Ninety-eight years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 66 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, January 6, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily U.S. jo in U.N. ns vote against Israel UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The Security Council voted unanimously yesterday to ask Israel not to deport Palestinians from the occupied terri- tories. It marked the first time the United States voted against Israel in the council since 1981. The United States is Israel's main defender at the United Nations and usually wields its veto power on be- half of the Jewish state. But Israel's crackdown on riots in the occupied territories has provoked strong criticism in the U.S. On Dec. 22, the United States rebuked Israel by abstaining from a Security Council vote condemning the crack- down. Yesterday it joined the other 14 members of the council in calling on Israel not to deport nine Palestinian activists.. Israel has defended the expulsions as necessary to prevent more unrest in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, which it captured from Egypt and Jordan in the 1967 Middle East war. Since rioting broke there Dec. 8, Is- raeli troops have fatally shot at least 24 Palestinians. The latest person died yesterday, when Israeli soldiers in the Gaza Strip opened fire to disperse hundreds of rioters on a march from the home of one of the nine deportees. Israeli Ambassador Benjamin Ne- tanyahu told the Security Council all nine Palestinians scheduled to be de- ported are instigators of unrest and affiliated with terrorist groups. He said the council was playing a "rigged.game." "We've never had a Security Council convene to condemn the murder of a Jew," he said. "Not once."' "They cannot be deported from their own land," Shaker Arabiat, a Jordanian representative to the United Nations, said of the nine Palestinians. At least four of the Palestinians are appealing the depor- tation orders, which were issued See U.S., Page 3 Ann Arbor opens two new shelters A Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Michigan running back Jamie Morris celebrates the Wolverines' triumph over Alabama in last Saturday's Hall of Fame Bowl. Morris assaulted the record book while leading Michigan to victory. WinforIMo that counts for Bo TAMPA, Fla. - His smile stretched farther than the Gulf of Mexico. Acting Michigan football head coach Gary Moeller won one of the biggest games of his career. But at the press conference after the Wolverines' 28-24 victory over Alabama in the Hall of Fame Bowl last Saturday, Moeller kept events in perspective. "It feels great, but it is still Bo's team and a victory for Bo," said Moeller. "I don't want the win togo in any Mo (win) col- umn. This is a Bo victory." Sorry coach. The win may not Miller Time y BY SCOTT G. MILLER go in the Mo column but it does in this column. For Mo, it was Miller Time. Mo in command. Confident. Successful. A refreshing change from his head coaching days at Illinois. "I'm just happy for everyone involved," said Moeller. "I'd be lying to you if I didn't tell you I feel really happy about the way things happened. I'm happy for myself and my family." In his three seasons with the Illini, Moeller could not register more than three victories in any one campaign. He tried to build the program honestly and was re- warded with a pink slip. It takes more than three years to revamp a down program. Just look at George Perles' five-year tenure at Michigan State. The Hall of Fame Bowl served as an audition of sorts for Moeller as a head coach. He played the part to perfection. With Bo Schem- bechler recuperating from bypass surgery in Ann Arbor, Moeller displayed the leadership qualities his mentor taught him over the years. Bo and Moeller conferred daily See MOELLER, Page 10 By KEVIN S. VINEYS The Ann Arbor Shelter Asso- ciation began the new year with the promise of two new shelters for the city's homeless. A day shelter for up to 60 people will open today, replacing a shelter closed last year. Another shelter, a home for displaced women, has gotten a financial boost from the federal government. AASA spokeswoman Cathy Zick said the new day shelter offers "a place to go between job searches and housing searches." Zick said the shelter, located at 112 S. Ashley St., will provide adult education, counseling, and support groups for drop-ins. It will be open every day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. A day shelter at 117 S. Division St. closed last fall when the owners of the property, Great Lakes Federal Savings, announced plans to replace it with a parking lot expansion. Great Lakes Federal has since donated the building to the AASA, which will move it and use it as a women's shelter. Zick said the AASA has received a $150,000 grant from the federal department of Housing and Urban Development to open a house for displaced women. Displaced women are women who have left their homes because of domestic violence, eviction, or other hardships. Currently, Zick said, displaced women are staying at homeless shelters, domestic violence shelters, or "staying in a bad [home] situ- ations because there's nowhere to n Zick said that up to 68 women will be able to live at the home once it is moved to its permanent site, a vacant lot at 411 N. Ashley St. Residents may stay for up to a year, See DAY, Page 3 CRISP: an assembly line o characters " . cusprrqsieaaee as By DOV COHEN They come asking questions, throwing tantrums, giving kisses, signing autographs, wearing leather, smelling badly, having traumas, getting excited, and proposing marriage. Every year 70 thousand students go through CRISP registration. And despite the frustration, the ignorance, and the eccentricities of the student body, the CRISP system manages to make class registration an "interesting" experience on both ends. CRISP employees emphasize that most students are courteous, polite, and patient. But with the seemingly "4 - _ - - - - -- "never ending stream of these kids, there are always certain elements that make sure work at CRISP never gets dull. CRISPers come in a variety of different styles. There are: -the compulsive CRISPers. Many students have trouble settling on their classes and switch them around at the beginning of the semester. But it seems a few have more trouble than most. "Some kids come in every day," said one terminal operator. Every year, one or two of these CRISP junkies even manage to "write themselves off" the computer by making more than the 30-some odd changes allowed in one semester. 'One guy offered to marry me (after I got all his classes) ... But he didn't come back.' Sherry Cook CRISP operator course prerequisites, and even ask them to recommend good classes and good professors; -the affectionate CRISPERs. Several terminal operators recall, students giving them a "big kiss" for getting all their classes. And others say they have students who "latch on" to them and try to come to them every time they CRISP. "Their first experience has been so positive and it just happens to be you," said one. The latching on happens "especially if they're (first year students, because) they're scared." Sometimes love at the computer terminal gets a little exaggerated. "One guy offered to marry me (after I got all his classes)," said operator Sherry Cook. "But he didn't come back," she said; -the primal screamers. This is the other side of the affectionate ones. While the process can be rewarding for some, it can be frustrating for others. "They'll go out and scream at the top of their lungs," said Nancy Giggey, who works on the problem desk and so receives her share of frustrated students. "They want to slam the door so badly, but it's on hooks so you can't slam it now," said Giggey, who notes that most students are polite. Still there are See SMELLS, Page 2 "The students are indecisive. They don't know what they want," the operator said of these CRISP recidivists; -the inquisitive CRISPERs. "One of our biggest problems is to make sure we don't give out b a d information," said another CRISP employee. In what might be called the "reverse cab driver effect," some students assume the terminal operators know everything. It's infrequent, but employees say students sometimes ask them for academic and financial aid advice, ask them about degree requirements and ---- ------ 'Monorail may connect INSIDE Students report falling out of sleeping lofts, question safety city, campus By STEVEN TUCH Mickey Mouse in Ann Arbor? The futuristic styling of Disney's monorails may be coming to Ann Arbor. The Ann Arbor Trans- According to city and transportation officials, the monorail could be used to connect downtown and other developed parts of Ann Arbor to. both North and Main Campuses and ~Fat Al hais Nc ~gtion . autobography. ew Year' s sug- OP NIONPage 4* Arthur Miller's ARTS, 'age By HEATHER EURICH Lisa Bass recalled thinking, "Wow! Six feet two inches!" as she fell from her loft in Bursley Residence Hall during her first week at school. But the thrill of flying ended for the first year Pncrneirinv cti1nt when t*~he roke her inner frm innd that is about to be published in the American Journal of College Health. Her research was internationally recognized on New Year's Eve when an Australian newspaper announced she had advised people "to sleep as close to the ground as possible" when intoxicated. Alcohol played a role in a large number of .,.