The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 30, 1993 - Page 3 Charge under act keeps 'U' athlete's record under wraps by Will McCahill Daily Crime Reporter The University athlete who set off a bomb in South Quad in December was sentenced Friday in Washtenaw County Circuit Court. Damon Jones, a redshirt freshman tight end on the football team was sentenced under the Holmes Youthful Trainee Act - a statute specifically designed for 17-to- 19-year-old first-time offenders. Jones exploded the bomb - made from a plastic soda bottle lined with aluminum foil and filled with a bathroom cleaning substance - in front of his resident director's door Dec. 5. Jones was suspended from the team by head coach Gary Moeller, but has since been reinstated and participated in spring practices. Under the act, Jones will be on probation for three years, after which time the offense will be expunged from his record if he fulfills his probation requirements. Assistant Washtenaw County Public Defender David Lankford said the act guarantees records of the offense will remain sealed, in effect enabling the offender to state legally that he has never been convicted of a crime. Only law-enforcement and judicial agencies will have access to the information. For this reason, the court could not release specific information on Jones' sentence to the media, and could only state that he had been sentenced under the act. Normal probationary procedure calls for the offender to petition the court for the offense to be expunged from the record after five years, at which time the judge can grant or deny the petition based on the individual's be- havior. Greek system to sponsor final 4 mayoral debate by Jonathan Berndt Daily City Reporter It's your last chance to ask the mayoral candidates that one question they haven't been addressing. Well, half of them anyway. The Interfraternity Council (IFC) and the Panhellenic Association (Panhel) will host the final mayoral debate before Monday's election in the Michigan Union tonight. Mayor Liz Brater and Republican challenger Ingrid Sheldon are scheduled to speak at the first such forum the two groups - the govern- ing bodies of the Greek system - have ever held. Val Wilde, LSA junior and Pan- hel public relations chair, said the purpose of the evening is "to involve the students, to have them be in- formed about the issues concerning the Greek system, and we want them to make an informed, intelligent choice and to be able to vote." Wilde said some of the concerns will probably include the Greek sys- tem's alcohol policy and the police, plus Ann Arbor's noise ordinances, but these were not the primary rea- sons for hosting the forum. "It's more of an involvement and information process than anything else," she added. "We want to work with the candidates, not against, them." Wilde said the format would in.' clude LSA junior Sandy Sussman, IFC's public relations chair, asking key questions, and a question-and- answer session for members of the audience. The Greek system held a voter- registration drive earlier in the year giving the candidates 900 more vot- ers to reach. Even with the registration drive, Wilde said it is difficult to estimate how many people would be attend- ing the forum, although organizers are hoping for participation froi each house. She added that fliers have been posted around campus to publicize the event. Wilde said smoothing relations i4M a goal of hosting the forum. "We want to sponsor cooperation between the Greek system and the city," Wilde said. Wilde added that Greek and non Greek students are welcome to come and hear the candidates speak. The forum will start at 8 p.m. in" the Kuenzel Room of the Michigan Union. ,s UG Lirenovation HEATHEM Warren Douglas, Vern Nitchie and Jean Moran - employees of the University Forestry Crew - remove a tree stump from the Diag near the UGLi. Many trees and shrubs in the area are tagged for removal, replanting or trimming before construction on the UGLi begins in mid-April. Thieves target. pizza-delivery vehicles University Department of Public Safety (DPS) officers responded to a call from a pizza delivery person Sunday, who told them he had ap- prehended a student trying to steal from his parked delivery truck. DPS Lt. James Smiley said the driver left the truck running in front of Alice Lloyd Residence Hall while he ran inside to make his delivery. He came back to find the student in- side the truck. When DPS officers arrived on the scene minutes later, they took state- ments from the driver and the stu- dent. They released the student pending authorization of an arrest warrant from the Washtenaw County prosecutor: In a separate incident involving pizza-delivery personnel, thieves made off with the sign attached to a pizza delivery car Saturday, while a delivery was being made to the Law Quad. According to police reports, five or six men stole the sign and ran to- ward South State Street. Police0 Beat Eggs scramble N. Campus driver A driver on North Campus' Bonisteel Boulevard told police that passengers in a passing vehicle threw eggs at his windshield Sunday night. The man was able to take down the license plate number of the vehi- cle, and police were able to track down the car's owner. The owner confirmed to DPS of- ficers that teenagers riding in the ve- hicle had indeed been hurling eggs at other cars. Officers then notified the boys' parents of their sons' activities. The driver who reported the inci- dent was informed of the findings and decided not to press charges against the teenagers, who were in a car belonging to the father of one of the boys. He said he had faith that justice would be served by the boys' parents. Crew clears chemical spill at Med Sci II University Occupational Safety and Environmental Health (OSEH) department employees were called to the scene of a chemical spill in the Medical Science Research Building II Wednesday. According to police reports, chlo- roform was spilled on the fourth floor of the building. There were no injuries in the incident. OSEH crews spread chemical ab- sorbent on the spill, and later had to remove floor tiles from the affected area. Glue-wielding vandals take aim at parking meters The latest in a series of attacks on parking meters occurred on North Campus Sunday as vandals set fire to a Parkmaster machine at the School of Music parking lot. Eight incidents have occurred involving parking meters during the last three weeks. In the other incidents, vandals put glue in the meters, temporarily clogging them. Smiley said it costs DPS $300 to remove the glue from the machine, ,and estimated that the vandalism has cost the department more than $5,000 in buying new machines and repairing old ones since the incidents started, not including revenue lost because the machines were out of order. Police are still investigating the incident, and are hoping someone will come forward to give DPS in- formation concerning the case. Robbers grab woman s inheritance after threatening her life A woman who had just with- drawn her inheritance money from a local bank was robbed at knife point Sunday, and the robbers made off with $68,000 in cash. The victim told the Ann Arbor Police Department that a woman came to her Packard Road apartment just before 3 a.m. Sunday, asking to use a phone because her car had broken down. When the victim opened the door, a man and a woman wearing ski masks burst in. The man punched the victim in the face. Then the woman threatened her with a knife while the man searched for the money. When the knife-wielding woman threatened the victim's life, she told the bandits she had hidden the money in two paper bags in a cup- board. - by Will McCahill Daily Crime Reporter eI Muslim refugees attempt to flee during cease-fire More than 2,000 Muslims travel by truck to Tuzia; several die en route TUZLA, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - More than 2,000 Muslim refugees took advantage of a cease- fire and a rare relief convoy yester- day to flee the eastern enclave of Srebrenica. Some apparently died en route to Tuzla, 45 miles to the northwest. Tales were common of people falling off the trucks as they traveled all day, many in open trucks. The women, children and elderly male refugees were packed so tightly into the 19 U.N. trucks that they had to stand on their luggage. They waved with relief as they reached safety in the Muslim government-held city of Tuzla. The refugees reached Tuzla dur- ing the most successful cease-fire so far of the nearly year-long Bosnian war. It went into effect at noon Sunday, and U.N. officials reported no major violations. Bosnian Serbs agreed to allow a convoy of food and medicine, the evacuation, and a cease-fire as the international community turned up the pressure for a settlement. Sarajevo, the Bosnian capital, was quiet yesterday, and residents marked the cease-fire by thronging sunny city sidewalks after three days of snow. U.N. and local officials had made a list of 650 people in Srebrenica shelters and outdoors who most needed evacuation. Lawrence Jolles of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees' (UNHCR) office said" hundreds more climbed aboard thei trucks, and officials couldn't remove7 all of them. He estimated only a couple hun-i dred of the most needy actually were among the 2,346 people evacuated. Those who got on the trucks said they waited for five hours at the last Serb checkpoint as Bosnian Serbs looked for fighting-age men and weapons. UNHCR spokesperson Lyndall Sachs in Belgrade said anewt convoy was preparing to head to5 Srebrenica. The local military chief in Tuzla, Hazim Sadic, blamed French Gen., Philippe Morillon, the U.N. com-', mander for Bosnia, for the poor, transportation. "We don't even' transport animals that way," Sadict said in a statement. He charged that Morillon's in-' ability to get relief into Srebrenical contributed to the Serb campaign of "ethnic cleansing" by increasing the, number of people needing evacua tion. Serbs have been trying to empty the east of Muslims. Helicopter evacuation of the sick and wounded was suspended last, Wednesday after Serbs surrounded the eastern enclave shelled the land-I ing pad. Student groups Q Ann Arbor Committee to De- fend Abortion & Reproductive Rights/National Women's Rights Organizing Coalition, meeting, MLB, Room B119, 6 p.m. a The Christian Science Organi- zation, meeting, Michigan League,checkroom atfrontdesk, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Q College Republicans, meeting, MLB, basement, 6:30 p.m. Q Environmental Issues Commis- sion, meeting for Earth Week 1993, Michigan Union, MSA Chambers, 6 p.m. Q In Focus, meeting, Frieze Build- ing, Room 2420,6 p.m. Q Kaleidoscope, Alice Simsar Vis- its, Tappan HallBasement, 5:30 p.m. Q Mayoral Forum, Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room, 8 p.m. " Michigan Student Assembly, meeting, MichiganUnion,Room 3909, 7:30 p.m. Q Newman Catholic Student Fel- lowship Association, Stations of theCross, 12:10p.m.;U-MGrad/ Young Professional Discussion Group, 7 p.m.; RCIA Alumni Lenten Group, 8 p.m.; St. Mary Student Parish, 331 Thompson St. Q Shulhan Ivrit, Michigan Union, Tap Room, 12 p.m. U Social Group for Bisexual Women, call for location and information, 763-4186,8 p.m. U Socially Active Latino Student _c - _i _ _nmo _ .._rn n Room 52 Greene, 7p.m. Q U-M Sailing Team, meeting, West Engineering Building, Room 420,6:30 p.m. Q U-M Shotokan Karate, practice, CCRB, small gym, 8-10 p.m. U U-M Student/Faculty/Staff Prayer Time, Campus Chapel, 1236 Washtenaw Ct., 12-1 p.m. U University Students Against Cancer, group meeting, Michi- ganUnion,PondRoom,7:30p.m. Events Q Armenian Genocide: A Survi- vor Speaks, Lane Hall, Com- mons Room, 7 p.m. U Becoming Like God: The Real Difference, U-M Orthodox Christian Fellowship, Michigan Union, Room 1209, 7:30-8:30 p.m. Q Black Artist Series, concert, Rackham Amphitheatre, 8 p.m. U Bosnian Update: The Human Story, video, International Cen- ter, 12 p.m. U Carillon Auditions, for spring/ summer/fall study, Burton Tower, Room 900, 764-2539, 12:30-2 p.m. Q Center for Chinese Studies, Brown Bag Lunch Series, Lane Hall, Commons Room, 12 p.m. Q Dith Pran, Photojournalist and Cambodian Political Activist, Power Center, 7 p.m. Q Nobody's Perfect:HowtoLower the Stress of Raising Kids in the 90s, Kellogg Eye Center, Auditorium, 7:30-9:30 p.m. l A, 1_R h.rn. T' lonial State in fin-de-siecle Al- geria, Lane Hall, Room 200, 4 p.m. U Rudolf Steiner and the Modern Path of Inner Development, Rudolf Steiner Institute, 1923 Geddes Ave., 8 p.m. Q Undergraduate Education for Today and Tomorrow, Presi- dential Lecture Series on Aca- demic Values, Rackham Amphitheatre, 4 p.m. U University Arts Chorale Spring I Concert,Hill Auditorium, 8p.m. Q World War II: Lessons for the Future, Spark: Revolutionary Discussion Series, MLB, Room B 120, 7-8 p.m. Q Writing Bibliography from a Woman's Perspective, Blanche Cook, lecturer, Michigan League, Hussey Room, 4 p.m. Student services Q Consultation for Student Lead- ersand Student Organizations, speak with peer and professional consultants regarding leadership and organizational development, SODC, Michigan Union, Room 2202,8 a.m.-5 p.m. U ECB Student Writing Center, Angell Hall, Computing Center, 7-11 p.m. Q Northwalk Safety Walking Ser- vice, Bursley Hall, 763-9255, 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. U Peer Counseling, U-M Counsel- ing Services, 764-8433,7 p.m.-8 a.m. U Psychology Undergraduate Peer A dvicna TDenartment of Pgv- U5 Dith Pran Surviving The Killing Fields Tuesday, March 30 at 7:00 P.M. Power Center for the Performing Arts Free and open to the public Dith Pran is the survivor of the Cambodian holocaust whose story was portrayed in the award-winning film The Killing Fields. I