Ninety-eight years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 105 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, March 8, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily FBI believes fliers, threat may be linked By JIM PONIEWOZIK The FBI believes there may be a connection between a death threat received last week by a United Coalition Against Racism (UCAR) steering committee member and white supremacist fliers that circulated around cam- pus last month, said an FBI spokesperson yesterday. "There is a similarity in the tone of the fliers and the call that (the UCAR member) received. They could be different, they could be the same, and we're looking into that possibility," said FBI Detroit media representative John Anthony. The bureau began an investigation into the death threat incident in cooperation with Ann Arbor police and campus security last Friday. The UCAR member discovered the death threat on her answering machine last Tuesday night. The message contained the voice of a male who threatened to rape and kill her. The investigation is part of a broader civil rights in- vestigation which the FBI has been conducting into race- related incidents on campus since the end of January. Anthony would not give specific reasons why the bureau believes the incidents may be related, but noted that both the phone message and the flier, which said Blacks "belong hanging from trees," were threatening. Anthony said the bureau began the investigation in response to the January uproar over statements made by LSA Dean Peter Steiner which some students and faculty Ssaid were racist. The investigation is a preliminary one to determine if any of the recent race-related events at the University - like the death threat and several anti-Black flier inci- dents - involved violations of federal civil rights laws, in which case the acts would fall under FBI jurisdiction. Anthony would not speculate on whether any such violations took place. See THREAT, Page 2 Fleming draft gets backing It's a toss-up Daily Photo by DAVID LUBLINER Graduate student Mike Brown juggles on the Diag yesterday, in an effort to promote Michigras, which will be held in the Michigan Union from Wednesday to Saturday. The an- nual event is sponsored by the University Activities Council. By MICHAEL LUSTIG The faculty's governing body pledged "basic support of the con- cept" of Interim University President Robben Fleming's revised policy on discriminatory acts at their weekly meeting yesterday. But members of the Senate Advi- sory Committee on University Af- fairs (SACUA) qualified their sup- port, saying they expected Fleming to propose soon a policy for faculty that would be similar to the one for students. The nine-member panel agreed, in a short discussion, to support Flem- ing's proposal, and quickly agreed that a parallel proposal applying to the faculty was essential to its acceptance of the plan. Fleming was unavailable for comment. "I don't see how we can have a formal procedure for students and an informal one for faculty," said Social Work Prof. Beth Reed, SACUA's vice chair. BUT LONG time opponents of a student code of non-academic conduct quickly condemned SACUA's actions. Law student and anti-code activist Eric Schnaufer said, "SACUA does not mean what it says. SACUA would not endorse a policy in which tenured faculty could be fired for racially insensitive remarks in class. SACUA's endorsement is misguided and ill-founded." Former University Council Member David Newblatt said, "I feel that the new document is both un- able to deal with the problem of racism and and dangerous for the campus. I don't want to see anybody endorsing it." The University Coun- cil, a coalition of faculty, students, and administrators, has not met offi- cially since June, when it issued a statement that it was not capable of agreeing upon a non-adademic code of student conduct with academic sanctions. AFTER endorsing Fleming's revised discriminatory acts proposal, SACUA debated how the equivalent of an academic sanction could be imposed on a faculty member found in violation of a faculty code. Reed said she was concerned how the policy would apply to conduct in classrooms and offices - places where offensive or harassing behav- ior -would be punishable under Fleming's proposal. A possible sanction against fac- ulty members could be not allowing a professor to teach. 'I don't see how we can have a formal procedure for students and an infor- mal one for faculty' Beth Reed, SACUA's vice chair SACUA member Dan Moerman, professor of anthropology, said the policy could apply if a statement was made in a heated discussion which another person considered of- fensive. GROUP members say there is currently very little that can be done to a faculty member who commits offensive behavior. SACUA Chair Harris McClam- roch, a professor of aerospace engi- neering, said "There's a very, very fuzzy line" between what might be offensive or-harassing comments or behavior. "Our commitment is to make sure that the academic environment is as little constrained as possible," McClamroch said. But he added that there have been abuses to the system that have sometimes gone unpun- ished. See SACUA, Page 2 ELECTIONS TO BE HELD MARCH 22,23 h a;l MSA hopefuls begincampaigns By RYAN TUTAK Because this year's election meet- of MSA's external relations com- NINE LSA and four Rackham The Michigan Students Assem- ing was not mandatory, only 28 of mittee and LSA junior, is the vice- school seats are open, as are two each >ly's spring elections have officially the 40 candidates came to set the presidential candidate. in the engineering and business >egun. ballot. Election Director Colleen The Common Sense party has 19 schools. The Schools of Nursing, Last night candidates met in the Tighe, an LSA junior, said that in candidates, including five current Natural Resources, Art, Architecture, issembly chambers to set ballot the past, candidates absent from the representatives. Cheryl Tilles, chair Medicine, Pharmacy, and Law each spots for the elections of the MSA president, vice president, and half of the assembly seats. The elections will be held on March 22 and 23. THREE PARTIES and eight independents are competing in the e- lections. Only 26 of the 52 assembly seats are open because MSA held e- lections last fall for the other half to ease the transition of new members into the assembly. initial meeting had inadvertently broken election rules later in the campaign. "(Candidates) need to know the rules... to run a decent election that's fair for everyone," she said. THE STUDENTS First party has 21 candidates, with four incum- bents. Michael Phillips, chair o f MSA's student rights committee and LSA junior, is the party's candidate for president. Susan Overdorf, chair of the budget priorities committee and LSA junior, is the presidential candidate. Richard Nemeroff, Inter- fraternity Council executive board member and LSA junior, is her run- ning mate. LSA seniors David Hart, pres- idential candidate, and Brian Pearl- stein, vice presidential candidate, formed a two-member party, Dis- solve, initially named Out with MSA. have one opening. Eight students will vie for the seven seats on the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM) Board of Directors, mark- ing the first time board members will be chosen through MSA's elections. Because students are funding the environmental lobbying group through MSA, the assembly is monitoring the election of the PIR- See ELECTIONS, Page 2 Abbott wins Sullivan Award Union to By MIKE GILL with staff reports Michigan pitcher Jim Abbott won the 58th James E. Sullivan Award, presented to the United States' outstanding amateur athlete of the previous year. "They picked the worst athlete up here," said Abbott while receiving the award. "Baseball players usually don't get that much respect." "I am surprised and overjoyed for Jim to receive such a prestigious award," said Michigan baseball coach Bud Middaugh from his home last night. "He certainly deserves it. "I'm very happy that other people feel the same as we do here. It's a tremendous thing for him, U-M, his family, and everyone associated with the program. It was the first time a baseball player won the award Abbott was in Indianapolis last night to accept the award from last year's winner, heptathlon world record holder Jackie Joyner-Kersee. Last season Abbott compiled an 11-3 mark with a 2.08 ERA in 86 innings pitched for the Wolverines. The record earned him All-Big Ten Second Team hon- ors and Third Team All-American recognition. Over the summer Abbott became the first U.S. pitcher to win a game in Cuba -in 25 years. Later, he carried the flag for the U.S delegation in the Pan- American games and pitched in relief against Canada to clinch a spot in the gold-medal game and a slot in this year's Olympics. The award was another in a long list of kudos the junior pitcher from Flint, Michigan has received. Earlier this year, Abbott was named the recipient of the 1987 Golden Spikes Award - the Heisman Trophy of college baseball. Just last weekend Abbott was awarded with the Academy Awards of Sport, an award given by the American Sports Academy located in Alabama. The award is given to. an athlete for his courageous perfor- mance. Last year's winner was former Pittsburgh Steeler running back Rocky Bleier, who was injured in See ABBOTT, Page 8 host local battle of the bands By ROBERT FLAGGERT MTV will continue its ongoing search for the best band in the country by holding a regional contest for Great Lakes area college bands tonight at the Michigan Union. Hosting the Energizer Rock'N'Roll challenge will be Ann Arbor's own The Difference, who will be competing with three regional rivals to win a chance to compete in MTV's Spring Break finalist competition in Daytona, Florida on March 14. The event, which starts at 7:30 p.m., will be judged by local celebrity Carey Carrington of Ann Arbor radio station WIQB, and four. out-of-town guests, including John Post, owner of Nola Recording Studios (used by artists U2), and Jeffrey Zahn, music director for ABC's hit sitcom "Who's the Boss." Festival shows the best of the 16 mm By JOHN SHEA Here's a test for you: Where can you find North America's oldest and most presti- gious 16mm film festival? taining. Well. Can you think of it? If you can't, you're thinking too hard, because the answer is right under your nose. Tt'cI-here Tn Ann Arhnv-r W; Mm *11, - ll. -10im II.Ollilr---.!!:p3 lyN'll, e.,. -, % Itl fVvIO.0#*131-lAl'WAl