OPINION : 4 ARTS 7 SPORTS 9 University Council: An Obituary Killdozer destroys the mind Wolverines face surprising Buckeyes Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No. 74 Ann Arbor, Michigan -Thursday, January 18, 1990 The Mhign Dly MSA election controversy " continues by Daniel Poux Daily MSA Reporter Though nine LSA representatives have filled positions on the Michigan Student Assembly, the controversy emanating from last semester's MSA election has not ended. 'There are four people sitting on MSA now that were not elected by the student body. At the same time, there are four students that do not have seats on the * assembly, all who worked hard and won the students' votes.' - MSA Rep. Jeff Johnson. Because the appointment decisions made by LSA Student Government differed greatly from the results of the disputed and invalidated elections, many involved questioned the fairness of the appointment process, and the criteria used by LSA-SG in its selections. Four members of both the Conservative Coalition and Choice parties were appointed; the ninth selection, Stephanie Simon, was an _ unaffiliated anddat who id no run in the invalidated election. * LSA-SG Vice President Jeff 'U' group forms to *fight anti= Semitism by Mike Sobel Daily Staff Writer A newly-formed group, Students Against Anti-Semitism, held its first meeting last night at Hillel. Using an open forum, the 30 students who attended the meeting tried to lay out goals and objectives for the new group in light of recent incidents of anti-Semitism on campus. Hillel Director Michael Brooks, who also attended the meeting, said there has been an historical problem of anti-Semitism at the University. "The experience has been an un- pleasant one for Jews of the U-M campus," he said. "The problem for Jews in the '80s and '90s is that they are not considered a minority. A minority is now by definition a per- son of color." Laura Sankey, one of the group's five founders, added that the separa- tion between anti-Semitism and racism has created the need for the organization. "Anti-Semitic acts go largely un- noticed because there has been no organization which specifically ad- dresses those issues," she said. "We want to go out and reach a new pub- lic outside of Hillel." The members of the group agreedI that they should focus on education in order to deter anti-Semitic acts on campus. "There are a lot of people who come to the University without having met a Jew," one student at the meeting said. He suggested edu- cation campaigns in alliance with other campus groups, such as the Ehrlich firmly denied that party politics had anything to do with the selections. "To be honest, we were not even aware of the students' party affiliation before we made our choices," Ehrlich said. "We based our decisions on previous MSA activity and the students' familiarity with the issues. That it came out even between the parties was totally coincidental." But some MSA members questioned the coincidence. "I'm outraged," said MSA Rep. Jeff Johnson, who heads the Conservative Coalition. "There are four people sitting on MSA now that were not elected by the student body. At the same time, the are four students that do not have seats on the assembly, all who worked hard and won the students' votes." "As far as I'm concerned, this assembly has no legitimacy, for there are four people there that do not belong," Johnson said. But Choice member -Nick Mavrick, who was appointed to MSA though he did not win a seat in the overturned election, thought the appointments were just. "As far as I'm concerned, the elections were flawed from their very conception," said Mavrick, referring to the balloting and procedure snafus that plagued the MSA elections. "The election results should have never even been printed." Maverick was chair of MSA's Student Rights See MSA, Page 5 Coo Coo for Cocoa Puffs Doug Heerdegen, a junior in the Business School, has been collecting cereal boxes for two years. From "Breakfast With Barbie Cereal" to "Batman Cereal," there are about 500 boxes of 150 different types covering the walls of his room. - Unrest MOSCOW (AP) - The Kremlin yesterday told thousands of soldiers it sent to the Caucasus to shoot if need betto halt bands of Azerbaijanis and Armenians fighting each other in hills around the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. Thousands of Armenian refugees poured from the southern republic of Azerbaijan, many beaten or chased from their homes by angry mobs. Some blamed the attacks on Azerbai- janis who earlier fled ethnic violence in Armenia. continues in Soviet soldiers may interve with force in disputed area The death toll rose to 58, mostly Armenians, and the number of in- jured to 169 in 'five days of civil warfare, an Interior Ministry official said. The evening TV news show "Vremya" ran a statement from the KGB and the interior and .defense ministries, which control troops in the area, that said: "Risking their lives, they1 far refrained from using arms criminals to prevent bloodshe "However, a sharp incr outrageous attacks has made uation unbearable," and thes now were permitted to us weapons in accordance withr Armenia ne rules and Soviet law. Four burned bodies were tound in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan., the official news agency Tass said yes- terday. Eighteen Armenian residents were injured in Azerbaijan the past have so 24 hours. against Iran's spiritual leader, Ayatollah d. Ali Khamenei, said yesterday that Is- ease in lamic fervor was behind events in the sit- Soviet Azerbaijan, and warned soldiers Moscow not to deal harshly with the e their Shiite Moslem upsurge, Tehran ra- mihtary dio reported. Tenants picket, charge racism by Beth Johnson and Paul Antony Community members outraged at the alleged mistreatment of a Black public housing tenant protested be- fore the Ann Arbor Housing Com- mission last week, arguing that the tenant was treated unfairly when she was charged with violating occu- pancy regulations. Ann Arbor resident Charlotte Juide and her two children moved to the Hikone public housing site last November while her unit at the South Maple site was being reno- vated. Juide's mother and sister, Bessie and Dawn Dameron, moved with her into the new unit, allegedly violat- ing housing commission policies against overcrowding. Juide recently returned to the renovated unit, but her mother and sister remained at the Hikone site. The Housing Commission has since charged the Damerons with trespassing, claiming they are not legally permitted to remain in the unit because the lease was signed by Juide. However, the Housing Commis- sion decided last night to allow the Damerons to remain in the house until March 1. The Unity Tenant's Council said the Damerons were denied the option of signing their own lease for a pub- lic housing unit. The group claimed the commission is actually creating another homeless family, instead of helping to alleviate the housing problem in Ann Arbor. Juide said her mother and sister were not allowed to live at the Hikone site because of personal problems between her and one of the Housing Commission members. Bonnie Newlun, Executive Direc- tor of the Housing Commission, said Juide and her family violated their lease, as well as federal regula- tions governing overcrowding and leasing. "The Damerons do not have the right to be there," Newlun said. Unity picketed in front of the Housing Commission office last Friday. Tracye Matthews, the United Coalition Against Racism represen- tative to Unity, said, "The main is- sue involves Ms. Juide and her fam- ily, but the picket was also directed at general tenant mistreatment and poor unit rehabilitation." The treatment of Juide and her family was "blatant racial discrimi- nation and harassment," according to a Unity press release. The tenant's council also claimed the work dote on the South Maple rehabilitation project was sub-standard as a result of racial discrimination. Approxi- mately 95 percent of the tenants at See PICKET, page 2 Cutting class A Community High School student escapes from class through a window while an accomplice stands guard Wednesday afternoon. Study says eating oat bran does not lower cholesterol BOSTON (AP) - Contrary to cereal ads and popular belief, oat bran does not lower cholesterol levels, according to a study that challenges one of the biggest food crazes of the 1980s. Critics were skeptical of the findings. largely because it is rich in soluble fiber. Sev- eral studies have suggested that this kind of fiber somehow removes cholesterol from the body. But this latest study concluded that people's cholesterol levels dropped just as much when cholesterol consumption, not high fiber intake, entirely explained the drop in cholesterol seen. in their study. The study, conducted on 20 volunteers, most of them hospital dietitians, was directed by dietitian Janis Swain at Brigham and day. The volunteers could eat whatever else they wanted but had to keep track of what they ate and how much. On both the oat and non-oat regiments, their cholesterol levels were about 7 percent