I Weeken Magazine: " Basketball Tip-Off " John Logie . The List . Interview: Sean Higgins Ninety-eight years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 52 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, November 20, 1987 Copyright 1987, The Michigan Daily North hindered Contra probes WASHINGTON (AP) - National Security aides John Poindexter and Oliver North inter- fered with seven criminal investiga- tions when the probes threatened to expose the Reagan administration's private Contra resupply operation, the congressional Iran-Contra committees say. Meanwhile, Attorney General Edwin Meese, the target of strong criticism in the panel's 690-page report, described the study yesterday as "a great job of Monday morning quarterbacking." "There wasn't anything particu- larly new," Meese said of the report, which said he failed to deep records and neglected to seal North's office during a weekend inquiry last November that uncovered diversion of funds from the secret sale of arms to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua. North continued to shred docu- ments throughout the weekend in- quiry. The report, released Wednesday, also concluded that Meese probably approved the use of private funds for a failed 1985-86 ransom operation for the U.S. hostages in Lebanon bankrolled by Texas industrialist H. Ross Perot. Defending his performance during the inquiry a year ago, Meese said "it looks a lot different when you are on the scene." He declined to discuss the See NSC, Page 3 TA i sues ', Term limit disputed' By ROSE MARY WUMMEL The President of the Graduate Employment Organization, during the public comments session of yesterday's Board of Regents meet- ing, announced that the union will file an unfair labor practice suit against the University. Two members of the Rackham Student Government joined GEO President Don Demitriades to voice their anger over a restriction on teaching assistantships. Graduate students have been limited to no more than 10 terms of teaching as- sistantship or equivalent fellowship work. The restriction, known as the 10- term limit, constitutes a change in conditionc of emn liment Demitri- Steiner has said that the purpose of the 10-term rule is to compel de- partments to organize their programs so graduate students earn their doc- See GEO, Page 5 VP Wilson reportis research growth Daily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER LSA senior Wendy Sharp, vice-president of the Michigan Student Assembly and member of Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus, addresses the Board of Regents yesterday, urging the administration to take action again- st discrimination based on sexual orientation. Studens lobby regents By ELIZABETH ATKINS With about 130 students loudly cheering them on, speakers from two campus groups yesterday demanded that the University's Board of Re- gents take action against racism and anti-gay and lesbian discrimination. The students, spilling out of the regents' conference room in the Fleming Administration Building, arrived towards the end of the board's monthly meeting in time for its public comments session. The protesters - representing the United Coalition Against Racism and Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus - clapped, wore green arm bands, and chanted, "A people united will never be defeated." Lillien Waller, an LSA junior and member of UCAR, presented the re- gents with the three demands her group plans to focus upon this year: - cancel University classes on February 19 to honor the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and cre- ate anti-racism workshops; - establish a mandatory Unver- See UCAR, Page 2 IjJWJV1 AI11GL, 1 u5 ll AB MELISSA RAMSDEL L ades told the regents. He said gradu- The University increased its re- ate students were unaware of the rule search spending by $30 million this when they settled on a contract last past year. But impending budget cuts spring.The may blur the future of federally- "e l-er policy should not yy be implemented until all think about funded projects, Vice President for Research Linda Wilson told the the effects of the rule," Demitriades Board of Regents yesterday. Although LSA Dean Peter Wilson, presenting her annual re- Steiner proposed the ten-term limit port to the regents, said the Univer- three years ago, many departments sity spent $213 million for fiscal did not enforce it until Steiner sent year 1987, an increase of 16 percent letters to department chairs last June Fedear. calling for full implementation of Federal fundig constitutes 64 the rule. See 1987, Page 5 Blue to face, By SCOTT G. MILLER A week ago the Michigan-Ohio State game ap- peared meaningless in the context of the schools' storied rivalry. - Both teams had no chance to go to the Rose Bowl. In fact, both teams just wanted to salvage their sea- sons and make a bowl game. But events in the often unpredictable world of col- lege football changed everything. Ohio State fired coach Earle Bruce Monday afternoon, giving new meaning to this year's renewal of the traditional matchup at Michigan Stadium (12:20 p.m., ABC- T.V.). BRUCE POSSESSES an 80-26-1 career mark in nine seasons at Ohio State and will coach his final game for Ohio State tomorrow. The Buckeyes have said they will decline any bowl invitation. Bruce's dismissal sent shock waves through his team, a squad that already had revenge on its mind. "I've been waiting for this game for 11 months. This is my chance -to give something back to the team, the fans, and especially coach Bruce," said Ohio inspired OSU State placekicker Matt Frantz, who missed a game-, winning, 45-yard field goal against Michigan last season. "In my mind, I feel I gave the game away to Michigan last year." Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler, who staunchly defended Bruce earlier in the week, knows there is nothing he can do about the Buckeyes' deter- mination. "The thing about football is that I've never been concerned with the opponent's attitude," said Schembechler, who has been associated with the Michigan-Ohio State game since he was a graduate assistant under Woody Hayes 35 years ago. "There's nothing I can do about it, but I can do something about our attitude." Schembechler's sympathetic attitude towards Bruce will not carry onto the field. "I like and respect Earle, but I want to beat the hell out of him when he comes up here," said the 19th-year head coach. DESPITE ALL the controversy, there is a game to be played. And once Michigan and Ohio State put on the pads, Schembechler says a "knock down, drag See EARLE, Page 12 Students First leads in MSA elections By ANDREW MILLS Indications late last night showed the Students First party capturing many of the nine LSA seats open on the Michigan Student Assembly in campus-wide elections that drew only 1,700 voters. Students were . chosing representative for the Michigan Student Assembly, the LSA Student Government, Rackham Student Government, and the Engineering Council. Ballot counting was still proceeding at press time. Because this was the first fall MSA election, assembly President Ken Weine said he had. n o expectations, but the turnout was much lower than the assembly elections last spring. At that election, Students First garnered an overwhelming majority of the seats, as well as the presidency and vice- presidency, with close to 50 percent of the over 5,300 votes cast. About 250 to 300 ballots were invalidated by a ballot error in the LSA Student Government election. LSA-SG candidate Kenneth Bassey's name was erroneously left off ballots that were distributed Wednesday morning, but election officials caught the error and had correct ballots at all the polling sites by 4 p.m. Wednesday. While ballots that left Bassey's Farber ... campaigns for MSA See ENGIN, Page 3. . . SAPAC launches safety campaign By ELIZABETH ATKINS Volunteers from the University's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center began going door- to-door Monday, distributing litera- ture about making walking and liv- ing in area neighborhoods safer. Twenty-two volunteers will walk from one house to the next in resi- dential areas near campus, giving safety tips about walking alone at night, said Pam Kisch, a SAPAC coordinator. The canvassing will 'U' study: Market crash won't cause recession By DAVID SCHWARTZ The nation's economy will slump in coming months, but Americans will not have to endure a recession, a University study released yesterday said. The slump can be attributed to consumers' fears about the Oct. 19 stock market crash, but the study predicted that major purchases, like new cars, will pick up next year. "The fourth quarter economy will be slow," said Economics Prof. Saul Hymans, director of the Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics. But he said the slump will be "nothing that can be thought of as a disaster." Every year, the RSQE studies economic indicators and forecasts the such as new cars, until early next year. But it predicted a 0.2 percent increase in auto sales for 1988. The study also forecasted a 2.9 percent growth in the Gross National See ECONOMIST, Page 5 INSIDE The Detroit City Council should pass a handgun ban law. OPINION, Page 4 La Rondine, starring University students, is an opera of bittersweet romance set in the 19th century. ARTS, Page 7 Michigan begins a home-and- I. ii