In SPORTS STennis aces Michigan St.ate, 6-1 Page 5 One hundred three years of editorial freedom "Uti Michigan company manufactures caskets with school spirit By MAGGIE WEYHING 'I don't know if I Would buy one, but I could see it for a die- DAILY STAFF REPORTER * Some people never leave college behind. hard fan - no pun intended.' For the past few years, Oak Grove Interna- - Ann Liewellyn tional, located in Manistee, Mich., has been manufacturing caskets decorated in school LSA sophomore colors. "One of our distributors came up with the fiber glass of the exterior of the coffin, and the casket in maize and blue, they are currently idea. A customer and strong university alum- outside color is then off-set with the velvet getting one ready to display at upcoming nus had requested a red and white casket," inside."The most colorful and outrageous re- casket shows in Ohio and Indiana. said manager Gary Graham. quest that we've had so far was bright orange "So far, red and white for Indiana Univer- Graham compared the construction of such for some school in Tennessee," Graham said. sity is the most popular," Graham said. caskets to a boat hull. The colors are in the Although Oak Grove has yet to make a Could there be a future demand for maize and blue? Jerry Sigler, associate director of the Uni- versity Alumni Association, has mixed views. "There are alumni out there that are fanati- cal enough about the University to buy one. Personally, I don't think that I would want to go that way, but there are a lot of people who do everything in maize and blue," Sigler said. However, as far as marketing blue and gold caskets along with its usual sweat-shirts, tee-shirts and hats, Sigler says that the Alumni Association would rather leave that business to the funeral homes. Because most students strive to depart the University in four years, taking the colors to the grave may not sound attractive. "I think that it is totally stupid to be buried in a maize and blue casket unless your name is James Duderstadt. That is not how I'd like to be remembered unless those colors put mega-bucks in my pocket," said Teneka Johnson, an LSA first-year student. Others view the suggestion as a possibility."I don't know if I would buy one, but I could see it for a die-hard fan - no pun intended," said Ann Llewellyn, an LSA senior. --------------------- ---- ------------ - Pollack aide to run *for state Senate seat By RONNIE GLASSBERG DAILY STAFF REPORTER The University's first Black ten- ured professor and Ann Arbor's first Black mayor, Albert Wheeler, died Monday. Despite this recent loss, his * daughter, Alma Wheeler Smith, is running for state Sen. Lana Pollack's (D-Ann Arbor) seat - with Pollack's endorsement. Smith - whose son Conan ran for vice president of the Michigan Stu- dent Assembly in March - an- nounced her candidacy yesterday to a group of about 60 people at Maude's restaurant. 0 "Having worked with Lana for eight years, I knew there were a lot of issues we shared and wanted com- pleted and I knew I was the one who could do that," Smith said. Smith has served as Pollack's leg- islative coordinator for the past eight years. She also served eight years on the South Lyon School Board and is now a Washtenaw County commis- 0sioner. Pollack, who is leaving her seat to run for the U.S. Senate, said she is usually reluctant to become involved in Democratic primaries, but said Smith will deal with many of the same issues she has worked on. "I think she will be a very strong person in a Republican state Senate that wants to shut out the voices for education, for job training, for the In revenge for Hebron, car bomb klills 8 Israelis AFULA, Israel (AP) -- Yaacov Rahamim gestured toward three chil- dren wrapped from head to foot in bandages, victims of a car bomb that killed eight people and injured 45 yesterday in revenge for the Hebron massacre. "My feeling is that there will never be peace," Rahamim said as he vis- ited his injured son Kadouri, 13, in the hospital. Kadouri was burned on his forehead, shoulders and hands in the suicide attack. "All they know is how to kill chil- dren," Rahamim added. "Maya! Maya! It's not true. It's not true," said Jaffa Elharar, the mother of one of the dead - Maya Elharar, an 18-year old high school student. The explosion occurred at about 12:30 p.m. in the northern town of Afula near a city bus stop close to three high schools. As a bus pulled up to the stop and some students crowded around, a blue Opel parked 10 feet in front of the bus erupted in a fire cloud. Some students had finished school for the day. "Two boys were burning like torches. They came running toward me, and I took one and doused the flames with a rag and then I ripped off his clothes," said Albert Amos, a driv- ing teacher. "He was burned all over. When I touched him pieces of his skin came off in my hand." Afula, a factory and agriculture town in the northern Galilee region, is surrounded by Arab villages and is six miles from the occupied West Bank town of Jenin. At least one of the dead was an Arab woman. The Islamic militant group Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was in revenge for the Feb. 25 massacre in a Hebron mosque. The car used in the attack was a heap of charred and twisted metal next to the bus stop. The body of the suicide driver lay next to it. Like the killings in Hebron, which took place inside a mosque on a day of prayer during the holy month of Ramadan, the Afula attack was felt intensely because of the teen-age ca- sualties and because it came on the eve of Holocaust Day, when Israel mourns the slaughter of six million Jews by the Nazis. "Today, the eve of Holocaust Re- membrance Day, we paid a terrible price for being Jews, for wanting to live peacefully and independently in the Land of Israel," President Ezer Weizman said in a nationally broad- cast ceremony. Foreign Minister Shimon Peres conceded that "it is clear that when an incident like this happens support for the peace process dwindles." He and other officials indicated they would proceed with the peace talks. Opponents of the peace talks or- ganized demonstrations in numerous cities. In Afula, students chanted "Death to Arabs" and "Baruch Goldstein, We Love You." MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Alma Wheeler Smith announces her candidacy for the state Senate seat held by Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor). Pollack endorsed Smith yesterday. environment," Pollack said. "She knows how to work through a prob- lem; she knows how to negotiate." When Smith's father ran for mayor in 1974, Pollack became friends with him through her work in local poli- tics. "Al Wheeler told me that when he came to the University of Michigan, there was no place for Black students to get housing, no place for Jewish students to get housing," Pollack said. "I have enormous respect for Alma as a person and I know her strengths come from her parents." Smith said some of her main con- cerns include children, families, edu- cation, the environment and the economy. "We need to be very forceful about how we support education in this state," Smith said. "Education in this state has to have the resources behind See SMITH, Page 2 Clinton to name 2d justice to court ICY SPRING DRIVING WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Clinton promised yesterday to choose a nominee "of genuine stat- ure" to fill his second vacancy on a Supreme Court delicately split on major issues. He saluted retiring Jus- tice Harry A. Blackmun as a relent- less defender of the rights of every- day Americans. "The shoes are large," Clinton said as he wished Blackmun well in retire- ment and intensified his search for a replacement. "The role that he filled on this court is terribly important." Blackmun informed Clinton in January that this would be his last year on the court, so the president had a head start in his search for a succes- sor. "Yes, I've been thinking about it," Clinton said. Clinton said he would fill the va- cancy in "an appropriate and timely fashion," but aides said it probably would be several weeks before an announcement. There was a flurry of speculation, and administration officials did not dispute that Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell was high on the president's list. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt also was mentioned. Mitchell said he had not received an offer but would certainly consider one. Babbitt said he was not inter- ested and had relayed that to the presi- dent. "I very much want to stay put," he said. A handful of federal judges also were said to be on Clinton's list of prospective nominees, including Ap- peals Judge Stephen G. Breyer of Boston, a runner up to Ruth Bader Ginsburg in Clinton's first search. Others were U.S. District Judge Jose A. Cabranes of Connecticut and Ap- peals Judge Richard Arnold of Little Rock, Ark. See BLACKMUN, Page 2 * In 1973, authored the Roe vs. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationwide. 0 In a 1977 decision, Blackmun wrote that a blanket ban on lawyer advertisements violated free-speech rights. Wrote 1985 opinion that Congress has almost unlimited power to force state and local governments to comply with federal laws. w Wrote 1991 decision that said employers may not bar women from certain hazardous jobs just to protect fetuses. A 1984 opinion he wrote required states to, offer "clear and convincing" evidence of parental unfitness before severing all parent-child ties. AP Mandela rejects delay in elections as 700 soliders deployed in Natal MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Despite being several weeks into spring, cold weather brought snow and turned water on this car to ice yesterday. '1 44 ra iri f n4-ci 1 rte v~4-r ,i n-rh ,rd- 'n ,icr . DURBAN, South Africa (AP) - Nelson Mandela rejected any delay in new troops gathered at Ladysmith in northern Natal: most were to be sent end the political violence. Blood shed has increased in the weeks lead-