Ninety-eight years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVIII, No. 120 Ann Arbor, Michigan -Tuesday, March 29, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily Israelis close off occ upied territories JERUSALEM (AP) - The Is- raeli army yesterday imposed its broadest clampdown yet on the 1.5 million Palestinians living in the occupied territories, sealing the re- gions for three days to combat a PLO day of protest. The army also announced it was barring journalists from the territo- ries for the first time in the four months of unrest that have left 119 Palestinians and one Israeli soldier dead. Under the measure, the 650,000 Arabs in Gaza will be banned from leaving their homes, while the 850,000 Palestinians on the West Bank will be confined to their vil- lages and towns, the army said. The restrictions also forbid Palestinians living in the territories from entering Israel, affecting about 110,000 Arab workers. The 65,000 Jewish settlers who live in the occupied territories will be permitted to move freely. In Washington, the State De- partment criticized Israel for sealing off the territories. "We regret the decision because of the impact it will have on com- merce, on visits with family mem- bers and the press," said spokesper- son Charles Redman. The closure of the territories fol- lowed a mass arrest campaign aimed at preventing violence tomorrow, when Palestinians mark Land Day, the 12th anniversary of a 1976 clash between soldiers and Arabs over the confiscation of Arab land. S ix Palestinians were killed. Israel's ability to deal with ex- pected unrest on Land Day is viewed as a major test of the military's muscle to quell the uprising that be- gan Dec. 8. Gephardt with draws from race Jackson campaign gains momentum Daily Photo by DAVID LUBLINER Wrecked The shanty erected on St. Patrick's Day to commemorate the struggle of the Irish Republican Army was found torn down yesterday morning. Medicaie abortions to continue By KRISTINE LALONDE with wire reports Richard Gephardt's withdrawal from the Democratic presidential race yesterday intensifies uncertainty about what lies in store for the party's national convention this summer. Gephardt announced his with- drawal yesterday in a Capitol Hill news conference, saying, "It's been, said the opera isn't over until the fat lady sings. Last Saturday in Michigan, I think I heard her walk- ing to the microphone." Gephardt's exit from the race leaves his delegates with the option to vote for another candidate. It also increases speculation over the possi- bility of the Rev. Jesse Jackson en- teringthe convention as the fron- trunner. JACKSON won Michigan's Democratic caucus Saturday, receiv- ing 76 of the state's 136 delegates, according to the most recent count. Massachusetts Gov. Michael Du- kakis ran a distant second, receiving 53 delegates. Jackson yesterday questioned par- ty leaders who want to give the nomination to another candidate be- cause they believe he cannot win the general election. "If by the end of California we have the most popular votes, the most delegate votes, becoming the nominee is logical and proper. If I win the nomination from the people, I expect the party to embrace me, and to embrace those principles." Local Jackson campaign leader Dean Baker said Jackson captured the constituency that Gephardt had sought in the Michigan caucus. "What it came down to was Jackson was credible on the issues and Gephardt wasn't." BUT SEAN Jackson, co-coor- dinator of the Dukakis' campaign on campus, said Gephardt's departure will not significantly change the candidate race. Gephardt "hasn't been much of a force since (he won the) Iowa (caucus)," Sean Jackson said. But University Political Science Prof. Greg Markus predicted strong Jackson showings in New York and Wisconsin,hand gave him a fifty-fifty chance of having the most delegates going into the convention. Notgiv- ing Jackson the nomination if he is the leader, would be "suicidal for the party,"' Markus said. He added that the Democratic party faces a dilemma in choosing a candidate when no one has come out as a strong leader. Giving the nomi- nation to an unannounced candidate, such as New York Governor Mario Cuomo, has become a possible solution, he said. Daily Staffer Michael Lustig contributed to this story By VICKI BAUER Medicaid funded abortions in Michigan - which were in danger of being banned beginning today - will be extended until November when their fate will be put before state voters, Attorney General Frank Kelley ruled yesterday. Last summer, a Michigan Right to Life petition called for a ban of state funded abortions effective to- day. But Kelley's decision marked a victory for the People's Campaign for Choice, which submitted 230,000 signatures to the state legislature earlier this month in an effort to postpone the ban Kelley accepted the PCC's petition -even though the state Board of Canvassers has not finished validat- ing the necessary 120,000 signatures - because they appeared to have a legitimate number of valid names, said Chris DeWitt, spokesperson for the attorney gen- eral. Kelley's action carries the force of law unless it is overturned in circuit court. "There is no doubt in my mind that we will qualify for the ballot," said Molly Henry, a coordinator of PCC's nine-month petition drive. She added that, without yesterday's ruling, the ban would have contin- ued for several weeks until PCC's signatures were validated. "I'm disappointed by the decision," said Pat Rose, a member of Washtenaw County's Right to Life. "It means that more babies are being killed with state funds. It's not a personal thing, it's about civil rights - a child is being denied life," Rose said. Despite winning the temporary victory, PCC, an umbrella organization for the state's pro-choice groups, is still trying to educate the public about the issue be- fore the November election, said PCC spokesperson Judith Frye. See Abortions, Page 3 CAFE FOR AN 'A' 'B' school project satisfies appetite By LAWRENCE ROSENBERG If you're the kind of person who starts a five-page paper the week af- ter it was due, John Ivanko is going to annoy you. Ivanko took his class project for last fall's Retail Management 311 class - a sixty-page restaurant con- cept and business plan he co-au- thored with classmate Judith Salzberg - and officially made it a reality. The French Market Cafe opened on S. Fourth Avenue yester- day. He and Salzberg began working on the project during the second week of fall term. At the time, Ivanko didn't plan on going any fur- ther than handing in the assignment, he said. But in doing research for the pro- ject, Ivanko talked to many .Ann Arbor restauranteurs, especially David Kaplan, owner of Kaplan's Cafe. The deli was eventually con- verted into the French Markey Cafe. Kaplan, a 1983 graduate of Michigan State University's Hotel, Restaurant, and Institutional Man- agement school, had been running his store for six months before Ivanko came to him. Business wasn't as good as Ka- plan had hoped, and upon meeting Ivanko, he became interested in the project. The two sat down during winter break and seriously talked about implementing Ivanko's pro- ject. They became partners. "(John) brought an interesting proposal that had a lot of ethnicity and I felt that it was something Ann Arbor would appreciate," Kaplan said of his decision to renovate his restaurant. Although the renovations cost Kaplan "a significant amount of money," the site already had the ventilation and the plumbing neces- sary for a restaurant. They also saved money by doing some of the work See Project, Page 3 Students, staff rally for gay, lesbian rights By JIM PONIEWOZIK Speakers overcame rain and a malfunctioning speaker system at a noontime Diag rally yesterday to charge the University with neglecting the rights of gays and les- bians on campus. Addressing about 40 students, who crowded together at the base of the graduate library steps, the speakers specifically demanded that the University condemn dis- crimination based on sexual preference in regental bylaw 14.06, which now prohibits most other forms of dis- crimination. They also urged student groups -to unite in pressing the University to combat all types of discrimination. "We can't get the bylaw by ourselves... we need to seek coalition-building with other groups on campus," including UCAR and other minority groups, said Billie Edwards, lesbian advocate for the University's Lesbian and Gay Male Program Office. The University Board of Regents has consistently op- posed the bylaw change, which students have pushed for during the past decade. Edwards also criticized the administration's support for her office, saying that its refusal to increase the bud- get when the office went from operating part-time to full-time indicated that the University does not consider See Rally, Page 3 LaGROC member Alicia Luckstad, an LSA junior, Week at yesterday's kickoff rally on the Diag. Daiy rnoto oy DAV IDLUBLINuE reads the events of Gay and Lesbian Libertarian opposes Democrat in city council race By PETER MOONEY The results of city council races in Ann Arbor's First Ward are rarely a surprise. And this year is no ex- ception. The ward, which encompasses most of Northwest Ann Arbor, in- cluding the Bursley and Couzens dormitories, is so dominated by the Democrats that the Republicans A FORMER administrator at the Ypsilanti Resource Center, Hunter says his most pressing Con- cern is increasing the city's human services. He is currently starting a janitorial business. His opponent, Krebaum, is a land-use planning graduate student at Eastern Michigan University. Like his Libertarian cohorts, Krebaum to make whatever problem they're attacking worse," he said. Hunter contends that city efforts at providing affordable housing have been successful. Although it was later defeated by city council last fall, he strongly supported a pro- posal to open a single-room-occu- pancy facility on Liberty Street. Currently, Hunter is preparing a nronosa to exnpand the YMCA by inexpensive housing in Ann Arbor. "The regulations (and) the bureau- cracy that a developer has to go through almost forces them to shoot for the higher priced development," he said. The Libertarians have also pro- posed eliminating city housing in- spections, saying that tenants can seek damages in court if their units t: ' I 0