WE Untti One hundred three years of editorial freedom Vol. CIV, Nu.105'~~~~~~~~~,. An t,, ihgn.tusaMrh1,94194TeMcia al 'U' redefines its role in hearing harassment cases By RACHEL SCHARFMAN DAILY STAFF REPORTER In attempts to increase the "survi- vor friendliness" of the University's existing Sexual Harassment Policy, a more comprehensive, victim-oriented edition was released this month. The original policy, drafted in the early 1980s, was made more progres- sive in a 1991 version. While the 1994 edition is nearly identical, the few syntax changes are significant. The latest version reinforces what president James J. Duderstadt said in a written statement he expects to be a "commitment to have a community in S. African violence *claims 18 more lives THE WASHINGTON POST JOHANNESBURG - Rival Black groups killed at least 18 people in a gun battle in downtown WJohannesburg yesterday, jolting South Africa's delicate political transfor- mation - and_ apparently triggering new efforts at reconciliation. Armed vigilantes supporting the Inkatha Freedom Party and the African National Congress (ANC) battled for hours in the canyons between the city's gleaming skyscrapers, scattering lunch- time crowds and wounding hundreds *of people. Shortly afterward,the gov- ernment announced that a first-ever, four-way meeting would be held later this week among President Frederik W. de Klerk, ANC President Nelson Mandela, Inkatha President Mangosuthu Buthelezi and Buthelezi's ally, the Zulu tribal king, Goodwill Zwelithini. They will discuss steps to control violence and ensure fairness in South Africa's first democratic election next month - as well as Inkatha's objec- tions to the new constitution under which the balloting is to be held and Zwelithini's demand for Zulu sover- eignty. , Yesterday's battles began after about 10,000 heavily armed Zulus marched in protest against the election. The Zulus - supporters of Inkatha See S. AFRICA, Page 2 which individuals can work and learn in an environment that fosters dignity and mutual respect." The most prominent amendment is the drastic reduction in the number of people empowered to receive com- plaints of alleged harassment. The 1991 policy stipulated that any dean, director, department head, unit manager, residence hall building director and/or a designate could re- ceive and, if necessary, handle infor- mal reports or complaints. This ex- tensive body included more than 3,000 people. The updated version has consoli- dated the group; now only deans, di- rectors and department heads - ap- proximately 150-200 individuals - will be permitted to handle the deli- cate issue of sexual harassment. The new policy also provides for a specialized training program to make sure sexual harassment cases are handled appropriately. For deans, di- rectors and department heads, more detailed programs are being devel- oped, which surpass the educational activities, workshops and presenta- tions by the Center for the Education of Women (CEW) that have been part of the policy since 1991. Deborah Orlowski, a representa- tive from the Affirmative Action of- fice and member of the group on sexual harassment training, said the individuals who will now be respon- sible for receiving complaints need training. "They really do need to be well- grounded in a lot of different issues," she said. "I think that a lot of the sexual harassment complaints now are becoming more complicated. Things are a lot more subtle." The group developing the training program is comprised of individuals from different offices of the Univer- sity, including Staff and Union Rela- tions, Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC), Affir- mative Action, CEW, Human Re- sources and others. The representatives collaborated to amass the necessary knowledge and "acquaint (the deans, directors and department heads) with the issue of sexual"harassment, the laws, the University's policy and how to re- spond to someone coming to you with a sexual harassment complaint," said Debra Cain, coordinator of SAPAC See POLICY, Page 2 These examples constitute sexual harassment. They do not include all types of conduct listed within the policy. I Pressure for sexual activity or sexual favors. Unwelcome touching of a person's body, hair or clothing. Sexual innuendoes, jokes or comments. Sexual graffiti or pictures. * Making sexual gestures with hands or through body movements. Disparaging sexual comments. ZING WENT THE STRINGS OF MY HEART NORML must pay old debts to hold Hash Bash By JAMES M. NASH DAILY STAFF REPORTER Members of the National Organi- zation for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) want the Michigan Student Assembly to help pay for this year's Hash Bash, but vow to hold the annual pot ritual even without fund- ing from the student government. Before allowing NORML to hold the event on the Diag the afternoon of April 2, the University demands the group pay its debts from last year's Hash Bash plus a deposit for post- rally cleanup. The expenses total nearly $850. NORML spokesperson Adam Brook said the group does not have the money. NORML plans to ask the student assembly to cover the cost or issue a loan, he said. Even without the money, Hash Bash will hit the Diag this Saturday, Brook said. "(The University) can't stop us and they can't arrest all of us," Brook said, predicting a turnout of nearly 10,000. "I'm going to tell them to fuck off, I'm not going to take their shit." NORML apparently has taken a softer approach in its negotiations with University officials. Members of the marijuana-legalization organization See BASH, Page 2 SARAH WHITING/Daily Graduate student Dee Frey takes aim at the Archery Club practice last night. Regents spent more than $99,000 in pres. search By JAMES R. CHO DAILY STAFF REPORTER The Board of Regents opened a new account specifically for the presi- dential search. With an initial balance of $50,000, the regents spent about $90,600 in their search for the 11th University president. The expenses were tracked under account number 419267. The account was paid for with funds from the University's investment fund, and not from the University's general fund. The presidential search was run out of rooms 3281C and 3281B in the School of Business Administration. The regents selected Doris Estep to provide staff support for the search. The office was outfitted with a Xerox machine, a computer and printer, of- fice equipment and a copy of "Who's Who in Higher Education," which cost $257.00, to provide additional information on the candidates. Additionally, the regents spent nearly $30,000 for travel, food and accommodations as they traversed the country interviewing prospective can- didates. The regents used the account to pay for travel costs incurred when finalists were flown in for private interviews at expensive hotels. For example, Regent Paul Brown (D-Petoskey) spent $137.02 at the New York Hilton at Rockefeller Cen- ter, April 4, 1988. The regents interviewed four of the finalists at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Dearborn at a cost of $1,603.65. After interviewing the finalists, four regents met several days later to discuss the candidates while dining on tenderloin and poached chicken breast - the meal cost $166.83. The regents spent the most on an outside consultant brought in at the request of the faculty advisory com- mittee to obtain detailed information on candidates. Lamalie Associates Inc., a management consulting firm based in Atlanta, was paid more than $40,000. This was done because the regents were worried that additional contact might reveal the identities of candidates. The regents paid more than $5,000 for print advertisements in publica- tions announcing the search for a new University president and their phone bills exceeded $1,000. And regents dined often at the University's expense. They spent more than $500 on catered meals. In once instance, the regents footed a $296.80 bill for 24 custom box lunches with tenderloin salads and croissants. A favorite food of regents were fruit cups from Zingerman's. They spent more than $90 on them at two separate meetings. F ight on Law Quad lawn sends oneto jail, one to hospital WAR? WHAT IS IT GOOD FOR? As peace talks continue, Bosnians huddle in fear N $2,000 bond posted for student charged In the assault of a fellow student early * Sunday morning By HOPE CALATI DAILY STAFF REPORTER A fight on the lawn of the Law Quad last weekend left one person severely injured and another sitting in iail. of the Department of Public Safety (DPS). Pifer said Young and Dias got into a verbal argument at Sigma Phi Epsi- lon fraternity. When the argument escalated, the men went to the Law Quad to finish it. Approximately five male students assaulted Dias with a baseball bat, the handle of a lacrosse stick and a two- by-four near the corner of Tappan and Monroe streets. Police arrived and Dias was taken LOS ANGELES TIMES MAGLAJ, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Sniper shots from Serb positions only 100 yards uphill reverberate through the apartment courtyard where Remzo Hodzic tinkers with the bent frame of a bicycle he is salvaging for his grandson. But the smack of bullets punctur- ing brick and concrete no longer sends Hodzic diving for cover. Inured to the dangers of war by two years of full-scale bombardment that ceased only a week ago, Maglaj residents are almost oblivious of these last gasps of a failed offensive. The bedraggled people here feel they have scored a symbolic victory over the The Serb drive to take Maglaj, aided for nine months by Croat na- tionalist rebels,' may go down in the history of this Balkan conflict as Greater Serbia's Waterloo. Exhausted and forced to rely on elderly reserv- ists conscripted from refugee camps, the soldiers of the Serbian expansion drive have had to beat a retreat. The timely rapprochement be- tween Croats and Muslims, and U.N. officials' irritation with being used for target practice by the Serbs have converged to halt the rebels. Sharpshooters loyal to Bosnian Serb nationalist leader Radovan Karadzic conquered 70 percent of Bosnia with their arsenal of tanks,