TODAY Cloudy, rain likely; High: 50, Low:42. TOMORROW Partly sunny; AmIHigh: 43, Low: 31. Allw 4 INIDE... What's in North Campus buildings, anyway? See FridayFOCUS, Page 5. One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vol. Cil, No. 35Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, November 15, 1991 ne M0'gan paly Three dead in Royal Oak shooting Police holding former postal worker by Lynne Cohn and JoAnne Viviano Daily Staff Reporters ROYAL OAK - A former postal employee shot 11 co-work- ers at the Royal Oak Post Office yesterday, fatally wounding three, before turning the gun on himself, according to a Royal Oak police report. Thomas McIlvane, 31, of Oak Park, is in police custody at a sub- urban hospital, where he is being treated for a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. Police traced his semi-automatic weapon to a lo- cal firearms dealer. The three postal workers fa- tally wounded in the shooting spree were Christopher Carlisle of Rochester, manager of branch oper- ations; Mary Benincasa of Mount Clemens, an injury compensation specialist; and Keith Ciszewski of Livonia, a labor relations representative. Letter carrier Rockie McDonald, an acquaintance of McIlvane, said he was shot at three times from about 25 feet away while confronting the assailant. McDonald fell to the floor but wasn't injured. "I yelled, 'No, Tom! No!'" McDonald said. "I don't know how many times I yelled it. He turned and went the other way." McIlvane was fired last year for timecard fraud and had appealed his dismissal, Postal Service spokesperson Lou Eberhardt said in Washington. On Wednesday, an ar- bitrator upheld the firing. "Everybody said if he didn't get his job back, he was going to come in and shoot," postal worker Bob Cibulka said. "Everyone was talk- ing about it." Other postal employees agreed that they were not surprised by the incident. "He was crazy. He was a wait- ing time bomb," said Mark Mitchell, a fellow postal worker. "He had made previous threats." The mood was somber and slow-moving outside the Royal Oak post office after the 8:50 a.m. shooting. Officers from at least seven suburban police departments, FBI officers, postal inspectors and agents of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms pa- trolled the site. Area residents at the scene were shaken up, and many questioned how this type of tragedy could occur in their neigh- borhood. Sgt. Pete Kelly of the Berkeley Police Department said his agency was called to assist with crowd control, though the only crowd yesterday afternoon consisted of media personnel and quiet passers- by. People agreed that the incident was a tragedy that could have been avoided. "It's awful. My first thought is, this is Royal Oak and this is supposed to be a safe city," said Kathi McCoubrey, a long-time Royal Oak resident. "This is an isolated incident. It could have happened anywhere," added Scott Brown, an area landowner. "I wouldn't be sur- prised to see more violent things happening (due to) the welfare cuts." See SHOOTING, Page 2 A relative of a worker at the Royal Oak Post Office sheds tears of relief that her relative was not among the shooting victims. Peer conduct can be discrimination, not harassment by Lynne Cohn Daily Staff Reporter 0 Sexual harassment is a tough issue. It is difficult to define. It is difficult to prove. The University policy's working definition of sexual harassment says the individuals involved must be in a superior-subordinate work relationship. But does discrimination between students on the basis of gender count as sexual harassment? "How do you tell another indi- vidual that what they're saying isn't as sensitive as it should be?" said Michigan one victory away from Rose Bowl by Matt Rennie Daily Football Writer Michigan coach Gary Moeller will have to think of a new speech should his team win at Illinois to- morrow. After every other victory this season, Moeller has opened his post- game comments by saying, "This :" . game doesn't mean a thing unless we keep improving and go to the Rose Bowl." If the Wolverines do beat the Illini, they will go to the Rose Bowl, regardless of what they do in their final game against Ohio State next week. All season long, Moeller has used the trip to Pasadena as the focal point of his team's motivation. However, never before has the goal been so attain- able. Champaign has been the site of many conference championship celebrations for Michigan. The older plavers on the current team Kay Dawson, assistant to the provost and vice president for aca- demic affairs. "We're not in a posi- tion to regulate that kind of conduct as a University. There's nobody else to tell them that that kind of con- duct is offensive. It's up to you." The University drafted a harass- ment policy in 1987 regarding dis- crimination between students which provided for instances of sexual ha- rassment. The policy was declared unconstitutional by U.S. District Court Judge Avern Cohn on grounds of being overbroad and vague. "The law in this country has generally favored the speaker's right to say very offensive things and put the burden on the person lis- tening to tolerate it," Dawson said. -aracssMieYn Policies at the University "Freedom of expression is not abso- lute. One of the common ways to re- strict it is through time, place and manner." In its place, the University has issued an interim policy which di- vides the campus into three forums: a public forum - including places like the Diag and the Fish- bowl; an educational forum - in- volving classrooms and class activ- ity; and, a student's private home. Dawson said the government protects people in their own homes from offensive speech more than it can in a public forum. Where can students encounter sticky situations involving other students? They may encounter discrimina- tion in classrooms, in extra-curricu- lar activities or in residence halls. But an up-and-coming medium of communication - the computer - has the potential to pose problems. "Occasionally, we receive mes- sages from users who receive objec- tionable messages," said Steve Don- nelly, a University user advocate for the Information Technology Divi- sion (ITD). "Some of these cer- tainly could be classified as sexual harassment. We usually warn the offender with a degree of severity that the offense deserves." The University computer system allows students to contact one an- other through, among other'zpro- grams, MTS - a computerized communication program often used for class conferences and electronic mail. "E-mail isn't as private as people think," said Jim Knox, an ITD user advocate. "Getting down to the per- sonal level is difficult, but getting the ID number is easy." Knox said if a student or faculty member forwards an objectionable message to him, he would send a warning informing the person that the message was inappropriate. If it continues, however, he would not See HARASSMENT, Page 2 Faculty concerns presented before Board of Regents Stepping in style First-year LSA student Catherine Pozniah and LSA sophomore Dub Carpenter perform on the Grad Library steps to advertise their upcoming show "The Fantasticks", Nov. 14-16 at the Mendelssohn Theater. Conference on PC features national scholars, journalists Bethany Robertson Daily Administration Reporter The lack of faculty input into administrative decisions was a main concern addressed in a presentation to the University Board of Regents yesterday. Natural Resources Prof. James Diana, chair of the faculty senate's executive board, said the growing number of administrators in deci- sion-making positions compared to the number of faculty members is worrisome. "We carry out the main mission of the University," Diana said. "We are the ones who see the direct re- sults of that policy making." Diana also commented that fac- ulty finds it difficult to make con- tact with the regents. He mentioned that students also encounter this problem. "It seems that you, the University regents, don't talk to us. Our opinions should be important in setting the priorities of this University," Diana said. In responding to Diana's presen- tation, several regents said it is of- ten difficult to find a representative voice for faculty and students. "How you get the voice of the people out is an ongoing problem in any democratic process," said Regent Shirley McFee (R-Battle Creek). While Diana stressed the need for more discussion between faculty members and administrators, in a faculty, Regent Neal Nielsen (R- Brighton) brought up the point that a 1987 discriminatory harassment policy had supposedly been ap- proved by law school faculty. The policy was later struck down by a U.S. District Court. After learning of the discussion at the meeting, Law School Dean Lee Bolinger sent letters to the Ann Arbor News and The Michigan Daily clarifying the law school's role in the code. At yesterday's meeting, Brown mentioned that law professors had never approved the 1987 policy. "I think quite rightly it should be stated that the law school did not See REGENTS, Page 2 Regents officially appoint Anderson by Bethany Robertson Daily Administration Reporter The University Board of Regents unanimously appointed Maureen Anderson the new vice president of student affairs at yesterday's monthly meeting. Anderson, currently the vice provost for student affairs at Wash- ington State University, accepted the job after a Nov. 4 nomination by University President James Duder- stadt. Regental approval made the position official. Regent Shirely McFee (R-Battle Creek) said she was pleased with the by Tami Pollak Daily Staff Reporter Scholars and journalists from across America will gather together in the Modern Language Building and Angell Hall auditoriums this weekend to discuss PC as part of a conference entitled "The 'P.C.' Frame-Up - What's Behind the Attack?" PC - political correctness - is a term that became popular last year when the media used it as a catch phrase referring to more progressive mencement ceremony last May, practitioners of a new form of prejudice. "The term PC is a horrible clich6," said Richard Campbell, an organizer of this weekend's confer- ence and a communications professor. "The people bashing PC as an at- tempt to limit free thought, are the same people who want to shut down democratic reforms on campus," Campbell said. "I think a lot of neonle fear changes. and they want closely on the issues that have come under attack. "I see the conference's goals as tackling, a) Why this discussion has emerged, and b) how the left has painted itself into a corner," said Todd Gitlin, a professor of sociol- ogy at the University of California, Berkeley. Gitlin will speak this evening in MLB 3 along with Richard Bern- stein from The New York Times, Julie Hinds, a reporter for The De- troit News, along with three other