Ube idtgxan Bailu Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No.11 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, September 21, 1989 TheMichignCOil 'U' officials examining racism charges Housing Dept. investigating allegations of discrimination JOSH.MOORE/Daily Enjoying the morning sun... Ann Arbor resident John Kones, spends his morning looking out the window of the lounge at the The Liberty inn. by Marion Davis Daily Minority Issues Reporter A Mary Markley Residence Hall resident told a Residential Director two weeks ago that she wanted to move out after discovering that her roommate was Black, housing officials confirmed yesterday.. The Black student charged that she had been discriminated against, and for two weeks, the students living on the hall have endured a tense living environment. The Black student who reported the alleged discriminatory act said that no longer than five minutes after their first meeting, her white roommate made a decision that the two could not live together. The Black woman alleges that her roommate told her she wanted to live with someone who was more like her, had the same background, and grew up in the same environment. The roommate then suggested that the Black student move in with some of her own friends, the Black student said. The Plack woman said she thought the reasons were unjustified because they had not had enough time to get acquainted. The Black student said the white student denied that her decision was racially motivated. Both students involved in the incident have asked that their names not be printed because of an ongoing investigation into the incident. The white student who allegedly committed the discriminatory action has refused comment. Both the students later talked to their residence hall advisor and the building's resident director to discuss the incident. The conflict was not resolved and the- white woman eventually moved. Several days before the incident between the women, racist graffitti was found in a Markley elevator. PARIS (AP) - A Moslem fun- damentalist group claimed responsi- bility yesterday for the downing of a French DC-10 jetliner in southern Niger that killed all 171 people on board. U.S., French and UTA airline au- thorities said they believe the plane, bound Tuesday from Chad to Paris, was blown out of the sky by a bomb. A U.S. team of investigators was to leave later yesterday for Niger. Two callers who claimed to rep- resent Islamic Jihad but did not give their own names made their claims of responsibility in separate tele- phone calls to the airline and to a Western news agency. Archie Andrews, associate director of housing, said it stated "Die nigger, die." Though housing officials set up a "get-to-know-your-roommate" hall support meeting in response to the incident, the hall's residents have said the meetings have been vague. bombed over Niger 171 passengers, including 7 Amrcnkilled on board Islamic Jihad is among several radical fundamentalist groups in Lebanon believed to be part of Hezbollah, or Party of God, the um- brella groups thought to hold 16 Westerners hostage in Lebanon, in- cluding eight Americans. Among the passengers on the French jetliner were seven Americans, including Bonnie Pugh, wife of the U.S. ambassador to Chad, Robert L. Pugh. UTA Flight 772 was on a flight from Brazzaville, Congo, to Paris when it crashed Tuesday shortly after making a stop in N'Djamena, Chad. Debris was scattered over a 16-mile expanse of desert about 400 miles northwest of N'Djamena. The French army, whose troops stationed in neighboring Chad were the first to reach the scene, said the 15 crew and 156 passengers died, in- cluding eight children. Authorities said indications are that the aircraft was felled by a bomb. "The obvious wide-spread nature of the debris suggested it blew up in the sky and not on the ground," pres- idential, press.secretary-Marlin.z Fitzwater said, adding That President Bush had been briefed on the mishap. UTA said it had received an anonymous phone call from a man claiming responsibility on behalf of Islamic Jihad. In London, an anonymous caller also telephoned a Western news agency and said: "In the name of Allah and Imam Khomeini, the Islamic Jihad issued this statement: We are proud of this action which was very successful. We would like to say the French are warned not to exchange information see CRASH, page 5 The Black woman alleges that her roommate told her she wanted to live with someone who was more like her, had the same background, and grew up in the same environment. In fact, the housing staff was told not to comment on the incident and to refer questions to Andrews. But many of the residents said the meeting really didn't explain what happened. "They (housing officials) should have opened up a little more. It would have helped everybody to understand more," said one resident. "I don't think it's appropriate (being vague)," said another student. "It's a serious problem and it should be dealt with." Currently the incident is being investigated by Andrews, the building director supervisor and the Markley building director. "I can't give a definite answer on what actions we will take. We are in the process of investigating the facts," Andrews said. "There are always two sides to a story and we want to hear and investigate both sides of the story... I'm still talking to several people." Anti -discrimination rules: others lookin by Noah Finkel Daily Administration Reporter A student can now be punished for engaging in discriminatory con- duct directed at individuals with the intent of harming that individual. Civil libertarians are considering a lawsuit. Sound familiar? For many University of Michigan students, the controversy about the week-old revised anti-dis- crimination policy comes to mind. But in Madison, Wisconsin, stu- dents think of UWS-17 - the University of Wisconsin's new pol- icy imp mented this semester pro- hibiting aiscrimination on- the basis of race, sex, religion, sexual orienta- tion, and national origin. And students at Stanford, Tufts, and Emory are reminded of their uni- versity's policies on discrimination. Just like the University of Michigan, these schools and several others are struggling with the ques- tion of how to protect students from racial or sexual harassment while in- suring the right to free speech on campus. Schools are resolving the dilemma in their own way, and ob- servers are keeping a watchful eye on developments regarding Michigan's anti-discrimination policy, especially the legal aspects. Last month, the American Civil Liberties Union successfully chal- lenged the original University anti- discrimination policy. A federal court judge ruled that the policy was too vague and violated the First Amendment. But last week, University President James Duderstadt imple- mented a narrower interim policy that only punishes students if they issue epithets to individuals with an intent to injure. The new anti-discrimination rules at Wisconsin are very similar to the interim ones here. Gretchen Miller, an ACLU lawyer who is preparing a challenge of Wisconsin's anti-discrimination policy, said her case raises the same issues as the ACLU/University of Michigan case. "The victory at Michigan will have an impact here," Miller said. "We will certainly cite the judge's ruling in our brief." But Patricia Hodulik, general counsel at Wisconsin, said the ruling here will not make much of an im- pact on Wisconsin. "The Michigan policy was a bit broader," Hodulik said. "Because ours is narrower, it can withstand an attack from the ACLU." "We were aware of the Michigan policy when we were. developing ours at the same time, but we didn't draw much from it" she said. Stanford University may soon g to'U' enact similar, but slightly broader rules. A faculty/student committee is considering the possibility of pun- ishing students for discriminatory speech directed toward an individual or group of individuals that is in- tended to "insult or stigmatize". Those rules are a scaled down version of an original policy pro- posal which was withdrawn after a wide segment of the community judged it too broad and vague, said Stanford General Counsel Sally Cole. See POLICIES, page 5 Hurricane Hugo heads for the U.S. Looters plague war-torn Beirut MIAMI (AP) -- Hurricane Hugo quickened its pace toward the Eastern Seaboard yesterday as residents gath- ered supplies and made evacuation plans, while violence and looting broke out on the shattered islands in the storm's wake. President Bush authorized the sending of troops to the U.S. Virgin Island of St. Croix after members of the National Guard and police report- edly joined prison escapees and others in wild looting. Armed Coast W Guard crewnersons also went ashore tions. Hugo picked up speed over open water and could come ashore late today or early, tomorrow. "I think they're looking at this one with a bit of respect," city spokesperson Pat Dowling said in Myrtle Beach, S.C., as radio and TV advisories warned: "Remember the people of Puerto Rico." Since Sunday, Hugo has killed at least 25 people, left thousands homeless and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage as it slashed thrniouh the northeastern BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Long-suffering residents of this be- leaguered capital have braved six months of shelling and shortages only to face a new terror - bunker bandits. Bands of gunners prowl the streets of Moslem west Beirut at night, cleaning out apartments hit in the artillery battles between the Syrians and Christian forces. They grab anything salvageable: Persian carpets, television sets, video recorders, silverware. neath their apartment block in west Beirut's Aishe Bakkar neighborhood. "I don't know how they managed to get in during the shelling," said one of the victims, Mohammed Abu-Samir, a middle-aged Sunni Moslem taxi driver. "They just ordered us to hand over our jewelry, money and watches and we had to do as they said," he said. "I don't know which is the worst: getting robbed in our own shelter, or the shelling." The number of renorted rohheries . F