WEi t Weather Tonight: Mostly-cloudy, low around 280. Tomorrow: Cloudy, chance of rain, high around 430*. One hundred siCx years of editoralfreedom Monday December 9, 1996 ,;,I :; r r'$fr:': ,,," ,,.N.'u,'.'Y ~x': " s * e:3, :. s>,fi I Dunking M' captures win, 62-6 1 By Will McCahill Daily Sports Editor The Michigan men's basketball team received a holiday gift yesterday in the form of a huge 62-61 victory over Duke in Durham, N.C. With the seventh-ranked Wolverines trailing, 61-60, and just over 30 sec- (onds remaining in the game, Duke biard Trajan Langdon turned the ball over to Michigan's Maceo Baston. The Wolverines brought the ball down the floor and called a 20-second timeout. Michigan moved the ball around the perimeter before junior guard Travis Conlan gave it to sopho- more center Robert Traylor at the free- throw line. Traylor found an open lane, taking a couple steps before jamming home the Jning basket with 6.2 seconds left. The 10th-ranked Blue Devils were unable to get a shot off in their last pos- session, as senior guard Jeff Capel lost" the ball in traffic as time expired. The Wolverines were able to finish the second half on a 16-3 run despite having their best player, junior forward Maurice Taylor, foul out with more than 10 minutes left in the game. The victory was as exciting for stu- *ts as it was for the team. LSA senior Emily Miller, who has followed. the Michigan-Duke rivalry closely over the past few years, watched the game on TV on the ground floor of the Michigan Union. "I can't even study now, I'm so excit- ed," Miller said. She said she went to the Union intending to keep an eye on the game while studying, but the ten- sion of the close contest and the large wd it drew to the TV made that mewhat difficult. "Everyone was cheering and clap- ping and screaming," Miller said. "It was pretty intense." LSA first-year student Matthew ; Neagle was similarly exuberant about the Wolverines' triumphant visit to Duke. "Michigan really pulled it out there at the end," Neagle said. "A lot of peo- * thought Michigan was overrated. Robert Traylor h "But by beating Duke without match-up agains Maurice Taylor in the game, they really played the last 1 showed that they deserve their rating." For more comple Serbian court to deny vote fraud Los Angeles Times BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - In a major set- back, opposition forces said yesterday that Serbia's highest court has turned aside their legal challenge to President Slobodan Milosevic and decided to let stand alleged election fraud. Opposition leaders vowed to widen their fight to unseat Milosevic following the ruling, which has not been announced officially by Serbia's Supreme Court. The Belgrade Electoral Commission, which had filed a similar challenge to Milosevic's annulment of municipal elections won by the opposition, announced late yesterday that its appeal had also been rejected. Politicians and students staging their 21st day of street demonstrations said they were not surprised that the court had sided with Milosevic, and they pro- nounced themselves more determined than ever to see an end to his authoritarian regime.. "We want the protests to 4 spread to as many cities in Serbia as possible," said Zoran Djindjic, president of the opposition Democratic Party. "This is an enormous Djindjic investment in the future. Never before has there been a single unified protest in 20 towns in Serbia; never before have we attracted so much international attention." Approximately 42 protesters have been arrest- ed, according to opposition lawyers. Several of the arrested were held incommunicado, the lawyers said. Yesterday, the effigy sat slumped in the corner of the headquarters of the Zajedno (Together) opposition coalition as thousands of demonstra- tors rallied outside. Milosevic and his proxies have told Western officials that they will not use force to break up the demonstrations. But Milosevic has used tactics both subtle and overt to intimidate and undermine the opposition. State-run television, which routinely broadcasts interviews of residents complaining about how the protests disrupt traffic, resumed its tough talk last night, accusing Zajedno leaders of subversive attempts to destabilize the nation and mislead the people. "All of this is obviously a big farce intended for the foreign media," state television said. "They have finally shown their hand and have proven that their aim is to destabilize Serbia (and) to compro- mise it before the world." Milosevic is also seeking scapegoats in an effort to defuse the most sustained challenge to his authority he has ever faced. He has fired officials See BALKANS, Page 2A Police allegedly beat protester The Washington Post BELGRADE, Yugoslavia -- A 21-year-old stu- dent protester who was arrested for carrying a sty- rofoam effigy of Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic in prison garb was severely beaten while in police custody, his mother said yesterday, in the first alleged instance of police brutality in 21 straight days of protests against Milosevic's regime. Ljiljana Bulatovic met her son, Dejan, for 30 minutes yesterday and said he had a broken nose and a bad back after police allegedly beat the him on Friday. She quoted her son as saying police shoved a billy club up his anus, forced him to stand naked for several hours in a freez- ing room and clobbered his head and back while they held him in custody at Belgrade's central police station. On Saturday, Bulatovic was sentenced to 25 days in jail for carrying the effigy of Milosevic, she said, and assigned a cell with no bed and a per- manently open window. "My boy has asthma," she added. "He looks bad, his face is bloody. I don't know why they did this to him. They called him an enemy of the state." The alleged beating of Dejan Bulatovic last week came a day after Milosevic gave in to Western demands to allow Belgrade's last two independent radio stations to resume broadcasting less than 24 hours after he shut them down. Serbian officials said the beating, while not neces- sarily ordered by the president, could not have occurred without his tacit support. The maneuvers - one conciliatory, the other tough - are vintage Milosevic as he confronts the largest and most sustained challenge to his nine year rule. On the day Bulatovic was sen- tenced, for example, Milosevic met with Kati Marton, the president of the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists and wife of Richard Holbrooke, the architect of the Dayton peace plan for Bosnia. During that meeting he told Marton he would not order violence to be used against the demonstrators and signed a doc- ument promising to respect independent media in Serbia. The document summed up Milosevic's tenden- cy, as one diplomat put it, to "confuse us all on purpose." Marton scribbled out a statement that committed Milosevic to supporting "a free press in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the right to publish and broadcast without censorship freely here." Milosevic crossed out "without cen- MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily its the game-winning dunk with 6.2 seconds remaining on the clock during yesterday's t Duke in Durham, N.C. The game was a victory for the seventh-ranked Wolverines, who 10 minutes of the second half with their best player, junior Maurice Taylor, on the bench. ete coverage see SPORTSMonday, Page LB. sorship," back. signed the document and handed it Alum, Calif. state Len. Hayden to speak on activism By Laurie Mayk Daily Staff Reporter One of the University's most cele- ted activists is coming home today. niversity alum Tom Hayden, a California state senator and human rights activist, is expected to bring his message back to Ann Arbor today when he stops in town for a book signing, reception and a speech on the "Evolution relevant today, Mehta said. Hayden is interested in higher educa- tion as a state and federal issue, Ellison. said. "He's still got a real keen eye for higher education public policy,"she said. Hayden gained fame as one of the founders of Students for a Democratic Society, an activist group on college campuses during the 1960s. His work with SDS eventually of Activism" at the Michigan Union, spon- sored by the Michigan Su d e n t Assembly. "I've want- ed to bring Tom Hayden to campus for some time," said "He still continues his activism, albeit in a different arena." - Probir Mehta MSA vice president led Hayden to Chicago for the 1968 Democratic National Convention, where he became one of the "Chicago Seven" - a group arrested d u r i n g Students face real rescue situations By Heather Kamins Daily Staff Reporter Bursting into concerts at Hill Auditorium and games at Crisler Arena on a moment's notice to deal with everything from heart attacks to drunk- en blackouts, an emergency medical team is always on hand to take control. It's not an episode of "ER." This team is a group of students. Until recently, the University was unprepared to handle health emergen- cies that often occur at campus events, and as a result, students created the Michigan First Aid Stations service to provide immediate medical care at cam- pus functions in emergency situations. "This is a new service to protect groups and the University in case something would happen," said LSA senior Lowell Schmeltz, founder and director of MFAS. Schmeltz is also the founder and former president of the Emergency Medical Services Club. "There are University events with (thousands) of people, but there is no safety plan. We are there to provide direct emergency medical care," Schmeltz said. Schmeltz stressed the opportunity MFAS offers in hands-on experience, citing that the group has transported at Anne Marie Ellison, chair of MSA's Student Rights Commission. Ellison said she hopes the former student leader will "light a fire k er some of my fellow students in s of getting active on some issues." Although the political climate on campus today is not nearly as volatile as when Hayden served as editor in chief of The Michigan Daily and was active in student government in the 1960s, Ellison and SRC have pushed the cam- protests that week. Hayden has since taken a different role in the political process, becoming a state senator in California and returning to Chicago this summer as a delegate to the 1996 Democratic National Convention. "He still continues his activism, albeit in a different arena," Mehta said. Hayden has focused his recent ener- gies on environmentalism and his recently published book, "The Lost Gospel of the Earth." Hayden will be MARGARET MYERS/Daily Martha Cook resident Rachel Franzese escorts former University President James Duderstadt and his wife Anne during the annual dinner following the University Musical Society's performance of "Messiah." Messiah dinner caters to 'U' brass, musical 4performersa By Jeffrey Kosseff Daily Staff Reporter While streets outside shone with hol- iday lights and snow-glazed sidewalks, the residents of Martha Cook took part concert attendees. Last night, guests included former University presidents and regents. "This is one of the great University traditions," said former University same." However, she pointed out one difference that involved the large artifi- cial tree in the Gold Room. "We had a tree when I was here, but it was a real tree," Smith said. ,I I