Page 2 - The Michigan Daily -,Tuesday, September 30, 1986 - PACT REQUIRES SIGNATURE TO PLA Y Athletes agree to forego drugs -IN BRIEFS i (AP)-Youngsters must be under contract if they want to play sports at two Michigan high schools, but the- pact's provisions have nothing to do with salaries or incentive clauses. The terms are no drugs, no drinking and no smoking cigarettes. The penalty for failing to sign is no sports. "I think signing a contract will allow our kids a very valid reason to say 'no'," said Dave Dye, athletic director for Traverse City public schools. IN TRAVERSE City, at least 21. students couldn't practice on high school sports teams' early last week because they hadn't gotten around to signing their contract, Dye said. All eventually signed, he said. In the Detroit suburb of Ferndale, athletic eligibility also hinges on signing a so-called "chemical health contract." "If you won't sign it and can't agree with it, then you can't be an athlete here," said Donna Giltrow, the public school system's athletic director. "We've had some real bad role models from the pros, and it seems to be drifting down here," she said. The districts also require that parents sign similiar contracts. "WE HAVE met with no resistance from athletes or parents," Dye said. "In fact, we have met with enthuisiastic support." Traverse City and Ferndale are among 17 Michigan high schools participating in the Minneapolis-bassed Hazelden- Cork Chemical Health Program, a four-year program that teaches schools how to fight drug and alcohol use among students. The program gives schools the option of requiring chemical health contracts, but most schools involved only require that parents and students sign statements saying they are aware of the rules of behavior required by the program, said Richard Maher, executive director of We Believe in Athletics, a non-profit amatuer athletics foundation based in Sturgis. "SOME SCHOOLS take that a step further and require what they call a contract," Maher, who is administering the Hazelden- Cork program in Michigan, said Monday. Kalamazoo's Kalamazoo Central is among the high schools in the program,. but schools athletic director Fletcher Lewis said eligibility isn't contigent on whether a student signs a contract. "In terms of the chemical health thing and eligibility, I think you have to be very careful on that, he said. "I think for rules governing student behavior, you have to apply them to every student." Although the contracts also require students to follow school rules for maintaining acceptable grades and meeting dress codes, the drug and liquor prohibitions are the key elements, Giltrow said. "THIE MAJOR focus is our belief-and our insistence-that the kids be chemical free," she said. School officials acknowledge that merely signing a contract won't prevent students from drinking or taking drugs, but say it may provide some incentive to abstain. "Signing a contract really helps kids tell their peers Hey, I can't drink a beer, I signed a contract with my coach," Dye said. Traverse City began requiring the contracts this fall and Ferndale started the program last year. U.S.-Soviet dealfrees jailed Daniloff (Continued from Page 1) reading "Free Nick Daniloff."' In Moscow Daniloff had said: "I leave more in sorrow than anger." In an emotional departure, he read a verse by 19th-century Russian poet Mikhail Lermontov that bids farewell to "unwashed Russia, land of slaves," and to its "all-seeing eyes ... all-hearing ears." He and his wife then boarded a Lufthansa flight that landed in Frankfurt three hours, 40 minutes later, at 8:55 p.m. (3:55 p.m. EDT), ending a suspenseful month during which his arrest had threatened to derail relations between the' world's two most powerful nations. On hand to welcome Daniloff was Richard, Burt, U.S. ambassador to West Germany. The KGB secret service jailed Daniloff as an accused spy Aug. 30, in' what U.S. officials described as retaliation for the arrest in New York a week earlier of the 39-year-old Zakharov, a physicist and Soviet U.N. employee. Although the U.S. administration had insistedthere would be no swap of the two men, Secretary of State George Shultz SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State . . 668-9329 Maple Village .... 761-2733 v ,r v v and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze negotiated for long hours in Washington and New York in recent days over their fate. Some sources in the United States had said a broader deal might also include the release of some Soviet dissidents. And the Soviets, at the same time, were seeking relaxation of a U.S. order expelling 25 Soviet U.N. diplomats from the United States. The U.S. government alleges that some Soviet U.N. employees are engaged in espionage. At the United Nations, the usually well-informed Soviet bloc source said Shultz and Shevardnadze had agreed during a meeting Sunday night that Daniloff and Zakharov would be exchanged. . But the source provided no further details. In Washington, a source at the U.S. Justice Department, which brought the charges against Zakharov, would not say what deal, if any had been made for Daniloff's release. He did say, however, that Zakharov would not leave the United States yesterday. Like the Soviet bloc source, he insisted on anonymity. COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS Plane crashes into houses CHICAGO -A twin-engine plane crashed Sunday night into three houses, setting one ablaze and killing the pilot, authorities said. The pilot was the only person aboard the plane, and no one on the ground was hurt, said Tom Sheppard, a fire department spokesman. The plane lost altitude shortly after take-off from Midway Airport, hit the chimney of the first house, sheared off the roof of the second, struck a tree top, then crashed into the back yard of the third house, setting fire to its wooden porch, Sheppard said. Authorities said earlier that three houses were set ablaze. Officers on duty in a police station nearby heard the plane s engines sputtering as it flew overhead, said Officer Darlene Wicht. "We heard it go over the station here and we knew he was in trouble," Wicht said. "We hear planes go overhead all the time, but we've never heard one fly over that low. This one sounded like he was in trouble. I said to another officer 'I hope he gets up or we might be hit.'" Reagan to sign tax overhaul: WASHINGTON- A few clerical details are all that stand in the way of President Reagan's signing a major tax overhaul, a plan aimed chiefly at increasing the fairness of the federal income tax. Reagan said the bill, on whichthe Senate completed congressional action Saturday, will give Americans "a tax code they can be proud of." The president added he is looking forward to signing the measure, which has been at the top of his second-term agenda. But before he gets a chance to add his signature, Congress must complete action on a 76-page resolution correcting typographical and other errors in the bill. A Senate vote on the resolution was delayed because some senators were upset that the House added some substantive changes, which amend the tax bill itself. Sponsors expect to work out those problems before Congress' targeted adjournment date of Friday. Then, the 985-page bill will be shipped to the White House for what is expected to be a full-blown signing ceremony in the Rose Garden. The Senate passed the bill by a 74-23 margin, and Sen. Packwood, R-Ore., a chief author, said fairness is its major element. Israel indicts accused Nazi JERUSALEM-Israel indicted retired U.S. autoworker John Demjanjuk yesterday on charges of herding hundreds of thousands of people to their deaths in a Nazi concentration camp during World War II. The Ukrainiani-born Demjanjuk, 65, was charged in a 26-page indictment with "crimes against the Jewish people, crimes against humanity, war crimes and crimes against minorities." Demjanjuk, formerly of Cleveland, Ohio, is accused of being the sadistic guard "Ivan the Terrible" at the Treblinka death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland where at least 900,000 people, mostly Jews, were killed. The charge sheet, presented at Jerusalem District Court, said Demjanjuk's alleged crimes were "of incomparable severity." It accused Demjanjuk of the "murder of numerous Jews...whom he tormented to death," and described other alleged crimes including the cutting-off of a prisoner's ear. The charges against Demjanjuk carry a maximum sentence of the death penalty. Judge rejects park ordinance DETR IT-A judge yesterday struck down as unconstitutional a Detroit suburb's ordinance barring non-residents from its parks. Wayne County Circuit Judge Marvin Stempien ruled that Dearborn's law was unconstitutional at two parks-Ford Woods and Crowley-because it was racially discriminatory. He also ruled that the ordinance was unenforceable at all city parks because the proposed method of keeping non-residents out of the parks would intrude on the liberty and privacy of all park users. The ruling was a victory for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the American Civil Liberties Union, which alleged that the ordinance wasmeant to keep blacks out of Dearborn's parks and that it would result in blacks being illegally searched and detained in the parks. Flash floods hit Michigan Michigan's Lower Peninsula braced yesterday for up to two more inches of rain as a line of severe thunderstorms from Benton' Harbor to Saginaw threatened to renew the flooding which caused millions in damage earlier in the, month. Thousands of residents around the state lost power Sunday evening as the storms brought hail and lightning, which sparked a Tuscola County house fire that killed a 16-year-old Millington girl. A flash flood watch remains in effect until 8 p.m. today in 32 counties across the southern two-thirds of the state, said National Weather Service meteorologist Dan Houser. With acres of farmland in the Thumb still soaked from storms which caused $323 million in damage in 22 Lower Peninsula counties in mid-September, residents have been told to keep an eye out for more flooding. 4 I4 A i Associated Press American newsman Nicholas Daniloff waves as he arrives at Frankfurt International Airport yesterday. Daniloff, accompanied by U.S. Am- bassador to Germany Richard Burt, arrived from Moscow where he was released after being arrested four weeks ago on spying charges. Summit wishes led to accord, profs say (Continued from Page 1) the release. DANILOFF would have been released eventually, according to political science Prof. Raymond Tanter. "The question was not whether Daniloff would be Taking courses in technical areas? Technical Reading & Problem Solving " Improve Reading Comprehension " Refine Study Methods " Polish Test-taking Skills Registration: 9/30 - 10/2 at the released-he was always going to be released. The question was what price would have to be paid," Tanter said. That price will most likely be Zakharov. But Tanter believes a swap sends the wrong signal to the Soviets because it would enable them to arrest and exchange prominent U.S. citizens for Soviets arrested in this country. Tanter said that if Reagan agrees to a swap, it is because of his interest a superpower summit. Such a decision would indicate to the Soviets that Reagan is interested in promoting peace. THE MOVE, however, would weaken Reagan's position at the summit, Tanter said. "The Soviets would have won round one and the game hasn't even begun," he said. "Reagan wants to go down in history as a peacemaker. In his rush toward peace, he may have actually delayed the peace process." Political science Prof. Alfred Meyer believes that the Soviets released Daniloff because "they are sick and tired of the trouble it would cause." Meyer said Zakharov will probably be freed eventually as part of a trade. MEYER criticized the admini- stration's handling of the Daniloff affair, saying that Reagan overplayed the issue when Daniloff was captured. If the admini- stration had been calm about the entire affair, he said, it would have blown over a while ago. Meyer said the two countries are "playing little games." The United States sparked the incident by seizing Zakharov- the first Soviet official arrested by the U.S-and the Soviets responded by arresting Daniloff. Regardless of the cause of Daniloff's release, Tanter said, "The summit has begun." 4 1. Reading2 S Learning i Skills Center 1610 Washtenaw (near Hill St.) 763-7195 Classes meet Tuesday evenings in the UGLI 4- ." The English Composition ACADEMIC WRITING SERIES "OVERCOMING WRITER'S . 2 BLOCK" -*- z Do you have trouble sitting down to begin an essay? When--: yu finally do -begin do you ......y....'.'y.* *..**.....,......... :' - have nothing to write? Are you unable to fl a page. ...Francelia Clark and Emily JessupoftheEn.l.............n -. n ofThe English Composition -.wtBoard examine'the anxieties n. aldobgndoyu Associate VP Sudarkasa named to head LinColn U. (Continued from Page 1) said. Duderstadt commended Sudar- kasa's work. "I think she's done a remarkable job, both internal to the University as well as on the state level. Her impact has been felt over a broad range of activities in (the Office of) Academic Affairs," he said. ACCORDING to Duderstadt, Sudarkasa had to build a new minority enrollment program from scratch. Minority enroll- ment rose 0.7 percent last year, and black enrollment has increased from 4.9 percent in 1983 to 5.2 percent last fall. This fall's figures have not been released yet. Sociology Prof. Al don Morris, an expert on social movements, activities of one individual, then we don't have a sound recruitment policy," he said. "The way you accomplish anything important in an organization is by insti- tutionalizing the efforts so that it is not dependent on a single individual or personality." "What we will see now is whether that institutional mach- inery is in place so that her leaving will not disrupt recruit- ment facilities," Morris said. HE SAID that if that "machinery" is not in place, the University should question its strategy in recruiting and retaining minorities. "Also, it will be interesting to see how quickly this position held by Dr. Sudarkasa will be Vol. XCVII - No. 19 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 Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Editor in Chief....................ERIC MATTSON Associate Sports Managing Editor...........RACHEL GOTTLIEB Editors.............................DAVE ARETHA News Editor..... .....JERRY MARKON MARK BOROWSKY (CLy Editor............... 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