In- Weekenld Magallie' Frustrated Latino students seek I 'U' recognition- 'Tequila Sunrise' RO} BOW/L %9, A portrait of Bo - 2 and 3 for 'M'. 4 - - USC'sdeep threat - (page 14-15) Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. IC, No. 65 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, December 9, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily Dems. seek mayoral candidate 'It would take a very big BY NOAH FINKEL ing the right candidate," said LSA Senior Pierce, who was unseated as mayor in said although the committee's formation is and vigorous campaign to In an eleventh-hour scramble to find a Jesse Levine, a member of the search com- April 1987 by Jernigan, said "It would take a "certainly a concrete step," the current lack of unseat the incumbent challenger to incumbent Ann Arbor Mayor mittee. very big and vigorous campaign to unseat the a candidate could spell trouble for the Gerald Jernigan, city Democrats met last Early speculation about possible candidates incumbent mayor, and I'm not up to that Democrats. mayor, and I'm not up to night to discuss and agree upon a possible centered on former Mayor Edward Pierce and now... I don't have the fire in my belly." University political science professor that now... I don't have candidate for the April election, former Second Ward City Councilmember George Sallade, a long-time Democratic Samuel Eldersveld, an Ann Arbor Democrat the fire in my belly.' But no candidate came forward to accept Seth Hirshorn, but both ruled themselves out activist, said, "I was hoping someone would who ran for mayor in 1957, said the lack of a t the job, so the Democrats formed a five- of the race earlier this week. (step forward)... I'm disappointed." mayoral candidate "is a little unsettling." member search committee for a mayoral can- Those announcements left the city Montague, the party chair, said that she is Eldersveld said that Democrats used to - former Mayor didate. Democrats without any obvious candidates, not worried about the lack of a candidate. "It's have such troubles "all the time." He said that Edward Pierce The filing deadline for the candidacy is Jan. since veteran Democratic City Councilmem- not really a big deal... There are many candi- in 1957 when he was party chair, the 3. bers Larry Hunter of the First Ward, Jeff Ep- dates who we have been talking behind the Democrats could not find anyone to run for Christina Montague, chair of the Ann Ar- ton of the Third Ward, and Kathy Edgren of scenes with." mayor, so the party asked him to run. bor Democratic Party, said the committee the Fifth Ward all previously stated that they However, Montague said, "(The candidate) "We must have talked to 25 people, but no will begin to meet next week to discuss pos- would not run. First-term Councilmember might be a person who is not as easily one would do it," Eldersveld said. sible mayoral candidates. Liz Brater (D-Third Ward) also ruled out run- recognizable." -Daily staffer David Schwartz contributed "We will be serious and quick about find- ning. Democratic Party member Edward Surovell to this story. Kresge' s to get' new tenant By JEFF HASS Nebraska Book Co., owner of two campus bookstores, announced yesterday that by next fall's book rush, they will move- Michigan Book and Supply to the Kresge building at State and North Univer- sity. Mark Opplegard, the vice presi- dent of retail for Nebraska Books, said his company decided to lease the Kresge Building because- "we just like the location better... price didn't come into play." The price of the lease was un- available yesterday. The lease for the current Michi- gan Book and Supply location, in the old University Cellar Building on Liberty Street, has three and a half years left. The store, which sells primarily textbooks, will join sev- eral bookstores already on State St. including Shaman Drum and Bor- ders. Opplegard said his company has been negotiating for the lease to the Kresge building for the last half year even though it had only been at Liberty St. for one year. Opplegard said the company, which also owns Ulrich's, has no current plans for the former University Cellar building. Michigan Book and Supply's acting General Manager Fred Ullrich explained that the transfer will not take place until next summer, so that renovations can be made to the Kresge Building. He said the store will continue to operate at its pre- sent location until the new store is open for business. Ullrich described the motivation behind the move as "a need to be closer to the heart of campus" since "students are a big part of our cus- tomers." The store will occupy all of the Kresge Building, including the basement and the first and second floors. A-1 Typing Service, Behav- ioral Data Services, Campus Jewel- ers, and several dentists currently lease the second floor, but their leases will expire at the end of this year. All have found new locations. See Books, Page 7 Armenian quake kills thousands Associated Press Families mourn in rubble after Armenian earthquake kills several thousands. Gaza violence continues on uprising anniversary MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet au- thorities rushed military surgeons and tons of medical supplies yester- day into Armenia, which had been rocked by an earthquake that officials said virtually destroyed several cities and killed tens of thousands of peo- ple. Armenian journalists said a Politburo commission led by Pre- mier Nikolai Ryzhkov received pre- liminary estimates that up to 50,000 people died in the Wednesday earth- quake, which measured 6.9 on the Richter scale. Soviet officials re- ported thousands of people were killed, but provided no death toll. Soviet President Mikhail Gor- bachev cut short his trip to the United States and flew home to lead a worldwide emergency rescue effort in southern republic. "Urgent measures are being taken to help all those affected by this ter- rible tragedy, and I have to be there in this effort," said Gorbachev, who planned to fly to Yerevan, the Ar- menian capital, after arriving in Moscow. President Reagan offered emer- gency humanitarian aid, Cuban President Fidel Castro pledged to send construction workers, and Britain dispatched London firefight- ers to join the rescue effort. The Armenian Students Cultural Association will be collecting dona- tions in the Fishbowl today from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. and will have up- dated information about the, earth- quake. The association president, LSA senior Richard Najarian, said the financial support of the Univer- sity community is strongly needed. "There are 150 Armenian students here," Najarian said. "We make up a small percent of the University, but nevertheless are a part of the University." Najarian said that previously his group had not sent funds to Armenia for fear that they would not be used properly, but he is sure that Gor- bachev will get the relief aid to the appropriate places. The earthquake destroyed two- thirds of Leninakan, Armenia's sec- ond-largest city with a population of 250,000 people. The Tass News Agency reported that Soviet authorities dispatched doctors, engineers, food and medical supplies to the areas. The newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda said soldiers were working under spotlights in the wreckage of a Leninakan school where two sergeants-pulled the bodies of more than 50 children from the ruins. Army General Vladimir Arkhipov said soldiers were setting up tent cities to house evacuees in the devastated regions, and restoring electricity and water supplies. Bon- fires burned in the shattered cities to warm the homeless in the December chill. -Daily News Staffer Marion Davis contributed to this report. GAZA CITY (AP) - Israeli soldiers killed a teen- ager by shooting him in the heart, and 1.5 million Palestinians held a general strike in the occupied lands yesterday, the first anniversary of their uprising. The death of Yussef Mohammed Sbaith, raised the number of Palestinians.killed to at least 320 since the rebellion began Dec. 8, 1987, in the West Bank and Gaza Striop. More than 7,000 Palestinians have been wounded and 11 Israelis also have been slain. An army spokesperson said Sbaith was shot in the heart when troops were stoned during a sweep in the West Bank village of Kafr Rai. Soldiers also wounded a 22-year-old woman in the leg after meeting "violent resistance" from stone- throwing youths in Kafr Rai, said the spokesperson, whose name cannot be revealed under army rules. Hospital officials said a 23-year-old man suffered head injuries from a beating by troopers. Army gunfire wounded six other Palestinians in Nablus, the West Bank's largest city, and in Gaza City, Arab doctors said. One of those wounded in Nablus was a 14-year-old boy shot in the stomach, they said. Arab witnesses said two of the wounded were hit by bullets fired from the window of a house the army used as a lookout post in the open-air Nablus market, the center of many clashes between soldiers and Arab youths. Palestinians closed businesses and halted public transportation throughout the occupied territor-ies. The underground leadershiop, which the Palestine Liberation Or-ganization supports, called the strike for the aniversary of the revolt in the West Bank and Gaza, which Israel catpured from Jordan and Egypt in the 1967 Middle East war. Israeli military authorities put all eight Gaza Strip refugee camps under curfew, confining more than 250,000 Palestinians to their homes. Throughout the coastal strip, Palestinians erected roadblocks and burned tires in sporadic acts of defiance. About 20 Paelestinian youths were seen lobbing rocks from a barricaded alley in Gaza City. Five die in U.S. military helicopter crash in Honduras TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) - A U.S. military helicopter par- ticipating in maneuvers crashed in northern Honduras yesterday, killing all five Americans aboard, a U.S. Embassy official said. Embassy spokesperson Charles Barclay said the CH-47 Chinook helicopter crashed at 1 p.m. (2 p.m. EST) near La Ceiba, 235 miles north of Tegucigalpa. Barclay refused to identify the victims until their relatives are notified. destroyed." Honduran and U.S. military personnel formed a search team "to look for the other body" in the area, he said. Barclay said the Chinoo, which took off earlier yesterday from Pal- merola, was flying a supply mission and taking part in join Honduran- U.S. military exercises. Missile attack downs two Moroccan planes RABAT, Morocco (AP) - A missile attack downed one of two African country suggested that rebels of the Marxist Polisario Front were M.,