So far this semester there have been 38 rapes reported to SAPAC. This will not change until people's attitudes toward women change. Editor at Large of "Life" magazine Roger Rosenblatt will speak at the Hopwood Awards this afternoon. Joshua Keidan talks with Rosenblatt. Graduating Daily Sports Editor John Niyo reflects on his four years at Michigan. Read the final installment of Blame it on Niyo. Today Thunderstorms; High 56, Low 42 Tomorrow Cloudy; High 48, Low 32 # " i t "Uti One hundred two years of editorial freedom 1 Vl III No1 AnnAbo, ichga - ueda, Apil 019 1 h ichigan' * I, I 1 Court arraigns alleged stalker by Will McCahil! Daily Crime Reporter , A 24-year-old Ann Arbor resident was arraigned yesterday on charges of stalking a University student. Timothy Grizzle was arrested by University Department of Public Safety (DPS) officers Friday, after a female LSA senior made a number of com- plaints to DPS that he was stalking her. State law requires two reported inci- dents of stalking before an arrest can be . made. Grizzle stood mute at his arraign- m tent before -Judge Timothy Connors yesterday in 15thDistrictCourt. Grizzle had apparently decided to plead guilty, but then changed his mind and made no plea DPS Lt. James Smiley said the Ann Arbor Police Department has had pre- viousproblems with Grizzle, and called the connection between Grizzle and the woman he allegedly stalked "an ongo- mlg hate relationship." SThe two dated in the past, Smiley said, and Grizzle harassed the woman at intervals over the past six years, once allegedly breaking her arm. Grizzle, an Ashland, Ky. native, is not a student but lives in Ann Arbor and is unemployed. Grizzle eluded police for several __ days after the stalking complaint was registered against him, finally being apprehended Friday, the day Judge Elizabeth Pollard issued a warrant for his arrest. Connors set bail for Grizzle at $1,000. Grizzle could not post the sum and was therefore detained overnight at Washtenaw County jail. The charge of stalking is a misde- meanor and carries a maximum sen- tence of one year in prison and/or a $1,000 fine. A pretrial hearing is set for 11 a.m. this morning. Students tr to survive finals rnch by Mona Qureshi she has begun to feel less concernf Daily Feature Writer her annearance and wears more swe for ats April Harrison gazed drearily at the rain trickling down her window yester- day as she curled up next to her com- puter in her untidy room. Harrison, an LSA sophomore, has not cleaned for days in order to make time to study for finals and write term papers. "My room is a disaster," she said. "I'm not cleaning it until I pack." Dirty laundry topped with a Michi- gan baseball hat piled up on her floor and her clothes playedpeek-a-boo from her half-open drawers. H-3arrison, like many University stu- dents, is coping with a syndrome affec- tionately known as the finals crunch. LSA senior Deana Zeters said she too has changed her behavior. She said and baseball caps. "I don't know what's clean and what's dirty," she said. "It's called the 'recycling days."' A circulation desk assistant at the Undergraduate Library (UGLi), Zeters said more people are taking advantage of the UGLi's extended hours until 5 am. She noted as well that the last- minute book rush for term papers has escalated - one woman checked out 25 books last night for two papers due today. Such a rush to finish papers has the campus computing sites brimming with lines of students waiting for computers. Angell Hall on Sunday night around 11 p.m. saw a peak of 400 students on a See CRUNCH, Page 2 >; ,. HEATHER LOWMAN/Daly LSA senior Molly McClimon pours over notes in the UGLi one hour before her Social Psychology final yesterday afternoon. Fire in cult compound kills as many as 86 * FBI officials believe cult members set fire after federal agents invaded Branch Davidian hideout WACO, Texas (AP) - Doomsday cult leader David Koresh's apocalyptic prediction for his followers came true yesterday when a raging fire destroyed the compound where he had held fed- eral agents at bay for 51 days. As many as 86 members of the Branch Davidian religious sect, includ- ing Koreshand 24children, were thought to have died as the flames raced through the buildings in 30 minutes. Only nine were known to have survived. The blaze erupted about 12:05 p.m., just six hours after FBI agents began using armored vehicles to pound holes in the complex of buildings and spray them with tear gas in a bid to force an end to the standoff. Nine cultmembers who escaped the flames are believed by federal officials to be the only survivors, but authorities said they would not know the precise death toll until they could search an underground maze of passageways. Justice Department spokesperson Carl Stern said two survivors were in- jured critically, one had a serious injury and three have minor injuries, all in- cluding burns. One person taken into custody told authorities that people in- side the compound had set the blaze, Stern said. The person said that as he left one of the buildings, "he could hear above him people saying, 'The fire's been lit, the fire's been lit,"' Stern said. "We can only assume it was a mas- sive loss oflife,"FBI spokesperson Bob Ricks said in a solemn afternoon news conference. Ricks said multiple witnesses spot- ted cult members setting several fires. One person, Ricks said, "was knelt down with his hands cupped, from which a flame erupted." FBI agents reported seeing a man wearing a gas mask and black uniform throw something inside, followed by a fireball. Additionally, Ricks said, aman found yesterday afternoon in a bunker on the grounds said lantern fuel had been spread throughout the wooden complex and that the fire was started simultaneously in several places. Koresh had warned the- FBI last week that agents would be "devoured by fire" if they tried to harm him. A maze of tunnels was believed to run under thecomplex, butJackKillorin; a spokesperson in Washington for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Fire-+ arms, said the agency believed no tun- nel system would have allowed people+ to survive the fire.; "It's a bad end and one of the ends we feared from the beginning," Killorin said. "Obviously, suicide was aconcern; all along, but the method was different, unexpected." Attorney General Janet Reno ap- proved the assault and informed Presi-; dent Clinton. The FBI notified the compound'sneighbors before daybreak "that it would end today," according to Melanie Felton, a nearby rancher. Late in the day, Reno said the FBI's assault had been carefully planned over several days. She added that she "could not give the president that assurance" that the agents could prevent a mass suicide such as the cyanide poisoning that killed 913 people at Jonestown, Guyana, in 1978. The fire erupted while television cameras provided live coverage of an armored vehicle battering a hole into the compound's first story. Agents in the predawn tear gas as- sault were met by gunfire, at least 75- 80 rounds, the FBI said. The agents continued ripping holes in compound buildings throughout the morning, and at a 10:30 a.m. session with reporters, Ricks spoke calmly about the decision to force Koresh and his followers out. "Today's action is not an indication that our patience has run out," Ricks said. "The action taken today was, we believe, the next logical step in a series of actions to bring this episode to a conclusion." See CULT, Page 2 Students to attend march for lesbian, gay, bisex by Randy Lebowitz, Daily Staff Reporter Contingencies of activists will par- ticipate in the 1993 March on Washing- ton forLesbian, GayandBisexualEqual Rights and Liberation April25. Among them will be students from the Univer- sity and members of the Ann Arbor community. The gay community is demanding passage of a federal civil rights bill banning discrimination based upon sexual orientation. Of particular focus will be the issues of gays in the military and AIDS. Grassroots organizers from across the nation have spent the last two years planning the event. Although the actual march will occur Sunday, a week filled * with more than 250 related events has also been scheduled to run April 20-28. "Thismarch is acall toarms, notjust for the gay, lesbian and bisexual com- munity, but to every citizen who op- poses discrimination-to every citizen who will not remain silent while the Constitiution and Bill of Rights are re- placed by fundamentalist doctrine," according to a press release. Eventswillinclude lobbying, work- shops, receptions and drag shows. Co-coordinator of the University's Lesbian-Gay Male Programming Of- fice (LGMPO)Jim Toy said he expects more than 1 million members of the community to be in attendance to advo- cate equal rights. RC sophomore Ryan Bradley said he will attend the march in order to garner support for the homosexual com- munity. "I believe the besttool forequal- ity is visibility," Bradley said. "This shows that we are part of society and that we deserve equal treatment." Bradley said Washington, D.C., was the perfect place for this type of rally. "People look at the Washington Monu- ment and the Lincoln Memorial and get the impression that it's this beautiful white-washed city, but they don't real- ize that a lot of people are there who don't fulfill the American values," Bra- dley said. This will be the third march that Debbie Rosenstein, arecentUniversity graduate has attended. "My experience is thatitdoes matter if you asoneperson show up, because one plus one plus one adds up," she said. Rosenstein said it is always encour- aging to see the diversity of the people. "It's always amazing to see little kids with signs thatsay I'mproud ofmy two mommies.'" She said this march is important because it will create more visibility for thediversegay community. "Itwillgive an understanding that gay males, lesbi- See MARCH, Page 2 Participants in the March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Rights plan to present government officials with a list of several demands. These include: passage of a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender civil rights bill and an end to discrimination by state and federal governments, including the military; repeal of all sodomy laws and laws that criminalize private sexual expression between consenting adults; massive increase in funding for AIDS education, research and patient care; universal access to health care; and an end to sexism in medical research and health care; legislation to prevent discrimination against lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgendered people in the area of family diversity, custody, adoption and foster care, and expansion of the definition of family to include the full diversity of all family structures; full and equal inclusion of lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgendered people in the education system and in multicultural curricula; the right to reproductive freedom and choice and an end to sexist discrimination; an end to racial and ethnic discrimination; and, an end to discrimination and violent oppression based on actual or perceived sexual orientation/identification, race, religion, identity, sex and gender expression, disability, age, class and/or AIDS/H IV infection. ' Anthro. Dept. voted best in U .S. by Kenneth Dancyger Daily Faculty Reporter Archeologists across the nation are looking beyond ancient ruins to learn more about anthropology. According to a survey conductedby the Society for American Archeology (SAA), the University's Department of Anthropology offers the best graduate program in the country. Thesurveywasdistributedrandomly to 163 members of SAA -which con- sists of Ph.D. holders employed in pro- fessional positions at colleges and uni- versities across the nation. Approximately 10 faculty members from the University are members of the society, including Department of An- thropology Chair Richard Ford. Members of the SAA evaluated ar- cheology programs based on character- istics ranging from research opportuni- ties for students to the presence of de- partmental publications. Ford said he was not asked to com- plete a survey, and is not aware of any other University faculty members who may have been approached by SAA. The majority ofrespondents consis- tently ranked the University's program the best in the nation, followed by the Members of summer assembly hope to further goals of MSA by Jennifer Tianen Daily MSA Reporter Instead of splashing in the waves or soarking un the rmvs. some members of SummerTerms, the assembly musthave at least 10 representatives on hand to convokequorum-definedas themini- mum amountofvoting members needed drafting a budget proposal for the upcoming year; laying the foundation for the year on a meeting-to-meeting basis; "I'm sure we'll have to keep our guard up to see what kind of surprises the administration has in store for us," Kightsaid. "Lastyear, they dropped the "I think the representatives that will be around for the summer assembly are motivated to get the necessary things done to have a successful assembly,"