Many students complain about the University Board of Regents, but what if a student served on the board. Don't laugh. The possibility is more realistic than you may think. They Might Be Giants brings their upbeat and often bizarre style to The Michigan Theater this weekend. Find out if they really are. Is everybody ready for tomorrow's football game? Yeah, that's right. Football. The real question is who to root for in Michigan's annual intrasquad spring game. Today Mostly cloudy; High 56, Low 45 Tomorrow Chance of showers; High 62, Low 40 WE 46V 4v t tn 7l- 7 titt at One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vo. S & N. 12AnnAbr ihgn-Fiay, Ap i 0 192 ©192 he ichiga al Students at Duke celebrate with fire. by Karen Sabgir Daily Higher Education Reporter Optimistic safety officers at Duke University planned far in advance for the celebrations following its NCAA basketball victory Monday night. "We've been preparing for this since December," said Lt. Charles Nordan of the Duke University Public Safety Department. Prior to the championship game, the Duke Chronicle and local news- papers and television stations an- nounced that a bonfire - to be con- tained in an empty parking lot and supervised by safety officers - would be held for two hours following the end of the game. Although the bonfire was under control at first, when officers an- nounced that the two-hour time limit was up, the atmosphere drastically changed. "It was pretty chaotic after the two hours," Nordan said. Students started their own tradi- tional mini-bonfire - fueled by three park benches - in a university quadrangle. First-year student Luke Dollar said, "We usually light a bench or two after basketball games. We just make a bonfire of our own in the middle of the quad." Officers in the area tried to con- trol the unexpected second fire but were not entirely successful. "A few students went through it and got first, second, and third degree burns on their arms - two students actually fell into the fire," Nordan said. Dollar said when a bench gets thrown into the fire, students run across it before it catches fire and just when it is beginning to catch. Although Nordan said he thought more than 5,000 students and "townies" attended the planned bon- fire, Dollar said the second bonfire was much more enjoyable because it was not structured. "All roads to campus were blocked off, not even pizza trucks could get in," Dollar said. "Public Safety did a wonderful job, but I See DUKE, Page 2 I Noriega convicted of 0d eight d MIAMI (AP) - Manuel Nor- iega, the dictator who defied a su- perpower, was convicted of eight of 10 drug and racketeering charges yesterday, two years after the long arm of America plucked him from Panama in a bloody invasion. The ousted Panamanian leader's conviction included the key counts of racketeering and racketeering conspiracy. The eight counts carry a possible maximum sentence of 120 years. Sentencing was set for July 10. "We did one heck of a job. We're proud of what we did," said Assis- tant U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan. U.S. Attorney James McAdams said as soon as Noriega is sentenced, he will be taken to Tampa for a trial on marijuana smuggling charges. If convicted in that case, he could be sentenced to 35 years in prison. The defense said it would appeal the verdict. President Bush called the convic- tion "a major victory against the drug lords." "I hope it sends a lesson to drug lords here and around the world they will pay a price if they continue to poison the lives of our kids in this country or anywhere else," Bush said at a Washington meeting with Nicaraguan President Violetta Chamorro. Defense attorney Frank Rubino was bitter, and said the appeal would be based on issues including Norie- ga's prisoner-of-war status and the rug charges invasion. "The United States government in its self-appointed role as world policeman ... saw fit to invade a for- eign country and seize its leader," he said. "This, in our opinion, is the mod- ern day version of the Crusades, that 'I hope it sends a lesson to drug lords here and around the world they will pay a price if they continue to poison the lives of our kids in this country or anywhere else.' - George Bush the United States will now trample across the entire world, imposing its will upon so-called independent, sovereign nations. Unless the foreign governments are willing to kneel once a day and face Washington and give grace to George Bush, they, too, may be in the same posture as General Noriega." Noriega was acquitted of cocaine distribution and conspiracy to import cocaine. There was no visible reaction from Noriega or the jurors as the verdicts were read. In the row be- hind the defense, two of Noriega's daughters wept while his wife, Feli- cidad, stared forward without ex- pression. The U.S. District Court trial lasted seven months, during which the government painstakingly built its case against a head of state it called "a small man in a general's uniform" who was "just another crooked cop." The verdict came in the jury's fifth day of deliberations. On Wednesday, they announced they were deadlocked with one holdout; Judge William Hoeveler urged them to try again. "The decision was difficult," the foreman, Lester Spencer, told re- porters after the verdict. "The deci- sion was heavily debated back and forth." The defense maintained Noriega was a victim of U.S. politics, saying the case "smelled all the way to Washington." The attorneys por- trayed the government's witnesses as unscrupulous thugs looking only for a "get-out-of-jail-free card." The trial marked the first time the United States invaded a sovereign country and brought back its leader for a criminal trial. The government dubbed the invasion Operation Just Cause. Noriega was indicted on Feb. 4, 1988, along with 15 other people, including the head of Colombia's Medellin drug cartel, Pablo Escobar. Say 'ahhh' John Grant, a 4th-year dentristy student, works on Dawn Barbier yesterday at the Dental school. Barbier traveled more than 100 miles for dental work. Minority status does not play role in aid selection by Mona Qureshi Daily Staff Reporter Although a spokesperson at the Office of Financial Aid says prefer- ence is not given to people of color who request aid, students said they have mixed feelings about how aid is granted for minority students. "In the world of financial aid, we try to use the resources so those choices are not necessary. We look at people and plan aid so they all can be taken care of," said Judith Harper, associate director of the Office of Financial Aid. She explained that the University attempts to meet the needs of all stu- dents requesting financial aid. Minority status does not play a role in the selection process of need- based aid, Harper said. After awarding merit scholar- ships to those who deserve them, the Office of Financial Aid reviews how much need-based aid should be given to accomodate a prospective student, Harper said. "Most minority scholarships are to encourage underrepresented mi- nority students to come to the cam- pus and are based on academic achievement, not need," Harper said. She said the financial aid office provides merit scholarships specifi- cally for students of color as a way of fulfilling the Michigan Mandate. The Michigan Mandate is a doc- umented commitment to a progres- sion in diversity the University made official in1988. Harper said people don't gener- ally question the financial aid allocation process. "We haven't had any particular backlash from making minority scholarship provisions. It's always individuals who will raise questions about that," Harper said. Students said they are not sure how financial aid is allocated, but some said they assume the University's commitment to diversity does play a role. "My opinion is the school would give aid to a minority," LSA sophomore Daljit Doogal said. "I definitely think the University includes one's minority status for fi- nancial aid," said Jim Alley, a first- year MBA student in the Business school. Doogal and Alley speculated about whether the same amount of aid would be given to two studens with the same socio-economic standings, but of different ethnicities. "If it was up to me, I'd split the aid in half and give it to both of them.," Doogal said. "If it were a true toss-up, I would probably flip a coin," Alley said. Alley said he does not have prob- lems with programs which give the edge to people of color as long as they claim that they do. Alley added that he thinks the University should maintain its commitment since it makes it public. "If you're a minority in this country, there are more pressures against movements you make. Systems like this are set up so Blacks, Asians, and even women get See NEED, Page 2 Blood banks field calls from worried transfusion patients Associated Press A day after Arthur Ashe an- nounced he got AIDS from a blood transfusion, blood banks fielded calls from worried transfusion recip- ients. Officials say the blood supply has become markedly safer against AIDS since March 1985, when screening for the virus began. One woman worried by Ashe's announcement had gotten a blood transfusion after a hysterectomy about a year ago. Even though she had tested nega- tive for the AIDS virus three months and again six months after the transfusion, she called the American Red Cross Blood Services-Northeast Region in Dedham, Mass., yesterday morning. "What I told her was, for her own peace of mind, have another test, and if that's negative, then just to figure she is ... free of the AIDS virus," said Blanche Lansky, the blood center's director of commu- nity services. It was one of 10 calls to the cen- ter by early yesterday afternoon. The National AIDS Hotline also reported an increase in calls Wednesday. "Clearly it has renewed the fear of getting AIDS from a transfusion," said Bill Teague, president of the Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center in Houston, which had received 15 to 20 calls by mid-morning. Ashe, a tennis star of the '60s and '70s, said he believed he was infected by blood transfused after heart-bypass surgery in 1983. That was before blood banks began screening blood for the AIDS virus in March 1985. 'U' student clinches first place on tour of 'American Gladiators' Alexander Cockburn of The Nation speaks at Hutchins Hall last night. by Christopher Scherer Daily Staff Reporter "It was a total riot!" said Looby, who is also a strength coach for the Michigan football team. A lthrn1, nt firet hPunenoir&*_r Looby called the power ball event the most physically strenuous because of the straightforward inter- actionof both the Gla~diatrszand Columnist Cockburn defends the nnlitiend left in I iw SIehnnl frnuum Kinesiology junior Terry Looby G i