6 Page 2 - The Mjchigan Daily - Thursday, September 28, 1989 Student shot at MSU party by Roberto Sanchez A Michigan State University stu- dent was taken to a Lansing hospital Saturday night to be treated for gun wounds resulting from a scuffle dur- ing a weekend party, the second such incident in the past year. Two Detroit men were detained in connection with the incident and will face charges of attempted murder, said East Lansing Police Department Capt. Richard Murray. The men were part of a group of 14 Detroiters who came to East Lansing for the annual "Icebreaker party. After being denied entrance for lack ;ofstudent identification; the group went to a private off-campus party where the fight and shooting took place. The MSU student was shot twice in thg leg. The group of Detroiters tried to flee in four cars, but were stopped by a police road block at I- 96 and M-59. The incident took place a year after the death of Robert Woolfolk, a Detroit youth who was shot at the time of last year's "Icebreaker" party. Woolfolk was shot in connection with a traffic argument. Although both shootings oc- curred at the same time as "Icebreaker" parties, MSU Polic Comtihnder Andrew McEntee does not think they are related. PASS AROUNDI 9> ' 4'£u' 1 y About 2,000 protesters in clenched fists gather near th President Dan Quayle in Manila. The brief rally was la Filipinos prote and U.S. milih't4 MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Police hurled tear gas yesterday to disperse 2,000 leftists demonstrating against Vice President Dan Quayle and American mili- s tary bases at Clark. President Corazon Aquino accepted a U.S. offer to discuss the bases' future. Quayle called the ambush slayings of two American civilians on Tuesday "cowardly murders" and said a ma- jority of Filipinos want the bases to remain. "Let me be direct: terrorists will not drive Americans from the Philippines," he told U.S. troops and depen- dents at Clark Air Base and the Subic Bay naval base, the largest of the six American installations here. Police fired tear gas after demonstrators refused to end an anti-base rally near the presidential palace. During Quayle's appearance, riot police drove back hun- dreds of others who tried to march to the main gate at Clark. Over 150 people were arrested for joining anti- Quayle rallies in the capital. Opposition to the bases is increasing among Filipinos because many see the facili- ties as an infringement on national sovereignty. Quayle met with Aquino early yesterday and gave her a letter from President Bush regarding U.S. bases there. Bush suggested in his letter that the two leaders start to Asociatd Press he presidential palace to protest the 3-day visit of Vice ater dispersed by riot police. St Quayle Visit iry presence discuss extending the bases' leases which expire in September 1991. Aquino's executive secretary, Catalino Macaraig, said the government had agreed to the talks and would give Quayle formal notice before he leaves Thursday for Malaysia. Any agreement on extending the bases' lease must be ratified by two-thirds of the 23-member Senate, where opposition to the bases is strong. Aquino, who will visit Washington in November, has refused to say whether she will support a lease ex- tension. In 1985, Aquino signed a manifesto calling for the close of bases. This was a move to solidify the opposi- tion against Ferdinand Marcos, who was the Philippine president at that time. But after taking office in 1986, Aquino said she would keep her options open. After the meeting with Aquino, Quayle said, "I hope that the people of the Philippines understand and appre- ciate not only the special relationship, (but) the sense of stability in the economic sense, stability in the sense of hopefully seeing expanded economic opportunities and development to the people of the Philippines." During a courtesy call on Senate President Jovito Salonga, Quayle urged senators to "r'emove the emo- tionalism" from discussions about the bases. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports Hugo victims call for govt. aid CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) - Thousands of Hurricane Hugo's vic- tims lined up Wednesday for food, clothes and building supplies while of- ficials pleaded with the Bush administration to cut federal red tape and get aid to stricken areas. "We're very appreciative for all the help. But if it could have been done quicker and had been done quicker it would have been better," Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr. said. "I'm not sure the extent of the damage from Hugo is understood yet at the federal level." Riley, who earlier this week was full of praise for federal relief efforts, told reporters he has had to seek help from Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., to get more military generators to provide electricity. An estimated 233,000 utility customers in South Carolina remain without power, more than half in the Charleston area. From Washington, Hollings called officials with the Federal Emergency Management Agency "a bunch of bureaucratic jackasses." Canyon air crash kills 10 TUSAYAN, Ariz. (AP) - A sightseeing plane crashed into a wooded hill near the Grand Canyon Airport yesterday, killing 10 people and injur- ing the other 11 people aboard. The aircraft's wings were sheared off by the tall ponderosa pines but some passengers survived because the fuselage of the small two-engined plane remained largely intact, said Sheriff Joe Richards. The two crew members were killed, he said. National Park Service Ranger Paul Crawford, who was among the first to reach the wreckage, said some of the passengers were walking around when he arrived at the scene on a small ridge about 300 yards east of a runway. "They were all shellshocked. They had that empty, dazed look," he said. The airport is located about five miles south of the Grand Canyon. The injured were taken by ambulance, airplane and helicopter to the Flaggstaff Medical Center. Conditions of the injured ranged from serious to critical with lacerations, fractures and head wounds. Abortion researcher given Lasker medical award NEW YORK (AP) - America's most prestigious medical award was given yesterday to Dr. Etienne-Emile Baulieu, developer of the controver- sial French abortion pill; a decision criticized by anti-abortion activists. Dr. Baulieu studied the workings of hormones for nearly 30 years be- fore provoking an international ethical debate with his discovery of the drug RU 486, which prevents a fertilized egg from developing into a pregnancy. Baulieu's drug blocks pregnancy after conception by interfering with the hormone progesterone, which is essential to the maintenance of preg- nancy. Any egg that might have been fertilized and implanted in the lin- ing is shed along with it. The drug, reportedly being used for about 15 percent of elective abor- tions in France, has not been approved in the United States, but it has provoked a storm of controversy here nonetheless. Abortions linked to sadness LANSING, Mich. - College-age women who have undergone abortions have a higher risk of suffering from depression than those who deliver their babies or never become pregnant, said a survey released yes- terday. . The survey of 220 women found that 16 percent of those who had had abortions were severely depressed. Five percent of the women who were never pregnant showed signs of melancholy, while none of the women who had actually delivered babies were depressed. The researcher who did the survey said the results fall short of showing abortion caused the women's depression. "We can't say that for sure. It's really only an association, not a cause and effect," said Dr. John Mesaros, a resident in the pediatrics and psychi- atric departments at Michigan State University. EXTRAS Amway a loser because of death of Emperor Hirohito ADA, Mich. - Japanese Emperor Hirohito's illness and death cut into Amway Corp.'s sales growth for the fiscal year that ended Aug. 31, company officials said. Amway said growth in sales of its laundry and bath soaps and more than 4,000 other home and personal care products dipped 7 percent for the fiscal year following a 20 percent increase last year. Commerce in Japan, a country that accounts for 35 percent of Amway's business, slumped during Hirohito's illness, said William- Nicholson, Amway's chief operating officer. "All activity in Japan came to a stop because of that." Amway-Japan shut down completely during the three-day mourning period following Hirohito's death Jan. 7. Without that impact, Nicholson estimated sales growth would have been 12 percent. L THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Office of.9Mnonity Affairs Cordiaffy Invites you to Attend THE MINORITY STUDENT SYMPOSIUA HIEVING UNITY IN A a A PASS IT AROUND Share the news, 1 ai1g /I able 4.Witt ,an naiIl 'I cNM m IECOT The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $28.00 in-town and $39 out-of-town, for fall only $18.00 in-town and $22.00 out-of-town. 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