1d gan 74F Ccpynght C 1990 Vol. C1, No.44 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, November 5,1990 TeMicin IDal Vol. o. 4 hip~di American students in Israel cope wi 0 Mark Katz Program at the Rothberg School for of Israelis inside Israel-proper in the one of panic. JERUSALEM - When nearly 500 American college students boarded the plane to come here this past summer, anxiety ran deep. The thought of spending one year abroad in Israel evoked much excitement, but at the same time many worries. For many, it would be the longest time ever spent away from home. In *dition, it would be their first time in the midst of a region notorious for instability and random terror. That was July 31. -Three months later, American stu- dents enrolled in the One-Year Campus *ommons remains a frontier by Tami Pollak The history of the North Campus *ommons expansion project is full of chickens and eggs. Unfortunately, very few businesses are interested in cooking them up for that growing, hungry community. , - The Commons expansion, which doubled the size of the facility, was completed in the fall of 1989, adding approximately 45,000 square feet of floorspace. Today, most of that voce remains vacant. The expansion was originally in- tended to serve as a "place where those who learn, work, or reside on North Campus can get a sense of belonging' or community, through social interaction," according to the Program Statement issued by the University Planner's Office in March of 1986. Specifically, the services and fa- z ilities outlined for the Commons included many Union-like services such as informal restaurants, a book and supply store, a convenience store, a post office, student lounges, hotel rooms, and a computing center branch. In line with these expectations, much of the Commons' interior was left uncompleted, awaiting commer- " al development. However, only 'one-fifth of the space added to the original commons is currently uti- lized, including a computing center, a bookstore, a fast food stand, and as of this December, a credit union branch. Financially, the Commons planning team put all their eggs in one basket, depending on retail in- vestment for the bulk of their fund- *ng- "It is a chicken and the egg type thing," said John Brockett, senior associate director of the Michigan Union/North Campus Commons. Brockett said it is hard for busi- nesses to see the money that could be generated by investing in the 'Commons because few people fre- quent the area now. At the same time, he explained, businesses would generate more consumer patronage. Frank Cianciola, Director of the Michigan Union/North Campus Commons/Student Program ex- plained, "I think that in terms of commercial areas, they need to see sustained consumer traffic which just isn't there yet... However, I believe that with the imminent development of the I-Tech facility, there should be a tremendous increased draw to North *Campus." Completion of the I-Tech facil- ity - the Interdisciplinary Technol- ogy Instruction Center - is antici- pated in 1992. As explained by Alen Samuels, a professor of design in the School of Art, "This facility will be designed to enable all kinds of people to have access to all sorts of technologies that would not ordi- narily be available in their own dis- ciplines. For example, a dancer Overseas Students at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem find them- selves with much more to worry about. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's threats to destroy Israel with an arse- nal of chemical and biological weapons was taken more seriously than past threats made by other Arab leaders. Many Israelis have the gov- ernment-issued gas masks at home -o prove it. Internally, the combination of vio- lence on the Temple Mount three weeks ago and the random stabbings following week have further in- creased tensions among American students here. Mark Katz is a University junior and a Daily staffer, currently studying in Israel on Hebrew University's One-Year program.y-s - r WORLD}:J PERSPECTIVE However, the mood among American students at Hebrew University is, for the most part, not Out of the 550 students on the predominantly American one-year program, only 39 have left. That figure represents approximately twice the number of students who usually leave at the outset of each year due to personal complications, said Dr. Aharon Singer, director of the Hebrew University's one-year program. People involved in the program at all levels agree most of the early de- partures were caused by parental pressure from back home. Nevertheless, students have been ith regional affected by the realities of the threat deal with4 to their security coming from within Dana S Israel as well as from Iraq. Universit "Of course, I'm scared. The fact is Diego, ad that there might be a war," said appears t LSA junior Merav Barr, one of nine stage that University students on the program. tacks wit "It's scary living in Jerusalem know- evitable it ing we're so close to violence. It's avoidable; scary knowing I could have very eas- scary." ily have been at the Western wall the The re day of the Temple Mount incident." made mo: Barr added, "But at the same time, choosing we still go to classes and go out at what area night. You have to deal with it. It's example, a taste of what the Israelis have to crisis on a day to day basis." Shaw, a student from the .y of California at San dmitted that "the Intifada o be moving into a new will include individual at- h live weapons. The in- increase in terrorism is un- and unpredictable, and very cent events in Israel have st students more cautious in what busses they ride and as they walk through. For many students will no See ISRAEL, Page 2 Blanchard leads receni in tpoll Governor seems poised to be re-elected to a third term LANSING (AP) - Gov. James Blanchard remains a comfortable 14 percentage points over GOP challenger John Engler, a poll pub- lished yesterday showed. Michigan residents, who said they were certain or very likely to vote Tuesday, favored Blanchard over. Engler by a margin of 54 to 40, with six percent undecided, The De- troit News poll found, A month ago, a similar poll showed Blanchard ahead by 26 percentage points. The telephone survey of 814 reg- istered voters was conducted by the Gannett Corporate Research Depart- ment on Thursday, Friday and Satur- day. The margin of error was plus or minus 3.5 percent. Some analysts said the survey in- dicates Blanchard is poised to win a third term, barring defections to En- gler or a dismal voter turnout in ar- eas of Democratic strength. But Alex Gage, a Republican political consul- tant from Southfield, said 20 percent of voters could change their minds in the next two days. Engler, campaigning at a craft show in the Detroit suburb of Ster- ling Heights yesterday, said he wasn't shaken. "I'm confident that we're going to pull this out. We've had the mo- mentum for the past three weeks with our emphasis on taxes and edu- cation," Engler said, as he handed out campaign literature and passed out nickels that he contends repre- sent the voters' meager gains from Blanchard's tax-cut proposals. Engler campaign spokesperson Dan Pero criticized the News poll in a statement, citing a survey last week that found Engler within four percentage points of Blanchard, 46 to 42 percent. Thenewspaper poll also found that U.S. Rep. Bill Schuette has gained little ground on U.S. Sen. Carl Levin in three months. Schuette, a three-term Republican from Sanford, trails two-term Detroit Democrat Levin. Poll respondents said they preferred Levin by a margin of 64.4 percent to 31.4 percent, or 33 points, the News poll said. KENNETH SMOLLER/Daily The pressure's on Michigan outside linebacker Martin Davis pressures Purdue sophomore quarterback Eric Hunter in the Wolverines 38-13 rout of the Boilermakers. Iraq: Associated Press prepared to fight for Kuwait In a new outburst of belligerence, Iraq said yesterday it was ready to fight a "dangerous war" rather than ever give up Kuwait. One European official warned that divisions over the hostage issue are endangering the anti-Iraq alliance. "Iraq is not going to negotiate on Kuwait," Iraq's information minister, Latif Jassim, told reporters in Baghdad. He insisted Iraq's annexation of Kuwait would stand. "We are going to defend our 19th province on any condition, even if we have to fight a dangerous war," he said. Iraq also said it was recalling an unspecified number of retired army officers to active duty. Secretary of State James Baker " visited U.S. troops in the Saudi desert yesterday and said it was hard to say whether they would be called into combat. The presidents of Egypt and France expressed hopes that economic pressure rather than military might could force Iraq out of Kuwait. Meanwhile, four American ex- hostages were on their way home a day after being freed, and fifteen Europeans arrived in Jordan after being released by the Iraqis. They were among thousands of foreigners trapped in Iraq and Kuwait when Saddam Hussein's troops took over the emirate August 2. The first prisoners-of-war of the Persian Gulf crisis, three French soldiers, had a homecoming of their own in Paris yesterday, but it wasn't exactly a hero's welcome. French officials have said the soldiers, who were captured last week, might have strayed into Iraqi territory, and that they probably face punishment for their carelessness. The new Iraqi vow to keep Kuwait at all costs came only hours after a former Japanese prime minister, Yasuhiro Nakasone, met with Hussein and said the Iraqi president had demonstrated "great earnestness and seriousness" about seeking peace. Nakasone's visit, aimed at winning the releasesof Japanese hostages, comes as Japanese lawmakers are considering a plan to send troops to the gulf to join the multinational force arrayed against Hussein. The troop-deployment proposal has drawn ,strong criticism from those who say it would violate Japan's postwar peace constitution, even though the troops would be confined to non-combat roles. Iraq's official news agency said Nakasone had told Hussein it was unlikely lawmakers would approve the proposal. Nakasone, speaking to reporters, made no mention of such assurances, but the report underscored the way the hostages can be used as leverage. .AP Photo President Bush expresses his frustration with Iraq's treatment of U.S. hostages at a press conference last week. U.S. weighs training militaries of Warsaw Pact countries WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon may soon be training mili- tary officers from the very countries it once viewed as archenemies. Th aminctn.nnirni.;in- "Who would have believed we would train officers from the very countries which we viewed as our enemies just last year?" said one De- fi-nc Tlnm. t _,,i:a, about." That official said the decision on whether to include any East Euro- peans in the program would not be _ma unt:, Tim hpr L _hs_ ,,- There are more than 800,000 troops in the Warsaw Pact, not counting the Soviet Union. But the alliance is crumbling; it lost one of seven members this year when East painful transition from a state-run economy to a free-market system. The Soviet Union also is trying to save money. Its forces have begun pulling out of Hungary and