Ninety-nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. IC, No.68 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, January 5, 1989 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily U.S. shoots ' WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. Navy jet fighters shot down two Libyan MiG-23 jets yesterday after the Americans were ap- proached at high speed in what Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci called "a hostile manner" in international airspace over the Mediterranean Sea. Carlucci said the two American F-14 Tomcat jets acted solely in self-defense. Based on preliminary reports, he said, the Soviet-built Libyan jets activated their weapon-targeting radar before the U.S. jets opened fire with their air-to-air missiles. Carlucci denied that the jets, assigned to the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy, were airborne to participate in a military strike on a disputed chemical weapons pro- duction plant inside Libya. He said the carrier was only crossing the Mediterranean toward a port call and con- ducting routine operations when the inci- dent occurred at midday local time, about 5 a.m. EST. The U.S. planes, each carrying two crew down members, returned without incident to their carrier and were then flown to Naples, Italy, for debriefing, Carlucci said. The fate of the two Libyan pilots remained unclear, al- though he said "two parachutes were sighted" and a rescue helicopter was later seen in the area. It was the first military confrontation between the United States and Libya since a U.S. bombing raid over Tripoli in 1986. That raid came after the Reagan administra- tion said it had conclusive evidence that Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi was be- hind a terrorist bombing attack in West Germany. Gadhafi yesterday asked the Soviet Union to move some of its warships in the Mediterranean to the area in which U.S. vessels are operating near Libya, the Yu- goslav news agency reported from Tripoli. A reporter for Italian TV said Gadhafi's residence-headquarters in Tripoli, already equipped with watchtowers and tanks parked in camouflaged garages, had been further ibyan jets fortified with anti-missile batteries in key areas. President Reagan, on vacation in Los Angeles, was awakened about an hour after thcdowning and told of the incident by Lt. Gen. Colin Powell, his national security adviser, in a phone call, said White House Spokesperson Roman Popadiuk. The spokesperson said he had no infor- mation on Reagan's reaction, except to say that the president "considers the incident closed." Blue topples Trojan empire BY PETE STEINERT SPECIAL TO THE DAILY PASADENA, Calif. - Before Monday's Rose Bowl game, Michigan coach Bo Schembechler told his players to expect the unexpected, to be prepared for anything. Sure thing, coach. The Wolverines had already encountered their share of surprises during the regular season: the then unknown Reggie Ho and his automatic toe out-kicking Mike Gillette in the season opener; Miami (Fla.) rallying from laps behind; and starting quarterback Michael Taylor breaking his right collarbone against Minnesota. Michigan learned to deal with the unexpected. And the Wolverines taught many skeptics that lesson with their come-from-behind 22-14 victory over Southern Cal. Sports Illustrated's Nov. 14 issue said USC would not lose to "a pretender from the feeble Big Ten. A defeat would be unthinkable." Think again. "Down 14-3, knowing what's happened to us in the past, this team has great resolve," said Schembechler, now 2-7 in Rose Bowls. "When they came back and played like they did and won the game, I think it was a great tribute to them." USC coach and former Schembechler assistant Larry Smith said: "I'm not disappointed, I'm just damn angry." Michigan dominated USC (10-2) in the second half, outscoring the Trojans, 19-0. The player of the game, Leroy Hoard, scored two touchdowns and rushed for 142 yards - 113 in the second half - on 19 * carries. See Roses, Page 3 M' win is a heartfelt one for Bo The Schef's Specialty ' f BY ADAM SCHEFTER s .. PASADENA, Calif. - The maize and blue helmets were raised to the sky, the players waving them proudly. And suddenly the helmets were joined in the air when Bo Schembechler hoisted the Rose Bowl trophy high above his shoulders. Two forces meeting in the night. Michigan football. Rose Bowl trophy. A match made for the heavens. What does the fight song say? The champions of the West? Yes. They were. The champions of the West. And that sure as hell beats being the champions of just the Midwest. WHICH IS all Bo had been seven of his last eight trips out to Pasadena. With the win, Schembechler took the monkey off his back, grabbed him around the neck, threw him to the ground, and kicked him in the face. Who said Bo couldn't win the Rose Bowl? "Losing just tears your heart out. And I don't have that good a one to start with," Schembechler said with a boyish grin. "I must say that I am elated. That's the word - elated." It was ironic that Leroy Hoard was responsible for so much of this elation. IT WAS Hoard who caused Bo some heartache during the season. It was Hoard who was left out of the 1988 media guide - not a mention of the sophomore fullback in 117 pages. Academics, the reason. It was Hoard who, after rushing for 128 yards and two touchdowns against Indiana, was suspended for missing a class. An 8 o'clock class. And how many of you have done the same? But Hoard broke Bo's rules. He had to pay. No trip to Northwestern. After that, there was no more slamming of the snooze button, a college student's favorite form of procrastination. Hoard made it to class. He made it to Pasadena. And it was a good thing. Hoard ran for 142 yards (four more than Southern Cal's net rushing total) and two fourth- quarter touchdowns that put Michigan on top to stay. The first came on a race with four USC defenders to the corner of the end zone. And Hoard finished with the tape around his chest. The second came up the middle, on a fourth- down play, as Hoard barreled over USC's defense, as well as their hopes. "Leroy is very difficult to tackle," Schembechler said. "In the spring I used to get mad at our defense for not being able to bring him down. Now I know why." One person impressed by Hoard's performance was John Robinson, head coach of the Los Angeles Rams. Robinson called Schembechler after the game and said if Hoard was in the draft this year, he'd make him the Rams' No. 1 pick. When the game ended and Hoard ran off the field, he was asked what he was going to do now that he was named Rose Bowl Player of the See Victors, Page 7 JOHN MUNur~- Dony Michigan coach Bo Schembechler hoists over his head his second Rose Bowl trophy. After three previous losses to Southern Cal in Pasadena, Schembechler finally got his way. Higgins suspended for drinking incident 'U' grad's Tourist to premiere tonight .BY STEVE BLONDER Who says history cannot repeat itself? For the second year in a row, the Michigan basketball team will open the Big Ten season against Northwestern without the services of guard Sean Higgins. Higgins was suspended for three games on Dec. 21 by coach Bill *Frieder for "violating team training rules," but Frieder refused to elaborate. Frieder said he told his starting guard to go for counseling, but he denied Higgins was involved with drugs. Higgins does not have a phone and was unavailable for comment. However, Higgins' father, Earl, said the suspension resulted from Sean drinking alcohol at teammate Terry Mills' 21st birthday party. "Sean was drinking and he was suspended, but he does not have a drinking problem," Earl Higgins said. "The rule, as explained to me, says that athletes are not allowed to drink. The suspension is justified because he broke the rules. "People need to understand, though, that Sean is no different from other students. The only difference is he's an athlete. Probably over 75 percent of all college kids drink during the course of the school year, and no one says anything about it. He just did it when he wasn't supposed to." See Higgins, Page 8 'People need to understand, though, that Sean is no different from other students.' Earl Higgins on his son Sean BY MARK SHAIMAN University graduate Lawrence Kasdan's newest film, The Acci- dental Tourist, will make its Mid- west premiere tonight at the Mich- igan Theater. Kasdan may be best known, especially around here, as the man behind The Big Chill, a look at a group of University grads during their middle age. But after graduating with a B.A. in English and a Mas- ters in Education, as well as winning four Hopwood awards, he started in the film business as a writer, pen- ning the scripts to Raiders of the Lost Ark, The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi, three of the most successful movies ever made. Kasdan's directorial debut came in 1981 with the steamy thriller Body Heat, which he also wrote. In the lead roles he cast two then-unknown actors, Kathleen Turner and William on how to travel without coming into contact with anything that is "foreign." His orderly life changes unexpectedly when his wife (Turner) leaves him, and then even more drastically when he becomes in- See Tourist, Page 5 INSIDE Looking back on 1988. See Opinion, Page 4 George Mack blows the whistle on the US. comta job in Central America. See Arts, Page 5 Michigan had more than one champion over the vacation. The Wolverine hockey team captured Democrats pick mayoral candidate BY DONNA IADIPAOLO A relatively unfamiliar Ann Ar- bor attorney and former member of the U.S. House of Representatives stepped forward to file as Democratic resources, we should be trying to solve our problems, and we should be trying to demonstrate that to other cities," Clevenger said. But his announcement came after tion. In December Democratic coun- cilmembers Larry Hunter (1st Ward), Jeff Epton (3rd Ward) and Kathy Ed- gren (5th Ward), along with former the Democratic mayoral search committee. "Basically, we were looking for a strong candidate who could beat Jernigan." Republicans presently hold a 6-5