.JE f AdL. 4w t1C *ti One hundred three years of editorial freedom Week to focus on w eating disorders By SAM DUDEK FOR THE DAILY Eating Disorder Awareness Week, *which starts today and runs through Saturday, will be commemorated on campus and nationwide with special events meant to educate the public about the prevention and treatment of eating disorders. University Counseling Services, in cooperation with University Health Services (UHS), is sponsoring the week's on-cam- EATING pus events. Ac- Dj tivities include j panel discus- S sions, theatrical 0 performances, a R ribbon ceremony D and a trash bin on E the Diag where -R students can AWARENESS throw away their WEEK diet pills and books. "The purpose of the week is to highlight the issues of eating and body image," said Suzanne Fechner-Bates, a clinical psychologist at Counseling Services. She added that organizers of Eat- ing Disorder Awareness Week aim to "highlight how women in particular are affected by societal pressures for achieving thinness." She said, how- ever, the events are open to everyone, especially those with eating disorders and their friends and family. Fechner-Bates referred to a recent See AWARENESS, Page 2 U.N. presses NATO to OK JOE WESTRATE/Daily Marchers pause yesterday in the Diag to celebrate Cesar Chavez as part of Chicano History Week. /' Speakers.3 celebrLate Cha,..velz, call on youth for&A leaderip military SARAJEVO, Bosnia- Herzegovina (AP) --U.N. Secretary- General Boutros Boutros-Ghali asked NATO late last night to approve air strikes on mortar positions around Sarajevo, one day after the deadliest attack on the city in the 22-month siege by Bosnian Serbs. The death toll from Saturday's shelling of a busy marketplace rose to 68, while three U.S. cargo planes ar- rived to evacuate victims of the mas- sacre. The Bosnian government de- clared a day of mourning, and resi- dents railed at a world they say should be stopping the fighting rather than mopping up after it. A senior U.N. official in New York, speaking on condition of ano- nymity, said Boutros-Ghali sent a let- ter last night to NATO Secretary Gen- eral Manfred Woerner asking him to seek authorization from NATO mem- bers for air strikes. The strikes would be targeted "against artillery or mortar positions in or around Sarajevo which are re- sponsible for attacks on civilian tar- gets," the official said. The North Atlantic Treaty Orga- nization voted in August to provide air strikes on Serb troops ringing Sarajevo if the United Nations re- quested them. NATO leaders tough- ened their stance at a summit last month, but had been waiting for Boutros-Ghali's request. There was no immediate word on when the NATO Council would meet. See BOSNIA, Page 2 action President may order' Bosnian WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton conferred with his top national security advisers yesterday to chart a course for dealing with escalating violence in Bosnia amid intensifying calls from Congress for air strikes., A top administration official said Western military action was clearly "on the table" in the after- math of a mortar attack Saturday in a market in the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo that left 68 dead and hundreds wounded. And Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole asserted that a decision by Clinton to order air strikes would have "strong bipartisan support" in Congress. But Clinton-along with other allied leaders - appeared still to be groping for an effective strat- egy for ending the bloodshed in the former Yugoslavia. A day after he sent a U.S. medi- See CLINTON, Page 2 By REBECCA DETKEN FOR THE DAILY Chicano History Week festivities kicked off yesterday afternoon at the Michigan Union Ballroom with lower attendance than predicted. Approxi- mately 65 people out of the expected 300 turned out for the event, which featured three keynote speakers ad- dressing issues important to the Latino American cause. Pedros Salinas, an LSA sopho- more and organizer of the event, said he was disappointed with the lack of student participation. "There is a struggle out there, and the low atten- dance reflected that there are Chicanos and Chicanas that don't want to deal with the struggle that they need to be a part of." Although the audience was small, those who came were very enthusias- tic with the topics presented by the speakers. Julio Guerrero, president of the Student Union of Social Work at the University, gave a speech dedicated to the memory of C6sar Chavez, whom he had worked with for two years. Guerrero spoke of the perceptions' and legacy of Chavez and how both related to the realities of today. "Cesar was a simple man. An exceptional,; humble human being. He was a man with a vision and a passion to follow through," he said. Stressing the notion to follow Chavez's example, Guerrero con- cluded with the following remarks: "We say to Cesar - Mi causa es tu causa. It is everybody's cause. Ev- erybody should work together so he will be remembered, but not missed." See CHICANO, Page 2 .3 players suspended for alleged alcohol theft Workshop teaches basic skills to LGBi community By CHAD A. SAFRAN DAILY BASKETBALL WRITER Three members of the Michigan men's basketball team were suspended Friday from the Wolverines' game Saturday against Michi- gan State. Jimmy King, Ray Jackson and Chris Fields were forbidden from practicing Friday and participating in the game Saturday for what was labeled a "violation of team policy" by head coach Steve Fisher. The suspension will be re-examined today. Michigan plays No. 14 Indiana tomorrow at Crisler Arena. According to The Ann Arbor News, the players were kept out of the game because of their involvement in a Jan. 12 shoplifting inci- dent at the Dairy Mart on 615 E. University. Fisher learned of the policy violation Feb. 2 and informed Athletic Director Joe Roberson of the actions the following day. On Jan.12, anywhere from four to six men entered the convenience store, and during sev- eral trips in and out of the store, removed between six and eleven 12-packs of Molson Ice beer. However, the cashier gave at least two of the men a hug. She was apparently unaware a video camera, located behind the register, recorded the incident. The Ann Arbor News also reported that the cashier told an employee who questioned her about the removal of the beer that, "it was covered." The clerk apparently took $10 from her pocket then slipped it into the register. While the crime occurred three weeks ago, the intial crime report was not filed until Jan. 21. The detective on the case, Mick Schubring, did not receive the case until Feb. 2, after returning from vacation. "There will be no comment by Dairy Mart on this," said Michelle, the manager on duty that night. She would not give her last name. Rick Gibbs, director of Human Resources of Dairy Mart, said he "cannot tell any details" of the incident. No arrests have been made in the crime, which has been labeled retail fraud. A convic- tion on the misdemeanor can result in a prison stay of up to 93 days, as well as a $100 fine. See SUSPENSION, Sports Page 4 King By JUDITH KAFKA DAILY STAFF REPORTER The threat is real. Violent crime is on the rise, particularly harassment and violence against same-sex couples. This is why students prepared themselves for the ominous possibil- ity that they could become victims of gay-bashing: they took a self-defense course. "It's great to know that you can fight back, that you can do it!" said graduate student Karol Rubin after participating in the first four-hour session. Rubin, along with nine other men and women, spent Saturday morning in the Pond Room of the Michigan Union learning skills for self-defense in a course offered for lesbians, gay males and bisexuals. Melisa Buie, co-organizer of the University's Gentle World Self De- fense Karate Club, explained that she decided to offer a workshop through the Lesbian Gay Male Program Of- fice (LOMPO) in response to grow- ing concern about gay-bashing. "Especially because of the ballot proposal," she said, referring to a cur- rent movement in Michigan to get a law restricting gay-rights placed on November's ballot. Fields Outside Dairy Mart, reaction is mixed By SHARI SITRON DAILY STAFF REPORTER Most Michigan basketball fans would prefer to see the players on the the clerk on duty Jan. 12 allowed the three players to take the beverages even though they did not have enough money to pay the total bill. were at fault. "There's no excuse for that," he said. "They definitely should have been suspended." Snyder's unsympathetic attitude -E-.-, ,. ....-