WE 1 F,4 1 *t !tr t t7i One hundred three years of editorial freedom Students, mediator decide Code harassment cases By HOPE CALATI DAILY NEWS EDITOR This is the second in a series of our reports this week in which the Daily will examine specific cases brought against students under the Statement of Student Rights and Re- sponsibilities. Last semester, a student suspended under the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities returned to classes. This undergraduate was suspended for one semester after he was found responsible for harassing two female students under the code of non-aca- demic conduct during Winter Term 1993. This was one of 12 cases of ha- rassment that were investigated be- tween Jan. 1, 1993, to Oct. 8, 1993. Six of these cases were dropped dur- ing investigation. Two female students filed sepa- rate charges against the man. The harassment allegedly consisted of interfered with the women's academic work. Other students also said they wit- nessed the behavior. The male student admitted to ha- rassing several women. The case was heard within seven days of his March 22, 1993, suspension, as stated in the code. The accused student chose to have his case heard by a student hearing panel. English Prof. Peter Bauland served as the non-voting faculty chair on the panel, which consisted of four graduate and two undergraduate stu- dents. Three of the students were women and three were men. The student hearing panel unani- mously determined that the man had harassed the women. The man did not appeal the decision. He returned to the University after receiving professional counseling, which showed he could "function suc- cessfully in small group settings and especially with women." He is also required to avoid contact with the women involved. Other harassment cases have been resolved through mediation with a trained mediator. One of those cases involved a male Engineering student who allegedly entered the residence hall room of an female LSA student and refused to leave. He said he was looking for someone who was not in the room. The woman filed a complaint and See CODE, Page 2 comments of a sexual nature. One of the women charged he said he wanted to rape her. He also allegedly had been "physically suggestive and threatening toward a classmate in an off-campus social setting" and had FOR STUDENTS ONLY? Pentagon's No.2 man to now head Defense Clinton taps Perry to replace Secretary Aspin WASHINGTON (AP) - Filling an embarrassing gap in his national security team, President Clinton pro- moted the Pentagon's No. 2 man to defense secretary yesterday. He called William Perry "a real pro," a man "you can depend on." The reaction from Congress was enthusiastic, with predictions Perry would win easy confirmation. Though he is little known to the general pub- lic, senators dealing with military is- sues are familiar with him from fre- quent testimony at hearings. Seemingly a reluctant warrior, Perry said he told the White House Saturday he could not say yes at that point because "I did not want to drive my family into a decision - my deci- sion - without their support." After a talk with Vice President Al Gore and then a meeting with family members, he telephoned the White House on Sunday to say he would accept an offer if one were forthcom- ing. "I did not have to be persuaded to take this job," Perry said. Perry is to replace outgoing Sec- retary Les Aspin, who announced his resignation under pressure from the White House last month. Clinton's first choice to take Aspin's place, Bobby Inman, withdrew last week in a news conference filled with com- plaints about attacks from columnists and lawmakers. Despite Inman's shocker - and comments from a handful of other job prospects that they were not inter- ested - Clinton said hiring a new Pentagon chief was easy. "It wasn't hard to fill," Clinton said. "I asked Secretary Perry and he said, 'Yes."' Perry, who also served in Presi- dent Carter's Pentagon, is a former engineering professor and mathema- tician, a key early supporter of stealth technology who was later proven right. Unlike Clinton, he is also an Army veteran, perhaps positioned to help his commander-in-chief improve relations with military leaders and wrestle with a shrinking Pentagon budget. See DEFENSE, Page 2 SARAH WHMNG/Daly Jennifer Shea works out at the CCRB yesterday. Currently, criminal cases are pending against six people who used other student IDs to gain entry into the building, as reported in yesterday's The University Record. In campus letter, -Monts pledges to consult students By DAVID SHEPARDSON DAILY STAFF REPORTER Amid pressure from University *fficials and students, Lester Monts, vice provost for academic and multicultural affairs, issued a care- fully worded statement in campus publications yesterday explaining his office's handling of Martin Luther King Jr. Day and the subsequent boy- cott by a student group. Because of what members called "a lack of input" in the planning of the m niversity's MLK Day observance, e Black Student Union boycotted events and held its own slate of events, gathering considerable media atten- tion. Monts appeared to respond to BSU's concerns in "An Open Letter to the Campus and the Community," published yesterday in The Univer- sity Record and The Michigan Daily. "My office is committed to creat- g opportunities for people to ex- press diverse ideologies and relate them to Dr. King and the ideals he represented," wrote Monts, who has led the Office of Academic and Multicultural Initiatives (OAMI) for less than one year. "I believe our annr a fnfitr nlkepnr. a nnrc. chmi One anonymous planning committee member said Monts wanted to ease relations with the BSU and that his office had not made enough of an effort to include everyone. Monts' statement grew out of a meeting last Tuesday with Michael Jones-Coleman and members of the MLK Day planning committee. One planning committee member, who spoke on the condition of ano- nymity, said Monts wanted to ease strained relations with the BSU and answer mounting criticism that his office had not made enough of an effort to include everyone. Another administrator said Monts probably made the statement "of his own decision" and that pressure "prob- ably wasn't a factor." Reached by phone last night, Alethea Gordon, the head of the BSU, said that she had heard about the state- The U.S. Supreme Court ruled yesterday that anti- abortion protesters can now be sued under a federal anti-racketeering law. Lower courts had thrown out the nationwide class- action lawsuit that tried to invoke the anti- racketeering law against Operation Rescue and other groups. This decision means: Anti-abortion groups and individuals sued successfully over their conduct can be forced to pay tripled damages. The National Organization of Women lawsuit alleges criminal violations, which date back to 1982. The leaders of anti-abortion groups may be sued successfully as conspirators even if they are not physically present when illegal conduct occurs. Federal judges may invoke federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations legislation in order to issue injunctions against anti-abortion activities, such as blocking access to abortion clinics or in other ways conspiring to stop women from having abortions. WASHINGTON (AP) - A unanimous SupremerCourt ruled yesterday that protest- ers who block access to abortion clinics or in other ways conspire to stop women from having abortions may be sued as racketeers. The decision, which could threaten Op- eration Rescue and other anti-abortion groups with financial ruin, also allows federal courts to order a halt to illegal protests at clinics. Although focused only on interpreting a federal anti-racketeering law, the decision is a big victory for the National Organization for Women and the Clinton administration. NOW had taken the case to the high court, and the administration had sided with NOW's view of the disputed law. Lower courts had thrown out the nation- wide class-action lawsuit that tried to invoke the anti-racketeering law against Operation Rescue and other groups. Yesterday's deci- sion reinstated the lawsuit, which stems from anti-abortion protests in Chicago and other cities. Court rules in favor of abortion-rights advocates Protestors who block access to clinics may be sued "The court has added another weapon to our arsenal for attacking the terrorism of extremists in the anti-abortion movement," said Helen Neuborne of the NOW Legal Defense Fund. "We're very pleased." But Randall Terry of Operation Rescue said, "The Supreme Court has told civil protest to go to hell." He said, "This is a vulgar betrayal of over 200 years of toler- ance towards protest and civil disobedi- ence. The iron heel of government now will be used to crush dissent." Nothing in the ruling dealt directly with abortion. The court in 1992 reaffirmed the core holding of its landmark Roe vs. Wade decision of 1973 - that women have a constitutional right to abortion. Yesterday's ruling focused on alleged crimes committed against abortion clinic employees and patients. The court said such conduct can lead to lawsuits under federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organi- See ABORTION, Page 2 Regents name Hinshaw to be dean of Nursing school By SOMA GUPTA DAILY STAFF REPORTER After more than a year of search- ing, the University has confirmed Ada Sue Hinshaw as the new dean of the Nursing school. Hinshaw's nomina- tion was approved Friday by the ment has gone on for more than a year but Hinshaw's appointment to the position seems to have been taken favorably. "I am very pleased that Dr. Hinshaw accepted our offer to serve as the Dean of the School of Nurs- deanship and I am person who does things in decades. Thirteen years is long enough to do any one thing," Dumas said. "I want to do something different and the time to leave is when things are going well," he said. "I feel I have _______ w- -