r icl; b E Ninety-seven years of editorialfreedom tttiti . . ..... ..... 6'ol. XCVII - No. 43 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, November 3, 1986 Ten Pages v p. 1 killed, 2 injured during parties By MELISSA BIRKS One University student was killed and two people injured at local parties last weekend following pledges by the Ann Arbor Police to step up surveillance on local parties. Two of the accidents were alcohol-related, according to Sgt. John King of the Ann Arbor Police Department. Although fraternity parties have been the focus of concern to patrolling officers, the majority of violations issued this weekend were to party-goers in private residences rather than fraternities. Police issued almost 80 tickets during the third weekend since the police department added eight extra officers to break up rowdy parties, King said. Stephan Hannagan, a business school senior, fell head-first to his death at a party on the 1700 block of Geddes street early Saturday morning. ACCORDING to King, Hannagan was horseplaying on a balcony with another party-goer. Hannagan had grabbed the other person around the thighs and was picking him up when he began moving backwards toward the edge of the balcony. He lost his balance, and both fell over. The person Hannagan was holding grabbed onto the balcony and was assisted up by people standing nearby. Hannagan fell 30 to 40 feet to, the sidewalk, King said. Similar circumstances sent a woman to the University Hospital with a broken hip aoout one hour after the accident at Geddes. The woman, who gave police an out-of- town address, was partying at a home on East University and fell out of a window, King said. She See STUDENT, Page 5 LSA wants underclass revisions By PHILIP I. LEVY A proposal to reshuffle the governing structure of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts will be presented to the LSA faculty this afternoon. The plan is an attempt improve the quality of education for the University's freshmen and sophomores. The centerpiece of the proposal is a "Council for Collegiate Studies" which would seek funding to develop new courses, limit course size, and better train teaching assistants, according to Jack Meiland, LSA dean for long range planning and curriculum. Currently, "There is no body in the college charged with dealing with the freshman and sophomore years.. .It's very different from the junior and senior years where departments look after the concentration programs," Meiland said. THE PROBLEMS plaguing the freshmen and sophomores, according to the proposal, are:, -Too large a proportion of teaching being done by teaching assistants. .Insufficient space in courses and few small classes with senior faculty. -Lack of a coherent educational structure or program for underclassmen. The proposal, developed by the LSA Executive Committee, seems to be following up on a report issued last spring by the LSA Blue Ribbon Commission, which spent three years studying ways to improve the University's undergraduate education. That See LSA, Page 5 Lebanese cap tors release hostage BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-Shiite Islamic Jibad, the underground Moslem kidnappers freed American extremist group that held Jacobsen, hospital administrator. David Ja- still holds two other Americans: cobsen yesterday after holding him journalist Terry Anderson and for 17 months and said recent U. S. educator Thomas Sutherland. Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Down and out Michigan receiver John Kolesar comes up short in his attempt to catch a Jim Harbaugh pass in the first half of Saturday's Wolverine blowout of Illinois, 69-13. Kolesar broke his collarbone on the play, and will miss the remainder of the regular season. See related stories on page 10. moves might lead to release of other American captives in Le- banon. Jacobsen, of Huntington Beach, Calif., was turned over to U. S. officials on a street in Moslem west Beirut. A U. S. Embassy official, who insisted on anonymity, said Jacobsen was in good health and was at the embassy compound in east Beirut. Three other Americans were kidnapped-Frank Reed, Joseph Ci - cippio, and Edward Tracy-and other groups claimed to be holding them. Christian radio stations and television reported over the previous two days that six kidnapped Americans and two of eight French hostages would be let go. Board to clarify protesters' rights Baker sues Rep. Pursell im By BRIAN BONET The University's Civil Liberties Board Friday discussed its obligation to provide a platform for protesters and ensure them the right to express dissent on campus. The board, a unit of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), called a public hearing on Friday to gather information for its current study concerning the rights and limits of ,protesters. The study includes recommend- ations on the use of police and security forces on campus, which was an issue duringhcampus protests last fall. The board recommended placing neutral observers at protests where police are called. Other considerations include deciding whether increased security is necessary at protests, providing programs for University security officers on how to respond to protests, and an agreement with See BOARD, Page 3 By PETER MOONEY Democratic congressional can- didate Dean Baker has filed a defamation lawsuit against incumbent Carl Pursell (R-Mich.) for statements Pursell made during their Oct. 21 debate. Pursell said in his closing comments that Baker and his supporters had "intimidated" his staff and "decimated" his office during a political protest last fall. Baker's lawsuit, filed Friday in Wayne County Circuit Court, charges that Pursell's comments were false and intentionally damaging to Baker's reputation. The protesters were conscientious and cleaned up after themselves, Baker's complaint stated. THE SIT-INS last fall, at which 100 people were arrested, were held to demonstrate opposition to Pursell's vote in favor of aid to the Nicaraguan Contras. The conflict reflects what has been a bitter campaign in which both sides have traded accusations. Pursell has said that Baker's campaign distorted his record, while Baker has characterized Pursell's statements that he is a socialist as "McCarthyist tactics." According to Baker, however, Pursell's recent accusation "goes well beyond the bounds of even a dirty, mudslinging campaign." Baker said he filed the suit because he believes that Pursell, in effect, accused him of violence. In addition, Pursell refused to apologize by a deadline Baker had set last Wednesday. "I DID NOT want people to believe I tore up his office and threatened his staff. He essentially accused me of violence against his staff," Baker said. Repeated attempts to contact Pursell staff members for comment were unsuccessful. Baker Campaign Manager Mark Weisbrot said the suit was not an election tactic. "We're responding to specific, outright lies Pursell said in the debate," Weisbrot said. . See BAKER, Page 5 Gold . . . supports protesters rights Gay comedian, author says life's not a drag By DOV COHEN It was still relatively early on a Friday morning for Billi Gordon, and he didn't feel like getting dressed up for his interview. So after he pulled his 6' 1", 400-pound body out of bed, slipping on the clothes he would have to wear for his book-signing appearance later that day. A red and white checkered dress, a pair of sunglasses, and a little lipstick. Who is Billi Gordon, and why is this former seminarian and University student wearing a dress? "I don't consider this drag," says Billi. "This is the most comfortable way for me to dress." BILLI, who performs on the comedy circuit and TODAY- The Left Stuff makes television appearances, is enjoying success. His greeting cards, featuring him in a variety of sassy poses, have sold more than any other model's. "I'm like the greeting card queen... so to speak," he says. And his 1985 cookbook, "You've Had Worse Things in Your Mouth," has already sold 50,000 copies. If anyone had told him in high school this would happen, "I would' have said, "Not even on the "Twilight Zone. I was a good little Catholic boy. To me, liberal was being friends with Jamie, a Jewish girl." Billi grew up in Dowagiac, Mich. "At that time I thought I was the only homosexual in the world," he says. The pattern for kids from his high school was to go to college, get engaged in the first semester, and get married, he says. "(In high school) I was a jock, president of the student body. I was real concerned with what people thought. So I had to find an excuse not to get married," he says. That's when he joined a monastery in northern Minnesota. He lasted there for one semester before coming to the University in 1973. "I WENT to college for the sake of being educated, not for a degree. You don't need a degree to be a performer," says the former B.G.S. student who says had a 3.9 grade point average before dropping out- six credits short of graduation. "I'm a child of the '60s... I just want to have the knowledge," he says. "I'd always been such a goody-two shoes until I left college...It was time to go the other way," he says. "I went to Hollywood and became a prostitute. I worked the street for other straight men as a transvestite. I'm a very convincing transvestite." "IT'S AN easy living. The money is good...and you can do it anywhere," he says of the world's oldest profession. But "we grow out of these things. I'm a married woman now," he says. Billi met his fiance at a women's softball game. See GORDON, Page 2 INSIDE ELECTIONS: Opinion endorses Dean Baker for Congress. See Page 4. A- Vum.~ dA-& .....:.... L.. 0ft...La 'P.... -q touchdown. Before the game, Rags coach Seth Klukoff, Editor in Chief of the Review, asked Libels players to take a urinalysis test, but was re - fused. Klukoff then offered ajar with his specimen ' to the vistors of the game, but the Libels never picked up .the prize. The Libels are now 2-0, including their win over the Michigan State Snews pizza on game day. On Saturday that meant 69 percent off. "We had to close early (Saturday night) because we ran out of ingredients," said Herschel Rohr, owner and manager of Gianelli's. Rohr is still tabulating how many pizzas were dished out on Saturday, but he estimates that the store took 500 to 600 calls. "The phone never stopped ring - I I