Can't get there from here? Well, if the Campus Safety Committee of the Michigan Student Assembly has anything to say about it, you may not be able to get there on your bike. A They're no longer riding that groovy train, but The Farm is back with a new album. Read a review of this latest effort. SPORTS 8 Thrashin' Tony Tolbert made his first pilgrimage back to his former basketball mecca last night - but this time he was in a University of Detroit uniform. The R.H. Factor looks at his return. Todtay Sunshine daydream; High 34, Low 22 Tomorrow Snow+rain=slush; High 36, Low 30 we 4bv t Itttl *ar One hundred two years of editorial freedom Vo.. . N.49An ror ician-uedyDcebrG,99 o 92 h Mc ia Dily Clinton considers Cabinet nomnees WASHINGTON (AP) - President-elect Clinton plans to make several major appointments over the next week, building an eco- nomic team of white men and nam- ing women to several other top posts, advisers said yesterday. The secretive selection process generated an 'ever-growing frenzy of speculation. "He finds a lot of it humorous," Clinton confidant Bruce Lindsey said of the constant public handicapping of various Cabinet contenders. "The people who know what is going on are a very small group," Lindsey said. "Most of the people who are talking about it don't know what they are talking about." Senior transition aides said Clinton was likely to name a few women and minorities to major ad- ministration posts in the next week to 10 days to signal a commitment to his pledge of a Cabinet that "looks like America." Clinton wants to ensure there is diversity among early appointments "so we don't get sidetracked by what would be ultimately groundless criticism," said one adviser. The first announcements are likely Thursday. Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen is Clinton's choice for treasury secre- tary, and California Rep. Leon Panetta the front-runner to head the Office of Management and Budget, according to transition . and Democratic sources. Weekend interviews with transi- tion and Democratic sources sug- gested Indiana Rep. Jill Long as a serious contender for Agriculture secretary. Former Vermont Gov. Madeleine Kunin also is seen by se- nior Clinton advisers as likely for a major post, perhaps heading the See CLINTON, Page 2 U.S. soldiers begin Somali relief effort MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) - Somalis got their first look at U.S. power yesterday when Navy war- planes roared over Mogadishu, and Pentagon sources said Marines would land at dawn tomorrow to begin helping the starving people. The 1,800 Marines standing off- shore on three Navy ships are the vanguard of a multinational rescue mission in the war and famine- wracked nation. Pentagon sources said most of the 28,000 U.S. soldiers and Marines committed to the opera- tion might not begin arriving for several days. Robert Oakley, a special U.S. en- voy and former U.S. ambassador to Somalia, arrived yesterday to meet with leaders of Somalia's warring clan leaders and with international aid workers to outline plans for the U.S.-led operation. He stressed that Washington envisioned a humanitar- ian effort and not a military one. Oakley told reporters the U.N.- authorized operation would be the opposite of Desert Storm. "We hope it will remain a hu- manitarian operation all the way through, because the purpose is to protect deliveries of relief supplies, relief workers and relief recipients," Oakley said. Aid groups say half the food do- nated for starving Somalis has been stolen by the gangs of soldiers who have held sway during a nearly 2- year-old civil war. An estimated 300,000 Somalis have died from starvation, disease and fighting this year, and 250,000 more are feared to be in imminent danger. U.S. troops and smaller contin- gents from France, Canada, Italy, Egypt, Turkey, Kuwait and other nations hope to impose calm so re- lief supplies can move into the coun- tryside in safety. American officials have said U.S. troops will fight if necessary. Marlin Fitzwater, the White House spokesperson, said yesterday that the initial response from Somali war- lords had been better than expected. See SOMALIA, Page 2 Uprooted U-M grounds employees take down a dead tree in front of Angel Hall yesterday. Two new trees will be planted in place of the dead one. SAPAC besieged by sexual assault reports by Erin Einhorn Daily Crime Reporter The number of sexual assaults reported to the U-M Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC) have been so high this year that a small backlog of cases waiting for counseling has devel- oped, said SAPAC Director Debi Cain. In November alone, 24 people reported assaults. Eighteen people reported assaults in October, bring- ing the total number this semester to 56 - the highest SAPAC has seen in its seven years of existence. However, Cain said these statis- tics do not necessarily reflect an in- crease in campus rape. Rather, she said, because of improved campus awareness about rape, more people are seeking assistance from the cen- ter. "Our suspicion is that more peo- ple are coming forward," Cain said. "With Sexual Awareness Week and workshops, more people are familiar with SAPAC. More people are aware that we're here and are com- ing to us for free counseling." Also, she added, many of the rapes did not occur within the months they were reported. As many as 40 percent of the people who made recent reports sought counsel- ing several months or years after the incident. SAPAC Senior Counselor Kata Isarri added that many survivors re- port incidents to the center that oc- curred seven or eight years ago be- cause at the time they did not know of centers that provided counseling. Other people wait to report rapes be- cause they either do not realize im- mediately they have been raped or do not yet feel comfortable talking about it. Executive Director for University Relations Walter Harrison said the U-M is working to reduce the num- ber of campus assaults. As well as increasing funding to SAPAC, the university has installed lighting and emergency call boxes around cam- I U.S. Supreme Court . rejects challenge to 24-hour wait period Decision leaving Mississippi abortion law intact satisfies anti-abortion activists WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court rejected a challenge to a Mississippi abortion law yester- day, encouraging abortion foes but leading abortion-rights advocates to see "a frightening implication" for women nationwide. The state law requires women to get counseling and then wait 24 hours before ending their pregnancies. The justices, without comment, left intact a ruling that denied abor- tion clinic operators a hearing when they tried to block the law before it took effect last Auguss. s At issue was how soon after such a law's enactment women may sue claiming it is an "undue burden" on their constitutional right. Yesterday's action is not a deci- sion on the merits of the Mississippi rdie...t nnr ,z z. n n it n,.c-_ in "endless litigation over whether women have the right to know the facts about the development of the unborn child and about alternatives to abortion." In other matters, the court: Refused to reinstate the Iran- Contra convictions of former na- tional security adviser John Poindexter. Agreed to decide whether new congressional districts fashioned by North Carolina's General Assembly discriminate unlawfully against white voters. Refused to kill a lawsuit against the Pentagon by a California lesbian kicked out of the Army re- serves because of her sexual preference. Steered clear of a Florida ob- scenity flap over rap, leaving intact a ruling that said the group 2 Live Crew's album "As Nasty as They Wanna Be" wrongly was denied free-speech protection. In the Mississippi abortion case, a federal appeals court threw out a pus during the past few years. In addition, Harrison said, "What the university has been trying to do is educate people as much as possi- ble ... more education will ulti- mately change behavior." Fourteen of the 24 people report- ing sexual assaults in November, and 11 of the 18 people reporting in October, said they were assaulted by an acquaintance. No complete in- formation is available about eight of the November reports and five of the See RAPE, Page 2 Big second half leads 'M' cagers past U of D by Adam Miller Daily Basketball Writer When the loudest cheer you get at home is during a musical chairs game at halftime, it's a sign you have problems. Or it could just be a sign that you are playing Detroit Mercy. In either case, that's just the situ- ation the Michigan men's basketball team faced last night in its lackluster 92-77 victory over the Titans at Crisler Arena. After a truly forget- table first half, the fans were hungry for action, and they got it with the WhereHouse Records musical chair contest. The student section ex- ploded with Duke-like noise during the final round as contestants pushed, shoved, and pulled chairs out from under each other in pursuit of compact discs. Leading only 43-37 at the break, Michigan faced an immediate surge by the visitors, who cut the lead to three, 49-46, on a trey from former Wolverine Tony Tolbert with 17:29 remaining. Tolbert finished with a .__ -hm 10_) KRISTOFFER GILLETTE/Daily Todd Crabtree, a graduate student at Michigan State University (MSU), waits in line with several others at the Angell Hall Computing Center last night. Crabtree lives in Ann Arbor and was waiting to type a research paper. Students endure 3 hour waits, broken computers to complete final papers by Adam Anger Daily Staff Reporter More than 100 students lined the hallways and benches of Angell Hall at 8:00 last night, i.,rrant1n 1.-;. far .-mn titprc campus," said Ian Ellison, a tem- porary data processing assistant at Angell Hall. Computer consultants esti- mated the waitlist would move at "Although students have to sometimes wait, the situation is a lot better this year compared to last year," said Bryan Nakfoor, temporary data processing assis- tnntnt " A , 1 ,,n _ __m tn