In Weekend Magainie: A look inside the School of Music - An interview with Archibald Cox* The Replacements 1£..iditga BaIv Ninety- nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. IC, No. 109 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, March 10, 1989 Copyright 1989, The Michigan Daily I Eastern files bankruptcy NEW YORK (AP) - Eastern Airlines filed for protection from creditors in bankruptcy court yester- day, the sixth day of a Machinists strike, blaming pilots for a "cash crisis" that paralyzed the nation's seventh-largest airline. The move came a day after East- ern insisted such a step remained a last resort in the airline's effort to endure the strike, which had strong. support from the pilots and flight attendants and was costing Eastern an estimated $4 million a day. The filing under Chapter 11 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York is designed to give Eastern a reprieve from debts while it tries to restruc- ture and extricate itself from the worst crisis in its 60-year history. Eastern boss Frank Lorenzo blamed "the damage that has been caused by the pilots union." He and Eastern President Phil Bakes insisted they intend to restore the airline in bankruptcy court, though in a smaller form. "We tried mightily to keep East- ern from bankruptcy," Bakes said at a news conference. "We intend to operate our airline: make no mistake about that." Bakes said Eastern faces a "cash crisis that can only be averted and stabilized by" turning to the bankruptcy court. Union leaders lashed out at Lorenzo as a "robber baron." Ma- chinists called for a public boycott of Eastern's sister airline, Continen- tal, and said they would oppose Eastern's reorganization plan and any sale of assets. Lorenzo and Bates pledged that all creditors would be paid in full; shareholders would receive "fair value"; passengers would be pro- tected; and as many employees as possible would return to work. Eastern had 31,200 employees before the strike. John Peterpaul, a Machinists vice president, said Eastern filed for bankruptcy on payday "in a spiteful attempt to deny Eastern workers their last paycheck earned before the strike." Paychecks were frozen by the move. John Bavis, head of Eastern pilots union, said management continued calling pilots at home in hopes some would return to work. He said the effort would fail. Union leaders long have said they believe Lorenzo wants to break them and tear Eastern apart. But Lorenzo would have a tougher time imposing lower wages at Eastern than he did when he reorganized Continental in 1983. Congress amended bankruptcy law in 1984 to require bankrupt companies to negotiate with unions and prove economic necessity before abrogating contracts. Lorenzo stressed the filing covered only Eastern and not its parent Texas Air Corp., of which he is chair. But on Thursday, Sen. Howard Metzenbaum (D-Ohio) filed a bill to allow Eastern creditors to collect from the parent company. Senat Towei WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate yesterday rejected the nomination of John Tower as de- fense secretary, 53-47, handing President Bush a major defeat in his first high-stakes showdown with the Democratic-controlled Congress. The White House said Bush would act swiftly to submit a re- placement nomination to the Senate. Tower was scuttled by concerns about his drinking habits coupled with senatorial unhappiness that he had left his government post as arms negotiator and quickly began earning hundreds of thousands of dollars as a defense industry consultant. rejects bid, 53 -47 The vote was the culmination of a tumultuous six-day Senate debate and closely followed party lines. Howell Heflin of Alabama, Lloyd Bentsen of Texas and Christopher Dodd of Connecticut were the only Democrats to support the nomina- tion. One Republican - Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas - voted against. Tower, in a statement he delivered at the Pentagon moments after the vote, said, "I will be recorded as the first Cabinet nominee in the history of the republic to be rejected in the first 90 days of a presidency and per- haps be harshly judged. "But I depart from this place at peace with myself, knowing that I have given a full measure of devo- tion to my country." Tower said no other public figure "has been subjected to such a far- reaching and thorough investigation nor had his human foibles pared to such intensive and demeaning public scrutiny." Bush dodged reporters' questions as he departed for a trip to New York, but his press secretary, Marlin Fitzwater, said, "If necessary, we'll come up with a (new) candidate very rapidly:" Tower ...rejected by Senate CBN fires Public Affairs Director BY JESSICA STRICK WCBN officials fired disk jockey, talk show host, and Public Affairs Director Henry Hardy last Monday, but the reasons for his termination are still under debate. Hardy said yesterday that WCBN General Manager Emily Burns fired him for "completely unprecedented" reasons, and possibly because of his plans to broadcast a program about Salman Rushdie's controversial book, Satanic Verses. Last Friday, March 3, Hardy announced that he would be broadcasting a special reading of Rushdie's book, and he lost his job the follow- ing Monday. While Hardy said he can't be sure that his fir- ing was a direct result of his decision to read from the book, he added that "if the public per- ception will be that I was put off for Satanic Verses," his termination from WCBN would be censorship. LSA senior Burns, however, said, "Contrary to Hardy's claims, his termination is entirely unrelated to the announcement of a reading of Satanic Verses... and in fact the decision was made two days previous to this announcement." Burns said WCBN will air the program, hosted by DJs Jesse Walker and Dick Whealey, this Sunday as planned. "WCBN feels the free discussion of ideas is very important and plans to go ahead" with the program "to the best of our ability without Mr. Hardy as the host," Burns said. Burns said her decision had nothing to do with Hardy's air conduct, but instead was provoked because Hardy had overstepped his authority in an entirely different area. Hardy "has asked me not to speak of the reasons why he was dismissed," she said. Hardy and Burns both vied for the WCBN general manager position last April. The Campus Broadcasting Network's Board of Directors chose Burns after much debate. Hardy said Burns possibly decided to fire him because of an in-house rivalry. Burns said Hardy has been "using WCBN for a personal vendetta." Hardy has contacted various human rights or- ganizations, including the Ann Arbor branch of the ACLU, to defend his case, and is organizing a protest this Sunday. His termination, he says; "will have a chilling effect on anyone who wants to do something risky on WCBN." According to a clause in the list of the sta- tion's guidelines, "The authority for suspension or expulsion relies on the general manager who is required in each case to consult with the board of directors, except in the case of an emergency." WCBN staff adviser Julie Lavrack and Burns said yesterday that they made the decision with- out consulting the board. The decision can still be appealed to the board at its meeting on March 17. Hardy, however, said their action was not in response to a real emergency issue because they "took no action until Monday after the an- nouncement." MSA pres. . hopefuls debate BY TARA GRUZEN The three candidates at last night's Michigan Student Assembly first presidential debate all tried to; distance themselves from the present fK-' assembly's policies. Conservative Coalition's Aaron Williams said the Public Interest - . Research Group in Michigan . MSA elections '89 (PIRGIM) should be abolished. Zach Kittrie, of the United Students party, vowed to have one student on every ROBIN LOZNAK/Oai y University-wide committee by thelryan Kase, of the Abolitionist party, addresses students at last night's Michigan Student Assembly See MSA, Page 2 presidential debate as candidates (from right to left) Zach Kittrie , Aaron Williams and Rob Bell look on. Activists to share insights on panel BY ROLLIE H UDSON - Students currently involved in anti-racist struggles at campuses around the country will join '60s activists tonight in a panel discus- sion on anti-racist activism at the Business School's Hale Auditorium. The discussion - part of a workshop-oriented forum taking place on campus this weekend - will focus on the shared experiences of former Student Non-Violent Co- ordinating Committee activists and today's student activists involved in anti-racist struggles. Both the panel and the workshop are sponsored in part by the local United Coalition Against Racism. From the east coast, Denise Tug- gle, a student at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania, is expected, to speak about her involvement in a recent movement demanding that the college divest from companies prof- iting in South Africa. She is also working in a campus struggle to "unite white students, administrators, and people of color," she said in a phone interview Wednesday. John Inda, an activist at Stanford University, will bring a west coast perspective to the panel. Stanford has received media attention surrounding the study of western culture, similar to the cur- rent debate here at the University. Last year, Stanford administrators agreed to establish a campus-wide prerequisite which does not empha- size the experiences and ideas of white male authors but those of men and women of color instead. Former SNCC activists Martha Norman, Marilyn Lowen and Charles Sherrod will attempt to em- power by example a younger gener- ation of activists. They will relate lessons learned from mobilizing southern Black communities in voter registration drives and establishing freedom schools - among other See Conference, Page 5 Mayoral candidates spar in second debate 'M' given scare by Wildcats, but BY NOAH FINKEL Ann Arbor Mayor Gerald Jernigan continued his attack on Democratic challenger Ray Clevenger, while Clevenger made an appeal to tradi- tionally Republican voters during a mayoral election debate yesterday. A "" A "Li, 'R_ Republican constituency. "I didn't come to an overwhelm- ing, enthusiastic Democratic crowd... but I think I will get more votes from these people than nor- mal," Clevenger said. The debate, the second of a dozen preceding the April 3 election, was sponsored by the Ann Arbor Cham- prevail, 88-79 - BY ADAM SCHRAGER SPECIAL TO THE DAILY EVANSTON - David Copperfield and Harry Houdini, eat your hearts out because these days the Michigan Wolverines are the greatest escape artists around. With last night's 88-79 Wolverine victory over Northwestern (9-18 overall, 2-15 in the Big Ten) in front of a sellout crowd of 7,624 in Welsh-Ryan Rice tallies 26 Bryan Schwabe led the Wildcat attack with 22 points and eight rebounds. He was supported by Jeff Grose's 13 points, three-of-five from three point land. "This is just one of those games," Michigan guard Rumeal Robinson said. "We came out playing pretty slow. The guys weren't really psyched up for it - they just wanted to come in, win, and then get out." Michigan survived second-half foul trouble, 15 turnovers, and 9-16 free throw shooting, to go 24-6 I.- I