8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 3, 1997 LOCALISTATE 'U' prof recounts personal stories from the Reagan years By Jeffrey Komoff Daily Staff Reporter When former President Ronald Reagan walked into rooms, people stood up and when he would laugh, others would laugh. "He would ask, 'Don't you people have minds of your own?"' said polit- ical science Prof. Raymond Tanter, who served as one of Reagan's ( security advis- ers. "That's the problem with power." any pr Tanter shared Republic many of his experiences and "political views with the cam- - Prof.1 pus chapter of Former the College Republicans 1last night. "This is perhaps the best speech we've had this year," said campus College Republicans President Nick Kirk. Some of Tanter's memorable experi- R4 rR ences come from his work in the Reagan administration. He said advis- ers were of great importance to Reagan, but they did not make deci- sions for him. "Some people called us his handlers, but no one could handle Ronald Reagan" Tanter said. Although he was excited to work in Washington, D.C., Tanter said he soon found the - world of poli- tics was much is ! more political and cutthroat than he had expected. aymond Tanter "That was Reagan adviser not the type of ballgame I thought Washington was about," Tanter said. One person Tanter lost the political ballgame to was Oliver North, who replaced him in the Reagan administra- tion. Tanter said his personality and views were quite different from North, and he had warned North about prob- lems that came later in North's politi- cal career. "I said, 'Ollie, one day you're going to get in trouble,"' Tanter said. "(North is) just not my kind of guy." Reagan subsequently sent Tanter to Vienna to be the representative of the Secretary of Defense. Although he has spent his life in pol- itics, Tanter only placed one bid for public office in an unsuccessful run for Michigan's 13th District House of Representatives seat. Tanter said his pro-choice stance hindered him from receiving Republican support. "There aren't any pro-choice Republicans, I learned," said Tanter, who was upset by his accumulation of a $10,000 campaign debt. "I vowed never to run again. Tanter also shared many of his views on state, national and world politics with the group. He has many theories as to why President Clinton won re-elec- tion in November. "One of the reasons why Bill AJA PEKLEVA COHEN/D&y Political science Prof. Raymond Tanter, a security adviser to former President Ronald Reagan, speaks with LSA senior Pets Rinato after his lecture at the campus College Republicans meeting in the Michigan League last night. Clinton is president is the success of the Republican and Democratic presi- dents in ending the Cold War and George Bush for ending the hot war in the Gulf," Tanter said. "Peace and prosperity are the two key themes on which people vote," Tanter said he is concerned with recent campaign funding allegation against the Clintons, but that suck scandals will not sWay the national Tornado season swirls By Matt Weller For the Daily Springtime. Budding trees, blossoming flowers. And tornadoes. Prof. Peter Sousounis, who works in the department of atmospheric, oceanic and space sciences, estimates that Michigan gets 16 of these devastating dervishes .a year. Fortunately for the University and all of Ann Arbor, the frequency of tornadoes is much lower for the eastern part of the state. In other words, Ann Arbor is out of the hot zone, Sousounis said. "I think we're probably in the middle," Sousounis said. "In the northwest and Upper Peninsula, the probability approaches zero." This doesn't mean, Sousounis warns, that we can't be burned by a funnel's wrath. "On June 8, 1953, a tornado struck Flint, killing 125 peo- ple," Sousounis said. According to USA Today Online, Michigan ranks 20th in the number of tornadoes touching down between 1950- 1995 (712), 8th in injuries from tornadoes (3,214) and 5th in tornado fatalities (237). Most touchdowns occur in April, May and June, when conditions are ideal. In these spring months, moist air interacts with dry, cold winter air, generating a column of rising and swirling wind, known as a vortex. The vortex pulls air up from the ground, creating a low-pressure area. This space on the ground cools, condensing water vapor, which gives the tornado its funnel shape. As it meanders along, it picks up dirt and debris, which gives it its charac- teristic gray color. Tornadoes can be an awesome and humbling sight, said Jeremy Welling, an Engineering first-year student from Farmington Hills, who said he observed a tornado in the northern part of the state. "I was in shock," Welling said. "It knocked down a few Grand Funk Railroad band to play for Bosnian children TRAVERSE CITY (AP) - They may be an American band, but their hearts go out to children everywhere. That's why the members of Grand Funk Railroad are planning three con- certs to benefit the children of Bosnia. Proceeds from shows in suburban Detroit, New York and Los Angeles will be donated to the Bosnian-American Relief Fund. The charitable organiza- tion was created to alleviate suffering of war victims in Bosnia-Herzegovina, primarily children left orphaned and homeless. The shows are scheduled for April 20 at the Palace of Auburn Hills, April 25 at Beacon Theater in New York and May 2 at Greek Theater in Los Angeles. In addition to the three founding members of Grand Funk - Mark Farner, guitar and vocals; Don Brewer, drums and vocals; and Mel Schacher, bass - the shows will feature guest artists and. a symphony orchestra, including members of the Sarajevo Symphony. "The opportunity came about through (manager) David Fishof," Schacher said recently, prior to a rehearsal at the State Theatre in Traverse City. Fishof asked the band members if they would be interested in doing a series of benefit shows. "We said, 'Absolutely,"' Schacher said. "For us to do it, it's a privilege. We can be ambassadors of the good will of the people of America,' Farner said. Schacher concurred. "It's been my dream to be able to do things for other people," he said. And it offered a chance to perform with a symphony orchestra, something Schacher said had always intrigued the band. With Farner living in Petoskey and Schacher in the Traverse City area, the group decided the State Theatre was the best location for rehearsal. Drummer and vocalist Don Brewer flew up week- ly from his home in Florida. The three dates are part of an upcom- ing tour that will take the band across the U.S. and also into Europe and Asia. It is the second tour for the band since it re-formed last year. Members said that re-forming Grand Funk Railroad after 20 years just seemed like the right thing to do. "It's not because of all the others, it's just time to get back together and work," Schacher said. The band went out on top, having garnered a string of hits including "Heartbreaker," "The Loco-Motion," ".Some Kind of Wonderful" and "We're an American Band." Schacher said he and his bandmates simply ran out of energy and wanted to try some different things. "We worked extremely hard, two albums a year, two major tours a year. There was no time for anything else. We wanted a life, so we stopped." He and Brewer hooked up in the band Flint and Farner did some solo things, but they also moved on to other endeavors, musical and otherwise. Brewer toured with Bob Seger for a few years in the 1980s before turning in his sticks. "After I saw all the arenas, I got my degree and went to law school for a couple of years,' Brewer said. But when his ex-wife died, "I basically retired, took time off to raise my daughter." Meanwhile, Farner had decided the farm he had purchased near the band's hometown of Flint wasn't the right place any more, and he migrated to the Onaway area. "I had threats, people weirding out," he said. Ten years later, he moved west to Petoskey. Schacher, meanwhile, had moved to nearby Traverse City. The passing of some 20-odd years has made for some cosmetic changes the band. Brewer's hair has turned alus- trous shade of gray, though his easy smile still lights up the room. Schacher's hair is gathered into a tight ponytail, strands of silver peeking through, while Farner seems deter- mined to ignore the passage of time, his long hair hanging down his back, defying fashion trends or the onset of age. Their music is also little than Twenty years of technological have enabled them to improve their sound, but as Farner says, "Grand Funk is Grand Funk.' Farner points to his guitar and a scar on his neck, evidence of two discs he had removed. "The doctor said to play a lighter instrument. It's a five-pound guitar called a Parker Fly," he said. "I can make it sound like a Strat or a Telecaster." Schacher lays down a heavy bottom end, while Brewer and Farner trade leads. Brewer keeps the beat, despite a skiing accident that put his left foot in a cast for a time, and Farner plays both keyboards and guitar. After rehearsing for two weeks at the State, the band headed to Detroit to work with the orchestra before kicking off the tour at the Palace. "It's gonna be tasty. It will be neal trees. It was just a skinny funnel. Then it took out a power line." The preceding calm can be just as impressive, said Jackie Pelliter, an LSA first-year student. "It was pretty cool. The sky was green," Pelliter said. "It got really still. Then my dad told me to get in the house" Although an impressive event, a tornado can be sinister. Winds within a tornado can reach 320 miles per hour, and its path is random - it can decimate one house and leave the neighboring home untouched. When tornadoes strike, immediate action may mean life or death, according to Robert Patrick, associate director of the Department of Public Safety. "Many people do not know how to properly protect them- selves when an actual tornado is sighted," Patrick said. "Knowing what to do can save your life and the lives of oth- ers." .. . . . Judge dismisses antitrust suit against Detroit newspapers " I DETROIT (AP) - A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit that accused the Detroit newspapers of violating antitrust laws by publishing combined weekday editions for the first nine weeks of the 19-month strike against the papers. U.S. District Judge John O'Meara wrote that the plaintiffs - including former Mayor Coleman Young and City Council President Maryann Mahaffey - had not shown they were injured by the publication of the joint edition. "The alternative to publishing a joint daily edition during the first two months of the strike might well have been to not publish a newspaper at all - hardly a victory for 'product choice,' O'Meara said in the ruling, dated March 27. Under a joint operating agreement implemented in 1989, the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News published separate newspapers Monday through Friday and combined editions on week- But O'Meara said the company did not have to seek full approval every time an amendment to the agreement was made. The News is owned by Gannett Co. Inc. and the Free Press by Knight- Ridder Inc. Donald Baker, a Washington D.C.- based attorney who is representi the plaintiffs, said no decision had been made yesterday whether to appeal. In another development, the regional director of National Labor Relations Board has made his recommendation on whether to seek. a federal court injunction to immediately restore jobs for all non-fired union newspaper workers who want them. But the regional director, Willih Schaub, wouldn't say yesterday what his recommendation is. He and NLRB officials in Washington said it's board policy to keep preliminary recommerr- dations on injunctions secret. Schaub sent the recommendation e S qe r ' s1i