Ninety-eight years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 59 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, December 3, 1987 Copyright 1987, The Michigan Daily Wolverines win a snoozer over BG, 91-72 By JEFF RUSH Michigan won. The other team lost. Gary Grant and Glen Rice scored. Grant dished out assists. And Rice and Terry Mills rebounded. Ho-hum. The Pope's also Catholic, the sun will rise tomorrow (at least outside of Ann Arbor), and Bill Frieder will always have something to complain about. MICHIGAN (3-1) beat Bowling Green (1-1), 92- 71, last night before 12,505 at Crisler Arena - that much was expected. What was less expected were the mistakes the tired Wolverines made against their Mid-American Con- ference foes. Grant scored 26, but many of those points came long after the game had been decided. And while Grant dished out eight assists, he also turned the ball over six times. And, perhaps worst of all, the Wolverines were sloppy on offense. On many of their fast-break attempts they missed shots that should easily, have been converted. Several times Michigan stole the ball for a break, looked for a fancy slam, and came up empty. "I just think that was maybe bad decisions," said Frieder. "When you're fighting for spots and playing time, though, it's not very smart to do that." GRANT SAID, "We'll get it all back together. Once we hit one of them (the alley-oops), we'll get going." Frieder said the team was still feeling the effects of its trip to The Great Alaska Shootout. "I think part of it might have had to do with the long trip, the jet lag, and so forth," said Frieder. Michigan returned late Tuesday afternoon after a long weekend in Anchorage. "We were hoping that they would be a little bit flat after the long trip back from Alaska," said Bowling Green coach Jim Larranaga. "But I thought they played hard - I thought they played well - especially during one segment in the first half." That one segment in the first half, in which the Wolverines scored 15 straight points, gave them a 23- 10 lead, and the game was never close after that. "The game was over in terms of us having a chance to win," said Larranaga. See 'M', Page 8 POLICE REFUSE COMMENT Student: U officei file e1 By STEVE KNOPPER A University student, allegedly kicked in the groin last week by a public safety officer, said campus safety officers have detailed "multiple charges of assault and battery" against him to the Ann Ar- bor Police Department. Rackham graduate student Harold Marcuse, who protested the Central Intelligence Agency's recruiting interviews last Wednesday, said yesterday that Police Detective Richard Kinsey informed him of the charges on Tuesday. He said Kinsey would not identify the officer who listed the charges. Kinsey and Deputy Police Chief Donald Johnson refused to comment on the case yesterday. Johnson said the police are .conducting an investigation, and will reveal all the details in a press release by the end of the week. Leo Heatley, director of the University's Department of Public Safety and Security, refused to comment last night. No official charges have been filed yet, but the involved parties may press charges after an ongoing police investigation. Police Lt. John Atkinson said Tuesday police have conducted six interviews about Marcuse's allegations, and expect to have a report for City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw prepared by the end of the week. Witnesses at the protest accused Robert Patrick, an assistant director S to targes of the safety department, of kicking Marcuse. Patrick refused to comment on the incident yesterday. About 30 students forced their way into the Career Planning and Placement Office last Wednesday, in protest of the CIA interviews, knocking Heatley - who was trying to physically restrain the protestors by pressing his hands against the walls of a corridor - to his knees. Heatley, before the protestors moved past him, said, "You'll have to assault me to get in." Marcuse said last night that he was the first protestor to get past Heatley into the hallway. After the protestors gained access to a hallway at the other side of a room, Marcuse said he was kicked, and demanded that the person who kicked him be arrested for assault. Marcuse said he did not know who kicked him, but three protestors who witnessed the kick later told police it was Patrick. Later, Ann Arbor Police Det. Douglas Barbour told police that he was assaulted by Marcuse during the protest. Marcuse said yesterday that he "denies the charges to the utmost," and that nothing he did at the protest "could be conceived of as assault and battety." "They're upping the ante," Marcuse said, "and I'm doing the same. I don't feel intimidated by them."~ The Latin American Solidarity Committee, which organized last See LASC, Page 5 Doily Photo by SCOTT lITUCHY Michigan forward Terry Mills tangles with Bowling Green's Tyler James in a battle for a rebound during action last night at Crisler Arena. The Wolverines won their home opener, 92-71. No candidates shine in presidential debate ' , By HAMPTON DELLINGER Daily News Analysis p It was still hard to tell the pretenders from the contenders when the cameras stopped rolling after Tuesday night's nationally televised presidential debate. The debate sent none of the 12 Republican or Democratic candidates to the edge of either stardom or ruin. But two University political scientists, one a Republican, one a Democrat, both felt the GOP candidates outclassed their Democratic counterparts in a debate where the issues were hardly scratched and the p surface of candidates - their appearance - was crucial. Prof. Gregory Marcus cited many of the Republican candidates' background in business in explaining why they looked like leaders. "In terms of the impression they made, in terms of looking presidential, almost all of the Republicans looked better than the Democrats." Prof. George Grassmuck, a supporter of Vice- President George Bush's bid for the Republican nomi - nation, also saw the GOP coming out on top. "They all seemed fairly well prepared," he said. The first hour of the debate, sponsored by NBC News and staged at the Kennedy Center in Washing - ton, focused on foreign policy and particularly the Intermediate Nuclear Force (INF) treaty President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev plan to sign next week. Ironically, all the Republicans but Bush disapproved of the missile reduction treaty which Shapiro speaks Princeton alum Reagan has set as the cornerstone of his final year in office. Former Delaware Governor Pete du Pont harshly criticized the pact. "It's a bad treaty...I would always entrust freedom to the ingenuity of the American people (a reference to the President's Stategic Defense Initiative) before I would entrust it to the integrity of the Soviet government." Du Pont spoke with the clarity and eloquence he displayed in the only prior Republican debate last month in Houston, but his sharp, combative style hasn't helped him escape his single-digit poll rating. As Prof. Grassmuck said, "In terms of glib TV presence, du Pont doesn't come off very well." Senate minority leader Robert Dole, Bush's closest contender for the nomination, expressed pessimism about the treaty while reserving final judgment on it. By not committing himself one way or the other, Dole did not appear the strong leader he has portrayed himself to be. Alexander Haig, Reagan's first Secretary of State, tried to propel his stalled candidacy by attacking the front-running Bush for his passive role in the Iran- Contra Affair. "George, you've claimed to be the co-pilot of this administration...now, were you in the cockpit (when Reagan approved the sale of TOW missiles to Iran) or were you in the back of the plane?" asked Haig. Bush refused to criticize the administration and seemed to be suffering from a strong case of "boosterism" when he said "we've got a sound anti- terrorism policy." See DEBATE, Page 3 Ratifying a Treats ..In the United States mmm nnun Step 1: Treaty must be submitted to the Senate by President Reagan. Step 2: Senate leadership sends it to the Foreign Relations Committee and ri(Mbly the Armed Services and InineCm tees for action. Step 3: Foreign Relations Committee vould likely hold hearings early next year after the Senate reconvenes. Step 4: Foreign Relations commit tee votes on eher to ratify treaty or not. Recommendation then g to the floor for full vote by the Senate. Rtification requires a t-thirds vote (67 votes if all 100 senators vote). Treaty is submitted to a full session of both houses of the Supreme Soviet, the Soviet parliament comisting of a total of 1,00 members, and is ratified by a simple majority vote. Summit drama Reagan accuses Soviets of violating 1972 treaty WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Reagan accused the Soviet Union yesterday of flauting a 1972 arms control treaty by shifting two radar installations to the vicinity of Moscow and Kiev and probably car- rying out illegal anti-missile tests. A report - submitted to Congress just five days before the arrival of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev for a summit meeting and treaty signing - made serious new charges that the Kremlin had violated the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty. The report said that in addition to shifting the two radar installations, the Soviets had improved a chal- lenged radar at Krasnuyarsk and may be preparing an anti-ballistic missile defense of the country in violation of the treaty. "I am confident the Congress fully shares my concern about So- viet noncompliance," President Rea- gan said in a letter accompanying the report. Earlier in the day, reporters asked Reagan how he could ask the Senate to ratify a new treaty at the same time he is accusing the Russians of violating an old one. "I'd say a certain amount of in- consistency is justified," Reagan said. Pressed to explain what he meant by that, he added, "on the part of us who are talking to each other." See U.S., Page 2 INSIDE By MARTHA SEVETSON "What they didn't tell anyone was that Fritz Crisler was traded to Michigan from Princeton for a player to be named later," University PrP.6rA,~nt LNnrnld Vhntn4n inlrpd with "Leadership in undergraduate education is going to be central for higher education in the next decades," he said. A small, private university like Princeton will enable Chnr to nf. aCannnantrt.. a .mnra of M Israel stifles opposition to its occupation of .the West Bank by deporting Mubarak Awad. OPINION, Page 4 Little Shop of Horrors devours the Mendelssohn Theater today through Sunday. I i i I A Tf mr "I -- -71 ___________________7 ~v.. II