The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 9, 1988-Page 3 Doily Photo by JESSICA GREENE Gustavo Adolfo Noyola, president of the University of El Salvador, asks University students for moral and material support during a speech last night at Rackham Ampitheater. The speech, sponsored by the Michigan Student Assembly Peace and Justice Committee, was part of El Salvador week. Salvadoran speakers ask for 'U' student suport Super co hider selection delayed By DAVID SCHWARTZ The selection of a first-choice location for the $4.4 billion Supercolliding Super Conductor has been delayed so that Department of Energy officials could consider an Environmental Impact Statement before making their decision. A "preferred site" for the collider will be selected in November, instead of July, department Spokesperson Jeff Sherwood said yesterday. The department will gather information on the collider's environmental effects at the various sites, and will release a draft report of their findings in August, Sherwood said. Energy Secretary John Herrington will confirm the decision on the collider's site next January, as was already planned, Sherwood said. Seven states, including Michigan, are still in contention for the collider. Michigan's proposed site is located in Stockbridge, a city halfway between Ann Arbor and East Lansing. It is also within an hour from Detroit Metropolitan Airport. In the past, officials working closely on the collider project have said that the collider's environmental impact will be minimal, although people who may live near the site have voiced concerns about the disposal of radioactive waste and the possibility of an accident. The Superconducting Super Collider, upon its completion in 1996, will be the largest such collider in the world. It will use 10,000 superconducting magnets to propel streams of protons around a 53-mile, underground track at close to the speed of light. Daily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN Lead singer for "Vice", a band from Eastern Kentucky University, belts out a heavy metal song at MTV and Energizer's "Rock and Roll Challenge", held last night in the Michigan Union ballroom. Unfortunately for "Vice", Ann Arbor's "The Difference" won the regional competition. Local band wins MTV regional Rock and Roll By SHARON TEHAN Two speakers from the University's sister university in El Salvador asked students for "moral and economic solidarity," as well as an understand- ing of their struggles at a speech last night. Gustavo Adolfo Noyola, president of the University of El Salvador, and Eliseo Ascencion, member of the student government at the university, spoke about El Salvadoran president Napoleon Duarte, military interven- tion at the University of El Salvador, and the current civil war. "In 1972, I was again captured and tortured," Noyola said, referring to a 1972 military take-over of the uni- versity when students and officials were exiled and the campus was de- stroyed. "They broke my ribs, cut my hair and left me for dead." Noyola told the crowd of about 100. Ascencio, who like Noyola spoke through an interpreter, said the the university now faces severe financial problems. Duarte is unsympathetic to pleas for more money to help the school, he said. "The concrete problem of university students is that we do not have rooms in which to hold classes or the chalk, the paper or anyway to repro- duce scientific documents necessary for our studies," Ascencio said. "You ask what it is that North Americans can do; the answer is ob- vious. We can't ask you for the $2 million a day that your government sends our military. We do ask for your solidarity, moral as well as economic," Ascencio said. By KRISTINE LALONDE Spring break for University students may have just ended, but for the Ann Arbor's band " T h e Difference," vacation hasn't even begun. Last night, the group, made up of two University alumni and three students, won the regional semi-final of the MTV/Energizer Rock and Roll Challenge for college bands. They now head for the finals in Florida next week. The crowd watching the competiton in the Union Ballroom roared support for the band, which regularly performs at R i c k s American Cafe, the Blind Pig and other local bars. "WE'RE TAKING Ann Arbor to the nationals," said band member Tom Campbell, a communications graduate student. "When you work as hard as we do th tonight things click The band will Florida March 15 the MTV spring b just for making itt will win at least $ a $1,000 schclarsh The winnerc competition willt cash, a $3,000 sc college and a tw session in New Yo "I'D LOVE t national title ands Ann Arbor," Cams the competition. "The Differe against three oth from across thec from Wright St "Vice" from Ea University, and "I Challenge' pings click, and Indiana University of Pennsylvania. ked." Competition judges, including not only fly to MTV video jockey Kevin Seal and th to film part of record executive John Post, based. reak special, but their decision on originality, to the finals, they creativity, performance and musical 1,500 in cash and content. The judging was completed ip to their school. on a scale basis. of the national "The Difference" will compete take in $5,000 in against bands other finalists from, holarship to their regional competitions at William o-day recording Patterson College in Wayne, NY, irk City. Georgia Tech in Atlanta, GA, and o go and win the Tufts University in Medford, MA. , say that I'm from WIQB disc jockey Carey ipbell said before Carrington and MTV video jockey Kevin Seals took over for Energizer nce" competed spokesperson and star of the new TV er college bands series "Highwayman" Jacko, who country, "IMU," was scheduled to emcee the event. ate University, He had to cancel because of stern Kentucky scheduling conflicts with shooting Learn How" from for the television show. Femi ng Continued from Page 1 prejudices, insensitivities and intolerances." The current rules governing faculty misconduct are spread out among Board of Regents bylaws, the staff's Standard Practice Guide, and various administrative memos. According to the guide, a staff member can be dismissed for "misconduct, incompetence or other good reason." Discipline, according to the guide, can range from a reprimand to a disciplinary layoff. Additionally, regental bylaw 5.09 allows for the punishment of tenured faculty members. BUT MCCLAMROCH said these rules "are not very specific. You couldn't call them procedures." He called the rules "inadequate." McClamroch said faculty and student rules should not be the same. He said rules for faculty members must balance "academic freedom" - professors' rights to teach whatever they want - and University standards under which employees must act. Virginia Nordby, director of the University's Affirmative Action Office, said staff rules should be stricter than student rules. "The University, as a public employer, can and should extract a higher level of accountability and performance from its employees," she said. MICHIGAN Student Assembly President Ken Weine said Fleming's proposed policies have never addressed racial and sexual harassment by staff and faculty.' Weine cited comments made by LSA Dean Peter Steiner about minority involvement, which many said were racist. Others, such as Fleming and the regents, said the remarks had been taken out of context. 0 " Primaries Continued from Page 1 delegates at stake and called it "a tremendous personal victory" for his boss. Dole's best state was Missouri, but even there he trailed the vice president narrowly in partial returns. Pat Robertson was out of the running almost everywhere. Rep. Jack Kemp was farther behind, and seemed a candidate for withdrawal from the race. Dole, while campaigning Tuesday in Springfield, Ill., said, "if we take a little bath today, I am going to start mt road to recovery in Illinois just like I did 40 years ago." He hoped to carry a few states and snare enough to carry him credibly to next, week's primary fight in Illinois. JACKSON pocketed wins in Virginia and Louisiana, led in Mississippi and competed strongly in Texas and several other states as he vied to parlay his Black political base into several hundred Democratic National Convention delegates. He was running second in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and North Carolina. Gore's early performance boosted him ahead of Gephardt in the battle to emerge as the moderate Democrat- ic contender for the industrial state battles to come. The Tennessee sena- tor was ahead in early returns in Ala- bama and Arkansas and in tight contests with Jackson in North Carolina and Georgia to go with his victories in Tennessee, Kentucky and Oklahoma. Gephardt was in jeopardy of fail- ing to qualify for delegates in several states. A[KID- CLASSES FOR BEGINNERS An introductory course is taught by Sensei Takashi Kushida, 8th degree black belt from Japan. Two new classes start in March: - Thursdays 6:30-7:30 pm (Mar. 17, 24, 31, Apr. 7, 14) - Saturdays 10:30-11:30 am (Mar. 19, 26, Apr. 2, 9, 16) Cost: $20 for five sessions. Classes held in the Genyokan Dojo in Ann Arbor, 749 Airport Blvd. (behind the State Rd. K-Mart). For information, call 662-4686. AIKIDO YOSHINKAI® ASSOCIATION OF NORTH AMERICA ZIMS FUN SPOT OF ANN ARBOR OPEN 7 DAYS 10AM - 2 AM John Lewis plays the best in music and video nightly. Thursday is WRIF guest deejay night. NOW SHOWING: 1 . . THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today or ARCADE BARBERS - HAPPY HOUR Mon-Fri 4:30-7pm Thurs & Sun 8-1 Opm 25o Draft - $1 pitcher 5o Well Free hors D'oeuvres & popcorn DRINK SPECIALS "Thurs&"Sun 10-2pm 75¢ Long Island Iced Teas " Deejay drink specials FEATURING: Speakers: Dr. Charlie Clemens - "Witness to War," Environmental Advocacy film/speaker series. Noon, Rm. 1046 Dana Building. Ann Mayer - "The Chang- ing Meanings of Islamic Law," 4 p.m., Room 116 Hutchins Hall. Ali Ramadhan _ "The In- ternational Institute of Islamic Thought: Islamization of Knowl- edge," 7:30 p.m. Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union. Shlomo Izre'el - "The Amarna Language: A Sociolin- guistic Account," 3 p.m., Room 3050 Frieze Building. Harold Cruse - "American Blacks and the Communist Movement, 1919-1925," noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall. Aline Lindbeck - "Selected Approaches to the Total Synthesis of Forskolin," 4:00 p.m., Room 1300, Chemistry Building. Dr. Robert Malina - "Timino' of Growth Sniirts in Meetings: LSA Student Goverment - Mass Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Wolverine Room, Michigan Union. Ceder Point Interviews- Michigan Union, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Biology Honors Concentrators - Informal discussion, 7:00 p.m., 2075 Nat. Sci. Furthermore: Rice & Beans Dinner - Cooked by Salvadoran Sanctuary Family, 6 p.m., First Congrega- tional Church, 608 E. William, $3 donation. Engineering Career Day - 3:30 p.m. - 7:00 p.m., Rack- ham Memorial Building, 100 Farnsworth, Detroit. $3 per stu- dent. Michigras '88 - 8:00 p.m.- 1:00 a.m., Michigan Union. Battle of the Bands - 9:30 p.m., semifinals, U-Club. Jim Bajor - Pianist, 7:30 NEXUS Creatif Paul Sebastian |I LADIES NIGHT Wednesday Night Alldrinks - 750 r I Redken Paul Mitchell K.M.S. Also: Discounts on Nexus refills No. 6 Nickels Arcade 665-78941 5 LARGE SATELLITE TV'S for all 761-3663 (in Briarwood Mall) sports events p I I A class ACT SENIOR PLEDGE PROGRAM 1 9 8 8 D CENTER FOR WESTERN EUROPEAN STUDIES A limited number of spaces remain open for the UM summer study abroad programs in London or Florence Earn 6 in-residence credits by taking 2 courses in err