Without Howard, men's basketball crushes Detroit - *1 ti .# .. -.4 - f /' 2 , (~ SIr _____.___ ' . I .;, , --e- ftoe- e -, " - e I e - I e e I - WE1 ti 1 One hundred three years of editorial freedom *1 4g.;- I I Engler to speak at commencement Winter commencement will be this Sunday at 2 p.m. in Crisler Arena. Gov. John Engler will be the main speaker. Graduating students can pick up to six tickets in Room @102 of the LS&A Building. Other people can get tickets from 9 a.m.- 8 p.m. Wednesday-Friday at the Michigan Union Ticket Office. There is a limit of two tickets per person. By NATE HURLEY DAILY STAFF REPORTER The University announced yester- day Gov. John Engler will speak at winter commencement Sunday. Engler, Michigan's 46th gover- nor, will receive an honorary degree, as will Carl Gerstacker, Elie Wiesel and Roger Wilkins. Engler Press Secretary John Truscott said the governor is looking forward to the event. "The governor will talk about education, especially the higher education system in Michi- gan," he said. Truscott continued, "(Engler) calls the University of Michigan the crown jewel of the state. He's very proud of the U-M." .Engler will likely receive a luke- warm welcome from University stu- dents because of his political view- points. "I have mixed feelings," explained graduating LSA senior Derek Einhorn. "They just try to get as big a person as they can politically. It isn't always the best thing to do." Einhorn suggested the political connections of University adminis- trators were responsible for recruit- ing Engler, as well as President Bush and Hillary Rodham Clinton, who spoke at earlier commencements. Walter Harrison, vice president for University relations, said a stand- ing committee, chaired by Rackham Dean John D'Arms, votes on all hon- orary degrees, which are then ap- proved by the University Board of Regents. "The reason he was chosen to speak is that he is the chief executive of the state and, by tradition, when the governor is given an honorary de- gree, he becomes the speaker," Harrison said. The announcement came as a sur- prise to many graduating seniors, who didn't expect such a prominent fig- ure. "It's really nice because I know a lot of people who are graduating and I was under the impression they didn't have anyone speak at winter gradua- tion," said LSA senior Kip Lewis. "It's really cool that we're actu- ally going to have a speaker students can hear, whether or not they agree with him politically," Lewis said. Engler has spoken at the Univer- sity several times before, but has never delivered a commencement address. In 1991, he introduced President Bush. A Mount Pleasant native, Engler was elected governor in 1990. He was elected to the state House when he was 22 years old in 1970. He was elected to the state Senate in 1978 and served as majority leader from 1983 to 1990. Engler received his bachelor's degree in agricultural economics from Michigan State University and a law degree from Cooley Law School. His press secretary said, "He is a Spartan, but as governor of the state, he represents all schools." -Daily News Editor Melissa Peerless contributed to this report. iN Gerstacker Engler Wiesel Wilkins "U' bans Christmas trees to eavoid fire By CARRIE BISSEY DAILY STAFF REPORTER .l .l. e* i*', Some residents of University Fam- ily Housing may be pining away for a favorite holiday tradition this month. x The University Housing Division has announced that it will no longer allow natural Christmas trees in its R r. *partment complexes. The Risk Man- s . agement Office adopted this policy after analyzing the results of experi- 3 ments conducted by the Farmington ...... Hills Fire Department in December . ;..' 1991. "We have documentation of how dangerous and how combustible natu- An Ann Arbor resident buys a Christmas tree yesterday. ral trees can be," said Assistant Man- ager of Risk Management Kathleen of our residents," Rychlinski said . spread very quickly through the build- ychlinski. The studies showed that "This is not something to ignore. We ing due to the wood-frame structure 4ry trees were extremely quick to didn't want to wait for a fire to hap- of the complexes. burn once ignited, and could be en- pen." Many of the larger apartment com- gulfed in flames within 11 seconds. Rychlinski stated that if a fire were plexes on campus, such as University "We are concerned about the safety to start in one unit, it would probably Towers and Tower Plaza, also pro- Faculty leaders outraged over salary inequity By JAMES CHO DAILY STAFF REPORTER University faculty members called for a 10-percent salary increase at yesterday's meeting of the Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Af- fairs (SACUA). They said they are outraged over the lack of increases they received in the latest budget compared to those of University administrators. The largest concern was over the broad recommendation made in the annual report of the Committee on the Economic Status of the Faculty (CESF). The report, which evaluated faculty salaries, was faulted by many members as being too vague. The report urges "implementation of an appropriate salary program this year." But many faculty members com- plained that it fails to set specific salary increase targets. "Idon'tbelieve (members of CESF) are acting in the best interest of the faculty," said SACUA member George Brewer. "A 10-percent salary increase for faculty should be included in the report. That should be the target in light of the cost of living and increased competi- tion," he said. Two years ago, most faculty mem- bers received no pay increase due to cost cutting efforts by the University. Last year faculty salaries increased an average of 5 percent. Brewer said the 10-percent increase in salaries would be reasonable. "The 10-percent increase will add up to a 15- See SALARY, Page 2 hibit natural trees, as do the Univer- sity residence halls. "It is totally a fire-safety issue," said Alan Levy, director of public relations for the Housing Division. See TREES, Page 2 Hubble repair -starts successfully SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) field planetary camera, the instrument - With guidance and power systems includes lenses to compensate for the restored on the Hubble, Endeavour's flaws created by the telescope's mis- spacewalking repair crew focused on shapen main minor. With it, NASA fixing the telescope's bad eyesight. hopes to regain most the Hubble's "We've been up to bat twice, and lost promise of getting crisp images the crew has hit two home runs," said of the faintest and oldest heavenly Joe Rothenberg, NASA's associate bodies. *irector of flight projects for Hubble. It also will enable astronomers to "The first objective has been met: We track the orbits of comets around the can handle on-orbit servicing and we sun and search for planets .around can handle contingencies." other stars. Yesterday, the space shuttle Astronauts Story Musgrave and Endeavour and its crew of seven were Jeffrey Hoffman, making their sec- in the sixth day of the 11-day flight, ond foray into the open cargo bay, setting spacewalk records each time also were set to replace the Hubble's they venture out of the crew cabin. two magnetometers that measure the The bus-sized Hubble, 43-feet long, telescope's position by Earth's mag- *its upright on a lazy-Suzan near the netic field. Neither of the existing rear of the cargo bay. instruments is performing at full ca- The third day of repairs, begin- pability. ning late yesterday, was reserved for One of the unanticipated events installing a new multi-purpose cam- also became the flight's most dra- era. matic moment. Latngtte their third space < walk to repair the Hubble telescope PLANNED ACTIVITIES Monday night/Tuesday moming 1. Replace Wide Field/Planetary Camera (abbreviated WF/PC and pronounced "wiff-pick"; Hubble's main camera) 2. Replace magnetometers (these instruments help Hubble determine its position in space) AP Former U.S. Rep. Brodhead announces bid for Senate LANSING (AP) - Former U.S. Rep. William Brodhead said yesterday that he left Congress 11 years ago to spend more time with his children, be more involved in community activities and practice law. The Detroit lawyer said his two sons are grown, he's accomplished all that he'd hoped and he's ready now to run for the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination next year. Brodhead admitted that he'd looked at running for the gubernato- rial nomination earlier this year, but "it's a different office." "I did think about running for gov- ernor. I finally decided that really wasn't the right office for me, that I just didn't have the enthusiasm," he said. "But I have enormous enthusiasm to run for the United States Senate. I'm very familiar with the issues in- volved.Ibelieve my record as a mem- ber of Congress shows that I know how to do the job. "If I had to be a U.S. senator tomorrow morning, I would know just what to do and just how to do it. I'm just so certain that I'm the right person for this job," he said. Brodhead said he didn't consider running for the Senate until his friend, Sen. Donald Riegle (D-Flint) an- nounced that he wouldn't be seeking re-election next year. Brodhead joins Macomb County Prosecutor Carl Marlinga and state Sen. Lana Pollack of Ann Arbor in the Democratic primary. He said he expects more candi- dates to enter the race, but he's talked to former Gov. James Blanchard - now the U.S. ambassador to Canada - and "I believe he's not going to run. If he runs, he runs. I'm not concerned about it either way." Blanchard would automatically become the front-runner .if he en- tered the race and hasn't flatly ruled himself out. Brodhead served four years in the Michigan House before winning elec- tion to the U.S. House in 1974. He didn't seek re-election in 1982. "The major issues facing the Con- gress are the same as they were 12 years ago," he said. Brodhead said the biggest chal- lenges for the federal government are improving the national economy and the education system and fighting crime and drugs. He said he would haye been a "no" vote on the North American Free Trade Agreement and a "yes"' vote on the Brady Bill. That bill requires a five-day waiting period to buy a hand- gun. Brodhead also gave President Clinton high marks, although he said he doesn't always agree with him. "I think President Clinton is doing well. He had a rocky beginning, but he is now doing well." -r 1 _ t "___trc_ " -f9 r___ -- - - .....2In .rv~ ... ---. 0 Nircnamed "wittnhc" for wide.- See HUBBLE. Page2 i