State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) has always been a champion of student's rights. With the deputization hearings just around the corner, students need his help more than ever. Sean Connery and Lorraine Bracco concoct another a bomb in Medicine Man, a movie for which there is no cure. SPORTSMonday The years go by, but the beat goes on for the Michigan swimming program. This weekend, coach Jon Urbanchek's men's team won its seventh consecutive Big Ten title. Today Cold, a bit of snow; High: 24, Low: 1 5*' Tomorrow ** A few flurries; High 32, Low 14 V 4v 41w t til tlqvtwrt YI One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vol CII, No. 73 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, February 10, 1992 y 9 The Mhgan Daily Russians protest Seconomic reforms MOSCOW (AP) - In a grow- ing split in public opinion over eco- nomic reforms, tens of thousands of people rallied against President Boris Yeltsin yesterday, but more than 10,000 Yeltsin partisans demonstrated in support. The competing protests, less than two months after the collapse of the Soviet Union, were being watched as a measure of Yeltsin's popularity as prices rise and living standards fall. In the past month, prices in Russia and across the Commonwealth of Independent State have nearly quadrupled for many goods that had been held at artificially low prices for decades. In a symbolic move, the Yeltsin backers staged their demonstration at the Russian Parliament. building, where Yeltsin led the anti-coup vigil in August that propelled him to the leading political role in the country. At the parliament, which is 0known as the White House, a speaker told the cheering crowd: "We don't want to demonstrate. ,We want to work. But we must come to the defense of the White House!" The hard-liners' rally in Moscow - where many waved the red flag of the old union - was one of the biggest of its kind since the coup. Recent rallies by pro-commu- *nists. and other traditionalists rarely drew more than 1,000 people, so yesterday's turnout indicated growing support and organization among the hard-liners. The rally was organized by a loose coalition of groups that in- clude the Russian Communist Workers' Party, the Moscow Labor Party and the nationalist movement Nashi, or Ours. They are united by See RUSSIANS, Page 2 Judge throws out challenge to couples law by Travis McReynolds Daily City Reporter A lawsuit challenging Ann Ar- bor's domestic partnership ordi- nance - which allows heterosexual and homosexual couples to register their relationships with the City Clerk's office - was dismissed from court Friday. The lawsuit, brought by Charles and Ellen Graham, has two compo- nents. The first part addresses the direct legality of the ordinance, and the second part refers to the regis-, tered relationship between two fe- male city employees, Jayne Miller and Chris McCown. Chief Washtenaw Circuit Judge Melinda Morris ruled against the Grahams' lawsuit. Morris said the Grahams have no legal standing to challenge the ordinance which was passed unanimously by the City Council Nov. 4 of last year. Steven Jentzen, the Grahams' at- torney, said he was somewhat sur- prised by the ruling. "We live in a state that encour- ages marriage. This ordinance en- courages unmarried couples to en- gage in sexual relationships that are contrary to relationships encour- aged by state law," Jentzen said. "The ordinance supports and en- courages extra-marital sexual rela- tions with unmarried couples, which is illegal in the state of Michigan," he added. Miller and McCown receive some extended insurance benefits as a result of their relationship, their attorney David Chambers said. An optional paid sick day to care for an ill partner is an example benefit, he See RULING, Page 2 Follow your nose... Art School Jennifer Brown paints the wall of Fred-Taylor House in South Quad with a jungle theme Saturday. Harkin, Bush touted as Iowa shoo-ins DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Democrats holding more than 2,000 precinct caucuses across this state today have only one question to an- swer: How big a victory will they cratic presidential field in Septem- ber, and his grip on the Iowa Demo- cratic Party's machinery kept other candidates from challenging him in the caucuses. Only Harkin has opened an office and hired a campaign staff. Former California Gov. Jerry Brown ven- tured into the state, but complained the caucuses are rigged in Harkin's favor. The absence of a fight led politi- cal leaders to predict that many Iowans would find something else to do today. They said only about 5 percent of the state's 482,880 regis- tered Republicans and 579,875 registered Democrats would show up. Yesterday, Harkin zipped across the state, cajoling voters to top the low-turnout projections and give him a win big enough to push him toward the top of the slate in New Hampshire and the South. "We're going to win the cau- cuses, I know that. But I need to do it right," he said in Ottumwa. President Bush faces a challenge from conservative commentator Pat Buchanan and former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke. But Republicans decided not to collect presidential preferences of those attending GOP caucuses. Iowa Republican Chairman Richard Schwarm said the party felt that Duke was not a real Republican and Buchanan's challenge was merely symbolic. To ensure a Bush ictory, Rep itcn ":111 clect lo- cal party officials, fight about platform issues and go home early. Presidential candidates compete for voter support give home-state Sen. Tom Harkin? Republicans have even less to de- cide in the caucus meetings, tradi- tionally 'he much ballyhooed kick- off to the presidential campaign season. Not this time. Harkin jumped into the Demo- NASHUA, N.H. (AP) - Paul Tsongas boasted of momentum yes- terday heading into the final week of New Hampshire's lead-off Democratic presidential primary campaign and received for his surge a harsh attack from rival Bob Kerrey. Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin was home securing his virtually certain win in today's caucuses. Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton also went home, to Little Rock, but is due back in New Hampshire today. Former California Gov. Jerry Brown campaigned across Maine, continuing his attack on the politi- cal system, saying it was preventing national health insurance - and his candidacy - from taking hold. A new poll of likely Democratic voters in New Hampshire showed Tsongas, a former Massachusetts senator, benefiting from wavering support of Clinton, whose campaign was preoccupied this week with questions about his use of a See CANDIDATES, Page 2 'U' pilot flies through the air with greatest of ease " by Josh Meckler * Daily Staff. Reporter Rich Jackson's job description sounds a lot like a famous super- hero's. Jackson flies through the air, stops to pick up people whose lives are in danger, and then whisks them off to safety. But he has no 'S' on his chest. In- stead, it's on the helicopter he flies for Survival Flight at the Univer- sity of Michigan Hospital. Jackson said about 95 percent of his missions are spent with two flight nurses flying to other hospi- tals to pick up patients and transfer them to the University's more ad- vanced treatment facilities. The rest of the time, Jackson and the nurses fly directly to the scene of an accident, or to a hospital where an accident victim has just been taken. Those experiences, Jackson said, are the most memo- rable and trying parts of his job. Sometimes at hospitals, Jackson encounters emotional family mem- 'You fly in all different types of weather, 12 months a year and 24 hours a day.' - Rich Jackson Survival flight pilot bers who tell him to fly safely. "It's a strange thing to say. Yes, I am going to fly safely, but I wouldn't fly unsafely anyway," Jackson said. "You're trying to separate yourself from all this emotion just to do your job well." Jackson has 24 years of flying experience behind him to help him with his present job. He first flew in 1967 after join- ing the Army and going to flight school in Fort Rucker, Ala. In 1968, Jackson left for a year-long tour of duty in Vietnam where he flew combat support for soldiers in a mountainous region of the country. In addition to the difficulty of navigating the terrain, Jackson also faced the problem of maneuvering through streams of artillery fire. Unlike the Man of Steel, the steel- of his helicopter could not repel bullets. "Fifty-caliber rounds are very interesting because it looks like they're shooting basketballs at See JACKSON, Page 2 S.Quad flood irks 4So ,,og',& is students ue by Josh Meckler and Melissa Peerless .f/Daily Staff Reporters Instead of coming home n. X sloshed, some South Quad residents of had to slosh home Friday night . when a leaking urinal on the third floor of Hunt House caused a flood, leaving the hall covered with one to two inches of water. One student said the leak started at about 11 p.m. when two students who were visiting the {/ University pulled a pipe above the urinal out of the wall. LSA sophomore Matt Wiley .. ~who lives down the hall from the bathroom - said, "The guys were friends of someone who lives on the hall. They were drinking quite 01YF f 5heavily and they went in the bath- room and pulled out the tube." However, Dallas Lanier, third Hunt's resident advisor (RA), said no one is sure how the flood started. "It has not even been confirmed that a person pulled the pipe out of the wall," he said. "Security is still investigating to find the Blacks anticipate the future Events of Black History Month focus on tomorrow by Mona Qureshi Daily Staff Reporter "A Legacy for Our Tomorrow" is the theme of this year's Black History Month events. The month's activities include several social pro- ation, is expected to speak on racism in Europe. The Black Student Union is sponsoring Jefferies' visit. Other events include Black His- tory Month dinners sponsored by residence halls and planned by mi- lots due to racial tensions during that era. Wang said the group's struggle stood out to her as a multicultural one, not just a Black struggle. "It shows that when it comes to