WE ATH TODAY Cloudy, cool; Cgh: 57, Low: 42. TOMORROW Chneof showers; Hgh: 57, Low: 40. Jrv Student Services search needed more input. See OPINION Page 4. One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vol. CII, No. 24 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 31, 1991thc:'a d Mideast conference opens in Madrid Bush adi vises compromise ssential for peace of landes MADRID, Spain (AP) - President Bush revived his land-for- peace formula yesterday at the opening of the Mideast peace conference. Looking for a quick-fix agreement in what could be negotiations over many years, Bush also urged Israel and the Palestinians to experiment on a self-rule plan for the West Bank and Gaza Strip. "Nothing agreed to now will prej- udice permanent status negotiations," Bush told the two nervous parties. Bush's aim may be to get a quick dividend for himself and his foreign policy, and also for Arabs and Israelis in the event a more comprehensive set- tlement of their 43-year dispute proves elusive. On Tuesday, in a news conference with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, Bush steadfastly refused to repeat the land-for-peace slogan. Gorbachev's oddly timed appeal for aid at the Mideast peace conference yesterday underscored his country's secondary role in resolving the Arab- Israeli conflict. "The world community is becom- ing increasingly aware that what is happening in the Soviet Union has a larger bearing than any regional con- flict on the vital interest of the greater part of today's world," the Soviet leader said after a keynote ad- dress by Bush. Bush said U.S. mediators at the conference intend "to engage the Soviet Union as a force for positive 'Territorial compromise is essential for peace. Boundaries should reflect the quality of both security and political arrangements' - George Bush change in the Middle East." But Arab delegates were less chari- table. They said the main Soviet role in the region had been its economic and political collapse following the coup attempt in August, thereby denying hard-line Arab states their traditional source of arms and diplomatic sup- port. Palestinian and Jordanian delegates responded to Bush's appeal for peace but ignored Gorbachev. "Let's face the facts. The United States is running the show," said one Arab delegate, who spoke on condition he not be further identified. "The Soviet Union cannot even feed its peo- ple and asks the world for food. It will not have much of a role." Bush suggested that a land-for- peace approach might inhibit the launching of face-to-face bargaining between Arabs and Israelis and to pre- scribe land-for-peace is to unnerve Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and Syrian President Hafez Assad. Shamir appears determined not to yield any of the land Israel retains from the 1967 Six-Day war and Assad is unwilling to offer peace to Israel in exchange for the Golan Heights alone. Determined not to upset the two key players at the outset, Bush fell back on vaguely worded 1967 and 1973 U.N. Security Council resolutions. The United States went to such lengths to satisfy Assad that the invi- tations to the peace conference did not even propose peace treaties as a goal. "We seek peace, real peace," Bush declared yesterday. "And by real peace See MIDEAST, Page 2 Delegates attending the Mideast peace conference listen to Soviet Foreign Minister Boris Pankin addressing the afternoon session in Madrid's Palacio Real yesterday. Students working with' 'U' polic by JoAnne Viviano Daily Staff Reporter Despite recent tensions between students and police, a group of stu- dents is assisting the Department of Public Safety and Security (DPSS) by offering their input through its new Student Work As- sistant Program (SWAP). "I've worked with the officers and find them to be a very dedicated group of professionals," said LSA junior Jayson Blake, "They're nec- essary for the University." "It makes things so much more efficient when U of M Police can handle U of M stuff and not have to be second rate to city stuff," added Engineering junior Jully. Park. Superviser Lt. Vernon Baisden said SWAP was initiated by DPSS in May after Director Leo Heatley realized that students could play a role within the department. "Our original intent continues to be to give University of Michi- e praise c gan students an opportunity to earn and learn," Baisden said. "The learning comes from different jobs that are meaningful, and students also learn about the operation of a campus law enforcement agency." "The University was in agree- ment and the pilot group of stu- dents also felt there was a role; consequently, there was nothing to do but continue the program in the fall and winter," he added. The current SWAP unit con- sists of 29 members comprising two major staffs. The first staff operates in the resource center. The second performs community ser- vice and assistance. Publications assistants in the resource center compile annual re- ports, and design fliers, brochures, and other public relations materi- als. RC senior Amy Spade said she sees her role as a publication assis- tant as one of "reaching out toward the University community." ifficers "It also gives me an opportu- nity to do things I didn't think I'd be able to do until after college," she -added. ""t: great experience for a future resume." Other students working within the center perform administrative jobs, compile survey results, and develop the department's re- sources. SWAP's community service field assistants are available to as- sist motorists in need of a jump start, escort, or an "unlock." Blake recalled an incident last summer when he rescued a handi- capped man caught in the heat. "His van battery was dead and he couldn't get his lift down. He got the attention of a hospital security guard and I went right over and gave him a jump start," he said. "This is -the first job I've had where I felt I was making a differ- ence," he added. "I feel like an im- portant part of the department, a contributing member." Detroit attempts to extinguish sparks of Devil's Night fires Baisden LSA sophomore Kenya Lacy said he has performed 11 successful unlocks since he obtained his posi- tion in September. "At first I thought it was just going to be a job," he said. "But it feels good to help. a person, to do something important as if you're a law officer trying to protect some- one." Community service office assis- tants work at the information counter at DPSS. "We want to help and do as much as we can," Park said. Park comforted a wet, lost dog which was brought to the office Wednesday until its owners ar- rived. "(They) were so happy and See POLICE, Page 2 DETROIT (AP). -Police heli- copters thundered overhead and vol- unteers checked fire extinguishers and flashlights yesterday as the, city readied for air and ground defenses against Devil's Night arsonists. Officials activated a dusk-to- dawn curfew to clear the streets of youths under age 18 and minimize the fires that annually besiege the city on the eve of Halloween. Fluorescent green fire trucks pa- trolled many neighborhoods during the afternoon as firefighters pre- pared for nightfall yesterday. "So far we haven't seen anything different than the fires that oc- curred Monday or Tuesday," Detroit police spokesperson Office Allene Ray said. She declined to say how many fires had been reported as Devil's Night approached. Mayor Coleman Young's office said an arson tally wouldn't be re- leased until tomorrow. Officials reported 281 arson fires and made 22 arrests in 1990 during Halloween and the two days preceding it. Minute-by-minute fire records show city firefighters responded to 411 fires in all categories over last year's three-day period. The records were released to meet Freedom of Information Act requests filed by news organizations. Fire officials have said there are an average of 60 fires in the city each night. Calls from residents lighted up a switchboard at Detroit fire head- quarters Tuesday night, but Capt. Charles Evancho said that wasn't unusual. He wouldn't say how many calls were received by the depart- ment's "Secret Witness" arson hot- line. Police helicopters equipped with See DEVIL, Page 2 Diag jail plight of by Joshua Meckler Daily Staff Reporter cell wor The wooden cage that appeared on the Diag late Tuesday night wasn't a shanty. It did, however, carry a message, and many curious passers-by took the time to find out just what it was trying to say. The structure was a mock jail cell constructed for a one-day dis- play by the University chapter of Amnesty International, a world- wide organization devoted to ending human rights abuses in all countries. Although Amnesty works to prevent human rights violations against people of all ages, the cell was intended to raise awareness of violations against children. "The purpose is to symbolically represent the fact that this is a jail that these people live in. They're not allowed to act as children," said LSA first-year student Tiffany McLean, Amnesty's publicity coor- dinator. 'N-v- - . highlights id's children day, Amnesty members solicited signatures for petitions which protested three instances of human rights violations. The petitions were form letters addressed to various foreign politi- cal leaders calling for investiga- tions of possible wrongdoings. One petition alleged that a 15-year-old Guatemalan youth was beaten and burned by police after he stole a pair of sunglasses. Becky Lassman, an LSA first- year student and Amnesty member, said about 800 people signed the pe- titions. McLean said letter writing to protest human rights violations makes up a major part of what Amnesty does. "It is very effective. When I first joined, I thought, 'What is my letter going to do?' It's not just one person's letter. It's the group's ef- fort," McLean said. An Amnesty pamphlet handed out yesterday quoted several former ~, - - - ... ~. . . . '~'%r'ro>',.""'? *.~,.;-;4yf A