Ninety-eight years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCVIIi, No. 101 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, March 2, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Dily Athletic director search continues By STEVE BLONDER The two men rumored to be the leading candidates to replace Michi- gan Athletic Director Don Canham, who is retiring in July, are not being considered for the position, said Re- gent James Waters (D-Muskegon). Waters said that Arizona S tate University Athletic Director Charles Harris and North Carolina Athletic Director John Swofford were not among the finalists. This is contrary to information provided by Michigan alumni close to the search, sources within the administration, and ath- letic department personnel at ASU. In addition to Swofford and Harris, another rumored candidate has been Michigan hockey coach Red Beren- son. Berenson, however, when con- tacted, said, "Nobody has talked to me. I am not one of the other two candidates." Waters added that of the two re- maining finalists, "one actually did not have any administrative experi- ence in athletics," while the other has worked in an athletic department. "I don't think anyone from inside the department or with ties to Michigan is being considered," Wa- ters said. Also he said that neither of the candidates have previously asked that their names be removed from consideration. Athletic department personnel are baffled about who the new athletic director will be. "It puzzles me as to who they could be considering from the out- side," said Associate Athletic Direc- tor Don Lund after being told of what Waters had said. He reaffirmed the h See MICHIGAN, Page 11 Israeli heads debate peace offering Peres: Land should Doily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN University employee Carl Levine addresses a group of students and workers picketing the Undergraduate Library yesterday. The group protested alleged incidents of racial harassment of Building Services em- ployees and called for the firing of two supervisors. AFSCME Protest Woorkers pike, chgsIet argerCI"M be* relinquished JERUSALEM (AP) - Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said Israel searching for protesters. was willing to exchange for peace arrested two boys age those parts of the occupied territories one inside and thec not crucial to its security, but Prime entrance. Minister Yitzhak Shamir has An army spokespers opposed trading any land for peace. the detentions of two The two men are partners and rivals but said an initial check in Israel's tenuous coalition occurred at the hospita government. He denied any doctors w Israeli soldiers broke into, a Ramallah hospital. yesterday, fired tear gas and rubber bullets, beat 'The soldier hit doctors and took away t wo Palestinian boys suspected of throw- abdomen with th ing stones at troops, the hospital di- his gun and se rector said. away!" Then h( Soldiers shot an Arab protester in Badah in the c the shoulder at Sebastiva, a West slammed him ag Bank town near Nablus, hospital of- wall. ficials in Nablus reported. A leaflet distributed by leaders of -Dr. Yas what Arabs call "the uprising" - the violence that began Dec. 8 - urged Palestinians to intensify an economic Arab protesters hav boycott of Israel through strikes and tals as hiding places dui other actions. of riots in the occupies At Ramallah, in the occupied and Gaza Strip, wher West Bank eight miles north of Palestinians live. At l Jerusalem, Dr. Yassir Obeid said have been killed in the three soldiers burst into the hospital cording to U.N. figures, with guns drawn shortly before noon, have been wounded. fired tear gas and rubber bullets and Israeli soldiers have broke several windows. hospitals at least seven He said it was the second time in doctors say injured Ara a week that soldiers invaded the for fear of being arrested government-run hospital, apparently SeeVIOLENCE, me in the ie back of aid, "get e hit D r. hest an d gainst the ssir Obeid e used hospi- ring 12 weeks d West Bank -e 1.5 million east 76 Arabs violence, ac- and hundreds e broken into times. Some bs stay away [. ,Page 2 He said they d 10 and 11, other at the on confirmed Palestinians, showed both al's entrance. were beaten, By JIM PONIEWOZIK Thirty workers and students picketed yesterday in front of the Undergraduate Library, protesting an alleged assault in the library against a Black employee by a white Building Services supervisor. The picketers called on Building Services management to fire the supervisor, as well as another supervisor who they claim prevented the worker from filing a grievance. The group, which called itself the Ad Hoc Worker and Student Committee Against Racism, also accused the supervisors of violating the employees' contract by preventing the worker from filing a grievance against Supervisor James Boyd for the alleged assault. Union members said they believe the alleged assault was racially motivated. Several Building Services workers have accused Boyd of harassing Black employees, citing a separate incident in which they said he called a former Black employee a "nigger" and vowed to "get rid" of him. The employee was later fired. See 'U' EMPLOYEES, Page 9 I I DECISION REVERSED MSA: Fleming said he would use 'U' Council By STEVE KNOPPER Interim University President Robben Fleming privately told two student officials three weeks ago that he would send the first draft of his anti-discrimination policy to the University Council for review. But when he released a second draft on Monday, a proposal that might be adopted by the University's Board of Regents later this month, the council had not seen the document. Michigan Student Assembly President Ken Weine and Vice President Wendy Sharp said Fleming told them three weeks ago that he Minority ~leadrs c larify stance By STEVE KNOPPER Several minority leaders on campus said yesterday they favor an anti-racism policy with sanctions for students, faculty, and administrators. But they wouldn't comment on the revised "anti-discrimination" policy put forth by Interim University President Robben Fleming o n Monday, because they had not read it. Their stance is still at odds with those of others students opposed to a code of non-academic conduct. Those would reconvene the council with a one-month deadlineto create a new policy that would deter student discrimination through academic sanctions. In addition to his first draft, Fleming was to have sent a copy of MSA's alternative proposal - which would impose no sanctions - to the council. FLEMING was unavailable for comment yesterday. But Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson, in a memo sent to MSA last week on Fleming's behalf, said sending the two documents to the council "would confuse the issue rather than clarify it." Johnson was out of town yesterday and unavailable for comment. Fleming said the new proposal was an "anti-discrimination" policy and did not need to be reviewed by the council, a nine-member body of students, faculty and administrators charged with reviewing changes in student conduct policies. THIS policy, he said, can be passed through the regents' anti-. discrimination bylaw 14.06, although bylaw 7.02 mandates that the council, as well as both the students' and faculty's governing body, must approve any changes in the current conduct rules. "We both left (the meeting) with the impression that (Fleming) was going to University Council," Sharp said. "We were both under the assumption that he agreed to send his proposal and MSA's proposal." "As President of. MSA, I expect that we can take his word as Interim President," Weine said. "Unfortunately, we cannot. It's Assernbly policy disturbs memlbers By RYAN TUTAK The Michigan Student Assembly last night passed a resolution urging its members to be present during ccnstituents time of the assembly's weekly meetings. But some representatives say the resolution, although unanimously passed, is trivial and served merely to spark personal conflicts among assembly members less than a month before MSA's general election. The resolution quotes MSA Student Rights committee chair Mike Phillips in stating that assembly representatives should remain in the MSA chambers to hear constituents speak because MSA is "...here to work for the students, and to do our job" During the last MSA meeting Feb. 16, more than 30 students blasted the assembly for See ASSEMBLY, Page 9 Dolly Photo by JESSICA GREENE Sociology lecturer Luis Sfier-You nis uses a combination of humanistic spiritual beliefs and a personal philosophy in his teaching, Socilo ogyprofessor explores i n innovative teaching techniques By MICHAEL LUSTIG Guest prostitutes and transvestites are not common in University classrooms. That is, except in lecturer Luis Sfeir-Younis's Sociology 101 class, "Love and Intimacy." His class explores concepts of love, friendship, and sex, including homosexuality, prostitution, and transvestivism. He believes that these topics should be course that instructs teaching assistants how to teach. He also coordinates the undergraduate sociology program and serves as a concentration advisor, while also finding time to teach a UAC mini-course on yoga. Despite his busy schedule, Sfeir-Younis said he sees students at all times in his office, which is jammed with mountains of papers and reflects his active interests. Stacks of files loom tall over Sfeir-Younis's two desks, and cardboard boxes scattered on the floor serve as spare file cabinets. Books and more papers teeter on overcrowded shelves. His interest in relating to students come into his teaching through "dialogue." Just talking at students, Profile