Championship shirts still selling briskly By Jason Carter I The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 19, 1989 - Page 5 Armed teenager takes 11 students hostage, gives up. When Rumeal Robinson sank his final free throw in last April NCAA championship game, the victory was not only spiritually uplifting for the University of Michigan community. It was also a financial boon, opening up a whole new market for local businesses - selling NCAA Championship T-shirts, toy basket- balls, backboards, banners, and posters. Debra Bishop, manager of Moe Sport Shops, said championship T- shirts make up about 30 percent of her store's total business. Sales of Michigan merchandise shot up after the NCAA victory and have stayed consistent ever since, she said. Bishop said the most popular Michigan item is a white T-shirt emblazoned with a emblem of the basketball championship on the front and last year's Rose Bowl vic- tory on the back. National attention from the two victories has spurred interest in the CHENEY Continued from Page 1 will include beefed-up border radar, additional ships and planes for surveillance along the eastern and southern coasts, and improved coor- dination among agencies involved in the drug battle, sources said. Until now, the Pentagon's role has been to support efforts of state National Guard units, which have been used for such duties as inspect- ing cargo at ports of entry, taking part in aerial searches for marijuana crops and helping transport law en- forcement officials or contraband. Those efforts have varied from state to state. Cheney insisted that in no case would the Pentagon be drawn into a history of the University and the state of Michigan, Bishop said. "It's great to see the younger student body appreciate the rich history of Michigan athletics." .Bill Dion, a manager of the Michigan Union Book Store, said there was also a business surge at his store after the final basketball game. "We're still receiving orders from across the nation," he said. Since the basketball victory, University of Michigan champi- onship wear, have been the most popular duds on campus. Scott Smith, a senior LSA stu- dent, said, "My girlfriend bought my shirt soon after the game." And to complete his basketball outfit, Smith purchased a championship hat. Physical Education sophomore Kirk Woodside said he bought four basketball T-shirts after the final game. He said the shirts will mean even more after a "tournament repeat in 1990." law enforcement role. The secretary conceded, however, that using U.S. military personnel to train other nations' forces as is being done now in Columbia, can put U.S. military personnel at risk. "It's a dangerous business. I hope nobody's hurt in the process but I can't guarantee it," Cheney said. Cheney declared his program "a high-priority national security mis- sion." That message appeared to be aimed both at Congress, where some members have expressed doubts about the Pentagon's commitment to the drug war, and to those inside the Pentagon's commitment to the drug war, and to those inside the Pentagon who've been loathe to use dwindling military resources against the civilian drug smugglers. JONATHANLISS/Daitv Burned-out sump pump that caused the "smoke-out" and evacuation of the Baskin Robbins on S. University yesterday. Crusted sump pump smokes out store McKEE, Ky. - An armed teenager stalked into a high school classroom, fired a shot at the ceiling and took 11 classmates hostage yes- terday, police and witness said. After a day-long standoff, he released them all and surrendered. Several shots were fired, but no one was injured in the confrontation, which began about 9:50 a.m., police said. There were conflicting reports that a shot was fired at a television news helicopter. The youth, whose only request to police was to speak to his father, told hostages he did not want to hurt anyone. The final two hostages were freed shortly after 5 p.m. EDT., and the teenager gave up about an hour and a half later, authorities said. The state police declined to iden- tify the hostage-taker, but classmates said he was Brian Pierce, a 17-year- old senior at Jackson County High School. McKee is a town of about 250 people about 50 miles southeast of Lexington in the Appalachian foothills. Pierce who released his hostages throughout the day in exchange for items such as food, soft drinks and cigarettes, "said he wasn't going to hurt nobody," according to Craig Eversole, a classmate who was held but released. Police Trooper Ed Robinson said the hostage-taker was armed with a shotgun, a .357-caliber Magnum re- volver and "some type of automatic pistol." Eversole identified the other weapons as a .44-caliber Magnum and a 12-gauge shotgun. Robinson also said the teenager apparently had held one hostage overnight _ the school Principal Betty Bond. He said the two boys arrived at the school in the younger Bond's red pickup, and it appeared that the armed youth had been hold- ing the principal's son since the night before. It was not clear why the youth took over the classroom. Authorities described his as a new- comer to the school who was living with his grandparents, but some stu- dents said they had had know him for years. Police Capt. John Lile said the boy's parents are separated. Robinson said the student's first request had been to speak with his father who lives in Delray Beach, Fla. He later asked to talk with his grandparents. Pauline Parks, whose son was held hostage earlier in the ordeal, spoke with one of the last hostages to be released. "He said they was walking around doing anything they want to," Mrs. Parks said. "They are watching TV, drinking pop." Eversole, a 15-year-old junior, said he was in the classroom when the armed youth came through the door reportedly firing a shot in the school parking lot. "He never said nothing," Eversole said. "He shot the ceiling and told the teacher to leave and let the two of students leave.... He didn't say nothing,'why he was doing it or nothing." Eversole was released at about 1:30 p.m. after soda was delivered to the room - apparently as part of a deal with police. by Ian Hoffman Smoke poured out of the Baskin Robbins 31 Flavor Ice Cream Store's basement on S. University St. yesterday afternoon, causing employees to evacuate the building. Ann Arbor Fire Department Captain John Schnur said the smoke resulted from a sump pump that had burned out. "(The pump) just overheated because it wasn't covered with water," he said. "It was old too, I could tell by the crust on it." Schnur said the Ann Arbor Food Dispensors Department visited the store after the fire, as a formality, to make sure the food was safe from smoke toxins and discovered noth- ing contaminated. Baskin Robbins Assistant Manager Steve Blinder, a senior at Pioneer High School, said, "I got here at 1:00 p.m. and smelled something that I haven't smelled before. I held my nose every time I went down to the basement." Another employee, LSA sophomore Jeff Straten said, "We went down in the basement and the smoke just poured out." The damaged pump was worth about 560, said Manager and Owner Richard Rohn. But the damage won't have any effect on the cost of ice cream, he said: "I'll eat (the cost) myself." Another person concerned with eating was Fire Department Driver and Operator of Engine One Douglas Vogel. "I hope that the cookies and cream wasn't damaged," he said. 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