TODAY Cloudy, snow possible; High: 31, Low: 21. TOMORROW Partly cloudy; High: 34, Low: 18. 4& 144&w 4v tlyan :4Daillj New Vice President should listen to students. See OPINION Page 4. One hundred and one years of editorial freedom The MicniganDaily Vol, CI1, No. 29 Ann Arbor, Michigan- Thursday, November 7,1991 copy"g0'4:199' w ° r < v, R ^k / 3 1 i g i9 LL lobby)Homeless 1. 54[ ^. u CL f SX, ' "r s "-' . ..... . e P ; CQ ra 4 y t. S P . F ial= 9 rf A N:1 S rL t 9 f 7 Q 3r k i £ } roi counci PH p rr r t o s t o p vs s s t ' i' Eo-3 fiLL f s Y r y .r ' dsy r? ;jy2 +1k ^' E ?' 'i rr F s f : "y 3 '', sr ' s § , " " SM111 2 f 33 / J \ _ p L o a s sts Li , 'SL v 'GAS c F r:T H Ym r dy & ' ,; evic io n s L H: "1%N x " S i7a ) r >F r Cold weather, welf are cuts prompt 13U Y j YF YS 'a s 5 ; fes's (.. " Ss e :: s f9 h to storm Cat -County Building in protest e z fRi.LtF d KRISTOFFER GILLETTE/Daily This won't hurt a bit Dick Warsocki, a visiting artist from Omaha, Neb., practices his craft yesterday on a fellow tatooist, Miz Jo-D Bones. Wofford victory in Pa. race ives Democrats hope for1 92 DETROIT (AP) - The bitter cold prompted about 150 protesters to storm the City-County Building yesterday, urging a moratorium on evictions in the wake of welfare cuts. The homeless and homeless advocates packed into the hallway outside the Detroit City Council chambers chanting "No housing, no peace," and "Pass the moratorium." Police blocked the entrance to the council office. City council President Maryann Mahaffey emerged to talk to the group, which interrupted her several times to chant. "We're tired of these stupid excuses," protester Joyce Ericsonshouted. "We're not going to die in the cold." Mahaffey, 66, and about 5-feet tall, led the mob down the hall to the auditorium, where about.20 police officers filed in and lined the stairs. "I'm trying to be honest and open with you," she told them. "We did not know you were coming." She said the city doesn't have the authority to pass a moratorium to stop evictions and encouraged the group to go to the state attorney general with their concerns about welfare cuts. "We're asking the state Legislature and the governor to come up with the money," she said. Police escorted three protesters - two men and a woman - out of the building but said no arrests were made. The Michigan Court of Appeals was expected to act this week on a request to overturn the cutoff of benefits to 81,000 childless adults, a move the state said was needed because of budget problems. A group of landlords agreed to hold off evicting 5,000 former welfare recipients pending the ruling. City officials were in court this week trying to stop the Seville Apartments Hotel in Cass Corridor from evicting residents. Some were ordered out of their apartments Tuesday night. "We're human beings. It's completely ludicrous to cut off all these people and put them on the streets," said Durk Barton, spokesperson for the Emergency Committee for a Moratorium on Evictions & Utility Shut-offs. "We're asking the city to give the people an opportunity to adjust." The city council later approved a resolution to ask Mayor Coleman Young to create more temporary shelters at city recreation centers. The city already has opened two centers and plans to add a third on 'We're asking the city to give the people an opportunity to adjust' - Durk Barton protester Monday. City vans with yellow lights and bullhorns round up street people every night. "We did not designate which ones, but we would like to see all the recreation centers opened up," said Councilman Mel Ravitz. Mayoral spokesperson Bob Berg said he was unaware of the new resolution and was uncertain whether more temporary shelters would solve the problem. "The task force has been meeting and we'll be making some announcements next week on what the city can do," Berg said Yesterday. "(Young) is checking things out before he makes his announcement." The protest started in the morning outside, but the 30-degree temperatures with fierce *winds off the Detroit River prompted demonstrators to head indoors. The weather, about 20-degrees below normal for this time of year, has been adding to the plight of the newly homeless. Tim Spidell, 23, who was evicted from his apartment Tuesday, said his $210 a month in General Assistance was cut and his part-time job at McDonald's wasn't enough for rent. Associated Press Democrats savored Sen. Harris Wof- ord's smashing victory in Pennsylvania yesterday as evidence of increasing strength heading into the 1992 campaigns for the White House and Congress. A chas- tened President Bush said "we'll try even harder" to repair the economy and expand health insurance. The sensitive issue of race vied with pocketbook concerns in post-mortems on the off-year elections. Bush hailed the sur- prise victory of Republican Kirk Fordice in the Mississippi governor's race after a campaign that stressed opposition to racial quotas. At the same time, the president sharply attacked Republican David Duke, the for- mer Ku Klux Klansman running in next week's gubernatorial runoff in Louisiana. Bush said he'd vote for the Democrat in the race if he had to choose. Sponsors of term limitations for mem- bers of Congress licked their wounds after suffering a surprising defeat in Washing- ton state, but vowed the issue would re- emerge in a dozen states or more next year. "Mark another one up for the ruling class of career politicians," said Ann Best, executive director of Citizens for Con- gressional Reform. Said seven-term Rep. Vic Fazio (D- Calif.), "I don't think any of us should un- derestimate the frustration and anger that people feel." The crosscurrents were strong in elec- tions that reached from the U.S. Senate to county supervisors. While the term-limitation measure failed in Washington, incumbents were turned out of office in striking numbers - Gov. Ray Mabus in Mississippi and Mayor Kathy Whitmire in Houston among them. House Speaker Tom Foley said the re- sults showed that voters aren't "blind, raging, out of control" despite their anger. Anti-tax sentiment came through loud and clear in New Jersey, where Democrats lost control of the legislature after push- ing through a large tax increase in 1990. Wofford said his upset victory over former Attorney General Dick Thorn- burgh after a campaign that stressed na- tionwide health care and extended jobless benefits showed that Americans "wanted to deal with problems of our own." Ap- pointed to the Senate last spring after the death of Sen. John Heinz, Wofford will serve the three years left in Heinz' six-year term. 'U' student delivers sideline coverage of game for ESPN by Jennifer Silverberg Daily Staff Reporter Terri Taliaferro spends most Football Saturdays in the stands with 100,000 other fans, but during last week's game she found herself jon the sidelines reporting the event for ESPN at the Michigan-Purdue game. ESPN called the Communi- cations Department about two weeks ago to look for a student commentator to participate in its cable coverage. The University then posted notices in an attempt to reach interested students, said Jonathan Friendly, director of the Masters Program in Journalism, After about 25 students submit- ted information about their aca- demic and on-camera experiences, 10 applicants were chosen to interview with ESPN the day before the game. "They came by (the stadium) at 11 a.m. and we gave them two sce- narios that could happen during the game - an injury scenario and a his- torical feature on Michigan atten- dance," said Susan Evans, ESPN sideline talent producer. The stu- dents were given two hours to pre- pare 30-second reports for each situation. "Personally, I thought it was a great experience because how often do you get the chance to audition for a major network before leaving school and see what the pressure situation is like," said Matt Caplan, a senior in the Communications Department who auditioned. Taliaferro was notified Friday evening that she had been chosen for the job. "Terri was the first to audition and she was really very good," Evans said. "Her problem was that she was a little nervous and when you are nervous you tend to talk a little quicker. But on the whole she did very well." Taliaferro delivered three live reports: She discussed field condi- tions; different types of footballs used by the players; and the air- planes that fly advertisements around the stadium during the game. She also interviewed Desmond Howard's and Elvis Grbac's fathers. "It was the most exciting, ex- hilarating, spontaneous experience of my life and one that I'd like to repeat," Taliaferro said. "I know ESPN was pleased because they said See ESPN, Page 2 2,300 dead as tropical storm hits Philippines TACLOBAN, Philippines (AP) - Landslides unleashed by a tropi- cal storm roared down mountains in the Philippines, sweeping screaming victims into the sea. More than 2,300 people died and 1,500 were missing and presumed dead, officials said yesterday. The landslides hit the central islands of Leyte and Negros on Tuesday, burying coastal shanty- towns under mud, debris and flood waters. "The water suddenly rose. Cars and trucks were being flushed into Ormoc Bay like toys," said Ruby Gernale, a Red Cross official in Ormoc, a city on Leyte that was hardest-hit by the furious land- slides. "People were being carried by the waters, crying out for help. But we were helpless," she said. "The current was so strong." One horrific landslide that hit the Ormoc area swept over shanty- towns, crumbling the flimsy shacks under the weight of mud and debris. Many of those killed were children, and workers were digging mass graves yesterday for the vic- tims. The disaster came during Tropi- cal Storm Thelma's sweep over the region, 450 miles southeast of Manila. The national government in Manula rnnivhPraimje awaire of the Taliaferro to a nationwide television audience. Taliaferro, a second-year masters student in journalism, was chosen to be the student sideline commentator It takes an engineer Engineering junior Mike Thayer fights the cold yesterday to change a flat tire on Church Street. Police report: use of gas on South U. crowd was appropriate by David Rheingold Daily City Reporter The Ann Arbor Police Depart- ment's internal report of the Sept. 14 tear gassing of students on South University determined that the de- cision to break up the crowd using Action taken to prevent repeat of 1989 South University from Church Street to East University so they could clear the road for traffic. At 2:00, police made another Executive Deputy Chief William Hoover said police feared that if they did not use any force, the crowd might have caused extensive NCAA victory riot didn't. "You don't get to Monday Morning Quarterback. You have to make a decision in the interest of "The justification for moving down the street... for the cost-bene- fit analysis is very weak because the interest in opening up traffic is ex- tremely low compared to the poten- tial cost of having a sweep which