... Michigan basketball's Kirk Taylor Denny McLain in Q&A 'M' Hockey sweeps UIC OPINION Recycling: Complete the loop 4 ARTS 8 Mudhoney wallows in noise w ~ 6rkm : 4v 4i iu4aitI Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No. 34 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, October 23,1989 coopo iglts. The Mwipn Galy 5 After the quake Lack of shelter Quake rescue outrages the city's homeless SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The shutdown of a shelter for earthquake victims to make room for a con- vention of plastic surgeons has angered some of the dis- placed and brought an angry defense by Mayor Art Ag- nos. Most of the 1,000 people housed in the Red Cross shelter at the huge Moscone Convention Center were moved yesterday to the Presido army base and to a Navy transportation ship, allowing time to prepare for the American Society of Reconstructive and Plastic Sur- geons' convention Oct. 30, city officials said. The relocation angered residents of the Tenderloin district, where hundreds of elderly and impoverished people were evicted from damaged transient hotels after last week's devastating 6.9-magnitude quake. "They should have the plastic surgeons postpone it for a week and let people get over this earthquake. I'm still shaking from this quake," said Keith Holyfield, 28, an unemployed man in a shirt and tattered green-and-yel- low Oakland Athletics' cap who waited outside the, -Moscone Center yesterday. The center is within walking distance of the Tender- loin's cheap cafes. The Presido and the USS Peleliu, at, Pier 30, are miles away - closer to the swanky Cliff House restaurant and Fisherman's Wharf. See HOMELESS, page 2 " gives hope to battered city SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Rescuers euphoric over finding a survivor in a collapsed freeway resumed work at a frustratingly cautious pace yesterday, and earthquake-shaken Northern California mapped strategy for today's expected commuter traffic "gridlock." Longshoreman Buck Helm, who spent four days in a tomb of Interstate 880 concrete and steel, was in criti- cal-stable condition in an Oakland hospital yesterday. Engineer Steven Whipple, said he was checking the fallen double-deck freeway for stability on Saturday when he spotted the back of Helm's head with his flash- light, and then saw a hand wave at him. "It stopped my heart. I thought maybe the wind was blowing and that's what caused it. I thought I might be losing it," said Whipple. At the I-880 rescue site in industrial downtown Oak- land, six sweeps of the area where Helm was found with sniffing dogs and electronic gear turned up no signs of other survivors. The number of dead pulled from the I-880 disaster rose to 38, including a 4-year-old boy, bringing the earthquake's total to 59, with thousands injured and homeless and dozens still missing. Damages topped $7 billion. See QUAKE, page 2 JOSE JUAREZ/Daily Michigan quarterback Michael Taylor, starting for the first time.since this year's loss to Notre Dame, picks up yardage on the ground for the Wolverines this Saturday. Michigan won the game, 26-12, to go 3-0 in the Big Ten. Wolverines poke Hawkeyes, 26-12 out Speaker addresses college alcohol abuse b,y Jennifer Hirl iy Staff Writer Imagine your parents and profes- sors sitting around intoxicated, plunking quarters into glasses of beer. The vision- doesn't come easily, Associate Psychology Prof. Chris Peterson said during a speech Friday, because "drinking games are a bizarre and mindless manner of having a good time." Peterson's talk, which drew a crowd of about 60 students, was part of Alcohol Awareness Week. He said he wanted to avoid the familiar drinking lecture that parents often preach, but at the same time, he wanted to stress the importance of being a responsible drinker. With alcohol as the leading cause of death among college students, he asked students to be mindful drinkers, instead of mindless drinkers, if they choose to drink at all. "Approach drinking in a mindful fashion," he said. "I'm not a hyp- ocrite because I drink. I am mindful when I give this speech and when I drink." As a responsible drinker, Peter- son said he pays attention to what he See ALCOHOL, page 7 by Steve Blonder Daily Football Writer IOWA CITY - The fact that Michigan had not won a football game in Iowa City since 1982 was rendered moot, Saturday, as the Wolverines knocked off the+ Hawkeyes, 26-12. "It was what we expected," Mich- igan coach Bo Schembechler said. "We knew it would be a dogfight. We got the points we needed and then played a little conservative.' This is a big win for us. "Playing Michigan State and Iowa on the roadsin back-to-back games is a tough assignment." With the wins, Michigan appears headed for a Nov. 11-showdown against Illinois for the conference title. All week long, questions had been raised about who would start at quarterback, but Schembechler an- swered the inquiries before over 67,000 fans at Kinnick Stadium when he sent Michael Taylor out under center. Earlier in the week, Hawkeye coach Hayden Fry called Iowa's chances of beating Michigan, "wishful thinking." After the game he had praise for his young team. "I'm not frustrated at all with the young people. Hell, I'm proud of them," Fry said. "They've madereal progress. That was Michigan out there. Seventeen of 22 guys out there played in the Rose Bowl." 'M' beats Iowa 26-12 In Sports Monday 1 Schrager: Taylor runs 'M' offense to win Michigan has an intense pass rush Boles, Hoard run wild behind improved line Peterson 'U' _z_- students question recurring tuition increases by Noelle Vance Daily Government Reporter Liz Schulyer, a second-year law student and then-out-of-state resident, knew she couldn't afford a University degree for $5,000-plus per semester. So last term she made a decision. No matter what her bill said, she would only pay the in-state tuition rate. Fortunately for her, the University granted her residency, and she is now able to pay for her education. But as another tuition increase - pre- dicted around 6.5 percent or more-- looms , in front of students next year, her words, "tuition increases are ridiculous and a joke," are being echoed around the campus. "(The University) is already the most ex- pensive public school in the nation, and too expensive," said Matt Barnowski, an LSA sophomore. Raising tuition again is simply outra- geous, said LSA first-year student Tony Camilleri "Soon no one's going to afford going to school," he said. In the past four years, tuition has jumped from around $2,800 per year for in-state lower division students to about $3,100, and from about $8,000 for out-of-state lower di- vision students to about $11,000. University officials have justified the in- creases by saying state funds have not been able to meet the University's needs, and the costs of education are rising faster than the costs of living. Students must pay more, they say, to maintain the quality of the edu- cation. But many students disagree. They say tu- ition is too high for a public University, they don't know where their money is go- ing, the financial burden is too much for their families to bear, and they aren't sure whether the education they are getting is worth the price. "What I'm spending doesn't go into what I'm getting," said Architecture senior Craig Brace, who recently transferred out of LSA and said he doesn't really know where his tu- ition dollars are being spent. "I've heard a lot about all of this re- search... but in LSA the classes are too big, half the TAs you can't understand. We should be getting something a little better for the price we pay," he said. "(The University) is spending too much money frivolously," said LSA senior Kelly Eccleston, "like on walkways from Engi- neering to the Randall Laboratory." University officials, on the other hand, say campus renovation is underfunded and ought to be a top priority. "We should be spending $100-200 mil- lion in facilities renovation and investment," University president James Duderstadt said during last week's meeting of the Univer- sity's Board of Regents. But, said first-year engineering student Chris Bernard, "They should stop working on the buildings and get some TAs who can teach or kick some of that money into finan- cial aid for borderline students." The walkway from engineering to the Randall Lab is the kind of priority that really "pisses me off," said See TUITION, page 7 Lebanese parliament passes accord to finish civil war TAIF, Saudi Arabia (AP) - The Lebanese parliament yesterday passed a new power-sharing accord to end the country's 14-year-old civil war, but Christian leader Michel Aoun appeared ready to reject the pact. Fifty-nine of 62 deputies present voted for the draft charter but made their action contingent on approval by Aoun and his rival, Moslem leader Salim Hoss. Two deputies ab- stained, and one voted against the agreement. Just as the session began, League envoy Lakhdar Ibrahimi flew to Aoun said at a news conference the plan did not meet his demands for a specific timetable for a SyrIan withdrawal from Lebanon. He said he accepted political changes :ta: would give more power to the Moslems. In Beirut, Michel Aoun appeared ready to oppose the peace plan, saying acceptance would be 'a crime.' peace plan to a referendum of the Lebanese people since the parliamen- tary deputies had "exceeded their jurisdiction and legal powers by vot- ing in these ambiguities that com- promise Lebanon's sovereignty." There was no immediate reaction from Foss. Despite Aoun's comments, Ibrahimi told reporters after his meeting with Aoun that he was pleased that there had been no new fighting in Beirut. He also said he hopes "that the atmosphere of opti- mism and the steps that have begun ALAMIR l