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September 28, 1993 - Image 2

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The Michigan Daily, 1993-09-28

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2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 28, 1993

HOUSING
Continued from page 1
lease," Ray-Johnson said.
Now, with the implementation of
the statement, Housing is able to refer
cases to Antieau for more severe penal-
ties. -
"(The Statementandrevisions)were
created to work in tandem with one
another," Antieau said.
Before revisions were made, Ray-
Johnson and Antieau dealt with infrac-.
tions on a case-by-case basis.
"Between January and April, Mary
Lou and I just communicated a lot
aboutcertain cases," Ray-Johnson said.
"On the serious cases, she was brought
in.
In a joint presentation by Ray-

Johnson and Antieau, Resident Advi-
sors and Resident Fellows received
training in August on the residence hall
process and the statement.
Antieau added that the Statement
and how it relates to students was dis-
cussed at orientation in an informal
way through open discussions.
"It was consistently referred to,"
she said.
Ray-Johnson said she feels it is very
important for students to familiarize
themselves with the Statement and the
judicial process for two reasons.
"One, (students) may be alleged in
violation of the Statement," she said.
"Two, there are a number of students
who become victims that are unaware
of the process."
Antieau agreed.
"I think most of our students know

that there's something out there that
might affect them, but unless they are
actually affectedby it, they don't sit and
read all the fine points."
The Office of Student Relations
published a new handbook containing
both policies this year titled The Judi-
cial Process.
It explains the rules, regulations and
guidelines that govern every Housing
lease holder.
"We handed out copies of The Judi-
cial Process to all the residents," said
Bursley ResidentAdvisor Adam Diller,
a School of Art senior. He added that he
has not received any questions about
the statement from his residents thus
far.
Ray-Johnson said, "The system is
working successfully and our students
get an opportunity to a fair hearing."

APPOINTMENT Political chaos forces

Continued from page 1
"The committee decided early on
that we wanted someone inside the
University. In this office you need a
running start," commented Whitaker.
Lipschutz will keep her position as
an adjunct associate professor of phi-
losophy.
Lipschutz has upheld a philanthropic
role for many graduate students -pro-
moting ideas such as an in-house cafe at
Rackham and the more recent installa-
tion of the health insurance plan for
graduate students and teaching assis-
tants.
Outside the University, hersuccesses
are just as prodigious. Most recently, in
1992, Lipschutz was elected to the board
of the Midwest Universities Consor-
tium for International Activities.
Lipschutzdeclined tobe interviewed
until after she assumes her new posi-
tion on Nov. 1.
-Daily Staff Reporter Nate
Hurley contributed to this report

Shevardnadze to flee

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TBILISI, Georgia (AP) ,
Abkhazian separatists captured
Sukhumi yesterday, forcing Georgian
leader Eduard Shevardnadze to flee
from the devastated city he had vowed
to defend.
Abkhazians forces fought their way
to the center of the city and raised their
flag over city hall, Shevarnadze said in
a message to his office in Tbilisi, the
Georgian capital.
The fall of Sukhumi, the Georgian
government's last stronghold in the
coastal province of Abkhazia, gave the
separatists virtually complete control
of the region.
More than 3,000 people have been
killed in the yearlong war, one of the
fiercest ethnic conflicts to rise from the
ruins of the Soviet Union.
The Georgian government has
warned that an Abkhazian victory could
FILM
Continued from page 1
can Journal," which aired on WXYZ
early this morning, the Schmidts gave
their reaction to the film.
"It made me sick," Cara Schmidt
said.
She added that the movie's depic-
tion of herself and her husband was
very unfair. In the movie, critics said
Schmidt was made to look like a ditZy,
uneducated, promiscuous woman, con-
trary to psychological profiles that in-
dicated she was in fact the brightest of
the four parents involved in the case.
A spokesperson for Washtenaw
County Circuit Court Judge William
Ager- who was portrayed in the movie
- said the judge had no comment on
the film.
Despite the national attention the
case received - it made the cover of'
Time and People magazines among .
others, and the DeBoers appeared on
CLINTON
Continued from page 1
States was paying too heavy a load. A
seniorU.S. official, speaking on condi-
tion of anonymity, said the idea was to
scale back from 30.4 percent to 25
percent and have Germany and Japan
make up the difference.
Clinton said the United Nations must
"weed out waste" and he suggested the
appointment of an inspector general to
investigate any abuses.
The more than 1,000 delegates who
listened in the cavernous General As-
sembly hall gave the speech restrained
applause.
During the day, Clinton crossed New
York's First Avenue several times be-
tween the U.N. and the U.S. Mission,
causing streetclosures that stretched 14
blocks and tied up traffic.
Inside the U.N., he reminded the
delegates that 32 years ago President
Kennedy had warned that humanity
lived under a nuclear sword of
Damocles. "We have begun to see the
doomsday weapon of nuclear annihila-
tion dismantled and destroyed," Clinton
said.

inspire other ethnic groups torevoltand
could lead to civil war across the
Caucusus Mountain region.
"Georgia lost an unequal battle,"
Shevardnadze was quoted as saying.
Shevardnadze's office said he had
left Sukhumi and was somewhere in
the Gulprish region, a few miles south
of Sukhumi, but declined to say exactly
where.
Shevardnadze's aides in Tbilisi said
he might have to accept a Russian offer
for evacuation, but would try to avoid
that humiliating step.
Although Russia has officially main-
tained neutrality in the conflict,
Georgia's government has accused the
Russian military of supplying armsand
other aid to Abkhazia.
Russia has both ships an aircraft in
the region and has evacuated 3,500
civilian refugees in recent days.
It made me sick.'
- Cara Schmidt
many syndicated national talk shows
- University students did not seem
interested in the movie itself.
LSA first-year student Mpatanishi
Tayari, who watched the movie in her
Alice Lloyd room, said she heard a lot
about the case and sided with the
DeBoers.
"The movie did show bias toward...
the DeBoers. They showed the
DeBoers' side a lot and ... made us feel
really sympathetic towardthem,"Tayari
said.
"If you're going to make a choice
like (giving a child up for adoption),
then you really have to think about
what you'redoing," Tayari added. "You
can't just decide later that you want
your baby back."
-Ronnie Glassberg contributed
to this report
Clinton's speech failed to address the
increasing gap between U.S. interests
and U.N. operations. Specifically,
Clinton did not spell out what U.S.
interests are in the operation in Soma-
lia, Dole said.
"We must avoid adopting the U.N.
agenda whether in Somalia, in Bosnia,
in Haiti, or elsewhere when it does not
meet our standards and principles,"Dole
said in a statement. "The key to making
the world safe for democracies and not
for dictators, is not to 'reinvent' the
United Nations but to assert U.S. lead-
ership in support of U.S. interests."
Clinton, in an extensive section on
the problems of children around the
world, said 1.5 million had died in wars
over the past decade. He said it was "far
more unforgivable that in that same
period 40 million children died from
diseases completely preventable with
simple vaccines or medicine."
Clinton said the United States was
determined to see suspects brought to
justice in the 1988 bombing of a Pan
Anjetliner in which 270 people died in
Scotland.
After his address, Clinton met with
the leaders of the Baltic nations of
Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia; Prime
Minister Morihiro Hosokawaof Japan,
President Cesar Gaviria of Colombia,
Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri of Leba-
non and President Joaquin Chissano of
Mozamibique.

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