.:"'..l. Inside Magazine Shopping malls: America's new village square James Cotton The Dybbuk OPINION* 4 ARTS 9 Dad has saving twist of Lemmon Say no to change in graduation ceremony . #, .£''29Ef£S°Raw' 'S2#.'95;6' #:: x'"k3 3Q£#.Y? '32'. SiG$e + f+t +Yti'}ia ;+"i. k'$f: 3.52i'f:; S}t'A' }w'% 'i. nnir. ::??: c#* if+' ? he igan~al Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No. 48 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, November 10, 1989 & Deng gives East Germany up last of his formal opens borders party obs for free travel BEIJING (AP) - Deng " to re t ae Xiaoping, China's senior leader, ~ passed his last formal leadership post New leader urges democratic to his chosen successor yesterday and the Communist Party laid out an austere economic plan for the next y'ee ions and ot error s two years. BERLIN (AP) - East German Schabowski did not say when the Deng, 85, resigned as chair of the leaders said yesterday they would law would be passed and it was not party's powerful Central Military throw open western borders and al immediately clear when the borders Commission in favor of party chief low citizens to travel freely any- would be opened. Jiang Zemin. He still heads the State where for the first time since the The decision, made during a Military Commission, a virtual mir- Berlin Wall was erected in 1961. Central Committee meeting, means ror of the party group, but said in a The move would end decades of all East Germans "can travel over all letter released yesterday he also restrictions for East Germans regard- East German border checkpoints, would leave that job.z ing their movement between East including through the Berlin Wall, The move solidifies Jiang's posi-"k and West and could leave the wall as Schabowski told reporters in East tion and appears at least to suspend a "' a mere monument to the Cold War. Berlin. reported power struggle between him Since 1961, 191 people are known Those who want to emigrate can and President Yang Shangkun. to have died while attempting to go to West Germany directly with- Jiang, 63, had not held a national cross the border to the West. out having to go through a third post until his elevation to party '"Open the gate! Open the gate!" country, Schabowski said. In the leader after the pro-democracy JUUE HOLLMAN/DaiIy chanted about 100 East Berliners past few months, East Germans were movement was crushed in June. Michigan defensive tackles Mike Evans and Chris Hutchinson chased Purdue quaterback Eric Hunter out of the who gathered last night at the leaving through Czechoslovakia, In Washington, Richard pocket last weekend The tandom will look to do the same thing this Saturday against Illinois QB Jeff George. Brandenburg Gate, the huge monu- Hungary and Poland. Solomon, the assistant secretary of ment just over the Berlin Wall in Schabowski said those who only state for East Asian affairs, said the M ich ig a n a n d Ill nfac e r East Berlin. want to visit the West need visas, United States was not surprised by MhIg a n a n III n o Is a co f New Communist leader Egon which should be issued quickly. He Deng's move and added, "I suspect Krenz also urged a law ensuring free mentioned no limit on the length of he will remain an influence." a and democratic elections. stay abroad. "You could say that the change a gm e1Lh a t snells o f ro se s More than 200,000 East Germans The offices that issue travel visas wouldn't have occurred if there' a ihave fled west so far this year; more closed for the night by the time wasn't a certain element of stability by Adam Benson Illinois. He felt it was a great opportunity for me and he than 50,000 have left since Saturday Schabowski made the historic an- there," Solomon commented. Daily Football Wrifer really felt that if I came back to college football that I alone. Hundreds of thousands of nouncement, and it was not known Foreign diplomats and Chinese Forget the battle for the Big Ten championship and a could.be successful and that college football might even people have taken to the streets to whether visas would be issued at sources agree Deng is likely to re-brhi h oeBw ihgnIliossi ebte.Ilsee main the leading voice in party and berth in the Rose Bowl. Tomorrow's Michigan-Illinois suit me better. I listened quite closely while we talked demand democratic reforms and the border crossing. There were no im- govnmt affairs, as h be as ben game will be for the bragging rights to Barberton, about that." end of 40 years of one-party rule. mediate reports of East Germans go vernavment i sth s hehas bn OhioThe coaches share more common qualities than just Guenter Schabowski, a member pouring directly into West Berlin or siCentral Committee in 1987. Barberton spawned two of America's finest coaches, the same hometov. n. Lach coach developed winning of the ruling Politburo, said East-West Germany. Although Deng described Jiang as Michigan's Bo Schembechler and Illinois' John teams with suffocating defenses, experienced quarterback Germany's heavily fortified frontier East Germans reacted to the news the "ucleus'ofthenewleadehisMackovich.leadership and consistently powerful running attacks. with West Germany would be with astonishment and jubilation. yleader's political "Bo and I have had a great relationship," said the "If you look at us statistically, there are quite a few opened as a provisional step until a "Now I no longer feel locked in rtne are tied toDeng's physical Illini's second year coach. "He was especially quite similarities," Mackovich said. "We're probably a law is passed to allow East Germans here," said Uwe Landgraf, who hoped health. instrumental in being positive about my coming to See ILLINI, page 13 greater freedom of travel. to travel to Paris. L o w \1r P LH V Anti-discrimination policy opponents face obstacles by Noah Finkel Daily Administration Reporter Daily News Analysis The Michigan Student Assembly hosted a forum discussion Wednesday evening titled: "Do you want your opinion to count on the interim discriminatory harassment policy?" The student body's answer: a re- sounding "no." Only about 80 students attended the forum, and many of those were members of MSA or other student groups represented at the forum. LSA junior Nick Mavrick, chair of MSA's Student Rights Commission, admitted that while dent input into permanent anti-dis- crimination rules. Students who have shown an interest in the policy cannot speak with anything resembling a unified voice. Students are of two distinctly different minds on the issue. Some students and student orga- nizations remain opposed to any anti-discrimination policy. Among these are the campus branch of the American Civil Liberties Union and both the College Democrats and College Republicans. These groups are the remnant vestiges of the old "no code" coali- tion of student activists, who op- posed any academic sanctions for non-academic conduct. They see any University anti-discrimination rules as a suppression of free speech. Third-year law student James Marsch, a member of the College Democrats, said at the forum, "Suppression of expression conceals the real problems in society... and are mere band-aids on a pervasive problem." Conversely, some students and student groups have criticized the in- terim anti-discrimination rules not because they suppress speech, but because they are not broad enough. Included among these are the more prominent anti-bigotry organizations on campus, such as the Black Student Union, the United Coalition Against Racism, and the Lesbian and Gay Men's Rights Organizing Committee. These organizations see the in- terim policy as too narrow and would like to see the permanent pol- icy include sanctions against those who issue epithets aimed at groups, not just for those who attack indi- viduals. "We have to understand that there is such a thing as group discrimina- tion," said LSA sophomore Devlin Ponte of the BSU. See CODE, page 2 the "panel was fairly representative, the student turnout was underrepre- sented" at the forum. Student apathy is not the only problem plaguing student leaders, who are dedicated to increasing stu- And those students who have shown an interest in the policy can- not speak with anything resembling a unified voice. Students are of two distinctly different minds on the is- sue. Thousands head to D.C. .rally for abortion rights by Jennifer Miller agreed to hear this year. in cars, addin Daily Staff Writer Dotnint fr..rn Ann.. Ar..Lnr.. --I ~ - to g up to around 200 A A ( T% A D -..U- Hundreds of Ann Arbor students and workers are heading to Washing- ton, D.C. today and tomorrow to join tens of thousands of pro-choice demonstrators gathering for the sec- ond "Mobilization for Women's Lives" sponsored by the National Organization of Women. The abortion rally, from noon until 4 p.m. on Sunday, will "try and send a message out to President Bush, the Congress, and ourselves that we will not tolerate the disman- tling of Roe v. Wade," said Jennifer Radin, NOW's college campuses or- ganizer and a graduate of Amherst College. Demonstrators will focus on in- fluencing the Supreme Court and Participants from Ann Arbor "will look to take part in great activ- ities nationally and organize groups to work together for abortion rights," said Rebecca Barlow, the rally organizer from Ann Arbor's Committee to Defend Abortion Rights (AACDAR). Radin said it is hard to tell if this event will draw more Ann Arbor residents than the pro-choice demon- strations in April. "A lot more peo- ple are driving than taking the NOW sponsored buses, so it is impossible to get an accurate count yet," said Radin. "At least 1,000 people from Michigan are going and for every person in Washington there will be iw to threea hck home fighting for people, said AAUAR member Paul Carmouche. The Ann Arbor buses and car- pools are leaving from today until early tomorrow morning. NOW is encouraging participa- tion from college students, since col- lege-age women have the most abor- tions. "And they have 35 years of reproductive life ahead of them that the Supreme Court and other institu- tions are trying to mess around with," Radin added. "It is our time, our turn, and our responsibility to get out and protect our rights. Our parents and grandpar- ents have been fighting for these rights for years and now it is up to us to make sure they are not all inct " Rndin eid Vandals smash cabinet in dorm by Liz Paige A glass showcase in East Quad- rangle containing artworks from the Voices of Women of Color exhibit was vandalized yesterday morning. The cabinet, in the hallway out- side the Residential College Offices in East Quad, was "smashed by un- known suspects," according to secu- rity officers. The artworks them- selves were not damaged. The Housing Security officers who took the report said that the damage occurred between 5:10 and . . . .. i