The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 6,1991 - Page 3 Three-year-old assault fincase ally goes to trial by Tami Pollak Daily Crime Reporter Rackham graduate student Harold Marcuse will finally be get- ting his day in court today, more than three years after he was al- legedly kicked in the groin by Robert Patrick, University assis- tant director of public safety. In November 1987, Marcuse was one of more than 30 students who participated in an anti-CIA protest when agency recruiters came to the University to inter- view student applicants in the Stu- dent Activities Building (SAB). In the midst of the protest, Marcuse says he was kicked in the groin. Although he could not iden- tify who had kicked him,awitnesses later identified Patrick as the as- sailant. Later the same day, Ann Arbor police detective Douglas Barbour, who was at the SAB during the protest, filed assault charges against Marcuse, as did Robert Pifer, University assistant director of public safety. Marcuse was then arrested on charges of simple assault. In the police report, University Director of Public Safety Leo Heatley testified that he saw Mar- cuse grab Barbour and knee him in the back. At his arraignment in Decem- ber, 1987, Marcuse stood mute. Those charges were dropped in the spring of 1988, when Marcuse decided to file civil charges against both the University and the city, specifically naming Barbour, Patrick, Pifer, and Heatley. In a pre-trial hearing Monday morning, Circuit Court Judge Patrick Conlin dismissed the charges against the city and the University as a whole, but upheld those against the individual defen- dants. Heatley, Patrick, and Barbour are being charged with assault and battery, as well as counts of mali- cious prosecution. Pifer is also be- ing charged with malicious prose- cution. "It is my belief that it is police policy to arrest people who are victims of police brutality," David Austin said yesterday. Austin, an Ann Arbor resident who was an LSA junior when he protested with Marcuse against the CIA, will be testifying on Marcuse's behalf in the trial. Marcuse was unavailable for comment last night as he was re- covering from jet lag. He has been working on his doctorate in Ger- man history in Germany since the fall of 1988, and has interrupted those studies for this trial. Both Patrick and Pifer declined to comment on their defense yes- terday, and Heatley and Barbour were unavailable for comment last night, as were their respective at- torneys, Peter Davis and Mary Rinne. In 1987, Assistant City Attorney Ron Plunkett said the attorney's office found that Patrick had acted in self defense. The trial begins today at 1:30 at the 22nd Circuit Court. ANTHONY M. CROLUDay Amy Bernthal, Renee Bushey, and Stephanie Brail, LSA juniors, hold candles to show their grief for those who were injured or killed in the Persian Gulf. Students attend Diag vigil to m -ourn deaths caused b war by Becca Donnenfeld I Cheers of victory may be spreading across America, but certain campus groups at Michi- gan would rather mourn than ,celebrate. "125,000 dead, is that some- thing to celebrate?" asked stu- dents attending a vigil last night on the Diag. Between 80 and 90 people at- tended the candlelight vigil, bvhich was organized by seven campus groups. Chanting "U.S. out now! Hands off Iraq!" those attending the vigil met to "express pain and sorrow for the people who have died and continue to suffer as a result of the Persian Gulf War," said LSA sophomore Ben- jamin Sandler and a member of Students Against U.S. Interven- kion in the Middle East (SAUSI). Sandler said he helped orga- nize the event because he felt "alienated by the patriotism and jingoism that's going on right now, making my mourning seem illegitimate." SAUSI member and Rack- ham student Tom Abowd said there have been well over 300,000 casualties since the war began. "At this point of euphoria we are trying to emphasize the fact that thousands were need- lessly killed," he said. The vigil began with a "statement of purpose" by Rackham student Pattrice Mau- rer, who urged the crowd to "turn mourning into motivation." She was followed by LSA se- nior Deyar Jamil, who is an Iraqi American. She said the dead "died in vain ... they were vic- tims of corruption." Rackham student Rochelle Davis tearfully described the "devastation in Iraq." She said the Iraqis were severely lacking in medical supplies, including such basic amenities as anesthe- sia for amputations. "Despite flag-waving and pa- triotic cheers, we killed 125,000 people and infiltrated an entire country," Davis said. "It's impor- tant that people know that it's not right to celebrate." Sandler cited sanctions against Iraq as the cause for dwindling food and medical sup- plies. "Water and electricity have been cut off in Baghdad, sewage is backed up, and ba- bies' incubators couldn't oper- ate," he said. "The Iraqi people are starving and in poor health." Rackham student Janise Hur- tig said she is "concerned that people are celebrating a superfi- cial victory on the basis of few U.S. deaths. The media sanitizes our side, and makes the other side appear satanic. "George Bush is as equally horrific (as Saddam Hussein)," she said. FDA investigates Sudafed capsule tampering incidents SEATTLE (AP) - A sixth sus- pect Sudafed 12 Hour capsule was found yesterday during examina- tion of tens of thousands of cap- sules as part of the investigation of three cyanide poisoning cases, an official said. "You can visually see that it was different from the other cap- sules," Food and Drug Administra- tion speaker Jeff Nesbit said from his Washington, D.C., office. "Its contents were yellowish, or cream- colored." The capsule was one of 20 in a plastic-and-foil "blister pack" of the cold remedy that had been re- moved from a drugstore shelf. Nesbit said the tape seal on the box had been reglued, and the alu- minum part of the blister pack was broken and then pushed back into place. The capsule appeared dif- ferent from the others in the pack and probably was not a regular Sudafed 12 Hour capsule, he said. Two people died and a third fell critically ill last month in the Puget Sound area after taking Sudafed 12 Hour capsules that au- thorities say were laced with cyanide. The poisonings led the maker of the medicine, Burroughs Wellcome Co., to recall the over- the-counter medication nationwide. Officials advised consumers who have the capsules to return them to the stores where they were bought, and to alert authorities if anything looks suspicious. The discovery yesterday repre- sented the sixth apparent tamper- ing. All have been in the Tacoma- Olympia area, about 50 miles south of Seattle. Investigators have not publicly offered a motive. No arrests have been made. Nesbit said the third capsule appeared similar to the other two, except the most recent pill was found in a 20-capsule pack, while the others were in 10-packs. The lot number on the blister pack also differed from the number for the earlier contaminated capsules. g F 4 i 1 F , i { ) F i 3 ty{ J L :i 1 1 i t t y 1a 7 w r 1 w: i 4 F 3 1 t ai + ,a 4' :i { :+ i 4; t 4 . . ', . i' ti I G. t, Y" ? i TH E LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today IV et"A View from Israel: the Persian s Gulf," Dr. Eytan Gilboa. Hillel, 7:30. Undergraduate Philosophy Club, "Toward a Toxonomy of Parenting weekly meeting. Topic: Philosophy Young Children," Dr. Marc Born- and Literature. 2220 Angell Hall, 6 stein of the NIH.ISR, rm 6050,4 p.m. p.m.. "New Frontiers Revisited," Paul AIESEC (International Association of Coverdell, Peace Corps Director. Students in Economics and Business), Rackham Amphitheater, 7:30. ,weekly meeting. B-School, Rm. 1273, "The European Revolutions of 1848 6:00. and 1989," Robert Goldstein of Oak- Latin American Solidarity Commit- land University. Lane Hall Commons, tee (LASC), weekly mtg. Guild noon. douse, 802 Monroe, 6 p.m. "Tests for a Change-Point in Simple EQ/RC Social Group for Lesbians, Linear Regression," Hyune-Ju Kim Iisexuals and Gay Men, weekly of Syracuse University. 1443 Mason, mtg. Dorm residents especially en- 4 p.m. bouraged to attend. Call 763-2788 for "Changing Images of Asia and Wnfo. Asian Americans," Dr. Gail Nomura. Revolutionary Workers League Union, Wolverine Rm, noon. Current Events Study Group, "From the Anti-War Movement to weekly mtg. East Quad, 52 Greene, Social Change," Howard Hawkins. 7:30. League, rm D, 7 p.m. Students Against U.S. Intervention "Organic Synthesis via Transition in the Middle East (SAUSI), weekly Metal Species. Enantiospecific Ap- outreach mtg. Michigan Union, Tap proaches to Substituted Dihydro- Room, 5 p.m. and Molybdenum Complexes," L. Students Against U.S. Intervention Liebeskind of Emory University. in the Middle East (SAUSI), weekly Chem Bldg, rm 1640, 4 p.m. action mtg. Michigan Union, 3rd Furt her m ore 'floor, MSA office, 6 p.m. Michigan Video Yearbook, weekly Safewalk, nighttime safety walking mtg. Union, 4th floor, 6:30. service. Functions 8-1:30 a.m. Sun.- University Students Against Can- Thurs. Call 936-1000 or stop by 102 cer, mtg. Union, Wolverine Rm, 7:30 UGLi. (officers at 7). Northwalk, North Campus nighttime U of M Students of Objectivism. safety walking service. Functions 8- Discussion of "What is Capitalism?" 1:30 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. Call 763-WALK by Ayn Rand. League, Rm A, 8 p.m. or stop by 2333 Bursley. American Civil Liberties Union ECB Peer Writing Tutors available (ACLU), mtg. Hutchins Hall, rm 250, to help with your papers Sunday- 5:45. Thursday, Angell/Haven Computing Indian and Pakistani-American Center, 7-11:00. 611 Church Comput- Students' Council, mtg. League, rm ing Center, Tuesdays and Thursdays, C, 6:30. 7-11. The Yawp literary magazine, mtg U of M Shorin-Ryu Karate-do for those interested. 7629 Haven, 7 Club, weekly practice. Call 994-3620 p.m. for info. CCRB Martial Arts Rm., Undergraduate Sociology Club, 8:30-9:30. mtg. Dominick's, 6 p.m. U of M Tae Kwon Do Club, Wednesday workout. CCRB Martial Arts Rm., 7-8:30. Speakers U of M Shotokan Karate Club, Wednesday practice. Call Ravindra "State and Local Gun Regulations Prasad for info. IM Bldg. Martial Arts in Michigan: How Have They Rm., 7-9:00. Changed and What do They U of M Ninjitsu Club, Wednesday' Mean," Brad Geller, aide to Rep. practice. Call David Dow, 668-7478, Bullard. Ann Arbor Women's City for info. IM Bldg, Wrestling Rm, 7-9. Club, 7-9. Beans and Rice Dinner, weekly "Domestic Violence in Puerto event. Guild Honuse. 802 Monroe St. Spring Break binges blamed on brewers WASHINGTON (AP) - Sur- geon General Antonia Novello took aim yesterday at binge drink- ing by college students, complain- ing that "Spring Break used to be where the boys are. Now it's where the booze is." She called on brew- ers to stop running promotions that appeal to underage drinkers. "Unfortunately, Spring Break has become synonymous with ex- cessive and binge drinking by our young people," Novello said. Novello began her news confer- ence by showing a videotape of throngs of drunken students clog- ging the streets of Palm Springs, Calif., during Spring Break three years ago. "I want to say to our young people that it is time to put on the brakes with regard to their drink- ing," she said. Novello expressed hope the message would carry far beyond this spring's vacations. "This is the wave of the fu- ture," she said. Novello said young people have been bombarded with advertise- ments that lead them to believe drinking is "an acceptable rite of passage, a necessary path for them to follow." - She appealed to alcohol manu- facturers and retailers to "take a more responsible posture" in their marketing and promotion tactics during this year's Spring Break. James Sanders, president of the Beer Institute, said manufac- turers in the past had provided "diversionary recreational opportu- nities" during Spring Break such as contests and games to take the emphasis away from drinking. He said the brewers were unfairly blamed for the wild behavior of students who lost control and that most brewers would stay away al- together this year. Novello said: The average student spends "more money on booze than on books;" Alcohol is one of the lead- ing causes of death among young adults; Alcohol is a factor in 21 percent of all college dropouts; Among those currently in college, between 240,000 and 360,000 eventually will lose their lives due to drinking, and; Most college students drink more beer than anything else. The figures came from the Of- fice for Substance Abuse Preven- tion within the Department of Health and Human Services. Bobby Heard, a 23-year-old student at the University of Texas, said thousands of students already are converging on beaches in his state for this year's break. Last year's break at South Padre Island featured drinking on the beaches, intoxicated couples having sex in hot tubs and young women stripping for a drunken crowd below, he said. Michigan Alumni work here: The WU Streset ournal The New Yok Times . Because theyorkedA The WashingtonPost Dcu hywre~r The Detroit Free Press The Detroit News NBC Sports FREE DOUBLE ~PRIN TS ONL Y3 24 EXPOSURE ROLE. COLOR PRINT FILM -41 PROCESS L - -VAUD 3-4-91 ThROUGH 310-91 WITH THIS COUPON m u H at&FWORRIED ABOUT THE WAR? Anxious? Worried about family and loved ones in Persian Gulf countries? WITH A NEW AFTERWORD One of our most distinguished legal minds offers a brilliant argument for the wisdom and necessity of interpreting the Constitution according to the "original understanding" of the framers and the people for whom it was written. "The most powerful, most readable- and wisest-book on constitutional law to have been published in this 'EMPTINt oFAMERICA ROBERT H. BORK: i If: ! ;;