Page 2 -The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, April 20, 1988 Inmate wins Hopwood By LIZ ROHAN Susan Fair, who won a Hopwood Award for her short story, "The Visit," thought attending the awards ceremony yesterday wasn't worth it. And for good reason. Fair, an inmate at Florence Crane prison in Coldwater, Michigan, wpuld have had to pay two security guards $500 in overtime t o accompany her to the ceremony. Instead, she received $1,200, as well as the prestige associated with the highest literary award given by the University, for her fictional piece about prison life. Fair, a senior at the University, receives instruction with the help of several University faculty members who recruit students to tape lectures and gather notes for her. ALTHOUGH FAIR could not leave prison the Rackham Student Government and the Coalition for A New Domestic Policy held a press conference in her name after the ceremony. There, speakers talked about the dehumanizing conditions 'Susan's story is an example of an individual's attempt to overcome this oppression.' - Political Science Prof. Alfred Meyer award Hopwood, up to a million dollars have been awarded to talented writers. This year $28,400 dollars was awarded to the 31 winners. There is both a major and a minor contest with categories in drama, screenplay, essay novel, short story and poetry. THE HIGHEST winner of this year's awards is Residential College senior Laura Gladhill, who won $2,000 for two short stories which demonstrated "particular achievement." Gladhill, a Russian studies major, says her prize-winning stories are emphasizes the difference between Eastern and Western attitudes. "I write from a Western point of view," she says. which prisoners suffer in the state's criminal justice system. Prisoners in Michigan are denied their right to privacy by law, which robs them of their dignity and individuality, said Fair's academic counselor, Political Science Prof. Alfred Meyer at the conference. "Susan's story is an example of an individual's attempt to overcome this oppression," he said. Those Hopwood winners who did attend last night's ceremony at Rackham Auditorium were honored by poet Donald Justice, winner of the 1980 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. JUSTICE WAS introduced by Hopwood Chairman Prof. John Aldridge as a poet who has "a romantic and Wordsworthian view of the past." He entertained the audience with his speech, "About the Prose Sublime." Justice said prose has special qualities apart from poetry and defined it as "a frozen picture which represents complex meaning and feeling." He read prose passages by Sherwood Anderson to the audience to emphasize his theme He concluded his speech with his poetic claim that poetry and prose is the means with which we see "momentarily into the heart of things. Such is the power derived from a lifetime of reading and writing. Since the Hopwood Awards' were established over fifty years ago by Broadway playwright Avery Both stories American visiting deal with an the Soviet Union. The Hopwood winning works were judged locally by several University professors, and nationally by 10 prestigious writers, such as poet Marge Piercy. HEALTH & FITNESS W T * Free Pregnancy Testing. " Free Counseling - * Gynecology * Birth Control " Abortion-- Health Care Clinic of Ann Arbor 2512 Carpenter * 971-1970 Recreational ( Sports - SEMESTER BREAK HOURS* IMSB NCRB CCRB APRIL 30 9AM-7PM CLOSED CLOSED MAY 1 12N-7PM CLOSED CLOSED MAY 2 7AM-7PM CLOSED CLOSED MAY 3 7AM-7PM CLOSED CLOSED Central Campus and North Campus Recreation Buildings will resume Spring/Summer hours on May 4. HA VE AN ENJOYABLE SUMMER! 2 voting machines erred int city election By LISA POLLAK The discovery of two defective voting machines in the April 4 city elections will not change the results of those elections, City Clerk Winifred Northcross said yesterday. The city's other 219 machines will not be examined for flaws, she said. Voting machines at the East Quad (Ward 3, Precinct 2) and Thurston School (Ward 2, Precinct 11) voting sites failed to correctly register votes for Proposal C - the rent control ordinance. Only 39 "yes" votes were recorded at East Quad; only 19 "no" votes were recorded at Thurston school, Northcross said. "What this means is that voters who came in to vote on the ma- chines involved after the numbers at that point did not, in effect, vote on Proposal C," Northcross wrote in an April 18 memorandum. Because Proposal C lost by more than 8,000 votes, the errors at the two affected precincts would not FULL PRIVILEGE ADULT NAUTILUS CLUB MEMBERSHIPS JUST $25.00 PER MONTH ANN ARBOR " Y" 350 S. FIFTH AVE. 663-0536 have affected the election's outcome, she said. There is "a small possibility" that other machines malfunctioned, Northcross said, "but there is noth- ing we can do about it at this point. The official recount date has passed." The city has no way to know how many votes were lost, she said, adding that she is confident the elec- tion results are accurate. "It is obvious, however, that if the determination had been closer, these two machine malfunctions could have made a crucial difference in the results. We were extremely lucky," her memorandum said. City officials were prompted to check the two defective machines after finding discrepancies in the voting results at those precincts, said Herb Katz, director of election re- cruiting the the city clerk's office. At the East Quad site, for exam- ple, Democratic candidate Liz Brater beat Republican Isaac-Jacobein Campbell, 145-45, but Proposal C lost, 92-86. "The vote should have been stronger for rent control," Katz said. Northcross plans to resume the battle for an alternative voting sys- tem that she abandoned in June, 1985, when she failed to convince the city council that the machines are obsolete, frequently in need of repair, and inconvenient to store and move. Considering Abortion? Free Pregnancy Test Completely Confidential Pregnancy Counseling Center 529 N. Hewitt, Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (any time) IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports French detect 3 mines in gulf MANAMA, Bahrain - A French warship spotted three mines and Iranian speedboats raided two tankers yesterday, the day after battles in the southern Persian Gulf in which Iran fired missiles from shore at U.S. Navy vessels. A marine executive said the gulf appeared "ghostly" from lack of ship- ping. He and others said commercial vessels were avoiding the waterway, where Iran and Iraq have been at war since September 1980 and the U.S. Navy sank or damaged six Iranian vessels Monday. They also said the United States had suspended escorts of Kuwaiti oil tankers temporarily, but Defense Department spokesperson Dan Howard denied it. Iran claimed its speedboats in the southern gulf sank an "American naval logistical ship," killing its crew, an hour after Navy ships destroyed two Iranian oil platforms Monday. Israel deports 8 Palestinians JERUSALEM - Israel yesterday deported eight more Palestinians to Lebanon, including six involved in a stoning attack on a group of teen- age Israeli hikers in a West Bank village, the army said. Army officials said for the first time that the April 6 attack on the hikers had been planned in advance by some of those who were deported and alleged they belonged to an outlawed PLO youth group. Also yesterday, Ezer Weizman, a Cabinet minister without portfolio, criticized the slaying of PLO military commander Khalil al-Wazir, warn- ing it would backfire on Israel. The army censored a newspaper editorial that sought to criticize Israel's reported role in the killing. The army reported relative clam elsewhere, although troops remained on alert for possible attacks. Kuwaiti royalty radios plea ALGIERS, Algeria - A relative of the emir of Kuwait said yesterday she and the other hostages aboard a hijacked Kuwaiti jetliner "are all in danger" if her royal kin did not meet the demands of the Shiite Moslem terrorists. The plea from Anware Al-Sabah, the second in as many days from a member of the royal family aboard the plane, came as the ordeal entered its third week with no outward sign of progress. "We want you to tell our families that my sister and I and all the pas- sengers are well, although our morale is low and Fadel is naturally deteri- orating," she said via radio in a tense but firm voice, referring to her brother, Fadel Khaled Al-Sabah and her 22-year-old sister, Ibtesam. The hijackers, thought to number eight, have killed two hostages since the plane was hijacked April 5 on a flight from Bangkok to Kuwait with 112 people aboard. Iacocca' s earnings irk UAW HIGHLAND PARK, Mich. - Lee Iacocca, the nation's top-paid ex- ecutive in 1986, earned nearly $18 million last year in salary, cash, and stock bonuses and exercised stock options, Chrysler Corp. reported yes- terday. Iacocca's 1987 earnings of $17. million included nearly $13.5 mil- lion by exercising stock options granted earlier in the decade, when Chrysler's stock was worth a fraction of its present value. Iacocca also received $765,890 in salary, $725,00 in cash bonuses, $249,000 in stock bonuses and a stock grant worth nearly $2.7 million when it was issued Dec. 8. The figures were contained in Chrysler's proxy statement, mailed yesterday to stockholders. United Auto Workers Vice President Mark Stepp, who leads the unit which opened national contract talks with Chrysler on Monday, called the payments "an incredible rip-off'. EXTRAS Stop the presses! The Daily takes its two-week vacationI Yes, we've got those one-week extensions on our last few papers, and we even borrowed notes for our classes which we've missed for the past several weeks. We didn't think it was true either, but now that classes are over and final exams are beginning, even Daily editors and staffers will be making their way to campus libraries and computing centers - if we can remember where they are. Today marks our last day of publication for the term. But The Daily will be back before you even begin thinking of that summer tan. Our Summer Weekly paper begins May 6, and will come out every Friday through Spring and Summer terms (If you are interested in' working on the Daily this Spring/Summer, call us at 764-0552, or show up May 1. at 7:00 p.m. for our first staff meeting). Good luck on finals! If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. Vol. XCVIII - go. 136 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates for May through August - $6 in Ann Arbor; $8 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the National Student News Service. 4 4 i FLEXIBLE EVENING HOURS at Michigan Telefund allow Andy Stenzler time to: - study for his engineering degree - act as social chairman of his fraternity . earnrmoneyforafun summer vacation Editor in Chief..................REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Managing Editor........................MARTHA SEVETSON News Editor.......................................EVE BECKER City Editor.....................................MELISSA BIRKS Features Editor..........................ELIZABETH ATKINS University Editor..........................KERY MURAKAMI NEWS STAFF: vicki Bauer, Anna Borgman, Dov Cohen, Steve Knopper, Theresa Lai, Kristine LaLonde, Eric Lemont, Michael Lustig, Alyssa Lustigman, Dayna Lynn, Andrew Mills, Peter Mooney, Jim Poniewozik, Liz Rohan, Micah Schmit, Elizabeth Stuppler, Marina Swain, Melissa Ramsdell, Lawrence Rosenberg, David Schwartz, Ryan Tutak, Lisa Winer, Veronica Woolridge. Opinion Page Editors.............JEFFREY RUTHERFORD CALE SOUTHWORTH OPINION STAFF: Muzammil Ahmed, Sarah Babb, Rosemary Chinnock, Brian DeBroux, Betsy Esch, Noah Finkel, Joshua Ray Levin, I. Matthew Miller, Sandra Steingraber, Mark Williams, Andrea immerman. Sports Editor.........................................JEFF RUSH Associate Sports Editors...................JULIE HOLLMAN ADAM SCHEFTER ADAM SCH RAGER PETE STEINERT DOUG VOLAN 1 ARTS STAFF: VJ. Beauchamp, Cherie Curry, Michael. Fischer, Andrea Gacki, Lynn Gettleman, Timothy Huet, 'Juliet James, Brian Jarvinen, Avra Kouffman, Preeti Malani, Mike Rubin, Mark Shaiman, Todd Shanker, Lauren Shapiro, Chuck Skarsaune, Mark Swartz, Marc S. Taras, Marie Wesaw. Photo Editors..........................KAREN HANDELMAN JOHN MUNSON PHOTO STAFF: Alexandra Brez, Jessica Greene, Ellen Levy, Robin Loznak, David Lubliner, Danny Stiebel, Lisa Wax. Weekend Editors.......................STEPHEN GREGORY ALAN PAUL WEEKEND STAFF: Fred Zinn. Display Sales Manager.........................ANNE KUBEK Assistant Display Sales Manager...........KAREN BROWN DISPLAY SALES STAFF: David Bauman, Gail Belenson, Lauren Berman, Sherri Blansky, Pam Bullock, Jeff Chen, Tammy Christie, Milton Feld, Lisa George, Michelle Gill, Matt Lane, Heather MacLachlan, JodiManchik, Eddy Meng, Jackie Miller, Shelly Pleva, Debbie Retzky, Jim Ryan, Laura Schlanger, Michelle Slavik, Mary Snyder, Marie Soma, Cassie Vogel, Bruce Weiss. NATIONALS: Valerie Breier LAYOUT: Heather Barbar,. 0 A