11 Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom VOLUME XCVII - NO. 119 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1987 COPYRIGHT 1987, THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'U, Regent Sarah Power falls fro By STEVE BLONDER and REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN University Regent Sarah Goddard Power (D-Ann Arbor) died yesterday after falling from an eighth-floor window of Burton Memorial Tower. : Power was pronounced dead on arrival at University Hospital yes - terday. Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Jan Suomala said she landed on concrete on the north side of the bell tower. "Her death was self-inflicted, and classified as a sudden death- a suicide," Suomala said. According to Fire Lt. William Koernke, a witness reported having een Power sitting in an eighth- oor window and then pushing off backwards. The eighth floor is the highest floor to which the public has access and contains several music offices and a classroom. "We have no reason to believe there was anybody else on that floor," said Captain Harold Rady of the Ann Arbor Police 'Department. Rady said that the window that Power jumped from was so high from the floor that her fall had to be deliberate. "She could not have been just looking at the scenery- we found a wastebasket at the foot of people to talk to P "When I spc morning there wa evidence of depre positive and upbe 'Sarah's legacy at the University is that sh represented the conscience of the Univers -Keith Molin, Interim Director Co commits m bell tower Power. University and us all," said Regent oke to her this Veronica Smith (R-Gross Ilie). s no indication or "She gave her time, talent, and sion -diwethad armoney to the University - she ssion - we had a, gave it all," Smith added. In eat conversation, addition to serving on the University's Board of Regents since e 1975, Power was known both ity.' nationally and internationally for of niersty her committment to women's of University rights, world peace, education, and mmuniCation political activism. ACCORDING to Molin, Power, 52, had been hospitalized .es . a several weeks last fall with a severe arent suicide at case of bronchitis, a respiratory .shocked family, ailment. Amidst speculation that entire University she may have been terminally ill, ny students were Regent Deane Baker (D-Ann Arbor) ower's motives in said that "while she appeared on the ch a conspicuous road to recovery, she has always usy time, been very quiet about her own ehind the death of health - she never complained." h an apparently "Her respiratory aliment had and private life are taken much more out of her than family declined to anyone originally thought it possible motives would," Molin said. "She was under e. vful tragedy for the See POW ER, Page 5 i suicide the window that she could have used to get up to the window ledge," he said. ALTHOUGH the 212 foot tower is reputed to be the site of many suicide attempts, no statistics were available to confirm the frequency of such deaths. University officials would not confirm that Power committed suicide. "There are many un - answered questions, but we have not termed it as a suicide" said Keith Molin, director of University communication and one of the last he added. Power's app around 9:50 a.m friends, and the community. Ma confused about P jumping from su place at such a bu The reasons b a woman with fulfilling public a a mystery. Her f comment on p behind her suicide "This is an aw Regent Sarah Power died yesterday after falling from the bell tower. Charles Eisendrath, a Communications professor, described her as "a fierce defender of the quality of the University." RD wants to By ANDY MILLS During the school year, Janet Hackel is a long way from Europe. During the summer, she teaches playwriting in London. Hackel works for the Summer Program in London sponsored by the Univ - ersity and Sarah Lawrence College. Someday, she wants to live and work as a writer in London. Hackel, a resident director at Couzens, is an undergraduate Pro file AND then there's the Scotland option: "If I really had my way, I'd make millions of dollars and go up to Scotland. I'd be perfectly happy with the wind whistling around a cottage and me and my little computer for nobody ever to see, as long as I'd be allowed to do it." "I just want to try," Hackel said of working in England. "Maybe I'll become incredibly bored by it all, I don't know. But I want to give it a shot." "Right now I want to go to London. Who knows; in two weeks, it could be Istanbul." Hackel grew up in East Lansing and entered the MFA program on a whim, even though she always enjoyed the theater. "When I came to school, I didn't have any idea of what I wanted to do," she said. She contrasts that with students she encounters through teaching playwriting, intro - ductory composition, and being an RD. "Most of them are pre-law, pre- med, or pre-business," she said. "They're more goal-oriented today." Hackel said she was content studying speech pathology until the day she saw a advertisement for the travel,' MFA program: "I was going to have a nice life and I saw this sign and thought 'I've got to at least try.' I don't want to be 50 years old and have somebody say 'you should have been a playwright."' S H E has had three plays performed, including one based on experiences with former roommates and, most recently, an adaptation of Madeline L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time for the Young People's Theatre in Ann Arbor. Most of her work draws on real life' episodes that she either has taken part in or has heard about. "They're usually about general craziness," she said. Hackel also works with the Residence Hall Repertory Theatre, taking ideas of the students in the company and putting them into theatrical form. She and the RHRT recently went to Chicago to perform at a housing conference. Although she gets paid for her work, Hackel said that very few playwrights - herself included - make enough money to live on the revenue from their plays. Hackel was the youngest of three children in her parents' first marriage; when her father remarried, she became the oldest of four step- write brothers and sisters. "My family's not that odd, I don't think. They're just sort of strange - like everyone's family is." RHRT director Scott Weissman admires Hackel's work. "Besides being very good at playwriting, she's very flexible and adaptable and willing to change scripts. She has very good ideas," she said. For the most part, Hackel writes her plays for herself. "I don't really desperately want to have people see my writing. I do a lot of writing to work out my own problems," she said. "Whenever I have an argument with somebody, I come home and have the argument again, but I win on paper." ACCORDING to Paul Best, an Engineering freshman who lives in Couzens, Hackel is a "fun person, but she doesn't let people push her around." "She's tough," Best said. "You, can get along with her, but if you get on her bad side, you're in trouble." Best recalls an incident at two in the morning, when Hackel pulled the plug from the lounge TV, located just outside her room, See RD, Page 2 "special" student. She received her Bachelor of Science degree in biological psychology in 1982. She studied speech pathology at Eastern Michigan University for a year before returning to the University to earn her Master of Fine Arts degree in 1985 in playwriting. She wants to move to England permanently in 1988. "If it doesn't work, and I can't get a job and I run out of money after a year, I'll come home. I can always teach at a university," she said. Daily Photo by DANA MENDELSSOHN Janet Hackel, a RD at Couzens, an avid gardener, and a playwright cares deeply about broadening the horizons of the students she is committed to educating. Election 'hopefuls lea ilS on issues. By CARRIE LORANGER Ann Arbor Mayor Edward Pierce and the two Third Ward city council candidates fielded questions on crime and affordable housing in a public debate last night. The Democrats appeared to have won the support of the crowd. Pierce's Republican opponent, Gerald Jernigan (R-Fourth Ward), was unable to attend the event at the Forest Hills Cooperative, a city ubsidized housing cooperative. Pierce encouraged co-op mem - bers to support the housing millage on the April ballot which, if ELECTIONS $ n Rassed, will generate $4 million MSA allocates money to UCAR By MARTHA SEVETSON The Michigan Student Assembly voted unanimously last night to allocate $500 to the United Coalition Against Racism. UCAR members will bring receipts to the assembly's Minority Affairs Committee and receive compensation for money spent on anti-racism activities. According to Lannis Hall, chair of MSA's Minority Affairs Committee, the funds will cover $200 in back expenses which have individual UCAR members have financed, as well as future expenses. The assembly has not yet voted to fund the activities of the Black Action Movement III, but Hall indicated that such funding may be proposed next week. According to Ashish Prasad, chair of MSA's Budget Committee, the assembly also paid for the hotel accommodations of Rev. Jesse Jackson earlier this week and may cover his travel expenses. "MSA has been trying to get Rev. Jesse Jackson to come to the campus for several months now," Prasad said. "It was the eruption of recent rapist events that got him to come." In addition, the assembly unanimously supported both UCAR's twelve proposals and BAM III's eleven demands to the University administration. Despite the unanimous vote, several assembly representatives were hesitant to endorse all of the demands. "I cannot support minority tuition waivers or a mandatory course on racism," said engineering freshman Marc Schafer. "The University does have some mandatory classes because they teach certain desirable skills, but this class would teach values. I would like very much to support UCAR, but I do not agree with some of the demands and do not think they are all reasonable." But the assembly decided that the obligation to support the anti-racist activities of these groups outweighed the individual disputes with the demands. Racist flier found in Mos her Jordan By EUGENE PAK A racist flier threatening death by hanging to blacks was slipped under the door of a black student's dorm room in Mosher Jordan Hall Monday, according to Cortez Jones, Mosher Jordan's minority peer during such a pivotal point of the semester," he added. According to Housing Security Investigator Gerald Bradshaw, a report on the incident was filed with Housing Security on Monday and officials are investigating it. INSIDE President Shapiro's partial con - cession to BAM and UCAR demands is a small step foward. OPINION, PAGE 4 Music Director Kevin McMahon talks about the upcoming Nat - ional Arts Chamber Orchestra concert. ARTS, PAGE 7