*A look at what goes on in the LSA Honors College In IW eeken M a az 0 'Hairspray review Interview: Ahmad Jamal ----16 49 i MIt4at Ninety-eight years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 113 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, March 18, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily Fleming, students lobby regents MILITARYINTERVENTION Board to vote on code' proposal today -Associated Press As a flock of birds takes to flight in the background, soldiers of the seventh Infantry and Rapid Deployment Force from Fort Ord near Monterey, Calif., line up beneath the wing of a C-141 as they board the transport jet at Travis Air Force base near Fairfield, Calif., yester- day morning for a flight to Honduras. U.S. troops arrive i Honduras By STEVE KNOPPER For perhaps for the last time be- fore the University's Board of Re- gents votes on Interim University President Robben Fleming's anti- harassment proposal, members of the University community reaf- firmed their positions on academic sanctions yesterday. Fleming, representatives from the faculty senate, and leaders of minor- ity student groups told the regents that such a policy is necessary to combat racist behavior on campus. Other groups, however, including the Michigan Student Assembly, criticized the proposal, saying it was an illegitimate code of non-academic conduct drafted without student in- put. The regents will vote- today on the proposal, which could impose academic sanctions on students con- victed of racial or sexual harassment. Fleming released the proposal two weeks ago, revised from an earlier draft released in January. Students appeared divided in their opinion of Feming's policy. Sec- ond-year law student Kermit Brooks, a member of the Black Law Student Alliance, said he endorsed Fleming's proposal because "a strong, articulate proposal is needed to eradicate dis- crimination at This-University." Members of IALSA, the Black Student Union, and the United Coalition Against Racism, expressed general support of Fleming's docu- ment, but requested that some spe- cific procedures be changed. But MSA members said that if the regents accept Fleming's pro- posal, they will be ignoring student input. Student Rights Committee Vice Chair Robert Bell said that MSA-run surveys have reflected strong student opposition to the code. In the last three days, he said, MSA has collected nearly 1,500 signatures against Fleming's pro- posal. But MSA and UCAR officials have asked the regents to delay the decision so they and other student groups can draft their own proposals. "We are coming up with an alterna- tive proposal, and that takes time," 'We are coming up with an alternative proposal, and that takes time,' - MSA President Ken Weine. said MSA President Ken Weine: Fleming asked for comments on the revised draft by last Monday, which left little time for comment on fur- ther revisions before today's meot- ing, Weine said. Fleming, however, told the re- gents, "I note that everybody else had time. People did, in fact, turnin proposals, and they were, in fact, considered." Regents Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor) and Neil Nielsen (R- Brighton) said yesterday that they have not decided if they would sup- port delaying the vote. Fleming's proposal, with revi- sions released yesterday, would set PALMEROLA AIR BASE, Honduras (AP) -- Planeloads of U.S. soldiers began arriving here yesterday in a show of strength ordered by President Reagan to counter what he called an invasion by Nicaraguan forces. Two battalions from the renowned 82nd Airborne Division of Fort Bragg, N.C. and two battalions from the 7th Light Infantry Division of Fort Ord, Calif. were combined into a task force of 3000 troops. A Honduran official said his government had given the Sandinistas 24 hours to get out. President Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua responded that his army was "ready to combat and liquidate, the famous forces of the 82nd Airborne Division." Maj. Gen. Carl Stiner, commander of the 82nd Airborne, said he knew of no plan to have U.S. troops enter into the battle between the Sandinistas and the U.S.-backed-Contras. "We have not been told to do so," he said before leaving Fort Bragg. He said the force was capable of that, if needed. The American troops were to engage in joint exercises with the Hondurans. Stiner also said there was no plan to use the troops if more trouble broke out in nearby Panama. The American forces began streaming into Palmerola at 10:15 a.m. as part of what the Pentagon called operation code-named "Golden Pheasant." carried by the 26 military transport planes. The C-141s landed in the intense heat at 30-minute intervals at this air base, headquarters of U.S. military operations in Honduras, 40 miles northwest of Tegucigalpa. Local groups protest U.S. troops in Honduras By LAWRENCE ROSENBERG As 3200 U.S. troops traveled to Honduras, over 100 people gathered outside of Ann Arbor's Federal Building to protest President Ronald Reagan's deployment of American forces to Central America. "We are pushing for an end to the war as opposed to continuing it, which is what the U.S. is doing by sending troops to Honduras," said Phillis Engelbert, a member of the Latin American Solidarity Commit- tee and Natural Resources graduate student. The protesters carried signs with slogans including "Contras Kill Kids", "Support Justice and Peace - See PROTEST, Page 5 Regents to revea By STEVE BLONDER The University's Board of Regents held a closed meeting yesterday to finish discussing whom they would name to replace retiring Athletic Director Don Canham. Interim University President Robben Fleming said a public announcement would be made during today's meeting of the regents. Fleming and the regents both declined to comment any further as to who would be named. An unconfirmed report from North Carolina said that Fleming had negotiated with North Carolina Ath- letic Director John Swofford about the job during the Atlantic Coast Conference basketball tournament last weekend. Fleming would not comment. new AD today SWOFFORD WAS unavailable for comment, but has repeatedly said he "has not pursued and am not pursuing another position." Regent Paul Brown (D-Petoskey) said he would not be surprised if Fleming and Swofford talked over the weekend, but declined to speculate as to what the two would have discussed. An alumnus who has been in touch with several re- gents, and other alumni said yesterday that St. Louis advertising executive Clayton Wilhite was offered the athletic director job, but had turned it down. Wilhite is a former Michigan football player who reportedly was one of the three finalists for the athletic director posi- tion. He is out of town until Monday and is unavail- See SWOFFORD, Page 9 up a hearing panel of four students ada faculty member to judge' stu- dent harassment complaints and ap- ply sanctions. Cases could be ap- pealed to another panel of one stu- dent and one faculty member, chosen randomly from a list of eligible stu- dents and faculty. If a student is found guilty, the panel could choose a sanction, rang- ing from a formal reprimand to sus- pension or expulsion, depending on the charge. In a statement released yesterday, MSA's Steering Committee said any anti-harassment policy must apply to staff, faculty, and students alike, and enforcement be controlled by students and workers. It must also be approved by students in a referendum vote, the statement said. MSA Student Rights Committee chair Mike Phillips criticized Flem- See PROPOSAL, Page 3 The De-wins MTV c ontest By BRIAN BONET Local band The Difference won this week's finals of the MTV-Ener- gizer Rock 'n' Roll Challenge, cei- minating a search for the nation's best college band. As the winners of the event, The Difference will receive $5,000 cash, a spot on MTV, and a $5,000 scholarship to be given to a University department of their choice. . Four bands who had advanced from regional competitions held throughout the United States com- peted in the challenge, held in Day- tona Florida. The Difference per- formed three original songs, "Welcome Lonely One," "Take It On" and "I Need Lnve" Victory separates M-en from 'the Boiose,' 63-58 By GREG MOLZON Special to the Daily SALT LAKE CITY - The sec- ond half of an NCAA tournament game is no time to go on vacation. Michigan learned that lesson last night. It squandered an 18-point lead had the ball and a chance to tie. But Brian King missed a long three-point attempt. "We wanted King to shoot it, but we just weren't in the best position at the time," said Boise State head coach Bobby Dye.