Oil spill harms Antarctic *wildlife BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) - An Argentine supply ship sank in heavy seas after running aground off Antarctica, and authori- ties in the region said oil from the ship had created a 10 mile slick that was killing wildlife. No one was injured in the sinking late Tuesday of the 400-foot Bahia Poraiso, which began leaking diesel fuel after striking rocks Saturday, the government news agency Telam re- ported, citing a navy communique. Peter Wilkniss, director of the Antarctic program of the U.S. Na- tional Science Foundation, said it was not known how many gallons * of oil had spilled out but that it could be an "incurable disaster." The foundation has said the Antarctic could face an ecological calamity if all 250,000 gallons aboard the ship spilled. "The ship rolled over, is lying on its side almost fully below the wa- ter," Wilkniss told ABC's Good Morning America yesterday.' "This is a very enclosed area. It's a bay ... bounded by a glacier and some islands and our (research) sta- tion. So if the oil goes into the area then it will have an effect on the shoreline, on the ice, on the ani- mals, on the organisms, on the sed- iments," he added. The depth of the water was not immediately known. Officials from the National Sci- enice Foundation, Greenpeace, and a U S. research facility near the wreck said leaking fuel had killed krill, a shrimp-like crustacean that is the main food of the baleen whale and a vital part of the Antarctic food chain. "The krill are dying; they are lit- erally jumping out of the water," the New Zealand Press Association quoted Greenpeace spokesperson Pe- ter Bogart as saying. "Seabirds at- tracted by the krill are diving into the slick...It's a real environmental disaster in no uncertain terms." More than 300 tourists and crew were evacuated from the ship after it ran aground about 600 miles south of Cape Horn. Salvage efforts were hampered by 50 mph winds. The ship was carrying supplies including jet fuel, gasoline, and can- isters of compressed gases to the Argentine Esperanza station near the tip of the peninsula. The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 2, 1989 - Page 3 Speakers evaluate Glasnost, refusernk s Sign 'em up LIZ STEKETEE/Daily LSA sophomore Linda Rosenfeld, an employee, of the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM), solicits student signatures yesterday in the Michigan Union. The en- vironmental group wants a referendum placed on the Michigan Student Assembly's election ballot which would provide PIRGIM with MSA funding. Arrested fugitive returns to Michigan after hiding BY SARAH SCHWEITZER Glasnost's positive and negative effects on civil rights in the Soviet Union and refuseniks - Soviet Jews who are refused exit visas - were discussed last night at the Hillel lec- ture hall. In a program sponsored by the Students' Struggle for Soviet Jewry, a University professor's play entitled "Proverbial Human Suffering" and an excerpt from a documentary film were presented to about 30 students, faculty, and Ann Arbor residents. The play was acted out by several University students and its author. Prof. Ari Roth's play focused on the hardships of living in the Soviet Union. Those struggles were also the subject of the documentary "Back in the USSR," which Roth co-au- thored with his wife Kate Schecter. Schecter, who lived in the Soviet Union for two years as a child while her father was head of Time maga- zine's Moscow bureau, spoke about the changes she and her family found when they returned 20 years later. These changes were the basis for their PBS documentary, which aired last March, and their recently pub- lished book. Both works were the. collaboration of Schecter's four, brothers and sisters, her husband, her parents, and other family members. "Glasnost is a good idea, but: needs time to catch on," Schectern said in a brief speech preceding them video presentation. "It should be ap- proached with great expectation, yet prudence." Schecter's video excerpt featured; refusenik families' discussions od problems they face in the Soviet Union. They focused on changesF which glasnost and perestroika hadF brought about in their personal lives. Glasnost and perestroika have been termed by Soviet leader Gor- bachev as the country's commitment to "openness" and"restructuring." LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Fugi- tive David Davis returned to Michi- gan yesterday after eight years of be- ing hunted by authorities on a charge of murdering his wife by injecting her with muscle relaxant. Davis, 44, was handcuffed and shackled when he was led by federal marshals into the Federal Building. State police spokesman Robert Nelson said he heard Davis say, "I didn't do it," when a crowd of wait- ing reporters questioned him as he walked by. State police Detective Sgt. Dou- glas Barrett said the warrant charging Davis with first-degree murder in connection with the death of his wife Shannon Davis would be read to him inside a holding cell in the Federal Building. Davis would then be advised of his rights and transferred to Hillsdale County Jail to await his scheduled arraignment today in 2nd District Court in Hillsdale, Barrett told re- porters before Davis' arrival. Barrett said security was in- creased for the transfer because of the notoriety that surrounds the case. Davis was apprehended in Amer- ican Samoa after a woman recog- nized him from a rebroadcast of the NBC-TV show "Unsolved Mysteries " which featured the death of Shan- non Davis. Shannon Davis died at the cou- ple's farm in Waldron on July 23, 1980. Davis maintained she fell and hit her head while riding a horse, but authorities said later investigations showed she had been injected with a muscle relaxant. Davis spent several years living in the Caribbean and Alaska during his flight from authorities. He had been living under the name of David Bell in American Samoa for more than three years and was chief pilot for Samoa Air, a small inter-island airline. After being arrested in American Samoa on Jan. 6, Davis was trans- ferred to Honolulu, where he waived extradition to Michigan. Tower denies CBS segment, study to focus on stress in university life drinking WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Secretary-designate John Tower to- day denied allegations that he has a drinking problem yesterday morning. Conservative activist Paul Weyrich said Tuesday that he had on a number of occasions" seen Tower publicly inebriated and in the company of women other than his wife. But in a closed committee, Sen. Malcolm Wallop (R-Wyo.) said Tower denied that he was a woman- izer, had drinking problems or that past business ties with military contractors would hamper his work. Tower later responded to the alle- gations in an open session. Asked by Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., the charges committee chair, if he has a drinking problem, the nominee replied, "I have none. I'm a man of some discipline." Nunn expressed chagrin Tuesday after Weyrich testified that "after a. number of occasions" he had seen, Tower publicly drunk and in the, company of women other than his wife. Tower has been divorce twice. Tower said last week in two days of testimony that he received fees of; more than $1 million for consulting, work for seven defense contractors.V The committee is expected to ap- prove Tower to head the Defense Department, and. there was no immediate indication that Weyrich's remarks would charge that. BY DIANE COOK University students are experiencing more stress than ever before, according to a study published in January by a University of California at Los Angeles research team. This finding is the basis for a segment on stress on campus for the CBS This Morning show, which will be broadcast from the University between 7 and 9 a.m Friday. About 300,000 university students around the country were given the survey, exploring their feelings on a wide range of topics. An overall 20 percent in- crease form last year was reported on questions regard- ing student depression and heavy workloads. "Stress has been in the news after the UCLA re- port," said Jeff Cooperman, who produced the seg- ment. "We're going to take a look at stress factors on campus." The segment will feature the University's Student Counseling Services, an office which offers counseling at no charge to enrolled students. "I see a lot of Superman-Superwoman syndromes on campus. There is a tremendous focus on grades, rather than seeing the college experience as an educa- tional process," said Tom Morrison, a counselor at Counseling Services who will be interviewed for the show. Rent a Car from Econo-Car CORRECTIONS University Housing Advisor Carolyn Shaklee's name was misspelled in Wednesday's paper. Apple preservative may contribute to cancer OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 1 University Communications Prof. in yesterday's paper. James Gindin's name was misspelled THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Speakers Visiting Writer Series - Debra Bruce, reading from her work, Rack- ham E. Conference Rm., 5 pm. "The Cost of Children and the Cost of Sex Among Herero" - Henry Harpending, Ph.D., Anthro. Dept., Penn. State University, Rack- ham E. Lecture Rm., 4 pm. "Americans and Their Games" - A. Bartlett Giamatti, William W. Cook Lecture 3, 100 Hutchins Hall, 4 pm. Wheelchair accessible. Meetings Students Concerned About Animal Rights - 124 E. Quad, 6- 8 pm. ACLU Meeting - Law School, 424 Hutchins Hall, 5:30 pm. To or- ganize forum in Feb. on abortion and father's rights. Democratic Socialists of America - 124 E. Quad, 7 pm. Intervarsity Christian Fellow- ship - Henderson Rm., Michigan League, 7 pm. Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry - Rm. 3 Hillel, 6:30 pm. Palestine Solidarity Committee --212 MTLB 7 nm. Islamic Coffee Hour Presents "Islam & Superpowers" - 1303 EECS, 12:30-1:30 pm. Free refresh- ments. LASC Film Series - "One Way or Another", Rackham Amphitheatre, 8 pm. 63rd Annual Kiwanis Sale - Kiwanis Activities Center, Downtown Ann Arbor, 10 am-6 pm. Used fur- niture, clothing, books, toys, etc. Northwalk - Sun.-Thurs., 9 pm-1 am. Call 763-WALK or stop 3224 Bursley. Safewalk - Sun.-Thurs., 8 pm- 1:30 am; Fri.-Sat., 8-11:30 pm. Call 936-1000 or stop by 102 UGLi. Performances University Dance Company - Presents Viva Stravinsky! Power Center, 8 pm. Michigan Theatre Las Vegas Night - Blackjack, roulette, craps, etc. Ann Arbor Inn Ballroom, 7-8:30 pm, free admission; 8:30-12 pm, $2. Music at Mid-Day - Afro- American Collections Center Presentation, 12:15 pm. Free. WASHINGTON (AP) - The government proposed a ban yesterday on a chemical that makes apples appear more appealing and last longer, citing "an inescapable and direct" link to cancer that could cause five deaths for every 100,000 people exposed. While the Environmental Protection Agency said the cancer risk is not high enough to warrant an emergency action to remove the chemical from the market, it urged its manufacturers to withdraw the chemical until a final regulation banning the chemical can be issued. Officials said formal agency ac- tion ordering the chemical withdrawn will not likely come for another 18 months and then is likely to be challenged, a process that could take another one year to three years. The object of the EPA's concern is a growth control chemical called daminozide, which is sold by the trade-name Alar. The chemical is absorbed by the fruit and has been used by apple growers since the early 1970's to spur even growth, reduce spoilage and help preserve apples so they can be sold all year. Alar's manufacturer, Uniroyal Chemical Co. of Middlebury, Conn., immediately challenged the EPA findings and promised to con- test any government ban. The com- pany said it would not withdraw its product voluntarily. "We don't see any basis for tak- ing (Alar) off the market," Uniroyal spokesperson Yanis Bibelnieks said. "All of the studies that have been done since 1985 have supported our position that Alar poses no signifi- cant health risk." He said it was "inappropriate to make any judgements based on in- terim results" cited by the EPA. 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