded 198. Fighting began at dawn Saturday when about 600 supporters of Elie Hobeika, former commander of the Lebanese Forces Christian militia, stormed across the Green Line dividing east Beirut from the Moslem western sector. "The last pocket of resistance was mopped up at daybreak, when 12 infiltrators from Elie Hobeika's supporters surrendered," said a communique issued by the Lebanese Forces, the nation's largest Christian militia. POLICE confirmed that loyalists of Lebanese Forces commander Samir Geagea defeated the pro-Hobeika attackers. There was no word on the whereabouts of Hobeika, who was ousted from the command of the Lebanese Forces by Geagea's hardliners Jan. 15 for signing a Syrian-sponsored peace pact with Moslem militia leaders. President Amin Gemayel, himself a Maronite Catholic, was among the Christians who felt the accord's power-sharing provisions conceded too much to the Moslems. ONE report yesterday, not confirmed, said Hobeika was in Chtaura, the Bekaa Valley town which houses command headquarters of 25,000 Syrian troops stationed in Lebanon under a 1976 peacekeeping mandate from the Arab League. The collapse of Hobeika's See BEIRUT, Page 5 Building dedicatepdDaily Photo by SCOTT UTUCHY University President Harold Shapiro (standing at podium) speaks at Friday's dedication of the new Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Building on North Campus. The $30 million classroom and laboratory building opened this term and is part of the College of Engineering's move to North Campus, expected to be completed Winter Term. TODAY Go home, Ron appearance. Eighteen percent said they were more likely to vote for Lucas after Reagan'sj visit, 33 percent said they weren't swayed either way, and 10 percent said they were. unsure. The poll also showed that Blanchard' was maintaining a 2-1 margin over Lucas.: I-**~ ."1+.. 1.. .~ 4r ... ,. ..a..Ata./t r c a hP concern about the increasing amounts of illegal garlic flooding the market, President Suharto ordered the destruction of smuggled garlic. Indonesia produces aboput 53,00 tons of garlic a year and consumes about 63,000 tons annually, according to government officials. The government fears the -INSIDE- PIRGIM: Opinion calls on the Board of Regents to recognize the student's voice. See Page 4. I