In ceen Building your winter wardrobe Illiee~ell Magazin10e. *Mike Fisch * Ed Pierce interview cl ble intynt-gan Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom 4r 43 all Vol. XCVII - No. 37 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Doily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, October 24, 1986 Fourteen Pages 'Tough luck IU strives for unexpcted By MARK BOROWSKY Don't expect the unexpected. Just expect it to be different. Case in point: before the season began, there was little doubt that Indiana would start 4-2 and 1-2 in the Big Ten before facing Michigan tomorrow in Bloomington. After blasting Louisville, Navy, Missouri, and Northwestern, head coach Bill Mallory and the Hoosiers had to face Ohio State and then Minnesota at Minneapolis. IT WAS the kind of schedule that would keep Indiana faithful interested and then scurrying to the ticket booth - for basketball tickets. While Indiana lost as expected to Ohio State and Minnesota, it was by scores of 24-22 and 19-17. The Ohio State loss came while kicker Pete Stoyonovich missed the game because of a funeral; his replacement missed two field goals. The latter loss came when Minnesota kicked a last-minute field goal. So while Indiana has the record everyone. expected, at 4-2, they don't have the type of team everyone expected, a crummy one. THE HOOSIER'S resurgence See HOOSIERS, Page 11 U.S. doesn't retaliate dismissals Losses may harm U.S. monitoring DAILY Photo by JAE KIM State Sen. Lana Pollack, left, and State Rep. Perry Bullard speak to students yesterday on the Diag. Critics call forum partisan By MICHAEL LUSTIG Billed as a "non-political" event, a rally sponsored yesterday by the Michigan Student Assembly to honor State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) and State Sen. Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor) has sparked controversy among some students, who called MSA's sponsorship of the rally a political endorsement. John Gaber, vice-chairman of MSA's External Relations Committee, the group that organized the event, said the intention of the rally was to thank Bullard specifically for his work on the Student Bill of Rights and Pollack for her support of state funding for higher education. He said the External Relations Committee has worked closely with Bullard and Pollack in the past. GABER SAID he tried to keep the event non- partisan by asking the candidates to limit their speech topics to education-related issues. He also removed posters advertising economics graduate student Dean Baker's campaign for Congress that some of Baker's supporters placed around the area of the forum. Michael Margolis, chairman of the External Relations Committee, said that no pins or flyers were permitted and Pollack, who usually wears a "re-elect See CRITICS, Page 2 WASHINGTON (AP)-The Reagan administration ack- nowledged yesterday that restrictions imposed on the U.S. embassy in Moscow would limit "our ability to monitor what happens" in the Soviet Union. But the administration decided not to retaliate for the expulsion of five more American diplomats and urged the Soviets to "put behind us" a dispute over diplomats and spies. Declaring a cease-fire, Chares Redman, the State Department spokesman, said, "we need now to get on with a resolution of thee larger issues affecting U.S.-Soviet relations and build on the progress made in discussions at Reyjkavik." THE SOVIETS have expelled 10 American diplomats in a week and withdrawn 260 Russians who worked as cooks, maids, drivers and 1 Socialist groups blast *both Pursell, Baker By HENRY PARK Although socialism has become an issue in the Congressional race between-U.S. Rep. Carl Pursell (D- Mich.) and Democratic challenger Dean Baker, most socialist groups say they do not back Baker. S In the 2nd District campaign's closing weeks, incumbent Pursell has played up the Democratic Socialists of America's endorsement of Baker. He has mailed a flyer that mentions the endorsement and, in the final minutes of Tuesday's televised debate with Baker, Pursell said, "My opponent has quietly and deceptively fooled a lot of people in the district by saying he is not an ultra-liberal. He has been endorsed by the Democratic Socialists of American out of New York City." IN AN interview that appeared in Monday's Daily Monday, Pursell questioned opponent Baker's ideology: "If he took the socialist endorsement, that would imply that he may or may not be a socialist. I don't know whether he is or not. I have to wonder why he took the socialist endorsement.'" DSA, however, is the only socialist group to endorse Baker. It claims to have the largest following of socialists in the United States and endorsed Walter Mondale for the presidency in 1984. Many of its members worked in the McGovern '72 presidential campaign. Other candidates who have accepted Democraic Socialists of America endorsements are Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) and Senator Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor). Ann Arbor City Council members- Jeff Epton and Lowell Peterson are members of DSA. BUT OTHER socialist groups criticized both Baker and Pursell's See SOCIALISTS, Page 7 performed other duties in the embassy and at the U.S. consulate in Leningrad. "There will have to be some fairly substantial changes in our staffing pattern," Redman said. He referred to the fact that the 251 U.S. diplomats either will take on work in addition to their duties or that some will be replaced by American workers. "But I'm confident," the U.S. official said, "that the dedicated U.S. personnel at our mission in the Soviet Union will continue to perform effectively." THE SOVIETS took the actions in response to the U.S. expulsion of 80 Soviets in Washington, New York and San Francisco. An administration official, who demanded anonymity, said Wednesday night the expulsion See LOSSES, Page 7 Locals to, visit 42 sister, By KERY MURAKAMI A delegation of 20 local residents, including Ann Arbor Mayor Ed ,Pierce and State Representive Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), will visit Ann Arbor's sister city Juigalpa in Nicaragua next Saturday. The delegation and the arrangement with Juigalpa were authorized last April, when ballot Proposal A was overwhelmingly approved by city voters. The referendum also ordered the city to send a letter to the federal government asking that Ann Arbor tax dollars not be' used for military aid in Central America. ACCORDING to Issac Campbell, a member of the Ann Arbor Central America Sister City Task Force, delegates will meet with Juigalpa officals and look for ways in which Ann Arbor could assist local projects, 'such as improvingaJuigalpa's sanitation system. The delegates will not make any commitments until they return Nov. 10, Curtis said, calling the 10- day visit a "fact-finding mission." Curtis also hopes that "information, good or bad," brought See PIERCE, Page 5 MAR C: exib ility is thedet rule By MARC CARREL It is a University program with fewer than 15 concentrators- and most of them combine it with another major. It borrows its professors from other departments. And next semester will be the first time concentrators must take core courses. It is probably the most flexible major at the University. It is named the Medieval and Renaissance Collegium, but you can just call it MARC. "I THINK it is the best example of a truly humanistic type of course in the University," said Guy Mermier, director of MARC. "There is no course with a focus that at the same time allows students to borrow this focus in a great variety of programs." MARC began in 1974 as a program in medieval and Renaissance studies. It was created by English Prof. Russell Fraser, who wanted to eliminate the boundaries that usually confine students to one department See MARC, Page 3 Pumpkins galore DAILY Photo by JAE KIM Students pack in to pick over and plumb plump pumpkin patch paraphenalia. The students are from left to right: Kathy Lashbrook, Shelly Jaster, Margo Jackson, Bobbie Jo Franzese, and Bill Murphy. The 500 jack o' lanterns in waiting are being sold outside of Stockwell to fund the Stockwell and Mosher Jordan Halls' hayride on November 15. The pumpkins will be on sale from 11 a.m. to6 p.m. today. Mermier director of MARC TODAY- Late Alimony A Walsworth said. "Other than that, it's a routine case." Walsworth said Shemers could have avoided the jail term that began Oct. 8 if he had documented his wife's death. He said he believed that Walsworth should have kept track of his wife's whereabouts. "I told him right where she think," 17-year-old Vicki Ann Guest said Wednesday. "A couple of days later, when people found out about it, I was really embarassed." The lawsuit alleges that teacher-adviser Jean Clower told the girl her grades and performance were acceptable for the cheerleading squad, but her BAKER: Opinion interviews Democratic Con- gressional candidate Dean Baker. See Page 4. I I