Ninety-nine years of editorial/freedom Vol. IC, No. 69 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, January 6, 1989 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily Frats, residents spar over noise BY BRAD ROTH AND MIGUEL CRUZ The Ann Arbor City Council has taken another step in its four-year effort to reduce tension between North Burns Park residents and fraternity members sharing the neigh- borhood. Last month, the council voted to raise the maximum noise violation fine from $100 to $500, prompted in part by repeated complaints against fraternities filed by local residents. The change was almost more harsh. At the council meeting last month, coun- cilmember Jeff Epton (D-Third Ward) ar- gued against a provision in the new ordi- nance establishing a maximum 90-day jail term for violators. As passed, the law was amended to eliminate the proposed jail sen- tence. Epton said, "Incarcerating people creat- ing excessive noise for three months would set a ridiculous and dangerous precedent." The fines will hopefully act as enough of a deterrent, he said. Prior to the change, the law provided for the possiblility of a 30-day jail sentence. North Burns Park is the residential area south of Hill St. and west of Washtenaw Ave., which contains several fraternities. According to Ann Arbor Police officer Richard Beck, accusations of "fornicating, urinating, and defecating" on residents' lawns, coupled with numerous calls to the police about excessive noise have prompted the council to change zoning regulations and pass ordinances, in order to curtail and punish fraternities' disruptive behavior. Recently, North Burns Park Association President Doug Van Houweling named the annual turnover of fraternity officials as the source of the problem. By the time the neighbors have had a chance to establish a working relationship with the fraternity's officers, he said, new students assume lead- ership, leaving residents back at "square one." Van Houweling is also the University's Vice Provost for Information Technology. Esther Ullman, who lives near the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity at 800 Lincoln, concurs. "Sometimes people have had a re- ally good working relationship where peo- ple understand each other," she said. "Then the next year there's another group of peo- ple who are oblivious to the facts that there are lots of kids and people who live a whole different lifestyle." John Friedman, president of Sigma Al- pha Mu, pointed out the complexity of the situation. Fundamental differences between homeowners and transient fraternity resi- dents place both parties in somewhat of a "no-win situation," he said. "Because of [fraternity] elections every year, because neighbors need to establish a new rapport every year, the problem is cyclical." . See Noise, Page 2 L~rr u~c. . .,; .: ,v, r. w~xcE~wxswaY~ . .w5.w;"%rr~r x s:mi.,,e...,....... . ....: g .... ..' " ":; xi35 a~s2 '# e3:' .e 7~i : > Defense chief OKs closings WASHINGTON (AP) - De- fense Secretary Frank Carlucci ap- proved a plan yesterday to close dozens of military bases around the country, calling it a "unique oppor- tunity' to save money and saving it was endorsed by military leaders. "We must have to move ahead and do this," Carlucci said, "We have not closed a base since 1978, and I think that fact speaks for itself. We need to step up to the plate here." Carlucci appeared at a special Pentagon briefing to announce he had approved the recommendations of a government commission, cre- ated by Congress last year, that se- lected individual bases for closure. Only Congress can save the bases targeted for closures and only by re- jecting the entire list. Senate and House leaders have predicted the awmakers will allow the closures to proceed for that reason. Adm. William Crowe, chair of the Joint Chiefs of staff, appeared at Carlucci's side and said that when it came to closing bases, the uniformeld See Closing, Page 3 Photos show Libyan jets ' f: ).. ROBIN LOZNAK/Daily Anybody home? were WASHINGTON (AP) - Photo- graphic evidence shows Libya lied when it claimed the two planes that the United States shot down over the Mediterranean Sea were unarmed re- connaissance aircraft, the Reagan administration said yesterday. Citing video footage from one of two U.S. Navy F-14 jet fighters in- volved in the confrontation Wednes- day, Pentagon spokesperson Dan Howard said one of the Libyan fighters carried four missiles on its fuselage and wings. "It tells me that the Libyan am- bassador to the U.N. is a liar. That's the first thing it tells me," Howard told a packed Pentagon news brief- ing. "They were obviously armed air- craft with obvious hostile intent. We believe that our aircraft commanders behaved in a prudent manner in de- fending themselves, in defending their aircraft, and in defending their ship," he said. At the United Nations, the Soviet ambassador, Alexander Belonopov, told reporters yesterday that Moscow "gave a warning signal to Washing- ton," before the American jet fight- ers shot down the Libyan planes, to show restraint and "not to raise the tension in the area." He refused to elaborate. "We deplore this accident," Be- lonopov said. "It shows the serious- ness of the situation and that all military personnel should be under strong instructions not to be too quick to pull the trigger." The United States told the U.N. Security Council that the U.S. planes fired on the Libyan aircraft in reaction to hostile actions that "constituted an armed attack" on American forces. U.S. Ambassador Herbert Okun made the statement in a letter to the 15-member council, which held pri- vate consultations on Libya's protest irmed of the incident. But Libyan Ambas- sador Ali Sunni Muntasser called the incident a "premeditated act of ag- gression" and said the Libyan fight- ers were "unarmed, on routine reconnaissance, ordinary flying." President Reagan, boarding his plane in Los Angeles to return to Washington following a vacations, told reporters, "Our pilots acted completely in self-defense." Meantime, the State Department yesterday welcomed Britain's an- nouncement that it had independent confirmation that Libya is building a plant to produce chemical weapons, as the United States has alleged. Libya contends the factory will pro- duce pharmaceuticals. Cockpit tapes back 1C Claims WASHINGTON (AP) - A Navy cockpit tape of this week's con- frontation between U.S. and Libyan jet fighters offers only flashes of video images, but provides in audio the drama of American aviators be- ing unexpectedly caught up in com- bat. The tape, released late yesterday at the Pentagon, also supports the as- sertions of administration officials that the two Navy F-14's repeatedly tried to maneuver away from two chasing Libyan MiG fighters: the pilot of the lead F-14 can be heard counting each time he tries to head away, only to have the "bogies jink See Tapes, Page 9 Statistics graduate student Meekyong Park gets desolate Undergraduate Library. a head start on her work yesterday in the State's first heart-lung patient dies BY STACEY GRAY Michigan's first heart-lung trans- plant recipient died of cardiac arrest early Tuesday evening. The University Hospital patient died at 6:51 p.m., 17 days after the operation, hospital officials said. The patient, whose name was not made public, was listed in good condition a day before the attack, but hospital spokesperson Toni Shears said the patient may have been suf- fering from primary pulmonary hy- pertension (high blood pressure in the lungs), a condition usually found in young females. Hospital officials have not dis- closed the patient's identity to pro- tect the family's privacy. Shears said she could not confirm reports that the patient was a 31-year-old woman. The operation began late Dec. 17 and ended early the next morning. Hospital officials listed the patient in good condition immediately after the operation. But after a week doctors observed signs that the patient was rejecting the heart and lungs and administered medication to combat the rejection. The condition went back up to fair and was listed as good the day before the patient's death. Rebecca Hadley, a Delta College biology teacher in Midland, Mich., was the donor for the transplant. Hadley died Dec. 17 in an automo- bile accident. Shears said heart-lung transplant patients have a 50 percent chance of surviving for one year after the operation, and about a 30 percent chance of living five years. But without such an operation, she said, "most patients with pri- mary pulmonary hypertension will either die a sudden death or of pro- gressive lung failure." The University Hospital is one of the two institutions in the state which is approved as a heart-lung transplant center by Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Michigan. The other is the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. The estimated cost of a heart-lung transplant is $41,000, said Dr. G. Michael Deeb, the head of the Uni- versity's transplant team, in a press conference. Deeb is the director of the Uni- versity Medical Center's cardiac transplantation-artificial heart pro- gram. Shears said there are almost 200 heart-lung transplants performed an- nually nationwide, adding that she expects more in Michigan. "Right now there are one or two patients on our transplantation list," said Shears. Chemical Weapons to be discussed by 140 nations PARIS (AP) - The 140-nation chemical warfare conference begin- ning Saturday could become an arena for an exchange of charges by the United States and Libya and debate between users of such weapons and their adversaries. Delegates will discuss changes in the 1925 Geneva Protocol prohibit- ing the use of poison gas and other chemical weapons, which does not forbid making the weapons and has no enforcement provisions. Because of their effectiveness, relative economy and case of production, such weapons have been called the poor nations' atomic bomb. Many countries want to give the protocol teeth and spur negotiations try." Foreign Minister Roland Dumas of France said his government hopes the five-day conference will not "deviate from its agenda" because of the shooting down of two Libyan jet fighters by U.S. Navy planes on Wednesday. Secretary of State George Shultz and a Libyan delegate plan to attend- the opening session, however, and tension is expected. The United States has been vocal in the weeks before the conference about what it says is a big chemical weapons plant Libya has built south of Tripoli, Libya says the factory manufactures medicines. President Reagan refused to rule out military action against the plant eight-year war with Iran and charges that it used poison gas last fall on rebellious Iraqi Kurds, have kindled public interest in chemical weapons: ,:.. _____________n,___ s;. EN