Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. IC, No.100 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, February 20, 1989 Copyright 1989, The Michigan Daily La. Rep. refutes election controversy NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Newly elected state Rep. David Duke, a former Ku Klux Klan leader, said yesterday that Blacks and Jews have nothing to fear from him and scoffed at the notion he would be banned from the GOP and not be seated by the Legislature. "I repudiate any racial or religious intolerance," Duke said at a news conference. "Any group - racial or religious - has nothing to fear from David Duke. Duke squeezed out a 227-vote victory over homebuilder John Treen to represent a nearly all-white House district in Metairie, a suburb of New Orleans, Duke received 8,459 votes, or 50 percent, to Treen's 8,232, or 49.3 percent, in Saturday's election. Duke registered as a Republican two days before qualifying for the race. After Duke's stunning success in the Jan. 21 primary, the national party sent three advisers to help his mild-mannered opponent and persuaded President Bush and former President Reagan to endorse Treen. Duke became an international spokesperson for the Klan in the 1970s as grand wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. As a teenager he was photographed in a Nazi uniform. U.S. senators, the governor and other community leaders of both parties warned that a Duke victory would ruin the state's reputation and harm already tenuous race relations. While Duke said he was extending a hand in friendship to the Jewish community and inviting his opponents to talk with him, he did not mince words on where he stands on civil rights and affirmative action. "I'm for getting the government out of our personal lives. I'm not for any law for segregation or integration," he said. "The right not to associate is just as precious as the right to associate." "David Duke is not a Republican." At- water said in a statement. "He's a pretender, a charlatan and a political opportunist who is looking for any organization he can fond to try to legitimize his views of racial and religious bigotry and intolerance. "We repudiate him in his views and we are taking immediate steps to see that he is disenfranchised from our party." "Is he going to censure me for my past? How many Republicans, how many Democrats ahave done controversial things in the past?" Duke asked. "The actions of Mr. Atwater are really un-American." Several lawmakers said they expect an attempt in the Legislature to refuse to set Duke by challenging his qualifications, namely his residency in the district. It would be the fist time the House has ever taken such action. The Legislature convenes for a special tax session on Wednesday. "It all depends on what the majority of the House wants to do," said House Speaker Jim Dimos, a Democrat. "Unless someone makes a motion to disqualify him, then he will be sworn in. I know the peopole in his district elected him by a small margin, but he still was elected and has to be treated as a member." Asked if he had been a redident of his district the requisite one year before the eletion, Duke said: "Absolutely I am. It's a frivolous question." Metairie attorney Dave Sherman, who said he represented several unsuccessful candidates from the primary, claimed to have irrefutable evidence that Duke failed to move into the district uintil September. He said he has a statement to that effect from an alleged roommate of Duke and power company records indicating utilities were not turned on in the Metairie condominium until September. Jewish organizations around the country had decried Duke's run for office. Mordechai Levy of the Jewish Defense Organization called Duke "a Hitler." The archbishop of New Orleans warned boters to choose cau- tiously. Duke's victory was denounced by national Republican chair Lee Atwater. *Blue swims to Big Ten title BY ERIC LEMONT The Michigan women's swim- ming and diving team won their, third consecutive Big Ten Championship last weekend at the Canham Natatorium. Despite win- ning for the third time, the team acts as if it were the first victory they've ever had. "I'm so proud of everybody. It all came together when it had to," said senior Stacy Fruth. "The com- petition was great and I think we thrive on it. We love to win and even more, we hate to lose." Head coach Jim Richardson, who after the meet was named Big Ten coach of the year, said, "They're a real tough bunch of kids and they don't like to lose." He was most proud of the emotion and excitement his team displayed during the meet - the one thing he felt the team had been lacking all season. "I think you saw yesterday and today the kind of team this really is. And I knew it was there. It's like the Prego commercial - 'It's in there, it s in there. I know it's in there!"' Even the most low-keyed person would have had a tough time not getting excited by the frenzy of the crowd this weekend. On top of the raucous caused by ten chanting, cheering and whistling swimming squads, the spectators themselves added a few decibles to the Noise-O- Meter. But not even the continuous chant of "Goooo-Gophers-Go-Go- Go" by the Fast Lane Fans, a group of yellow and maroon clad, pom-pon waving parents of Minnesota swimmers, could help the Golden Gophers overtake the Wolverines. Michigan's 740.5 points easily outdistanced Minnesota (538.5), Northwestern (522.5) and Michigan State (365.0). * The meet looked like it would be closer when Richardson decided to put three of his top swimmers, Stefanie Liebner, Ann Colloton and Gwen DeMaat, on training schedules that have them peaking at the. NCAA championships in March. See Champs, page 10 City expects low primary turnout today JESSICA GREENE/Dolly In an animated speech to an audience of 150, Qwame Ture, better known as Stokley Carmichael, calls for the organization and unification of the Pan-African community. Ture says revolution will lead to Pan-African unification BY NOAH FINKEL City officials are expecting a low turnout in today's mayoral and Ann Arbor City Council primaries. City Clerk Herb Katz predicted that only three percent of Ann Ar- bor's registered voters will turn out because the Fifth Ward is the only of the city's five wards to hold a con- tested City Council primary. There is also a contested city-wide Repub- lican mayoral primary today. Katz said the three percent turnout is normal for the city's primary., Polls will be open today from 7 am to 8 pm. The general city elec- tion will be held April 3. In the mayoral primary, Republi- can Paul Jensen is challenging in- cumbent Republican mayor Gerald Jernigan. The winner will face Democrat Ray Clevenger in April. Jernigan, who has been' mayor since he defeated Democrat Ed Pierce in 1987, said he is running on his mayoral record of strong manage- ment and said he wants to apply his experience to solve the city's $1.6 million budget deficit, landfill crisis, and crime difficulties. If reelected, Jernigan said he will address student concerns such as safety, and what he described as a lack of adequate student housing and parking in the central campus area. Jensen, who has run unsuccess- fully for numerous city, state, and Main student polling locations Ward Prec. Bldg. Address i 1 01 02 07, 2 01 02 03 3 01 02 4 01 02 Mich. Union 530 S. State Alice Lloyd 100 S. Observatory Bursley 1931 Ouffield Stockwell 324 Observatory Markley 1503 Washington Hts. Angell 1608 S. University School East Quad 701 E. University East Quad 701 E. University South Quad 600 E.Madison Marl St. 926 Mary St. Polline Place Ann Arbor Primary'89 BY JOSH MITNICK Twenty years ago Stokely Carmichael captured the nation's attention as a student leader fighting for civil rights. Now known as Qwame Ture, he is a proponent of Pan-Africanism, a movement for unity and cooperation of the African people that he says will "sweep the world." Ture, addressing an audience of 150 Saturday in a speech entitled "From Black Power to Pan- Africanism," said that only way the Pan-African community could arrive at unity would be through a revolutionary struggle. "Africa will be free. Africa will be unified. Africa will be socialist. Of this, there is no question," Ture said, receiving loud applause from the audience in Rackham Amphitheatre. Ture stressed the need for the Pan-African community to become more organized. "Struggle can only be carried out if people understand principles." Refuting political compromise, Ture emphasized, "In the area of principles, there are no compromises. It is black and white, there is no middle ground, no grey area." Once the chair of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, an organizer of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, and prime minister of the Black Panther Party, Ture now lives in the West Indies. Ture said that African interests are "diametrically opposed" to those of America and that all progress Blacks have made in this country has been through reforms. See Ture, Page 2 national elective offices, is making his fourth mayoral bid. Unlike other candidates, Jensen is running on issues such as establish- ing a sister-city program in South Africa, and changing Ann Arbor from a city run by a city administra- tor to one run by a mayor. On the city deficit, Jensen said he wants to find alternative forms of fi- nancing, such as a city income tax, sales tax, anda revenue bond issue. But Jensen's revenue proposals have been called unworkable or ille- gal by some. In the Democratic primary in the Fifth Ward, Verna Spayth is chal- lenging Ed Surovell for the right to face Republican Joe Borda in April's election. The winner will replace in- See Primary, Page 2 Students, TAs want discussion size limit BY SCOTT LAHDE DAILY NEWS ANALYSIS Most University undergraduates attend discussion sections, but both students and'teaching assistants are beginning to show dissatisfaction with the often large size of sections. Students for Smaller Classes (SSC), an undergraduate organization formed this term, has begun circulating petitions to TAs and stu- dents, hoping to spark support for a University class size limit. "We are the students being taught; the administration should re- alize the concern," said SSC member Deborah Kuhn, "It's not just an is- sue for TAs, it's an issue for all of us." Kuhn said discussion sections of- ten exceed 30 students and students sometimes receive very little atten- tion. SSC wants the University to and has proposed a University-wide policy limiting class size. GEO president Don Demetriades contends departments "allow - or in some cases, force - their TAs to teach unmanageably large classes." Demetriades cited several reasons why class size should be reduced, focusing on improving the quality of education: -to encourage greater student in- volvement in sections; -more and better comments on papers and exams; -more TA time per student in of- fice hours. Psychology Prof. Wilbert McK- eachie, in a recent Ann Arbor News editorial, faulted large classes for of- ten including: less writing, objective examinations which require less thought, and emphasis on learning facts instead of encourazin active Edwards, IU, shoot down 'M' at :O1(?.) BY STEVE BLONDER SPECIAL TO THE DAILY BLOOMINGTON - Indiana is 8-3 when it scores between 70-79 points, 11-1 when it shoots better than 50 percent from the field, and 14-1 when it has led at the half. But the only thing that mattered Sunday, was Jay Edwards' 22-foot jumper as time expired, which gave the No. 9 Hoosiers a 76-75 home victory over Michigan and virtually destroyed any Wolverine hopes of a Big Ten championship. The 13th-ranked Wolverines (19- 6 7-5 in the conference) went un by 1 0