The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 17, 1990 - Page 3 AT&T 'Glitch' PSC Diag shanty razed by vandals knocks out By Gil Renberg Daily Staff Reporter Campus Palestinian and Muslim groups remain outraged at the recent destruction of the Diag shanty built to protest the treatment of Palestini- ans, to show solidarity, and to in- crease awareness of Palestinian is- sues on campus. The shanty, which was discovered in ruins by two Pub- lic Safety officers on Jan. 7, was demolished by unknown vandals. Sgt. Kevin McNulty of the Pub- lic Safety Department said he and his officers found no leads as to who the vandals were, and the investigation has been closed. He said the actual date of the destruction is unknown, although it clearly happened on or before Jan. 7. Muzammil Ahmed, first year Medical student and member of both the Muslim Student Association (MSA) and the Palestine Solidarity Committee said the destruction of the shanty "could have just been ran- dom violence." However, he accepted phone system March, has been the subject of re- peated attacks. It has previously been vandalized, burned, spray-painted and urinated upon, Ahmed said. Some of the graffiti had been anti-Arab, he added. Nuha Khoury, Rackham Graduate student and PSC member, said she is The destruction of the Palestinian shanty shows that there is no tolerance on campus for Palestinians' -Nuha Khoury, a PSC member "disgusted" by the repeated attacks on the shanty. "It shows that there is no tolerance on campus for Pales- tinians." Ahmed and Khoury agreed that the destruction was a violation of their right of freedom of speech. The vandals "are attacking not just a shanty but the right of expression," Ahmed said. "The shanty is going to stay there," said Khoury. She said the BEDMINISTER, N.J. (AP).- American Telephone and Telegraph Co. blamed its largest service outage ever on a computer glitch in a new system designed to bolster its long- distance network, and moved quickly yesterday to make amends with cus- tomers. "It was certainly the most far- reaching service problem we've ever experienced," AT&T Chair Robert Allen said. AT&T discovered the problem about 2:30 p.m. EST Monday, and did not correct it until nine hours later. More than half the long-dis- tance calls placed on its nationwide network during the trouble did not go through, the company said. AT&T said it traced the glitch to a computer in New York City that helps direct calls through the vast telephone network. Allen said it was not caused by a computer virus or sabotage. The company said the problem stemmed from a bug, or "logic" problem, inadvertently written into the software, or computer program. The program spread to more than 100 switching centers. "It was almost like a nightmare waiting to be dreamed," said AT&T spokesperson Burke Stinson. "It was there all the time but the condi- tions were not right." In a briefing at the company's sprawling Network Operations Cen- ter in this New York City suburb, Allen announced plans to offer: a discount day when all of AT&T's approximately 80 million customers can make calls at reduced rates. Allen called the plan a small compensation to customers who couldn't do business or reach friends and relatives during the outage. The company had not decided the dis- count and date, but Allen said AT&T is filing an emergency petition with the Federal Communications Commission to approve the mea- sure. Allen said he could not estimate the losses to AT&T or its customers from the trouble. Airline reservation centers, telephone marketers and others who depend on telephones were especially affected, officials have said. The failure, however, may hive been somewhat muted by the Martin Luther King holiday, which reduced the load of government, business and banking calls. 8 i G 3 4 JOSE JUAREZJDailyI "the possibility of the act being ar anti-Arab statement. & The construction and maintenance of the shanty was a joint venture b} PSC and MSA. The shanty, whict was one of several symbolic struc tures on the Diag, featured slogan advocating Palestinian liberation. The shanty, three years old thi Grad student attacked in front of the Union * A 34 year-old University PHAd candidate in computerscience was assaulted with a wine bottle by three men in front of the Union last Sat- Surday night. The victim, who was unavailable forcomment, left the Union at. 11:50 Saturday night after picking up some papers, Ann Arbor police reports said. - At the bottom of the Union's steps the victim and a group of three men in their 20's bumped into each dther. After a brief argument, a igember of the group brandished an empty wine bottle and broke it over the victim's head. The student was treated for severe head lacerations at the University hospital and summarily released. Although the police have a firm suspect, no arrests have been made. Two Ann Arbor businesses receive bomb threats Last Sunday the Molly Maid housekeeping business on S. State m :e y .h Is is The Palestinian shanty, a symbol of Palestinian suffering and solidarity, was destroyed over the holidays. PSC has not met to decide when to rebuild it yet. However, she did say that one option would be to leave the shanty in its current condition - torn apart, with pieces strewn about and no parts remaining standing. Ahmed promised the shanty will be rebuilt. A shanty built in protest of apartheid in South Africa was also vandalized during the same week the Palestinian shanty was razed. St. received a a telephone call an- nouncing that a bomb would arrive in an envelope the following day, police reports said. Although the threat has yet to be fulfilled, Ann Arbor's Campus Inn received a similar call last Monday. An unknown male stated, "I'm not going to call again, but there is a bomb in the building," and hung up, police reports said. No bomb was found after a thor- ough search, the report added. Student reports sexual assault at the U - Club A University student was sexu- ally assaulted at the U club by an ac- quaintance at 1:00 on Monday morn- ing, police officials said. The victim was sitting on the stage when a male, known to her, approached her, jumped on top of her and began "thrusting her in a sexually lewd manner," the report said. The victin is deciding whether or not to pres charges against her assailant who could be charged with criminal sex- ual conduct. Two residents are threatened with guns An Ann Arbor resident was walk- ing East Bound on Packard Rd., last Friday night, when a light blue car pulled up beside him. The driver, a young male, asked the complainant if he "wanted to become a statistic," pointed a semi-automatic pistol at his head and told him he was going "to blow him away," police reports said. The assailant then drove off. There are no suspects. The previous night, the police reported an armed robbery in which a young male held up a pizza delivery truck with a small pistol. He reportedly took the driver's wallet and a submarine sandwich. There are no suspects. By Mike Sobel RIDE TILE WAVE.- Use and Read 9Yt 0i*9i4tt] WaV Classifieds Judge: officials did not execute prison reform KALAMAZOO (AP) - A fed- eral judge found state officials in contempt yesterday for failing to comply with portions of court- ordered prison reform. U.S. District Judge Richard Enslen, however, did not find Gov. James Blanchard or state Attorney General Frank Kelley in contempt for allegedly attempting to defy his orders. Enslen didn't impose sanc- tions. The case deals with prison re- forms ordered by Enslen, including improved medical care and access to the court system, after 1981 prison riots. Enslen ordered the reforms after the U.S. Department of Justice found that the state was violating constitutional rights of inmates. ' Enslen found the state in con- tempt yesterday for not supplying required projections for state prison populations and for suppressing in- formation needed to check compl- ance. He ordered an independent con- tractor - not state corrections offi- cials - to provide the population projections. Enslen also modified the compli- ance reporting methods, requiring more audits of prison conditions. Enslen also admonished the at- torney general's office for not being as cooperative as it had been in the past in complying with his orders, but said imposing financial sanc- tions would only detract from the is- sues. Assistant Attorney General Susan Przekop-Shaw said she was disap- pointed with the judge's ruling, but pleased that he did not find Blanchard or Kelley in contempt. Woman reports rape Police reported a local rape on Lake Lila Dr. at 8:00 Sunday morn- ing. A young, unmarried couple, who had been living together, were in the process of breaking up when the boyfriend forced his partner to have intercourse with him, the report said. The boyfriend recently fled to St. Croix, the report added. Bank pleads guilty to "laundering drug money } TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - U.S. Dis- trict Judge W. Terrell Hodges ac- cepted pleas from two divisions of the Luxembourg-based Bank of Credit and Commerce International and found them guilty, but has not set a date for formally imposing the sentence. Theiplea did not affect co-defen- dants. in the $32 million money- laundering case, including six top BCCI banking officers and two Colombians the government claims Ywere part of the Medellin cocaine cartel. Their cases opened with pre- trial motions yesterday in a trial ex- pected to last five months. Under the agreement signed yes- terday, BCCI, S. A. and BCCI Over- seas Ltd. are to forfeit $14 million in assets frozen earlier by the gov- ernment. Prosecutors claim that rep- resents profits made from the sale of cocaine in American cities and laun- dered in a series of complicated worldwide banking transactions. The banks are also to receive suspended fines and five years proba- tion supervised by the Federal Re- serve. The cash forfeiture was the largest ever by a financial institution in the United States, said David Runkel, spokesperson for the U. S. Justice Department in Washington. A two-year sting operation, Op- eration C-Chase, began in Tampa in 1986 after an undercover agent conned his way into an international money laundering network. After that, agents helped launder profits from cocaine sales to Columbia through Panama, investigators said. ARE YOU THICK AND TIRED OF IT? The Weight Control Clinic at The University of Michigan r- Nutrition Seminars, Exercise Classes, Counseling, Body Composition Testing, Computer Diet Analysis, Personal Exercise Training 1 DON'T MISS OUT! THIS IS YOUR CHANCE TO EXPLORE THE MOST SPIRITED UNIVERSITY IN THE WORLD!!! Michigan Video Yearbook Mass Meeting Thursday Jan. 18 Michigan Union Pond Room 7:00 PM CURIOUS? Stop by. You'll be glad you did. i _I * Winter Program Begins January 29, 1990 *Registration by Appointment January 8-25 * Winter Open House, January 18, 7-8pm Room 1250 Central Campus Recreation Building 74 7-2722 THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Women Worshipping in the Christian Tradition - 7 p.m. at Canterbury House Students Fighting Anti- Semitism - mass meeting at 7 p.m. at Hillel Michigan Student Television Network - mass meeting in the School of Education's Schorling Auditorium tic Tomography" - Dr. Larry Shepp of AT&T laboratories speaks at 4 p.m. in 451 Mason; coffee served at 3:30 in 1443 Ma- son "Gorbachev and Glasnost: Promises, Promises" - Prof. Sue Hulett, a visiting scholar who teaches courses in international re- lations, speaks at the Brown Bag at noon in the Lane Hall Com- m Rnnm A message for the new nurse The best nursing careers start with a little nervousness You've graduated. You're ready to start work. And, you're nervous. Will you make the right decisions? Can you remember everything you learned? How will you fit in with your co-workers. Relax. At Oakwood Hospital we know the best nurses start out with a little nervousness. That's because they know how important their chosen career is and how many lives they will touch. A good nurse wants to be sure everything they do is just right. Oakwood helps new nurses by providing 6-12 week orientation, a designated preceptor and long term support. In addition, our entire staff is willing to help each other. We offer a new competitive wage package and great benefits including an on-site BSN completion program and on-site daycare. If you're interested in beginning your nursing career where you'll be understood, I