' d AH V a N%%Y .i...l..... .....i.RW. ? wM 39 ll Zlli|||...............i...WN S4i~ i . k.} tl |NNI!E aS'... ......R n .L. A aivV ..... ..... OPINION 4 ARTS 7 SPORTS 9 Michigan defeats Western Ontario in an exhibition hockey game Duderstadt: the year in review Unquestionably the best song ever 46F idtq a'q'q u ailt! Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No. 31 Ann Arbor, Michigan -Wednesday, October 18,1989Tn Earthquake rocks San Francisco At least 47 reported dead in California blast AP PHOTO Do the Druids come here, too? Carhenge, a sculpture of junked cars reminiscent of England's prehistoric Stonehenge, sits on land about 2 miles north of Alliance, Nebraska. Carhenge supporters are trying to raise funds to build a paved road to the site as required in the sculpture's special use permit. MSA names studentsR MSA BUSINESS e e y T 1 i Charles Vest the Vice ive iut 0 uP ridenmtand Provost for the assemiA, Veist detsed SAN FRANSISCO (AP) - A major earthquake rocked Northern California yesterday, killing at least 47 people, caving in a 30 ft. section of the San Francisco Bay Bridge, forcing World Series fans to evacuate Candlestick Park and causing widespread damage. Lt. Gov. Leo McCarthy said at least 40 people had been killed in a highway collapse in Oakland. Six people were crushed to death in their cars when part of an old four-story brick building toppled onto the vehicles on Bluxome Street in San Francisco, said police Lt. Jerry Kilroy. One person died of a heart attack and four people were injured in San Jose, 50 miles south of San Fran- cisco,'according to Willis Jacobs of the National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo. Three hours after the 5:04 p.m. PDT quake, the magnitude of the disaster began to emerge as reports came in of widespread destruction. Buildings in San Francisco report- edly swayed several feet. McCarthy said a section of Inter- state 880 in Oakland had caved in, killing at least 40 people who were in their cars. "The rubble is so bad that they still don't have an accurate count of the fatalities," McCarthy said. The California highway patrol said six were killed in the collapse of No major injuries were reported at Candlestick, where Game Three of the World Series was cancelled and about 60,000 fans were evacuated. Fans at Candlestick screamed as the stadium swayed for about 15 seconds. Players from the San Fran- cisco Giants and the Oakland A's were on the field and stood around as fans began to leave their seats. The quake, which registered 6.9 on the Richter scale, apparently was centered about 10 miles north of Santa Cruz and about 65 miles south of San Francisco. Mayor Art Agnos' press secre- tary, Eileen Mahoney, said as many as 20 people had been injured at a 'The rubble is so bad that they still don't have an accurate count of the fatalities.' - California Lt. Gov. Leo McCarthy fire in the Marina section. Another fire was blazing near downtown Berkeley. The quake knocked out phones and power, including electricity at the Associated Pres' bureau there. by Josh Mitnick Daily MSA Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly will submit the names of 10 stu- dents to serve on a committee which will review the University's interim anti-harassment policy, which has been in effect since Sept. 15. President James Duderstadt plans to use the committee's input to help draft a permanent policy, which he hopes to implement by the begin- ning of next year. Last week, Duderstadt asked MSA, the faculty's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, and the Academic Service Board (made up of administration officials) to nominate three to five con- stituents each to serve on the com- mittee. But last night, the assembly agreed to name twice the number of students the administration requested because representatives felt 3-5 stu- dents were not adequate to represent the campus. "We're submitting 10 people to show how many interested and quali- fied people want to serve on this committee," said LSA Rep. Susan Langnas, chair of MSA's Campus Governance Committee, which is charged with finding the students. "The fact that seven people have expressed an interest in two days shows to us that three to five posi- tions are not enough for the diversity of student representation needed for this committee," she said. Langnas said she will have the See MSA, Page 2 part of the City Santa Cruz. Garden Mall in East German Polituburo debates fate of Pres. Honecker BERLIN (AP) - East Germany's ruling Politburo held a meeting yesterday that could determine the fate of leader Erich Honecker, whose stern rule has been chal- lenged by mass emigration and pro-democracy protests. In West Germany, the mass-circulation newspaper Bild reported late yesterday that a special session of the Communist Party Central Committee has been called for today. Quoting party sources it did not identify, Bild said Honecker would be "pressured" to turn over leadership of ,the party "to younger hands." Honecker is also East Germany's head of state. There have been reports and speculation for several days that Honecker, who rejected talks with pro-democ- racy groups, might be near the end of his tenure. Bild reported Monday that the regional party leaders were demanding his dismissal. Secrecy surrounded the Politburo meeting and there was no indication when news might emerge from it. Demonstrations were reported in five cities on the eve of the regular weekly meeting, including a march by 120,000 people in Leipzig that was the largest protest since East Germany was founded 40 years ago. Chants of "Freedom!" and "Democracy now!" rose from the throng and marchers shouted "We're staying here!" Most protesters in East Germany have been peo- ple who do not want to emigrate and demand reform at home akin to the reforms being pursued in the Soviet Abortion consent one step closer Senate panel approves bill requiring girls to get parental permission LANSING (AP) - A senate panel approved yesterday a measure requiring girls age 17 and under to get their parents' consent for an abortion despite one member's fears that the bill interferes with some forms of birth control. The Senate Human Resources Committee voted 4-1 to send the bill to the Senate floor even though Sen. John Cherry (D-Clio) said it classified some birth control pills and intrauterine devices as abortion devices requiring parental consent. "To me, this is a critical point. It moves the bill beyond parental consent dealing with abortion. It involves a whole additional new concept, changing the definition of abortion," he said. But the sponsor, Jack Welborn (R-Kalamazoo) said he had no intent to interfere with contraception and will try to work out a clarification. "I don't want it to be read or interpreted that minors cannot get or use birth control or contraceptives because this is parental consent dealing with abortions," he said. The measure defined abortion as the use of any instrument, drug or other device to end a pregnancy. Cherry said that could include IUDs and birth control n pills that prevent a fertilized egg from being implanted r in the womb. His attempt to exclude them from the N abortion definition wa reietedn3.2 Waiting out the rain Ann Arbor resident Drew Curtis finishes a meal while waiting out the rain at the Brown Jug. Formerly banned books now on display at Grad library by Bob DeMayer "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Alice in Wonderland should and early 20th centuries for its sup- posed coarseness and vulgarity. In more modern times, the objection over the years. Rare Book libraria Ed Weber said the main reason fo displaying this exhibit is to show