itg 9' 40F at4 One hundred three years of editorial freedom L I 4A, -, r ry2, 4 1994 TheMichigan Daily Israel seals off West *Bank in massacre FROM DAILY WIRE SERVICES JERUSALEM - The Israeli government yesterday announced creation of a commission of inquiry into the massacre of Palestinian worshipers by a Jewish settler and said it would disarm some militant Jewish extremists as Arab rioting continued in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Israel itself. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin also said Israel would release between 800 and 1,000 Palestinian prisoners as a goodwill gesture in hopes of keeping peace talks with the Palestine Liberation Organization from collapsing, but PLO leader Yasser Arafat dismissed the Israeli measures as "hollow and superficial." Meanwhile, Israeli security forces killed four Palestinians and a Bedouin in a third day of Arab rioting that spread to the Negev desert in the south of Israel and erupted anew in Jaffa, near Tel Aviv. Demonstrators burned tires and hurdled stones at *police, who responded with tear gas, clubs and in some cases live ammunition. The commission of inquiry into the killings that sparked the riots is the highest form of official inquiry codified in Israeli law; similar panels were set up to investigate aspects of the 1973 Middle East War and the 1982 massacre of Palestinians at the Sabra and Shatilla camps in Lebanon while the region was under Israeli :} ,{ kfif S ' ' ',. t . . . .,"" 'l // / fJ: Vr i. . .. ~ . 'U'regents vote to keep By HOPE CALATI DAILY STAFF REPORTER The Statement of Student Rig and Responsibilities will remain interim policy until next April, University Board of Regents voted the Friday before Spring Break. The regents, urged by M leaders, voted 7-1 to wait until stude and University members have opportunity to submit amendment the code of non-academic cond before they make it permanent pol "I believe there's widespr( agreement among the University, the students and around this bo that the Statement (of Student Rig and Responsibilities) is not finished," said Regent Rebe McGowan (D-Ann Arbor). Proposed amendments have had the chance to be filtered throt the difficult amendment process, s Maureen A. Hartford, vice presid for student affairs. She requested delay in making the code a perman policy because of the number amendments proposed to her off She said the proposed amendme have not had the chance to be filte through the difficult amendm process. Amendments must be approi by a quorum of student jurors bef they are forwarded to the regents adoption into the code. She said the Office of Stud Affairs is planning another hear 01 interim code on the amendments. The office has attempted to hold O News Analysi hts two hearings this semester on the an proposed amendments. The first was M SA Claim s the canceled because of an ice storm. No I on action was taken at the second hearing de i*1* because a quorum of student jurorsCsion is a SA did not attend. eats Proposed amendments include partial victon the adding murder to the list of on-campus 1 s to offenses handled by the code, luct changing the statute of limitations By JAMES R. CHO icy. from six months to one year and DAILY STAFF REPORTER ead extending the code to cover student The coalition of Michiga and organizations. Student Assembly (MSA) membe ard The regents agreed with Hartford's that confronted the Universi ghts rationale in postponing the vote to Board of Regents at its regul yet make the code permanent. meeting two weeks ag cca Regent Shirley McFee (R-Battle successfully convinced the regen Creek) said, "I thinks it's very to keep the Statement of Stude not commendable on the part of the Rights and Responsibilities - th ugh students who stepped forward in a non-academic student codec said responsible manner on this policy." conduct - as an interim policy f lent Regent Philip Power (D-Ann the next 14 months. the Arbor) concurred, "It's silly to have But in the process, membe lent permanent policy when you can't gained only a temporary repriev of change the interim policy." before the University makes th ice. One regent stood fast in his policy permanent. And the change nts opposition to the code. Regent Deane members pushed so hard to hav red Baker (R-Ann Arbor) cast the dissenting implemented, are now months awa ent vote against the code itself. from consideration and possib Michigan Student Assembly Vice passage. ved President Brian Kight said the effort of MSA Vice President Bria ore thestudentgovemmentnetted "alimited Kight, a long-time opponent to t for victory code, along with other MS He explained, "We still oppose the members, have hailed the action b lent policy as a whole but this is much better See CODE, Page ing than making the policy permanent." s an rs ty ar go its nt he of rs ve :he es ve ay- le an he A. by a2 AP PHUO A Muslim holds the Qur'an, Islam's holy book, during a protest yesterday by more than 1,000 demonstrators stemming from Friday's massacre. control. The government also approved measures targeting members of a~ Jewish nationalist group called Kach, composed of militant followers of the late American rabbi Meir Kahane. It was one of Kahane's adherents, Baruch Goldstein, a physician at the West Bank settlement of Kiryat Arba, who opened fire Friday with an automatic rifle on hundreds of Arab worshipers at the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron. The official See ISRAEL, Page 7 Michigan Party By RONNIE GLASSBERG LSA junior Julie Neen DAILY STAFF REPORTER endidat iar Pf Let the games begin. While the 1994 Winter Olympics *ended yesterday in Lillehammer, the games for the Michigan Student Assembly elections are just beginning. And, it may be more than even Tonya Harding or Nancy, Kerrigan could endure. Just three days after announcing a a e iflJLU is president, Michigan released a o proposed SUniversity Campus stitution, governs M "What we are proposing, I proposes ne n as its will make MSA a profoundly more or MSA effective organization," said MSA the Vice President Brian Kight. Party The party has gathered more than ropy of a 1,100 of the 1,000 student signatures new needed, which will put the issue on y All- the election ballot, March 22 and 23. Con- The issue could have also been put on which the ballot by a two-thirds vote of the SA. assembly. believe, Three-fifths of all valid student votes must be obtained to initiate the new constitution and give the Michigan Party the gold. Kight said the party proposed the issue through ballot because he believed the assembly would oppose such a change. "MSA has in the past been resistant to making any major changes," Kight said. Because of such assembly w All-Campus Constitution resistance, Kight said the Michigan Party would not get two-thirds of the assembly to put such an issue on the ballot and instead put the issue on the ballot by student petition. But the Students' Party candidate for president, Business Rep. Devon Bodoh, criticized the Michigan Party for not bringing the constitution to the assembly. "The Michigan Party did it this way so they could not have meaningful dialogue," he said. "It is utterly ridiculous not to have every opinion." Bodoh said the Michigan Party should have been proposed the constitution through the assembly and, if the assembly opposed it, then gone to a student petition. Bodoh could not comment on the specifics of the constitution because See MSA, Page 2 *Housing rates rise 4 percent for* next year JAMES R. CHO DAILY STAFF REPORTER - Students living in dormitories next year will have to fork over almost $200 more each due to recent hikes in hous- ing rates. The University Board of Regents approved housing rate increases at its regular meeting the Friday before Spring Break. Rates will increase by 3.95percent for residence halls and 3.3 percent for family housing. "The proposed rates were recom- mended by the rate study committees, made up of students and staff mem- bers," said David Foulke, associate di- rector for the Housing Division. Vice President for Student Affairs 'M' basketball players sentenced in theft Dairy Mart clerk also pleads guilty to one count of theft; all 4 FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS The three Michigan basketball players who each pleaded guilty to one count of second-degree retail fraud earlier this month were, for- mally sentenced Friday, along with the store clerk who allowed them to take the beer. Ray Jackson, Jimmy King and Chris Fields were each assessed $200 in court costs, ordered to complete 72 hours of community service and told to pay $38.25 in restitution fees for the stolen cases of beer. The players will be on probation for 6 months. Allison Chenault, the Dairy Mart clerk who did not stop the players from taking the beer last month at the store located at 615 E. University, received the same sentence. Chenault, who is from Lansing and was registered as an LSA sopho- more at the time, was seen on a store videotape hugging the players. She has since been fired and is no longer enrolled at the University. She is still under investigation for a simi- lar incident involving Michigan foot- ball players on Jan. 20. Damon Jones, a tight end, has a pre-trial hearing scheduled for March 1. He was already on probation on a bomb charge. If found guilty, he could receive a new sentence of up to four years in prison and a $2,000 fine In court documents, the Ann Ar- bor police said the players put several 12-packs of Molson Ice beer in duffel bags and that Chenault did nothing to stop them. Jackson, Fields and King pleaded no-contest Feb. 9. Chenault pleaded $4,659.20. Rates in the traditional halls include room and 13 meals per week. Other rates will range from $1,872.64 (now $1,800.42) for a room-only converted triple unit in a non-traditional hall to $5,535.04 (now $5,325.78) for a single room in the traditional halls. This year the Housing Division has experienced an unprecedented short- fall in occupancy in the residence halls, especially at Bursley. "Despite the largest entering freshman class, Bursley opened with 90 vacancies." draw same penalty guilty to the same charge on Feb. 11: Another man, Jamar Joseph, was also charged in the incident. He was also caught on videotape with Chenault taking beer. Joseph pleaded no-contest to second-degree retail fraud Feb. 18. He will be sentenced next month. If the defendants complete the terms of the sentence in the six-month time period, the charges will be dis- missed by the court and it will be the same as if they had been exonerated of the charges. After a few cncessions, 1 t developer gets A2 inn ti-gay amendment may be on Nov ballot By JUDITH KAFKA DAILY STAFF REPORTER When President Clinton spoke out circulating around the state, collect- ing the 256,000 signatures needed to get the amendment placed on the bal- 1lnt 11 YJJ ~iW~ ~M ~3 ~~L~AUAL~p I ~~UII~4 ~.Ai.h I~