y.1sM ."E I Inside Magazine TIPOFF '89 ............... OPINION El Salvador civil war worsens 4 ARTS Squeeze plays Ann Arbor 9 ...................................................................................-...'-....-°-->,.3-.......-.-.-.....-.-........................?....Y.:*.*...'....... .................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................~ aJrr i uuUAi Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No. 53 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, November 17, 1989 n South Africa *to desegregate public facilities Six Jesuit priests slain in El Salvador Witnesses say government soldiers are responsible CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - President F.W. De Klerk yesterday declared all beaches open to Blacks, and he promised that the law allowing racial segregation of public * facilities would be repealed as soon as possible. "There is no alternative for South Africa but the road of reconciliation, of creating opportunities for all the people of this country in a way which is fair, just and equitable," he said. "The time has arrived to repeal this act," he said, referring to the Separate Amenities Act which his *National Party put into law in 1953, allowing white local governments across the country to bar Blacks from parks, libraries, swimming pools, civic centers, buses and pub- lic toilets. But the repeal would still leave major areas of segregation in South Africa including residential neigh- borhoods, medical care and public education. It also would leave intact the political system that gives the 5 million whites domination over the 32 million Blacks, Asians, and peo- ple of mixed-race. The government is in the process of designating certain neighborhoods as multiracial, although it says whites will retain the option of liv- ing in segregated areas. And De Klerk has given no sig- nal that public schools and hospitals will be integrated, nor hinted at re- peal of the Population Registration Act, which officially classifies all South Africans by race. The Separate Amenities Act can- not be repealed formally until Par- liament reconvenes Feb. 2. De Klerk's declaration "that all beaches will henceforth be accessible to all members of the public" also requires action by municipal and provincial authorities. ,;u /.. Daily crime watch: Part I I First-year LSA student Kent Hansen slides on a tray in the Arb. KENNETH SMOLLER/Daily stolen Markley cafeteria I Gramers to By Mark Katz Daily Staff Writer 4f T , IA) host convention They are gamers. Not basketball gamers or football gamers. Not peo- ple whp indulge in an occasional game of Scrabble. They are wargamers, playing complex strategy games, from role .p laying to board games to minia- tures. Over 800 "gamers" from places as far as New York will converge at the Union this weekend for U-Con, a three day gaming convention spon- sored by the year-old Michigan Wargaming Club, a group of 70 stu- dents who get together for seven hours every weekend to play games. * Beginning Friday at 7 p.m., over 135 different games will be run dur- ing the course of the weekend. At- tendees will be eligible to compete in games for $1 and elimination tournaments for $2 in which winners will be awarded prizes. The convention, the first-ever of its kind at the University, will fea- ture speeches and presentations by seven representatives from various * wargaming companies. Also, hobby shops and companies will sell gam- ing items in the Michigan Union Ballroom, and conference attendees will bring in rare-gaming items such as out-of-print magazines and old Uvr over 8 argamers Club expects X00 this weekend in Union - board games such as Diplomacy which are "like Risk, but infinitely more complex," Meadow explained. "It's as if you have a novel for a rule book." " miniatures, in which people use miniature lead solliers and equip- ment on diorama battlefields which are made to scale to simulate historic military battles. UsCon Director Tim Carroll said SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - Armed men killed and muti- lated six Jesuit priests, their house- keeper and her daughter yesterday after bursting into their house at a leading university. A witness said uniformed government troops were involved. The government denied responsi- bility, condemned the slayings as savage and irrational" and said an investigation was underway. A witness said the killers were part of a detail of about 30 uni- formed army or police troops that entered the house before dawn, ac- cording to another priest who lives nearby. He spoke on condition of anonymity. The killings were committed "with lavish barbarity," said the Rev. Jose Maria Tojeira, the Jesuit Provincial for Central America. "For examxple, they took out their brains," Tojeira said, Roman Catholic Archbishop Ar- turo Rivera Damas compared the killings to the slaying of his prede- cessor, Oscar Arnulfo Romero. That 1980 assassination marked the be- ginning of years of killings and kid- nappings by right-wing death squads. "If this spiral of violence contin- ues, death and destruction will sweep away many, especially those who are of most use to our people," said Rivera Damas after leading a prayer over the mutilated bodies. The slayings came on the sixth day of fierce combat in and around this capital following an attack by left-wing Farabundi Marti National Liberation front guerrillas. The United States has supported a succession of governments in a civil war versus the FMLN. The dead included Ignaco Ellacu- ria, rector of Jose Simeon Canas Central American University, and vice-rector Ignaco Martin-Baro, the country's leading expert on polls and polling procedures. The other dead priests, all educators, were Segundo Montes, Amado Lopez, Juan Ramon Moreno and Joaquin Lopez Lopez. A servant, Julia Elba Ramos, and her 15-year-old child Celina, also were killed, said Tojeira. "They did not want to leave wit- nesses," said Eduardo Valdez, director of Jesuit Studies at the university. The educators had received death threats since the heaviest fighting of the 10-year-old war began Saturday, and callers to radio talk shows had vehemently chastized Jesuits as sub- versives and demanded their expul- sion or punishment. Rivera Damas said those who killed the priests "were motivated by the same hate that snuffed out the life of Monsignor Romero." Romero was killed by a sniper while saying Mass on March 24, 1980. LASC to hold protest on Diag by Britt Isaly Daily Staff Writer The Latin American Solidarity Committee will hold a rally today at noon on the Diag to protest Ameri- can military involvement in El Sal- vador. This protest follows reports from the Associated Press yesterday of the slaying of six Jesuit priests living in El Salvador. The slayings came on the sixth day of fierce combat in and around the capital, San Salvador, following an attack by left-wing Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front guerrillas. LASC members expressed con- cern about American funding and ad- visors within El Salvador. That could lead to an American-related conflict, the likes of which haven't been seen since the late '60s when an increasing number of American advisors were sent to Vietnam, said Rob Hickey, a LASC member. "I think that there are definite parallels between Vietnam and (the See SALVADOR, Page 2 hard-to-find games for an auction. The convention will offer an escape from the usual experiences of everyday life, said Brian Meadows, president of the Wargaming Club. "Hacking apart dragons and searching for treasure in caves is much more exciting than the real world," he said. "(Playing the games) offers a chance to be some- one and to be somewhere that you would not normally be." Playing games is more than just a chance to have fun. "The games do help a lot in the process of decision making," said Wargaming Club Vice-President T De La Pefla, who hopes the convention will become an annual event. "You can get very good and very fast in making analy- ses." Most gamers developed their in- terests before they came to college, according to De La Pefla. "A lot of us have played games since high school," he said. "A lot of our friends played Dungeons and Drag- ons with us when they were younger. We're just the ones that kept at it." Gaines at the convention fall into 'Hacking apart dragons and searching for treasure in caves is much more exciting than the real world... (Playing the games) offers a chance to be someone and to be somewhere that you would not normally be.' -Brian Meadows, President of the Wargaming Club three general categories: - role playing games such as Dungeons and Dragons and Star Trek. These are conducted by game masters, people with stacks of notes which outline the universe the char- acters will operate in. "The game master describes to the players what the character perceive," Meadow said. "Then the players tell the game mas- ters what their characters do." the convention will offer a well- needed break from school. "A lot of times you don't really have the time to enjoy yourself," he said. "but U-Con gives us a good chance to just relax and play games." The convention costs $10 for the weekend and runs from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, 9 a.m. to]I a.m. Satur- day, and 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday. Registration, in the Union. Econ prof. releases ,upbeat report for '90 by Ian Hoffman Daily Staff Writer When the Nostradamus of eco- nomics speaks, people listen. The U.S. economy can expect "a healthy rebound at the start of the new year," according to a report re- leased yesterday by the University's Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics (RSQE). The results were announced today in a speech by the RSQE's leading prognosticator, Economics Prof. Saul Hymans, in the featured speech of the University's 37th Annual Conference on the Economic Out- look. Hymans is a two-time winner of the Silbert Award, presented annu- ally by New York's Sterling Na- *tional Bank and Trust Co., and given fall while the unemployment rate rises. The current economic slowdown is a combination of "special factors," said Hymans. "For example, in the summer and fall of this year, auto companies hyped their sales only to see them fall in the fourth quarter," Hymans said. Hymans also cited the tight money growth policy of the Federal Reserve Board as contributing to the slowdown. When these and other factors "return to normal", the economy can expect a recovery, Hymans said. Participants of the conference ex- pressed confidence in the RSQE's and Hyman's work. J. David Richardson, an eco- nomics professor at the University k¢ Gophers can spoil 4theparty for Blue by Richard Eisen Daily Football Writer Who the hell cares? Really. It's just one week after Michigan won its biggest Big Ten football contest of the year, defeating Illinois 24-10, and now they will compete against the mighty Golden Gophers of Minnesota. X Again. Who the hell cares? Really. Talk about anti-climactic, the Golden Gophers, who average a paltry 36,630 fans per Big Ten an ia nnnrnhflly iin a a kainh ~ I