Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom VOLUME XCVII - NO. 97 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16,1987 COPYRIGHT 1987 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Students By ELIZABETH ATKINS Schuur cover Editor's note: Today's article is the second of a clear plastic, d two part series. On Friday the Daily examined the just as his b administration's asbestos removal policy, stuffed an East Quad resident Peter Schuur, an LSA newspapers,a sophomore, threw a party Saturday night on the first and hung the floor of Hayden hall to celebrate the removal of "It's really asbestos in his hall's bathroom. Schuur and other said, "but it's hallmates had to use a bathroom three floors above to UNTIL TI shower for two weeks this term while workers as an insulat repaired their own bathroom. durable, and To decorate for the "First Annual Asbestos Party," exposed andc cope ed all the furniture in his room with duct tape, and asbestos warning signs - athroom looked. He and his friends asbestos worker's uniform with attached an army gas-mask to its head, figure from the ceiling. scary if you think about it," Schuur nice to be able to laugh at it." 'HE early 1970s, builders used asbestos or because the substance is fireproof, long-lasting. But if asbestos chips are crumble, its microscopic fibers become with asbestos airborne. When inhaled, the dust-like fibers cause STUDENTS have complained that they were not lung lesions and cancer. Currently, an estimated three- informed about the problem until asbestos surveying fourths of all University buildings contain the and removal began this fall. They were shocked when hazardous insulation. workers wearing "moon suits" blocked off restrooms Housing officials are overseeing removal or with clear plastic and bright yellow danger warning containment of all asbestos over the next two to three signs. years. The removal process was initiated last fall after Bursley resident Michelle Rozsa, an LSA maintenance personnel were repairing leaky pipes in sophomore, said she and other students were told at an residence halls and discovered the substance. informational meeting in December that there was no "We want to make the residence halls safest first," immediate danger. Rozsa found exposed asbestos on a said Gary Monroe, manager of University pipe in her room and called FIXIT. Occupational Safety and Environmental Health. See ASBESTOS, Page 5 Vengeful Sp.artans surprise l', 90-81 By SCOTT G. MILLER Special to the Daily EAST LANSING - Jud Heathcote thrust his fist in the air with 11 seconds left in yesterday's game. Near tears, the Michigan State coach knew his team had clinched a victory over its arch rival. The fans at Jenison Field House chanted, "Jud, Jud, Jud." "We've said all year long we don't play hard enough, emotionally enough, and excited enough," said Heathcote. "Today we got all those things." Crowd as well as player spirit led the Spartans (9-13 overall, 4-8 Big Ten) to a 90-81 win before 10,004 and a national-television audience. "It has been a long, long season, and this certainly helps," said the eleventh-year head coach. "Whenever you beat Michigan it seems like two (wins). "To salvage anything from the season, we needed a win. Where this takes us, ,I have no idea." The Wolverines almost salvaged the contest in the second half. After See SPARTANS, Page 11 -r 'U' Council hits impasse over code By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Although the University Council has finished writing its guidelines for political protest, the panel has been vigorously debating the issue of enforcement for its past two meetings. They appear to be at an impasse. Without agreement among council members, some feel that both past and future.progress of the council could be threatened. The continuing debate over enforcement has pitted students against both faculty and admin- istration members of the council since they began working on a draft of the proposed code of non- academic student conduct in October, 1984. By dividing their work into three tiers, the council first dealt with crimes of the most violent nature, has just finished its work on political dissent, and is almost ready to proceed to crimes of a less violent nature, such as harassment and assault. The issue of how to enforce the political dissent guidelines stands in the way. "This needs to be at least partly resolved before we move to our final tier," said Livermore. "There is no point in writing these guidelines unless we can guarantee that they are followed," said Shaw Livermore, history professor and co-chair of the council. Livermore and a majority of the faculty and administration members on the council feel academic sanctions - such as sus- pension or expulsion - are nec- essary to enforce its proposed rules of student conduct. Student members of the council vehemently disagree. Instead of allowing the code to create an additional court system within the University, they feel the civil court system should be better utilized. They also fear that the admin- istration could use academic sanc- tions to repress students' right to dissent and protest. "It's not even that I distrust the administration so much, but I just See 'U' COUNCIL, Page 2 Doily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY The Children's Hour Kids from around Ann Arbor gather at Tally Hall Saturday to take part in "Child's Play Saturday." The children are entertained by magician Jeff Wawrzaszek and The Mask Puppet Theatre. City predicts low primary turnout today By JERRY MARKON City officials are predicting an even lower voter turnout than usual in today's mayoral and Ann Arbor City Council primaries because candidates are running uncontested in two wards. Although this year's Second and Third Ward races are uncontested, the First Ward features a close battle For a profile on Republican mayoral can- didate Paul Jensen, see story, Page 3. between Democrats Robert Elton, an automobile designer, and Ann Marie Coleman, who co-directs Guild House campus ministry. Republican Ron Witchie will face no opposition in his bid to succeed retiring Democratic councilmember Lowell Peterson. Students can vote in the First Ward primary at Alice Lloyd and Bursley residence halls. The Fourth Ward primary pits Republican Jerry Schleicher, an optometrist, against Jim Cameron, a lawyer. The winner will face Democrat Richard Layman in the April general elections. Fourth Ward polling places include South Quad, and 926 Mary St., See CITY, Page 3 Riegle promises to fight Senate contra funding By CARRIE LORANGER and STEVE KNOPPER In two Ann Arbor appearances Friday, U.S. Senator Donald Riegle (D-Mich.) told Ann Arbor Sister City Task Force members that he will continue to fight in the Senate against funding of the Contras in Nicaragua, and he spoke at the dedication of the College of Engineering's new satellite data center. Before the task force, Riegle paralleled the Central American situation to Vietnam. "We have a number of Reagan Administration policy makers who would like to win the war in Central America that we did not win in Southeast Asia," Riegle said. He said he has target proponents of Contra funding in the Senate and will try to change their positions. "Someone who identifies themselves as being in favor of Contra aid either needs to be persuaded or replaced," he said. Task force members and delegates from a city-sponsored trip in November to Juigalpa, Nicaragua - Ann Arbor's sister city - told Riegle their objections to the' Administration's Central American policies. Ginny Peacock, a delegation member, told Riegle that the Contras focus their "terrorist" attacks on teachers and medical' professionals. She described the hardship of seeing the relatives of Contra victims in Juigalpa. Other speakers at the meeting urged Riegle to learn more about the situation and take an active stance. Riegle was elected to the Senate in 1976, and has a history of speaking against U.S. involvement in Central America. At the dedication ceremony, Riegle told an audience of nearly 200 research faculty and administration members that "some of the most advanced outer space activity in the country is being carried on right here," Riegle said the federal government has a backlog of satellite research, so work on similar facilities around the nation "will prove very timely and wise." Riegle, who spoke after Engineering College Dean Charles Vest, University Space Physics Department Director Paul Hays, and Interim University President James Duderstadt at the ceremony, is chairman of the Senate science technology and space subcommittee. See RIEGLE, Page 2 Daily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN Michigan Senator Don Riegle was the keynote speaker Friday at the dedication of the University's new satellite data center on North Campus. Riegel also spoke with the Ann Arbor Sister City Task Force about his plans to cut off U.S. funding of the Nicaraguan contras. Panel examines problems of black 'U' athletes BY SCOTT BOWLES Black athletes at the University, before the 1970s,' had to possess almost superhuman abilities to compete and earn letters in varsity sports, said John Rehee, author of "Hail to the Victors!" According to some University administrators, student- athletes still enter school with the odds stacked against them. Behee, a professor of physical education black. Before 1972, according to Behee, blacks were either banned, restricted in number by an unwritten quota, or expected to have talent above that required of white athletes in nearly every sport at Michigan. Behee recalled a phrase, "Superspade," coined by a successful black athlete that he used to entitle the first chapter of his book. "When I look back at the achievements of those athletes, I am reminded of an interview in 1935. Ward beat Owens in the 60-yard dash and the 65-yard high hurdles. Despite Ward's talent, Behee said, the football team did not allow him to play in the Michigan-Georgia Tech game in 1934.. Teams from the south traditionally did not play opponents who had blacks on their teams. There was a rumor that Georgia Tech might not play if the Wolverines used Ward. Behee said the University discriminated He concluded, "I don't think we would have had change without national political forces at work. The change that did come about came especially from the leadership of Martin Luther King Jr. I see him as a revolutionary hero. What this country needs now is more Martin Luther King Jr.'s, black ones, white ones, male ones, female ones." THE PANEL members who followed Behee's speech agreed blacks had made INSIDE None of the Republicans in today's primaries for the Fifth Ward are worth voting for. OPINION, PAGE 4 The University's Museum of Modern Art offers students a chance to get their Dadas out with a retrospective of surrealist artist Max Ernst's work. ARTS, PAGE 7