t'Elan ti r ' r e Afta'Arbor, b cbi ao - Monday, Self r 16,1"4 i Vol. CIV, No. 131 INIP xM, G p so A' 4 L e p , I, e a 'd} y t+v' k " *k' ' 3 .y e ea Aa Xh 'Eft 'a t J v a ; h' S !, a t" R, MoY4 fy ry3n 4 i4 GK fY ,* h i. Y "Ck { x, Ri >P pq'Y i :'R )t a 5 e nth^'o J /yyrts a^, . Ny +Yr ))z k = d * J qj,$k h F, t s +, .!a Sys, ,, 'fF'y ° q>d' r :o Vbp e yl IW O, R. G ,yn Etp , . 5f A to S' Y 4A.y'Y! 4 ? k APo > V y P y 4 ) 4J F s a t ,yyR .,p ri lrrv ) f+ a< Ys1P y.v j9'. $,ta 4 . } _ Sn 4 q( " S r s < , Alai, h y'#" tr P y 'e, r ,f'v . r.., uP r, .n F l' " S' ly ...r, o- w... .. .. .. The Washington Post CAP-HAITIEN, Haiti - Hun- dreds of unarmed Haitian citizens, emboldened by the firefight between U.S. Marines and Haitian police Sat- urday night and the collapse of au- thority in this city on the northern coast, stormed police stations and army barracks yesterday in a sponta- neous popular revolt. They comman- deered rifles and ran wildly but joy- ously through the streets before turn- ing the weapons over to the U.S. Marines. At four police stations, crowds tore apart offices, throwing arrest records into the streets and ripping electrical sockets from the walls. Many Haitians came to stare at the station's barren jail cells. One man donned a military officer's cap and baton and began a pantomime of a bullying officer, marching before a throng of street vendors, hawkers, revolutionaries and looters. Last night, Haiti's second-largest city was without any civilian or Hai- tian military control after 400 Haitian military evaporated overnight from their posts. Although military helicopters circled overhead, Marines did not ar- rive at the Haitian army barracks until at least an hour after the assault began yesterday morning. The citizens' attacks on the police and army offices followed a short, fierce and deadly firefight Saturday night between U.S. Marines and Hai- tian police that left 10 Haitians dead. The dead were zipped into green mili- tary body bags delivered to a hospital morgue yesterday. The only U.S. ca- sualty in the firefight was an inter- preter who was lightly wounded. President Clinton, in a statement issued in New York, said, "It must be clear that U.S. forces are prepared to respond to hostile action against them and will do so." Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.), chair- man of the Senate Armed Services Committee, who had traveled to Haiti a week ago with former President Jimmy Carter on a last-minute peace mission, said more confrontations are inevitable. "This is the first bad incident we've had involving, directly, American troops, but it won't be the last," he said on NBC-TV's "Meet the Press." The confrontation between U.S. soldiers and Haitian police and a grow- ing series of other incidents has re- newed doubts about the ill-defined nature of the American mission in Haiti. The U.S. military increasingly finds itself caught between the mili- tary it is disarming and civilians See HAITI, Page 7 Colorado wide receiver Michael Westbrook hauls in Kordell Stewart's tipped desperation heave with no time left on the clock. Stewart's o lossfrom a otean Ste ar'sshocking last-second 64-yard ps steals winy for Colorado 'U' denies charges in Friendly lawsuit By MICHAEL ROSENBERG Daily Football Writer Football is a game of peaks and valleys and Saturday Michigan slipped off Mount Everest and landed in the Dead Sea. 0 The decline was as exhilarating as it was quick. Twice in a fortnight the Wolverines played with fire. Two weeks ago they torched Notre Dame. Saturday they got burned. Michigan, fresh off a shocking 26-24 upset of the Fighting Irish, was beaten by Colorado on a last- second, 64-yard, it-happens-every- decade Hail Mary pass from Kordell tewart to Michael Westbrook. The pass was tipped out of the hands of 'U' hosts weekend-W bash for By MELISSA ROSE BERNARDO Daily Staff Reporter To the average student, this week- end meant a disheartening defeat in lichigan Stadium. But to University officials, it meant halftime of a cam- paign to raise $1 billion. This weekend marked the mid-point of the "Campaign for Michigan," the University's commitment to raise $1 billion by 1997. Since its kickoff in 1992, the campaign has raised $670 million. Friday and Saturday's mid- campaign event amounted to a two-day ep rally, where University officials wined, dined, educated and entertained more than 1000 donors and campaign Michigan safety Chuck Winters by Colorado's Blake Anderson and pulled from the air by Wes-tbrook. The touchdown gave the seventh- ranked Buffaloes a 27-26 victory over No. 4 Michigan. "I have never had a feeling like this in my life," Westbrook said. "It was tipped. There was nobody else around. It was just me and the foot- ball. All I had to do was catch it." Stewart's pass was eerily reminis- cent of Doug Flutie's touchdown throw to Boston College teammate Gerard Phelan against Miami in 1984. That pass, which also measured 64 yards, propelled the Eagles past the Hurricanes and Flutie toward the Heisman Trophy. It remains to be seen whether Stewart will be similarly acclaimed. After the game, he was simply over- whelmed with the events of the final six seconds. "It has to be one of the greatest wins of my career," Stewart said. "The coach called this so-called play. It worked." It was not the first time coach Bill McCartney sent in that so-called play, called "Rocket." The Buffalo boss had called for the bomb at the end of the first half. That pass was intercepted. By Chuck Winters. "I'm sick," Winters said. "My belly hurts. It never crossed my mind that they would do it." The play is so seldom-used that nobody in black and gold could de- cide how often it is practiced or what Westbrook is supposed to do. "We practice it once a week," coach Bill McCartney said. "Westbrook's job on that play is to position himself for when the ball is tipped." "I'm supposed to be the (one who tips it) because I'm the tallest," Westbrook said. "(But) we don't prac- tice it because somebody could get injured.', See COLORADO, SPORTSMonday Page 4 By RONNIE GLASSBERG Daily Staff Reporter The University issued a formal denial of a lawsuit that alleges it re- taliated against a faculty member for disclosing misspent endowments, in papers filed in Washtenaw County Circuit Court last week. The lawsuit filed in July by Jonathan Friendly, director of the Master's Program in Journalism, claims that his role in prompting an audit of the communication depart- ment cost him his three-year contract. During the last academic year, the department was audited after allega- tions that the Harry and Helen F. Weber, the Howard R. March Profes- sorship in Journalism and the Howard R. Marsh Center for the Study of Journalistic Performance endow- ments were being misspent. In his suit, Friendly, a former re- porter and city desk editor for The New York Times, claims that LSA Dean Edie N. Goldenberg and then- communication department chair L. Rowell Huesmann "unilaterally im- posed a one-year contract containing less desirable terms and conditions" in retaliation for Friendly's role in the prompting the audit. The suit further claims the defen- dants - the University, Goldenberg and Huesmann - violated the Michi- gan Whistleblower Protection Act by refusing to renew Friendly's contract for three years. The audit, released in June, found the department had misspent funds from the endowments. In an Aug. 30, 1991 letter, an attorney for Wesley Maurer Sr., who served as chair of the University's former journalism department, raised concerns about the use of the Weber endowment. Maurer encouraged his friends, the Webers, to establish an endowment to support internships in journalism. Then-communication department See LAWSUIT, Page 2 Home again Jones tells of love for 'U' By MELISSA ROSE BERNARDO Daily Staff Reporter James Earl Jones does not donate his hard-earned money to the Univer- sity; instead, he donates something infinitely more valuable and immea- surable - his time. Now an accomplished actor and a household voice, the 1955 graduate ('71 honorary Ph.D. recipient) returns with some regularity to his alma mater and home state of Michigan. And he calls the University "a place that I hope to support the rest of my life." "In service," he adds quickly. "(Michigan) is a state I love, a state I wish I could make my living in. I wish it offered me the same kind of opportunities as New York or Los Angeles did, in terms of what I do - acting," he said. Before his dress rehearsal for Fri- See JONES, Page 7 Searching for unbiased jury in Simpson trial KRISTEN SCHAEFER/DAILY University alum and actor James Earl Jones laughs at a question Friday. volunteers. logical environment, an interactive Individual colleges and offices contemporary art exhibit, a panel dis- across campus designed a variety of cussion on state and national health small presentations, discussions, tours care reform. Students were on hand at and exhibits, which ranged from the most events to offer perspectives and informative to the entertaining. insights. Among the choices: a presenta- Associate Vice President for De- tion of the University's scientific re- velopment Roy E. Muir described the search in a rapidly-changing techno- See CAMPAIGN, Page 7 Newsday LOS ANGELES - A beautiful young mother and a handsome young man are found stabbed to death on a moonlit night in June. There are bloody footprints, a leather glove, a blue-knit cap and a white dog with bloody paws howling into the night. There's a limo driver, a houseguest, airline tickets to Chicago and an ex-husband - a foot- ball legend and American idol who's been charged in the murders. He says he "absolutely one-hun- dred percent" didn't kill his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend, Ronald Lyle Goldman. The prosecution maintains he did. Enter the jury, the final arbiters of truth. After months of trying to influ- ence public opinion, the lawyers for the prosecution and defense move from the court of public opinion to an See SIMPSON, Page 2 INSIDE LOCAL NEWS Under 21 and drinking? Lots of rules, few punishments