If Ann Arbor city officials really want us to got to the polls and vote, then they should make it possible to do it without waiting in hour-long lines. A lot of people think the Daily is full of fiction every day, but today, we're actually admitting it. Check out our annual Fiction and Poetry issue. Michigan sports fans can take a trip down memory lane at the Towsley Sports Museum located in Schembechler Hall. EA Today Gray with occasional rain: High 48, Low 34 Tomorrow Cloudy and colder; High 40, Low 28 It t lullt ti One hundred two yea rs of editorial freedon Vol. CIII, No.33 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 12,1992 ©1992 The Michigan Daily NCAA clears U-M hoops trio to play EVAN PETR IE/Daiiy Child's play Matthew Sulham, a 10-year-old from Angell Elementary School in Ann Arbor, plays on top of a sculpture in front of the Museum of Art. ourt unermines m ar ga an Clinton says he will repeal restriction; Pentagon prepares staff by Ryan Herringon and Adam Miller Daily Basketball Writers The NCAA reinstated Michigan men's basketball players Eric Riley, Jalen Rose, and Mayce (Chris) Webber yesterday, and cleared all members of the team of any charges against them stemming from the Wolverines' activities with charity events and basketball camps during this past summer. "We thought the whole time we would get (cleared)," Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. "We never thought we were wrong." The three players had been mired in two potential violations. The first involved their participation in the "0-K Shootout" fundraiser in Hol- land, Mich., this summer. The play- ers were paid s300 each for judging slam-dunk contests. NCAA rules allow only "reimbursement for actual expenses" when players participate in charity and non-profit events. When the players were suspended Sept. 11, they paid the extra money to the University. In a prepared statement, the NCAA eligibility staff said that "the actions of the university were sufficient" to rectify this situation. The second entanglement with the NCAA rules came over summer high school basketball camps, which many Michigan players had attended as guest lecturers. The players re- ceived monetary compensation for their work at the camps, averaging $200 per appearance. In question was whether or not the players could WASHINGTON (AP) - President-elect Bill Clinton will be forced to deal with one of the most difficult issues affecting the military in decades - the Pentagon's 50- year ban on homosexuals and his promise to end it. Clinton has not said when or how such a policy change would be insti- tuted. And few inside the Pentagon have begun to prepare the military's 1.8 million members for such a ma- E~ ~I jor change, officials said. Lawrence Korb, Pentagon per- sonnel chief during the Reagan ad- ministration, predicted, "Even if he doesn't act - which he could by signing an executive order - the courts will make the Pentagon do it." Just Tuesday, a federal judge in Los Angeles reaff irmed his order that the Navy reinstate a homosexual sailor, though the judge did not rule on the overall issue of whether the military ban is legal under the Constitution. Speaking to reporters yesterday in Little Rock, Clinton said, "I don't think (homosexual)- status alone, in the absence of some sestrutiv be- havior, should disqualify people" from serving in the military. The president-elect said he in- tends to consult with military leaders about "the mechanics" of a change in policy, but did not say when that might occur. Revoking the ban would be one of the most far-reaching social changes imposed on the armed scr- vices since President Truman or- dered Blacks integrated into the mili- tary in 1948. Proponents of a change in the policy have expressed hope that Clinton will remove the ban in his first days in office. *MSA reps. seek reelection to complete unfinished business Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, and Eric Riley will be allowed to play in all of U-M's games according to NCAA decisions released yesterday, saying: the players did not receive excessive payment for work at camps last summer; the eligibility of Webber, Rose, and Riley was restored; the university's disciplinary actions,including repayment of money from the charity tournament, were sufficient. receive payment for these services under NCAA rules. In addition, NCAA rules allow only one player to visit a camp at a time, but, in several situations, mul- tiple Wolverines attended the same summer camp. Michigan was cleared in the area of compensation. The NCAA Inter- pretations Committee determined that while NCAA rules prohibit stu- dent-athletes from receiving com- pensation for such lecturing, the practice has become so.common- place throughout the country that punishing the Wolverines would un- necessarily single them out. The NCAA is still deciding on the issue of multiple-players at camps, but NCAA spokesperson Janet Justice said it is treating the matter as a "secondary violation." "We still have to rule on it," Jus- See BASKETBALL, Page 8 Beaten victim had record of violence DETROIT (AP) - A man beaten by Detroit police had a record of vi- olent conflict with authorities while he was living in suburban Chicago, a prosecutor said yesterday. Lake County, Ill. State's Attorney's Office announced that Green was convicted of battery in 1990 for pushing two police officers. A 1989 charge of resisting and ob- structing police was dismissed, said Matt Chancey, chief of the felony division. Green also had convictions for marijuana possession, drunken driv- ing and driving with a revoked li- cense, Chancey added. A 1989 bat- tery charge against Green was dropped after the female victim re- fused to testify. Green was bludgeoned with flashlights when two plainclothes officers approached him in his car parked near a suspected crack co- caine house on Nov. 5. Detroit po- lice Chief Stanley Knox has said five other officers watched or took part. All seven officers were sus- pended without pay. Witnesses' accounts have dif- fered on how much, if any resistance Green gave the officers. Civilian witnesses have said by Robin Litwin Daily MSA Reporter While 19 of the current Michigan Student Assembly members have Sdecided to call it quits, four repre- sentatives will vie for re-election in the upcoming contest. "I felt a lot of business that got started back when Jamie Green was president needs to be finished. There's still a lot of things that can be done to help students." said En- gineering Rep. Brent House. "I'm specifically working on the Engineering budget. Engineers get a very small amount of money com- pared to the actual number of people in (the school)," House added. Engineering Rep. Brian Kight, who is running his third MSA cam- paign, said the unfinished work on the Statement of Students' Rights and Responsibilities will be his pri- mary focus, if he is re-elected. "The main reason I'm running again is because there's a lot of un- finished business, particularly on the code. Because (MSA Student Rights Commission Chair Rob VanHouwel- ing) is not running, we still need someone on the assembly itself who's been familiar with what's go- ing on with the code," Kight said. "I want to make sure it comes to a good conclusion," he added. Rules and Elections Chair Roger DeRoo pointed to his work with the Michigan Collegiate Coalition (MCC) as his primary reason for running again. "I'd like to make sure MSA's membership in MCC is solid and that the viewpoints of students are represented in Lansing. The state Legislature has been far more recep- tive than the administration to stu- dents' ideas," DcRoo said. Medical school Rep. Michael Lee said although he wants to improve University Health Services and stu- dent insurance, he had second thoughts about running again. "At first I didn't want to run, but See MSA, Page 3 Berkeley 'naked guy' bares all for class by Shelley Morrison Daily Higher Education Reporter Getting ready for school in the morning is easy for Andrew Mar- tinez - all he has to do is don his sandals. Martinez, the notorious "Naked Guy" at the University of California at Berkeley (UC-B), has been going to class nude for what university of- ficials have estimated to be more than two months. Student and faculty complaints about Martinez's exposure have cre- ated such an uproar that UC-B Chancellor Chang-Lin Tien has is- Tien was unavailable for comment. UC-B's new policy forbids "indecent exposure, public nudity, and lewd or offensive conduct on the UC-B campus." Policy violations are punishable under the university's student-conduct code and criminal law. Because of his actions and com- plaints that his nudity is sexual ha- rassment, Martinez, a sophomore, is banned from campus for two weeks and may be expelled. UC-B campus police officer Dave McCain said that Martinez's Two months ago, Martinez and several nude cohorts from a group called X-Plicit, staged a "nuderin" at UC-B's Sproul Plaza. McCain esti- mated about 20 people frolicked naked in the plaza. Because there were no laws for- bidding nudity in Berkeley, no ar- rests were made. Martinez reportedly spoke to the crowd about his belief that clothing is repressive. "There's a lot of social control that goes on," Martinez said. UC-B students had mixed reac- tions to the event. KT .,« s. n s «n~ ..r o r Amy Jardon, Erik Parker and Dean Sniegowski, members of the Air Force ROTC Drill Team, attend to a flag yesterday that had been ceremoniously retired. ationm onors veterans but camp uses apathetic