E A9H E TODAY Snow; High: 30, Low: 10. TOMORROW Cold, snow; High: 19, Low: 6. Ii trrulr Jesse Jackson and the homeless. See OPINION Page 4. One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vol. CII, No. 56 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, January 14, 1992 Coyright ©1 92 TheMihign Daily Man stabbed outside the Union Attack result of argument; assailant disappears from scene through Union by Ben Deci Linda Tymensky, a second-year arrived shortly after the stabbing, and Lauren Dermer LSA student, said she administered said, "They were apparently Daily Crime Reporters first aid to the victim after he told arguing about entry into the A man was stabbed yesterday her he had been stabbed. building." w afternoon after an argument "Blood was pooled on the ce- LSA senior Nicole Stafford said outside of the Michigan Union. The ment next to him. There was blood she saw the attacker exit through victim was transported to the everywhere," she said. the State Street entrance of the University Hospital, while the Tymensky said she attempted to Union while calling the police assailant disappeared into the position the victim on his back, but from the Campus Information Union. he rolled over on his side to vomit. Center. The victim was listed in critical She said the ambulance arrived 10 Baisden said, "A search of the condition as of late yesterday minutes later. area has been conducted but the a>;evening. DPS Sgt. Chris Spork, who also See STABBING, Page 2 =W>, E : Z., t, "We received a call at approxi- tw / &'a'4j, '~ mately 3:45 that there had been a tastabbing," said Lt. Vernon Baisden Stockweil residents shaken by bomb threat 0011of the University Department of K ;..* .Public Safety (DPS). "Responding Shortly after 9 p.m. last night, "We searched the building thor- officers located an individual several Stockwell residents poured oughly and nothing out of the ordi- suffering from a stab wound in the out of their rooms and into the rain in nary was found,"DPSOfficerCharles ,,n response to the second bomb threat Noffsinger said. abdPoce the residence hall has received this LSA sophomore Shanetta Paskel Polic.e have not yet released the ya,'a ohrdbtew h 0 i Sname of the victim.year. was bothered by the way the incident nmEfh/ii.Lt. Joseph Piersante of the De- was handled. "The procedure was One student, who asked to re- partmentof Public Safety (DPS) said, sort of erratic. How trained are Un-. main anonymous, was present at "A student got the call in her dorm versity security officers to handle the incident, which occurred at the room. It was a very, very vague bomb threats?" north entrance of the Union. threat." Piersante explained that DPS fol- KENNETH SMOLLER/Daily He said he saw the attacker By 10:30, DPS officers had an- lows FBI guidelines when conduct- The man who was stabbed outside the Michigan Union is carried away by the paramedics yesterday make jabbing motions at the victim nounced it was safe for residents to ing a bomb search. aftemrnwoon and then put something into his return. -byBen Dec andKarenSabgir pocket. * Jackson to speak on homelessness to by Mona Qureshi Daily Staff Reporter The Rev. Jesse Jackson will speak at 5:30 tonight in Hill Auditorium during a two-day visit to Michigan. Jackson plans to focus attention on the homeless problem in Michi- gan and the nation and to encourage voter registration, said John Huls of New Detroit, Inc. New Detroit, Inc., a group which promotes multicultural under- standing, is one of the sponsoring organizations of Jackson's visit. In a recent news statement, Jackson said choosing Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday for a visit to Michigan was appropriate. "Dr. King protested against the system and so are we. The system in Michigan is attempting to balance the budget and cut taxes at the ex- pense of the poor," he said. Washtenaw County Com- missioner Christina Montague, one of the organizers, said she also expects Jackson to address the re- cent gang movement. She added Jackson "is very fond of the U of M." "He's good friends with Charles Moody, vice provost of the Office night of Minority Affairs," she said. Members from College Democrats and the Black Student Union (BSU), two organizations sponsoring the visit, said they look forward to hearing Jackson speak. "Jesse Jackson will bring na- tional attention to the local issues and national issues like the home- less, voter registration and police brutality," BSU president Devlin Pont6 said. "He is a motivating and inspir- ing factor to Black students and others in addressing the justices of See JACKSON, Page 2 U.S. Dept. of Ed. criticizes accreditatio n association 4 by Ren6e Huckle Daily Staff Reporter The Commission on Higher Edu- cation, Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools (CHE), is under fire by the Department of Ed- ucation for its application of diver- sity standards in its accreditation process. CHE, one of several associations that accredits U.S. colleges and uni- * versities, establishes standards schools must meet so their students can receive federal financial aid. The association accredits universities in five states. CHE requires universities to "have a governing board which in- cludes a diverse membership broad- ly representative of the public interest and reflecting the student constituency," as well as a diverse student population and curriculum. According to a U.S. Department of Education report, CHE has apparently forced schools to adopt diversity standards by threatening "delayed or withdrawn accredita- tion" in the event of non- compliance. Department of Education spokes- person Roger Murphy said the National Advisory Committee on Accreditation will meet and re- consider Middle States petition for recognition Feb. 5-8. Other accredi- tation associations are also consid- ered for renewal at that time, he said. In a letter to advisory committee chair Martin Trow, Secretary of Ed- ucation Lamar Alexander wrote, "I believe that institutions should be free to define diversity and to select steps that are of their own choosing and that are consistent with their institutional mission - rather than having these matters dictated to them by accrediting associations." As a long-term solution, Alex- ander proposed that accreditation be eliminated as an institution's re- quirement for federal financial aid. See STANDARDS, Page 2 Friedman analyzes Mi~deast con ft jet by Henry Goldblatt Daily Staff Reporter Even in light of the recent Madrid Peace conference, Middle Eastern countries are not ready to make required political sacrifices to achieve a lasting peace in the region, New York Times journalist- and Pulitzer Prize winner Thomas Friedman said yesterday. Approximately 550 people gath- ered in Rackham Auditorium yes- terday afternoon to hear Friedman speak on "Middle East Peace Prospects." Friedman addressed the signifi- cance of Madrid and made predic- tions for the region's future. He said he believes Middle Eastern coun- tries came to the peace conference for the wrong reasons, namely be- cause of the end of the Cold and Gulf wars. Friedman - the author of From Beirut to Jerusalem - has covered the Arab-Israeli conflict for more than a decade as a foreign correspon- dent from Beirut and Jerusalem, and is currently based in Washington. "No Arab state found benefits of the Cold War other than Syria... The collapse of the Soviet Union put Syria in the position of being a geopolitical orphan," Friedman said. Countries such as Israel, he .said, came to the conference becausethey needed to prove themselves a strate- gic asset to the United States. 4 "With the end of the Cold' aWar the biggest threat to security came from regional conflicts. We look at potential friends and allies in how they behave in a regional context," he said. Friedman argued that the most important result to come from the Madrid conference was that parties no longer had the Cold War to use as an excuse for their actions. Coun- tries are now forced to reveal their real reluctance to negotiate. Friedman said that if parties do Please accept me Heidi Grieling tries to complete her graduate school application over a cup of tea at Cafe Fino's. MSA reps. discuss agenda for semester 24-hour libraries, deputization, accountant top list of assembly by Jennifer Silverberg Daily MSA Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly will hold its first meeting of the se- mester tonight with a relatively empty agenda. Nevertheless, some assem- bly members are beginning to think about important issues for this term. "The assembly was just elected ..,A %%, . Ls .. _ 4:_ o n .. that political and it's the kind of thing that MSA should be involved in." Other representatives expressed concern about University deputization of campus police, expected to begin this semester. State law allows the University Board of Regents to deputize police officers, but it must hold public hear- :.ac hsfr..nn .a . 4it;,;n i;meet Representatives are also interested in examining election reform to en- sure that the election process becomes more effective. "Students should be able to con- trol the structure somehow," LSA Rep. Robert Van Houweling said. "Hope- fully, this will bring more votet par- ticipation and more voter turnout." Pnik e isMezo intereteiing etiing members' goals acquainted with what MSA does and work together to come up with some concrete goals." Representatives also want to see MSA gain more respect from stu- dents. "What I'd like to see would be stronger student rapport," Medical School Rep. Michael Lee said. "I want tnh nhal to fini what rident'sre.aliv