w'. x .~ .ri f..yr ; .}"":v.fi :::i'::}ir??F..r r. f..?., n:::: .::. .v'.":"."i' ^: i'.Ci' :?pv}r""::i:::i::i:JY..v::::?::>: $:i:2::i:t; \ "I OPINION 4 ARTS 5 SPORTS Lou Henson and the "Lou'do" come to town Sunday 9 Promises are not enough The joy of giving r 4irrnl4ai Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom .Abrit,,1990 Vol. C, No.90 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, February 9, 1990 TMchgDaily Good Knight, IU0 Blue wins, 79-71 by Mike Gill Daily Basketball Writer .o Blanchard proposes Michigan might have found the answer to losing big leads at the end of a game. The solution: A steady offensive flow and Tony Tolbert. Michigan never found itself with a 20-point lead as it had the last time it faced the Bobby Knight's Indiana Hoosiers. But this time, the Wolverines came away with a 79-71 win last night at Crisler Arena. The Wolverines took control midway through the final period. With 8:41 left in the game, Michigan started a 12-2 run, which began with eight straight points. Only 3:11 later, Michigan led 70-59 and never looked back. The Wolverines used the clock well, did not force shots, and Tolbert showed why he was a - Michigan "Mr. Basketball" favorite last season before a season-ending knee injury. "We had to play hard for 40 minutes," Michigan- coach Steve Fisher said. "We talked about how y somebody had to step forward and give us a lift. (Terry) Mills did that and Tolbert did that off the bench." Eric Anderson and Chris Lawson led all scorers with 20 points apiece. Loy Vaught led the Wolverines with : 19 points and 10 rebounds. Rumeal Robinson had 18 points while Mills scored 16 and grabbed nine boards.' Michigan ran its record to 7-3 in the Big Ten (17-4 overall), good for second place behind Purdue while Indiana fell to 4-6 in the conference, 14-6 overall. . Knight summed up his loss by pointing to two ,-.. tough lapses his team slipped into. In the first half the Wolverines went on a 11-0 run to grab a 28-16 lead, but l Indiana fought back and took a 33-31 lead into the lock- ;:. erroom. However, Michigan's outburst in the second f half proved to be too much for the Hoosiers to overcome. JOSE JUAREZ/Daily "Tonight we got into two bad stretches," Knight Michigan forward Loy Vaught, who finished with a team-high 19 points and 10 rebounds, fights said. "It happened to us in Illinois and we came back for a rebound with Indiana's Eric Anderson (right) and Calbert Cheany. The Wolverines out- once, just like tonight. Then at Illinois we got down by rebounded the Hoosiers by a margin of 35-26. 12 with six minutes left and we were 11 points down here. We could not come back from that." points, tight defense, and several gestures to the crowd The offense at times showed Tolbert, who barely saw playing time in conference - complete with a huge smile. impatience, yet for the most part, action until Sean Higgins injured his foot, provided the "He's like that all the time," Mills said. "Coach has displayed new-found poise and team with an emotional effort, contributing eight to always calm him down in practice." patience. '90 budget LANSING, Mich. (AP) - More money for education was good news to both Republicans and Democrats who hope to iron out a 1990-91 budget without bloodshed, but bad news for members of congress who think school spending is overshad- owing other important needs. Perhaps even more controversial than the spending plan was the pro- posed 2.5 percent spending cut in every area except education to avert a possible deficit. Governor James Blanchard's pro- posed budget drew criticism from lawmakers because it does not allow department heads' discretion in choosing where to make cuts. Some legislators also accused Blanchard of showing favoritism to education spending. "We're going to have a fight in our caucus on exempting education. That's a firm position that I have," said Republican Joseph Young Sr., D-Detroit, who maintains that more money is needed for mental health care. "They want to cut every budget except education. If they exempt anything, we've got a problem." Senator Robert Geake, R- Northville, expressed concern that the cuts would mean smaller welfare checks for poor people, but state Budget Director Shelby Solomon said that will not necessarily be the case. "It looks to me like education is cannibalizing the rest of the state budget," Geake said. "I don't see how we can accept that come Octo- ber first," the beginning of the fiscal year. Senate Majority Leader John En- gler, R-Mount Pleasant, took partial credit for the fourteen percent in- crease Blanchard proposed for public schools. The two are expected to face off in the November gubernatorial campaign. "Essentially we're in a bidding war over who can help schools the most," said Senator Dan DeGrow, R-Port Huron. But the expanded education bud- get did elicit some controversy, be- cause accompanying the proposal was a plan to cut back retirement and Social Security benefits to employ- ees of wealthy school districts. The proposed five percent in- crease in higher education spending was well received by the college community. 'Hundreds protest U.K. team in South Africa JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - Police used tear gas and clubs yesterday to disperse hundreds of Blacks protesting a tour by an English cricket team that defied an anti-apartheid boycott. A Cabinet minister said continu- ing unrest is prolanging South Africa's state of emerg, 'cy and said threats against Nelson Mandela from extremists are among the factors de- laying the ANC leader's release from prison. "We want to ensure he walks out Off-ice * incident sidelines Copeland by Eric Lemont Daily Sports Writer Michigan hockey. defenseman Todd Copeland will be suspended for this weekend's series with Alaska- Anchorage, after coach Red Berenson learned of his involvement early Thursday morning in an incident re- sulting in damage to a fraternity house and a sorority house. According to an Ann Arbor police commanding officer Deborah Ceo, the incident took place between 3:00 and 3:30 a.m Thursday morn- ing and resulted in broken windows at both the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house. "There was malicious destruction of property on the 1400 block of Washtenaw," Ceo said. "Apparently it was the same person who had committed malicious destruction on the 1200 block of Hill Street." Ceo said the incident was a boyfriend-girlfriend dispute. "A young lady was with another indi- of that prison a free man and lives safely in this country as a free citi- zen," Law and Order Minister Adri- aan Vlok told a news conference in Cape Town. In the township of Alexandra, po- lice arrested at least six Blacks, say- ing they had commandeered minibus taxis to transport protesters to the nearby cricket grounds despite a magistrate's ban on demonstrations. Police stopped all minibus taxis and most cars leaving the township, removing any youths they found on their way to the five-day test match the English visitors and South Africa's national team. A crowd of 2,000 people, mostly students, then assembled at an inter- section and were "dispersed peace- fully" after tear gas was used, police said. A local anti-apartheid group, the Alexandra Civic Organization, claimed some would-be protesters were beaten and that 30 were injured. The English team is defying a ban on sports contacts with South Africa, designed to protest South Africa's system of racial segregation. Police said eight journalists cov- ering the confrontation were briefly detained when they refused to obey an order to leave the area. Police claimed some journalists provided transportation to protesters trying to reach the stadium. Later, riot police with batons broke up a second protest by more than 100 Black youths outside a downtown office building housing the British Consulate. The protesters were chased through the streets even though a British diplomat urged po- lice to let them stay. President F.W. de Clerk an- nounced Friday the end of restric- tions on press coverage of unrest and police action, although film or pho- tographs cannot be published with- out permission. However, police say they are using other sections of emergency regulations that give them the power to order anyone to leave the area. Gerrit Viljoen, the Cabinet min- ister in charge of setting up negotia- tions with Black leaders, said in an interview with ABC that the emer- gency will lost only a few more weeks because the government real- izes it is inhibiting normalization of the political process. Boesak added that Mandela, the 71-year-old ANC leader who has been imprisoned since 1962, is not delaying his release, and the question of when he is freed is entirely up to the government. Oil spill threatens beaches and wetlands in California HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. (AP) - A drifting oil slick threat- ened miles of beaches and estuaries yesterday after a tanker apparently was punctured by its own anchor and spilled 295,000 gallons of Alaskan crude oil. But favorable offshore wind held the slick stationary against an on- shore current about a mile out to sea from this popular Southern Califor- nia recreation area. Calm seas eased the effort to skim the oil from the surface. The 811-foot tanker from Ameri- can trader, which had been fully loaded with 21 million gallons, lay off the coast surrounded by a floating oil containment boom and Coast Guard vessels. The purple slick covered an area measuring 2 1/2 miles by 4 miles, said Coast Guard Lt. Vincent Cam- pos. Three skimmer boats were at work and five more were en route to the area, off the Orange County coastline about 35 miles southeast of Los Angeles. Along the shore, booms were laid to protect the environmentally deli- Six oil-soaked sea birds were cleaned and cared for by volunteers at a lifeguard headquarters. Six other birds were dead. Curt Taucher, a Fish and Game spokesperson, said there was some initial concern about migrating gray whales but that was not the biggest worry. "The concern is for the furbearing animals, harbor seals, and. animals like that," he said. The broad, sandy beach at this city of 180,000 in northern Orange County, plus Bolsa Chica State Beach to the northwest and Hunting- ton State Beach to the south, draw millions of sunbathers and surfers during summer. Routine alcohol and drug tests were given to the ship's captain, identified as Robert Laware, and the first mate, but results were not im- mediately available. There were no formal discussions on use of chemical dispersants, said Rolf Mall, deputy regional manager for the state Department of Fish and Game. Damage from chemicals has to be weighed against harm from the oil, he said. Realtor assails Ann Arbor zoning laws Jane Garcia, Detroit Census Community Awareness Specialist, speaks at the Trotter House. Speakers address by Josh Mitnick Daily City Reporter A local realty company is suing the city of Ann Arbor over A city zoning ordinance which it claims un- fairly discriminates against students by restricting where they can live. said he doesn't think the city will win the case because of a precedent set in 1984 by the State Supreme Court. In Delta Township v. Din- fold the court ruled that zoning laws could not discriminate against people on the basis of their relationships I i