Jrienlaie Ninety-eight years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 95 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, February 16, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Doily U-Mass protest resembles 'U' unrest By JIM PONIEWOZIK A group of minority students oc- cupied a university building last Friday, and says it will remain there until the university's administration takes steps to combat racism o n campus. The sit-in is not taking place here, but at the University of Mas- sachusetts-Amherst. If the news sounds familiar, some college students and educators say the explanation is not a coincidence, but a rise in racism at American colleges. "There has been over the past two } years a substantial increase in racist attacks" on college campuses, Regi- nald Wilson of the Washington- based American Council on Educa- tion said in an interview yesterday. The U-Mass sit-in began in re- sponse to recent race-related incidents on the campus, including an attack on two male Black students by five white students. In a phone interview yesterday, Robert Christian, a U-Mass graduate See EDUCATORS, Page 3 Candidates await N.H. primary Daily Photo by DAVID LUBLINER Shave and a haircut Bob Dascola cuts Lt. Col. Charles Narbaugh's hair yesterday at Dascola's Barber Shop at 615 E. Liberty. Dascola said he used to cut former University President Harold Shapiro's hair. By The Associated Press Vice President George Bush fore- cast a win, but Sen. Bob Dole showed confidence yesterday as the GOP presidential field sprinted for the finish line in a tight New Hampshire primary race. Also, Democratic candidate Michael Dukakis said his expected win in tomorrow's primary might be smaller than predicted. Bush campaigned side by side with former Sen. Barry Goldwater, patron saint of conservatives, as he threw all his campaign could muster into a bid to arrest Dole's week-long surge and regain his own political footing. In the meantime, GOP candidate Jack Kemp called Bush a n "embarrassment" to the Republican party during a day that featured many attacks by candidates on their com- petitors. DOLE CHIPPED away at Bush's once formidable lead in na- tional polls by suggesting that Bush was more a bystander than a partici- pant in the Reagan administration. That tactic worked well for Dole in Iowa last week and now Bush, looking more like an underdog, has adopted it in New Hampshire. Bush is portraying Dole as a Senate leader who has failed to produce the votes to sustain Reagan vetoes or to get Robert Bork a seat on the Supreme Court. The most outrageous example of an attack that went beyond normal bounds was material distributed by supporters of former television evangelist Pat Robertson that sug- gested a member of Kemp's family had an abortion. Kemp aide Mary Brunette said the allegation was "a lie. There's abso- lutely no truth in it whatsoever." DEMOCRAT Dukakis, gover- nor in next-door Massachusetts, held a commanding lead among the Democrats with support of roughly 40 percent of the voters. Rep. Richard Gephardt and .Sen. Paul Simon, who finished a close one- two in Iowa's caucuses last week, are in a duel for second place. Jesse Jackson, Bruce Babbit, Gary Hart, and Sen. Albert Gore are far behind in the polls. Simon, who faces tough times if he falters today, said he was sure he would defeat Gephardt for second place. Referring to Dukakis' com- manding lead in the polls, he said, "I think there is a possibility of a real surprise coming tomorrow." IN ADDITION, Robertson said yesterday that he wouldn't "back off" his assertion that there are So- viet missiles in Cuba, drawing an emphatic denial from the White House and skepticism from a man identified as his source. Campaign rivals blasted the assertion as "outrageous" and "rash." Robertson told a GOP candidate's forum -in Dover, N.H., that "the least we can do in this is get those nuclear weapons out of Cuba," a re- iteration of statements he had made Sunday during a debate. Yesterday, White House spokes- person Marlin Fitzwater said missile sites established in Cuba in 1962 "were confirmed as: having been de- stroyed in that year. We also are confident that the missiles were re- moved from Cuba at that time." MSA removes 6 reps. for absences By ROSE MARY WUMMEL Six representatives lost, their positions on the Michigan Student Assembly last week after chalking up too many absences, prompting another representative to resign in protest during the middle of the assembly's meeting last Tuesday. Combined, six schools are now temporarily not represented in the assembly. MSA President Ken Weine said the vacancies will be filled quickly by nominations. from the various schools' governments. The MSA constitution allows representatives 12 absences per year before they are booted off the assembly. Members are counted absent if they miss either of two roll calls at meetings, or if they fail to work on committees. But representatives said they had not been updated on their absence records since the end of last term, and many said they were unaware they were close to the 12 absence limit for the year. Weine said the absentee rule was "a healthy thing for MSA. We get rid of people who can't commit themselves. We are doing a service to students by kicking them off." He stressed the accomplishments of the "committed" assembly members who have lobbied in Lansing for rent control, worked for the establishment of a sister school in El Salvador, and put the PIRGIM funding question on the MSA ballot. However, the Rules and Elections Committee - the committee responsible for attendance records - proposed at last week's meeting that MSA mark three absences off every member's record. "I felt the Rules Committee had been slack in keeping people up to date in absences, and that as a courtesy we should (grant members the extra absences)," Bruce Belcher, a member of the Rules and Elections Committee, said. See MSA, Page 2 Last all-male residerwe hall plans to turn co-ed next fall By ERIC LEMONT Next fall, Fletcher Hall, the ' University's only all-male residence hall, will become co-ed. The decision was made at a meet- ing last January, when the Univer- sity's Housing Planning Committee voted unanimously to convert the hall to co-ed housing. "We will see how it works," said Director of Housing Information Leroy Williams. He said the decision will be reviewed after a year. MANY STUDENTS i n Fletcher support the change. "Anything to create a diverse atmosphere is a better place to live," said Christopher Murray, an LSA junior. "It was a good idea," said George Margelis, an engineering school ju- nior. Margelis said he believes there is "more of a sense of community" in a co-ed residence hall. Fletcher's Building Director Brenda Herman said residence hall staff conducted a door-to-door survey just before winter break to discover why people choose to live in Fletcher Hall. "We found that most residents weren't interested in an all-male hall, but in other features of Fletcher, such as room type, location and price," she said. FLETCHER, WHICH is located on Sybil Street near the Intramural Sports Building, is a less- expensive alternative to traditional dorm living, partly because Fletcher residents do their cooking in a basement kitchenette. Herman said the additon of 28 females will "expand the students' opportunities for social interaction." She said the hall has proposed going co-ed to the housing committee three. or four times in the past three years. In the committee's recommenda- tion, members said Fletcher repre- sents a good economic option that should be open to women and that the the addition of women would raise the hall's morale, Williams said. The recommendations were made to Associate Director for Student Relations Archie Andrews, who was unavailable for comment FLETCHER HEAD Resident Phyllis Englebert said the arrival of women to Fletcher will not require any structural changes in the facility. "As a co-ed residence hall, Fletcher will offer a greater degree of social interaction, interpersonal de- velopment and community building than is currently fostered in an all- male environment," Englebert said. While only half of Fletcher's 70 residents made Fletcher their first choice when applying to the University, many develop an affinity for it. DAVID GRAMS, president of Fletcher's house council and an art school senior, said the addition of women probably won't change the quiet atmosphere at Fletcher. "It won't get rowdy. I think it will be a nice experience where ev- eryone will get to know each other," he said. Grams added that of the few residents who were against the change some "socially haven't dealt with females." For many years, women stu- dents had to live in private residences that were left over once all the males were housed. The female residence hall Martha Cook was constructed in 1915 to remedy this problem. Fletcher Hall was established in 1922 by a non-profit alumni organi- zation who felt males should have on campus housing as well. Daily Photo by DANIEL STIEBEL Potts beats Surovell in Fifth Ward race Heads up First-year Nursing student Lisa Tuveson fires a heat-seeking, exploding snowball at first-year LSA student Marsha Davison yesterday outside Mary Markley Residence Hall. Groups expand on safe sex idea during Condom Week By PETER MOONEY Ann Arbor voters selected Ethel Potts over Edward Surovell to be the Democratic candidate for the City Council's Fifth Ward seat yesterday. Potts defeated Surovell 778 to S--- .--------,--- ..- - Her opponent agreed the election did not hinge on any one overriding issue. "I think they (the results) reflect identification and ties with individual candidates more than anything else," Surovell said Srovell owns a local By ELIZABETH STUPPLER Students at more than 300 universities across the country are practicing safe sex this week, as public health centers and Planned Parenthood organizations give away nanAn- to nn. . - nra nlin race to see who can put a condom quickly and correctly on a cu- cumber," Hughes said. . "We are trying to change the public's image of condoms from an embarrassing medical necessity to .nmethinu integrater in normal life-" Although the University is not officially participating in this week, students are still actively supporting safer sex. Amy Schwartz, a sophomore in the Art School, and LSA sophomore Josh Charlson won first nlace in the Carter-Wa11ae-