Page 2-The Michigan Daily- Friday, November 15, 1991 Midway Airlines workers face joblessness CHICAGO (AP) - Midway Airlines employees and others who depended on it for their livelihoods scrambled to find a new beginning yesterday after the surprise whirl- wind collapse of the carrier that once symbolized growth and success. Officials of the financially trou- bled airline promised legal action against their would-be suitor, Northwest Airlines, and the City of Chicago headed to court to force Midway back in the air. Idle planes, empty ticket coun- ters and vacant employee lockers marked the home of the airline that only 24 hours earlier was alive and carrying thousands of passengers. Midway grew from humble be- ginnings in 1979 to become the na- tion's 12th largest airline, serving 41 cities. Its demise marked the first time an airline formed after the in- dustry was deregulated in 1978 has ceased operations. The shutdown at 12:01 a.m. yes- terday came hours after Northwest Airlines announced it was pulling out of a previously announced merger agreement. Northwest accused Midway, which had filed for bankruptcy pro- tection back in March, of misleading it by overstating 1990 revenues. Midway said it had been straight- forward and called Northwest's ac- tion "shameful." "I'm a single parent with a 13- year-old boy," said Midway flight attendant Judy Carlson as she ar- rived at Midway Airport on the air- line's last flight from Los Angeles. "You tell him why he can't get braces for a Christmas present this year." Hundreds of Midway passengers scrambled to reshuffle their travel plans. Several airlines, including the nation's two largest, United and American, said they would honor Midway tickets with certain restrictions. "I woke up late and didn't hear the news," said Francoise Strauss, who arrived at the airport yesterday morning for a flight that no longer existed. "We were going to Atlanta to look at colleges for my daughter." "It hurts," said Kevin Augle, a Midway baggage handler. "I don't know what I'm doing. I've got a house. I've got to make my living somehow." Midway's 4,300 employees re- ceived instructions yesterday on how to file for unemployment ben- efits and how the shutdown affected their employee benefits. Most workers will be without health in- surance by the end of the month, said airline spokesperson Laura Podlesny. Podlesny said the airline planned legal action against Northwest amid speculation that Northwest had been more interested in Midway's airport gates than in Midway itself. 0 0:- I h Attention., U of M Students Select Your Best Professor for Il Nomination Process Begins November 18th HARASSMENT Continued from page 1 hesitate to cancel the user's com- puter ID and access to University computer communication programs. "We are beginning to see that behaviors that were once expressed differently are beginning to be ex- pressed electronically, and that a system of ethics and values regard- ing these sorts of things is begin- ning to develop within our user community," Knox said. Knox said the main problem with objectionable MTS comments lies within the definition of objectionable. "What one person considers ob- jectionable, another doesn't. It's safe to say we receive many more ob- jectionable message complaints from women than from men. The number of complaints increases near the end of terms when tensions are higher," Knox said. But he added that "in general, the total number of complaints is declining." Many instructors incorporate a class computer conference into class requirements, presenting students with another opportunity to use MTS. On some of these conferences, students find themselves facing what could be construed as harass- ing responses. Communications Prof. Joan Lowenstein has a computer confer- ence for her class on First Amend- ment issues. Sometimes, students object to others' responses. "I don't think anything on the conference has reached the level of sexual harassment, just insensitiv- ity or stupidity," Lowenstein said. "My definition of sexual harass- ment wbuld have to include the fact that the harasser was in a more pow- erful situation. r 'How do you tell another individual ... what they're saying isn't as sensitive as it should be' -Kay Dawson Assistant to the Provost "Ordinarily, students are on an even footing, so I think most situa- tions involving one student against another would be a different kind of sexual harassment than the 'Anita Hill' type." Knox said students should re- port conference responses that make them uncomfortable to the class in- structor first. He also said that e-mail and MTS can and are used to harass people - sexually and otherwise - because the communication is not face-to- face. "It's a little like making an ob- scene phone call in a way, but not as anonymous," Knox said. He added that in sexual harass- ment cases, it is usually difficult to prove one person's word against an- other's. On the computer, however, he said a message can easily be re- trieved from memory and printed out. President Duderstadt yawns during the University Board of Regents meeting yesterday. The meetings are held monthly in the Fleming Administration Building. , REGENTS Continued from page 1 draft this code," Brown said. The regents agreed that in the future when consulting law fac- ulty, formal statements of their recommendations be obtained. But some regents questioned whether consulting faculty on University policies was a conflict of interest. "I don't think we should even consider them in that function," McFee said. But Nielsen pointed out that some University faculty members are consulted on policy by Congress, and that it would be foolish to ignore their expertise. "We have an obligation to have them look at it," Baker said. In other business, John Weiden- back, who has been interim director of athletics since 1990, will suc- ceed Bo Schembechler as director of athletics. i MMOI S s " " " " s " " DOWNTOWN BED & BREAKFAST Midweek Student Discount Close to campus S35/40 nightly 630 N. Main Street, Ann Arbor (313) 996-3130 "" "*** """""""* ** " " s * SHOOTING Continued from page 1 Nancy Barnett, a Royal Oak na- tive, said it is important to separate the incident from the city. "Just because it happened here doesn't mean Royal Oak is not a safe city. It's a postal problem," she said. "People are taking the law into their own hands because no- body'll help us. There's no justice anywhere." A retired employee who worked in the Royal Oak post of- fice for 36 years sympathized with the suspect. "I can understand where this guy is coming from. This place is a zoo. They treat you like animals," said the man, who requested to re- main anonymous. "I was so glad to get out of there -- I had to before I killed someone, too." Many local merchants on Royal Oak's Main Street said the incident reflected the times, not the city. "I don't think it has to do with the recession or money," said Patti Harrington, a worker at a neighbor- ing store. "There are a lot of dis- turbed people out there. They see it, hear it, read about it. ... It's too easy to do." A spokesperson at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak said six people from the incident were being treated, three of whom were in critical condition, though she would not disclose any names. An Oakland General Hospital spokesperson said three postal em- ployees - Clark French, who was in critical condition, Allen Adams and Gwendolyn Thornton - were being treated yesterday morning . for gunshot wounds. - Associated Press contributed to this report WE'RE SO SURE YOU'LL ENJOY THESE EXCITING NEW RELEASES THAT WE'RE MAKING THIS SPECIAL "NO RISK" OFFER. If you don't like it, bring it back with your receipt within II 2 weeks of purchase and we'll credit you back the full purchase price towards anything else in stock. U r 7 Religious Services ......... CAMPUS CHAPEL (Serving the U-M Campus for over 50 Years) 1236 Washtenaw Ct. (one block south of CCR B) 66&74211662-2402 Rev. Don Postema, Pastor SUNDAY WORSHIP: Morning Worship-10 a.m. Hymn Festival at Ann Arbor Christian Reformed Church, 1717 Broadway-6 p.m. WEDNESDAY: Undergrad R.O.C.K. Group: Refreshments, fun, provocative discussions-9-10:30 p.m. CANTERBURY HOUSE (The Episcopal Church of U-M) SUNDAYS: Holy Eucharist-5 p.m. at St. Andrew's church Dinner-6 p.m. at Canterbury House Canterbury House & St. Andrew's (corner of Division and Catherine Street) Call 665-0606 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER Huron Street (between State & Division) SUNDAYS: Worship-9:55 a.m. Bible Study Groups- 1 :20 a.m. WEDNESDAYS: Student Fellowship Supper and Bible Study-5:30 p.m. For information, call 663-9376 Larry Greenfield, Minister FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. (Between Hill & South University) SUNDAYS: Worship-9:30 & 11 a.m. Campus Faith Exploration Discussion, Bagels & coffee served-9:30 a.m. THURSDAYS: Campus Worship & Dinner-5:30 p.m. For information, call 662-4466 Amy Morrison, Campus Pastor LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA 801 South Forest (at Hill Street), 668-7622 SUNDAY: Worship-10 a.m. WEDNESDAY: Bible Study-6 p.m. Evening Prayer-7 p.m. ST. MARY'S STUDENT PARISH (A Roman Catholic Parish at U-M) 331 Thompson Street SAT.: Weekend Liturgies-5 p.m., and SUN.:-8:30 a.m., 10 a.m., 12 noon, 5 p.m., and 7 p.m. FRI.: Confessions-45 p.m. SUN: Newman Social-5:30-7:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL-LCMs 1511 Washtenaw " 663-5560 SATURDAY: Evening Worship-6:30 p.m. SUNDAY: Bible Study-9:15 a.m. Worship-10:30 a.m. I I1 PC Continued from page 1 together." In addition to national and Uni- versity figures, the conference also includes University graduate stu- dents as well as John Miller, editor- at-large of The Michigan Review, and Stephen Henderson, opinion edi- tor of The Michigan Daily. Miller and Henderson will join Law Prof. and feminist law scholar Catharine Mackinnon, Law Prof. Alan Aleinikoff, and Anita Norich, associate professor of English and Judaic studies as panel members in Saturday night's session entitled, "Free Speech, Hate Speech, and PC." This forum will focus somewhat on Michigan legislators debate open primaries LANSING, Mich. (AP) - The Republican-run Senate approved a bill yesterday to reinstate Michigan's open presidential pri- mary, but the Democrat-controlled House isn't likely to buy it. The bill would let any registered voter vote in the March 17 primary without declaring a party preference 30 days in advance, as now required by a new state law. Democrats say that conflicts with their party rules. Those require that only declared Democrats take part in allocating presidential dele- gates among the candidates. The House is expected to pass an alternative bill. It would allow voters to declare a party preference the debate surrounding an adver- tisement promoting Holocaust re- visionism published in The Michi- gan Daily three weeks ago. Although Joan Lowenstein, the session's moderator and an adjunct lecturer in the Department of Communication, said the advertise- ment itself didn't spark the idea for the discussion, the debate surround- ing its publishing certainly has rel- evance to the free speech arguments PC bashers use to degrade ideas of speech codes. "The whole discussion of PC of- ten centers around whether colleges can regulate hate speech," Lowen- stein said. "Catharine Mackinnon, who devotes much of her energy to fighting pornography, will take her ideas further and talk about how speech that doesn't directly incite violence can still be harmful in and, of itself." Although Campbell said most of the weekend's sessions will be fairly formal presentations, he said there will also be opportunities for, audience members to ask questions through a moderator at many of the discussions. Rackham graduate student Corey Dolgon along with others f graduate students will run smaller, more interactive workshops on spe- cific issues like poverty, homeless- ness, and gay male and lesbian issues- Sunday afternoon. Please see The List, page 3, for details about conference times and! locations. r The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. On-campus subscription rate for fall/winter91 -92 is $30; all other subscriptions via first class U.S. mail are $149 - prorated at Nov. 1, 1991, to $105. Fall subscription only via first class mail is $75- prorated at Nov.1 to $46. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. 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Smoller Matt Rennie Theodore Cox, Phil Green, John Niyo Jeff Sheran, Dan Zoch Mark Bineli, Elizabeth Lenhard Valerie Shuman Michael John Wilson Jule Komorn Annette Petrusso Jenie Dahlmann Chiisine Kloostra r 1 1** 0^ _# V News: Merav Barr, Barry Cohen, Lynne Cohn, Ben Deci, Lauren Dermer, Henry Gddblatt, Andrew Levy, Travis McReynolds, Josh Meckler, Uju Oraka, Rob Patton, Melissa Peerless, Tami Pollak, David Rheingdd, Bethany Robertson, Karen Sabgir, Julie Schupper, Gwen Shaffer, Purvi Shah, Jennifer Silverberg, Stefanie Vines, JoAnne Viviano, Ken Walker, David Wartowski, Chastity Wilson. Opinion: Matt Adler, Chris Aendulis, Brad Bernatek,Renee Bushey, Yael Citro, Erin Einhorn, David Leitner, Brad Miller, An Rotenberg, David Shepardson. Sports: Chris Carr, Ken Davidoff, Andy DeKorte,Kimbey DeSempelaere, Matthew Dodge, Josh Dubow, Shawn DuFresne, Jim Foss, Ryan Herrington, Bruce Inosencio, Albert Lin, Dan Linna, Rod Loewenthal, Sharon Lundy, Adam Miller, Rich Mitvalsky, Tim Rardin, Chad Safarn, David Schechter, Eric Sklar, Tim Spolar, Andy Stabile, Ken Sugiura, Jeff Wiliams. Arts: Greg Baise, Skot Beal, Jon Bilik, Andrew J. Cahn, Richard S. Davis, Brent Edwards, Gabriel Feldberg, Rosanne Freed, Diane Frieden, Forrest Green III, Aaron Hamburger; Nima Hodaei, Alan J. Hogg, Roger Hsia, Marie Jacobson, Kristin Knudson,- Mike Kdody, Mike Kuniavsky, Amy Meng, John Morgan, Liz Patton, Austin Ratiner, Antonio Roque, Jeff Rosenberg, Joseph Schreiber, Christine Slovey, Kevin Stein, Scott Stering, Kim Yaged. Photo: Brian Cantoni, Anthony M. Croli, Jennifer Dunetz, Kristoffer Gillette, Michelle Guy, Doug Kanter, Heather Lowman, I I L "v c u raun i. av. ijm t a r 1 cm-, i