-~ 9k- ~- - T~V~t --~. SPORT S Mike Barrowman, Michigan's world record holder in depth: Field Hockey and Volleyball MORE 'M' football coverage OPINION 4 ARTS Animation festival lackluster 9 South African Struggles 11 Jill p! I! 1 1 ll ''I E N IIIN IN N IIIII lakidtrnlail Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No. 13 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, September 25, 1989 T*. MmhiNaiv U.S. coast still .struggling with Hugo's wrath CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) - Churches appealed for emergency donations of food, clothing and money yesterday for victims of Hurricane Hugo. Lines for hot meals were blocks long and people waited up to four hours to buy gas and other supplies. National Guards with M-16 rifles patrolled the streets of the battered city of 65,000 people, guarding against looters and keeping order at locations where residents lugged coolers and plastic jugs to get fresh S water. An emergency law enacted Saturday night sought to keep profi- teers from charging $10 for a bag of ice and $6000 for a chain saw. Without electricity for a third day, residents were unable to cook, boil water for drinking or get cash from bank machines. At stores that managed to reopen, people waited in lines for up to four hours. The Red Cross dished out hot meals from lunch wagons. At the Citadel Square Baptist Church, the line stretched for three blocks, spokesperson Brian Ruberry said. As a cold rain fell yesterday morning, church bells pealed above the hum of generators and the buzz See HUGO, page 7 Soviets compromise at arms summit r JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. (AP) The headlines were of summits and arms control, but it is a desper- ate Soviet economy that is melting a range of bitter edges from the Cold War and driving a reduction in su- perpower nuclear arsenals. The Soviets came to this Rocky Mountain setting in a compromising mood and the United States, mindful of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's plight, was there to pocket the concessions. One by one, Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze trotted out the concessions - yielding on Star Wars, a dubious Siberian radar facility and on sea-launched cruise missiles. Secretary of State James Baker was compelled to give nearly noth- ing in return. Yes, he would consider " Soviet proposal for inspection of U.S. radar facilities in Greenland and Britain. And he would consider draw- ing up lists of acceptable Star Wars space tests. But Baker, said that really noth- ing could be done about the radar without the consent of the host countries, Denmark and Britain. And, he said, nothing really had changed since 1987 when the Soviets first suggested identifying which tests were permissible under the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty. The Soviets, on the other hand, gave and gave again. They will let negotiators in Geneva try to complete a treaty to slash the number of long-range nu- clear weapons-perhaps by half even without a parallel agreement on space-based defenses. That means the Soviets are sur- rendering to the U.S. Strategic Defense initiative. Their best hope for trimming the program rests with See SUMMIT, Page 7 DAVID LUBEUNERIUiy Michigan fullback Leroy Hoard (33) takes a handoff from quarterback Elvis Grbac during the Wolverines' 24-23 victory over UCLA. Michigan native Mike Lodish is in pursuit. 'M' wins 24-23 inmda iih By Richard Eisen Daily Football Writer LO ANGELES - It looked like d6ja vu all over again. For the second straight Saturday, Michigan placekicker J.D. Carlson teed up the football in a last ditch onside kick attempt to hopefully bring the Wolverines to a comeback victory. Against Notre Dame, the ball died not more than three yards from the tee. On Saturday, however, Carson's kick was dead solid perfect as the ball popped into safety Vada Murray's hands 15 yards downfield. The successful onside kick set up a Carlson 24-yard field goal, his fourth of the day, with :04 left to push the Wolverines past the UCLA Bruins, 24-23 in a stunning comeback win. Carlson, who shoved an extra point wide left against the Irish, atoned for his sins and was right on target against the Bruins. "It felt great. I was glad I had the opportunity to do it," said Carlson, who sounded like he'd been in someone's doghouse all week. "To have the opportunity is great, but to make it feels ecstatic." The onside kick opportunity wouldn't have meant much if it had not been for Michigan redshirt frosh quarterback Elvis Grbac, who recovered from early-game jitters to calmy lead the Wolverines down the field with time running out. "I thought Elvis played very well at the end of the ballgame," Michigan coach Bo Schembechler said. "He was aiming the ball most of the game and he certainly wasn't the quarterback we practiced with all week. UCLA seemed to have the game sewn up as it had possession of the ball with 4:30 left. But at 3:41 in the fourth quarter, running back Shawn Wills fumbled the ball when Michigan cornerback David Key smacked him. Captain J.J. Grant recovered the ball and Grbac brought the team into the end zone with just 2:06 remaining. After a missed 2-point conversion, Carlson teed up the ball for the onside kick and the rest is now history. "With a victory like that," Grbac said, "it kind of sets the whole season in perspective. We have to work off this (win)." Thousands attend pro-choice demonstration by Laura Counts Daily Women's Issues Reporter LANSING - About 5,000 pro-choice demonstrators aimed their message at the Michigan State Legislature as they converged on the steps of the Capitol Building in a rally for reproductive rights yesterday. Fearing the legislature will pass several pending bills that may restrict abortion in Michigan, pro-choice activists planned the rally to show their conviction that government has no place in deciding a woman's right to an abortion. The legislature, which reconvenes today, will begin hearings on the bills during this fall's term. "I believe this event will serve as a rallying point for thousands of citizens in Michigan whose voices are yet in Lansing to be heard," Gov. James Blanchard told the crowd yes- terday. Blanchard criticized the use of anti-abortion opin- ions as a litmus test for candidates for Supreme Court Justices and powerful state offices. The mood was festive yesterday as a band played, people picnicked in the sun, and children held brightly colored balloons. The crowd, composed of people of all ages and both genders, applauded enthusiastically at ev- ery cue. A giant American flag hung as a backdrop for the speakers, and the rally opened with the national an- them. Several of the rally's speakers emphasized that most Americans, including Michigan residents, are pro-choice and have become more vocal since the Supreme Court's Webster v. Reproductive Health Services ruling in July. See RALLY, Page 8 League holds chess tourney by Karen Akerlof They speak in terms of "concentration", "perfect game", "master," and "challenge." The game they play is a modern mind game, a mental medxval joust. "There are no dummies in chess," said John Smalec, an Ann Arbor chess player of 17 years and director of a statewide chess tournament hosted at the Michigan League yes- terday. Fifty-six people came from all over the state to play in the Michigan Chess Team's action tour- nament. "Action" chess, where players are only allowed 30 minutes each to make all their moves, is relatively new, recognized by the United States Chess Federation only in the last two years. The players were of all ages and levels of ability, from fourth grade novices to state champions. In in- 11 MWIN A