I An undercover look at Fraternity Rush *Buzz Alexander S-ie! 9 The Blues color Ann Arbor this weekend Ninety- nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. IC, No. 22 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, October 7, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily Pomp and protest Duderstadt crowned eleventh president Kickoff, 12:15, Ch. 7 Blue to Stake on -rival MSU BY PETE STEINERT You know it's the week of the Michigan-Michigan State football game when the air turns crisper and the leaves change color. You know it's the week of the Michigan-Michigan State game when the intensity in practice rises a notch. A. nd you know it's the week of the Michigan-Michigan State game when the state suddenly divides itself depending the color of one's blood (blue or green). The 81st meeting between the Wolverines and the Spartans takes place Saturday at Michigan Stadium (12:15 p.m., Ch. 7). Seventeenth- ranked Michigan leads the series, 52- 23-5. "Hey, let's face it, we've been looking forward-to it," Michigan coach Bo Schembechier said. Michigan State coach George Perles said, "It's a very important game in the conference. It's a very important game in the state of Mich- igan. About half the people pull for one, and the other half pulls for the other team, so there's a lot of, I'd guess you'd say, teasing." The game holds extra meaning for See MSU, Page 12 3 bars to close for selling to minors BY NATHAN SMITH Two campus-area bars will close their doors for several days in the next two months after being con- victed of selling alcoholic beverages to minors, a Michigan Liquor Con- trol Commission official said yesterday. A third bar will face proceedings today, the official said. The Nectarine Ballroom and The Count of Antipasto - known commonly as Charley's - negoti- ated settlements out of court Wednesday, said Verna Foote, supervisor of hearing and proceed- ings for the MLCC. Both estab- lishments will raise their minimum entrance age from 18 to 19, spokes- people for the bars said. DOOLEY'S is charged with four counts of selling alcohol to, minors and will be in court this afternoon, Foote said. The Nectarine Ballroom was fined $2,500 and will close for 10 days, said bar manager Michael Bender. He said the bar, charged with three hk counts of selling alcohol to persons BY STEVE KNOPPER Oblivious to pandemonium out- side Hill Auditorium yesterday, hundreds of students, alumni, fac- ulty, as well as past and present University officials, watched as the University crowned James Duderstadt its 11th president. Duderstadt, who was formerly University Provost and Engineering Dean, assumed the presidency Sept. 1. Yesterday, after a two-hour cere- mony, Regent Paul Brown (D- Petoskey) formally ,invested Duder- stadt with the powers of the office. In his speech to the packed house, Duderstadt said the University must learn from the tradition of its past while moving into the 21st century. The school, he said, must be "responsible and responsive to the people who founded it." "IT IS a University built and sustained through the commitments and sacrifices of your ancestors," he said. "And it is a University that must be preserved and strengthened through your commitments today if it is to serve your descendants to- morrow." Duderstadt also reaffirmed his plans to incorporate "diversity" into the University as it moves into the future. Before the ceremonies, about 3Q0 people donned academic robes and caps - including former Presidents Robben Fleming and Harold Shapiro, and former Associate Vice President for Minority Affairs Niara Sudarkasa - to march in a proces- sion from Rackham to Hill Audito- rium. Outside the auditorium, protester's took issue with Duderstadt's selec- tion, the inauguration's elaborate See Event, Page 2 JESSICA GREENE/Daily Ann Arbor police arrest LSA senior Rollie Hudson, a protester outside Hill Auditorium. Hudson was among a group of students protesting the inaguration of Pres. Duderstadt. Protesters m BY RYAN TUTAK Ann Arbor police arrested two students protesting the inauguration of University President James Duder- stadt yesterday morning and campus security arrested another - the first student to be arrested since two of- ficers were deputized this fall. A fourth student protester was taken to the Univer- sity Hospital after an Ann Arbor police officer flipped her and threw her to the ground. About 30 protesters gathered at 10 am in front of Hill Auditorium, the inauguration site, carrying signs reading "Duderstadt: not our choice" and "Duderstadt is illegal." The signs refer to the University's Board of Regents recent confidential presidential search which, the students allege, violated Michigan's Open Meetings Act. THE CHAIN of events began when five police and security officers prevented about 15 protesters from entering the auditorium. The Ann Arbor Police, after repeatedly throwing off the oncoming protesters, ar- rested LSA senior and Daily opinion staff writer Rollie ar ceremony Hudson, whose finger was cut and his hair and ears pulled in the process of arrest. The protesters, then numbering about 50, followed the arresting officers and Hudson to an unmarked gov- ernment car, which the protesters shook and surrounded to prevent it from leaving. Several Ann Arbor police officers pulled out billy clubs and tried to push back the protesters. Police offi- cer Richard Blake picked up Rackham graduate student and Daily opinion staff writer Sandra Steingraber and threw her to the ground, where she landed headfirst and laid until an emergency unit from the Ann Arbor Fire Department arrived and carried her away in a stretcher. "Cops pulled her and threw her on the ground with a vengeance," said LSA junior Laura Shue, who was standing close to Steingraber. "There was no need to use that much force. I've never seen anything like it. They don't need guns if they're that brutal." BLAKE would only say he didn't recall the inci- dent with Steingraber because "there were numerous See Protest, Page 5 ROBIN LOZNAK/Doly James Duderstadt was officially named 11th president of the University at inauguration ceremonies yesterday. Police chief oks automatic guns BY RICHARD MCKAY Ann Arbor Police will be able to carry quicker, faster-loading hand- guns while on duty, under the terms of a new departmental policy uncov- ered yesterday. Police Chief William Corbett said his officers need the increased firepower of semi-automatic weapons to even the odds against better-armed criminals, particularly drug traffickers. Ann Arbor Police currently carry .38 caliber revolvers which must be manually reloaded, Corbett said, while the automatic weapons making their way onto the streets can fire off long bursts with- out reloading. "It's absolutely demoralizing, a very frightening experience to con- front one of those automatic weapons. You are in mortal fear that INSI DIIE Ann Arbor CiyPoiead University Public Safety officer~s clash with protesters at Prsdent James Duderstadt's inauguration. Opinion, Page 4 'Our police partment should de- be Corbett said the officers will be trained in the use of the new weapons. before carrying them on as equally equipped as the people Rape .Awareness deal with.' - City councilmember Mark Ouimet (R-Fourth Ward) you are going to die right now," Corbett said. "The firepower is just awesome." BUT the new policy has not been brought before the Ann Arbor City Council, and one councilmem- ber vowed to fight rearming police. "It is laughable, this new internal policy," said Jeff Epton (D-Third Ward) when told of the new policy. "And that it would somehow en- hance the safety of the public and the police personnel is equally ridicu- lous." City councilmember Mark Ouimet (R-Fourth Ward) said he was not aware of the new policy but added, "our police department should be as equally equipped as the people they deal with." At mo tfive n tn rnnnri1m rnarnlnc duty. About 20 of the 120 officers on the force now have placed weapons for the gun's, according to David Burke, president of the Ann Arbor Police Officer's Association. Burke said each gun will cost about $400. "I haven't decided to buy one yet but I'd feel a whole lot safer with the increased firepower," said Burke. CORBETT said the new policy was spurred by three recent incidents in which Ann Arbor Police encoun- tered automatic weapons on duty. In one of those cases, a car was stopped on Main Street for a routine traffic violation on July 6. The two arresting officers found one of the car's occupants. armed with a nine- millimeter Luger, an illegal sub- machine gun, and a .357 Magnum revolver. The driver, Leambo De- zombolis, was convicted Wednesday in Washtenaw County Circuit Court for illegal possession of the guns. Earlier this year a man shot at an Ann Arbor police officer at the intersection of Jackson and Maple with an automatic weapon. Shortly after that there was a shooting inci- dent in the Pine Valley Apartments, ROBIN LOZNAK/Daily sites around See story, page A group of women spray painted nearly 300 campus where rapes have allegedly occured. 3. Chileans celebrate Pinochet' s defeat Toni Morrison Ulnspeakable. speaks the U- r %