2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 5, 1994 RAFKO Continued from page 1 tor. I know her fairly well. She's got a good approach to the issues," he said. Since her tenure as Miss America, Rafko has been working for Hospice in Monroe, which cares for terminally ill patients and their families. From this experience, Rafko said her platform will center around the health field, should she decide to run. She opposes the proposed Physi- cian Assisted Suicide Act and the efforts of Dr. Jack Kevorkian. "We didn't choose our birth, and I don't think we should choose our death," Rafko said. If assisted suicide is legalized, Rafko said she is "afraid it will open up a big Pandora's box and that scares me." In addition to health care, Rafko said she wants to redefine the image of the politician. "When you take on a position of being a representative for so many people, you have to keep in mind you're representing them and you can't lose sight of them," she said. She cited her role as Miss America as good training for this. Should Rafko not run, the deci- sion will be more of a temporary, rather than lifelong, postponement. She said she wants to run for public office, but now may not be the time. There are many other things she would like to accomplish, she said, including finishing her master's pro- gram and possibly having a second child. She and her husband of five years, Chuck Wilson, have one son, Nicholas, who will be 2 in June. STUDY Continued from page 1 Tim Greimel, an LSA sophomore and an editor of the multicultural news- letter Voices, said no racial group has been totally successful in crossing ra- cial boundaries."Both people of color and Caucasians are all too closed to interacting with people of different backgrounds," said Greimel, who is white. LSA first-year student OmariBayi said minorities create racially- and eth- nically-based organizations for sup- port, not for exclusion."You have to ask yourself why they need support. It's because of the way society is structured," he said. Bayi, who is Black, added in some ways, such groups are necessary."It's like a defense, or a way of survival in American society." Engineering sophomore Tarun Bhatnagar, who is Indian, said self- segregation is not limited to formal organizations."If you go to the li- brary, you'll see all the Chinese sit- ting together, or the Indians sitting together." Chen said the phemonenon of self- segregation has been noted by mem- bers of the Asian American Association."As a group leader, I hear it from both sides. Some Asians feel we're segregating ourselves, but I think it's a unity thing," he said. The implications of Hurtado and Dey's study are not clear, but it pro- vides ascientific basis for discussionof racial integration on campuses. The impact of intangible factors on the statistics, such whites' status as the majority, cannot be measured, though they are noted. But this research certainly indicates that whites share a portion of the blame for segregation in American society. Serbs strike ravaged Bosnian city with renewed shelling SARAJEVO,Bosnia-Herzegovina down the possibility of Gorazde fall- (AP) - Gorazde, the city that has ing, and may have been stung when been the site of some of the Bosnian the city's mayor, Ismet Briga, on Sun- war's fiercest fighting and the United day invited him to visit "and witness Nations' greatest frustrations, was the suffering of its citizens." again under attack yesterday, Bosnian Bosnian radio said the Serb forces radio reported. had launched an especially heavy at- Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Rose, the tack yesterday morning. A local ham U.N. commander in Bosnia, is plan- radio reporter, Mustafa Kurtovic, saiO ning to visit Gorazde tomorrow, but it some of the front lines were "literally is not clear what he can accomplish. in flames." With only four military observers U.N. officials say they can do little in Gorazde, the United Nations has to supplement their military contin- appeared helpless as Bosnian Serbs gent in the Muslim enclave because shelled the city of 65,000 people. of Serb intransigence and a shortage Rose's planned visit was an- of peacekeeping troops. nounced by U.N. spokesperson Maj. Annink said earlier yesterday Rob Annink after Rose met with that Serbs had rejected U.N. plans Bosnian Serb officials in their strong- to send more observers because eg hold of Pale. what they claimed was a "Musli Rose had recently tried to play offensive." The Summer Daily. A whole lot o fun. Wanna write? Call us at 764-0552 MASS MEETING, Thursday, April 14 7:30 p.m. @ 420 Maynard P.O. Box 9110- Internship programs i:Lw Waltham, MA 022S4-91 10 w Medicine and Health Policy or 1 (617) 736-3424 Public Servie i ak A FAX: (617) 736-3420 ls80 0 t77 7 0r112 TRE f .i/rThe -world's largest student & youth travel organization STA TRAVEL Focused Futures PROVOST Continued from page 1 been made ... if these individuals had been recommended for promotion." The letter to Whitaker contained no names, but outlined the charges against Pratt by Pharmacology pro- fessors Thomas Landefeld and Peggie Hollingsworth. Last September, Landefeld wrote to Ray Counsell, interim chair of the pharmacology department, about his concerns that Pratt was unfit for his recent appointment as department minority affairs representative. There is also an ongoing griev- ance filed by Hollingsworth, an Afri- can American, against the promotion committee that denied her a promo- tion. Pratt was a member of the com- mittee. In response to Pratt's letter, Whitaker sent a letter to Counsell to be circulated within the department. Whitaker's Feb. 11 letter to Counsell stated, "Racism is a serious charge, and I believe that anyone making such a charge should either document it or withdraw it." In yesterday's letter to Griffin, the provost answered accusations by Landefeld and Hollingsworth that he has interfered in a grievance proce- dure by sending the letter to the de- partment. Whitaker's letter stated that, "I was concerned because the accusa- tions against Dr. Pratt arose in the context of his service on his department's appointment and pro- motions committee.... "Faculty must be able to exercise judgement based on academic merit, free from intimidation and fear that negative decisions will result in per- sonal attacks based on unproven ac- cusations of bias," he continued. Landefeld responded in an inter- view. "I am really bothered by the fact that Whitaker's letter to Griffin had to do with Pratt's role on the promotion's committee. These issues need to be kept separate. It is a very convenient thing if you look at it from the standpoint of sour grapes," he said. Both Hollingsworth and Landefe# said they never called Pratt a racist, an accusation that has surfaced numer- ous times. "At no time did I ever say that Bill Pratt is a racist," Hollingsworth said. "What I said in my petition (to the grievance committee) was that I was very concerned about a person who was very abusive and vocal in his speech ... who was put in the positi* of deciding my future." Landefeld said, "It needs to be clear that I did not say that he was a racist. I said he made racist com- ments." Hollingsworth and Landefeld also said that Pratt refused opportunities to discuss the issue in an official fo- rum. He declined to testify before the grievance review board or meet wi Landefeld through an ombudsman. "He had at least two opportunities to come forward and have this re- solved. He chose to handle this in his own way," Landefeld said. In response to the allegations against Pratt, several faculty have cir- culated a petition in support of him. The March 17 petition, signed by 41 members of the Medical school, stated that "we find the charges 0 racism against Dr. Pratt to be unbe- lievable and of such a questionable nature that they raise serious ques- tions as to the motives of his accus- ers." Landefeld said he cannot under- stand why this has not been resolved. "The one thing that is bothersome and frustrating in this process is that the provost says bring this forward a document it. We have done ever - thing we can." '- MSA Continued from page 1 "We've kept the pressure up and I fully expect the code will change for the better as a result," Kight said. "I think while we haven't been able to successfully have our amendments introduced because of the lack of quorum, I think our amendments have kept the code in the public eye." An LSA senior, Kight said he does not yet know of his plans for the next year. Greenberg, an LSA junior from Kentucky, said during the next year he plans to write country music re- views for The Michigan Daily and work for student representation on the University Board of Regents. Greenberg was also elected to Police Oversight Board in the la election. Despite his plans, Greenberg said he will miss being MSA president. "I'm going to miss the excitement of being in the know of what's going on in the University," he said. CS First Boston has made a firm-wide commitment to career development. That is just good common sense because people are our most valuable asset. Our professional development program includes training, mentoring and team responsibilities. And it provides employees with the knowledge and experience needed to maximize the opportunities they will find during their careers. CS First Boston continues to be a leader in the investment banking community, developing innovative products and services - The Micnigan uaily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $160. On-campus subscrip- tions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. NEWS David Shepardson, Managing Edlt. EDITORS: Nate Hurley. Mona Qureshi, Karen Sabgir, Karen Talaski. 4 STAFF: Robin Barry, Hope Calati, James R. Cho, Lashawnda Crowe, Rebecca Detken, Lisa Dines, Sam T. Dudek, Ronnie Glassberg, Michele Hatty, Katie Hutchins. Judith Kafka, Maria Kovac, Andrea MacAdam, Patricia Montgomery. James Q. Nash. Zachary M. Raiml Rachel Scharfman. Megan Schimpf, Shari Sitron, Mpatanishi Tayari, Lara Taylor, Michelle Lee Thompson, Maggie Weyhing, April Wood Scot Woods. CALENDAR EDITOR: Andrew Taylor. GRAPHICS: Jonathan Bemdt (Editor), Kimberly Albert, Jennifer Angeles, Andrew Taylor. EDITORIAL San Goodstein, Flint Wainess, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Julie Becker, Jason Lichtstein. STAFF: Cathy Boguslaski. Eugene Bowen, Jed Friedman, April Groff, Patrick Javid, Jeff Keating, Jim Lasser, Mo Park, Elisa Smith, Allison Stevens, Beth Wierzbinski. LETTERS EDITOR: Randy Hardin. SPORTS Chad A. Safran, Managing Editor EDITORS: Rachel Bachman, Brett Forrest, Tim Rardin. Michael Rosenberg. Jaeson Rosenfeld. STAFF: Bob Abramson, Paul BargerRnTom Bausano, Charlie Breitrose, Aaron Burns, Scott Burton, Ryan Cuskaden, Marc Diller, Darren Everson, Ravi Gopal, Ryan Herrington, Brett Johnson, Josh Kaplan, Josh Karp, Will McCahill, Brent McIntosh, Dan McKenzie, Antoine Pitts, Melinda Roco, J.L. Rostam-Abadi' Melanie Schuman, Dave Schwartz.;TomSeeley, Brian Sklar, Tim Smith,.Elisa Sneed, Barry Sollenberger, Doug Stevens, Jeremy Strachan, Ken Sugiura, Ryan White. Heather Windt. ARTS Melissa Rose Bornardo, Nima Hodael, Editrs EDITORS: Jason Carroll (Theater). Tom Erlewine (Music), Rona Kobell (Books), Darcy Lockman (Weekend etc.), John R. Rybock (Weekend etc.). Michael Thompson (Film). STAFF: Jordan Atlas, Nicole Baker. Matt Carlson, Jin Ho Chung, Thomas Crowley, Andy Dolan, Ben Ewy. Johanna Flies, Josh Herrington, Kristen Knudsen, Karen Lee, Gianluca Montalti, Heather Phares, Scott Plagenhoef, Marni Raitt, Austin Ratner, Dirk Schulze, Liz Shaw; Sarah Stewart, Alexandra Twin, Ted Watts. PHOTO Michelle Guy, Evan Petrie, Editors STAFF Anastasia Banicki, Mark Friedman, Mary Koukhab, Elizabeth Lippman, Jonathan Lurie, Rebecca Margolis, Judith Perkins, Joe LWestrate, Sarah Whiting, Chris Wolf. I I consistently and successfully. For more than 60 years, and in 20 countries worldwide, our employees - in areas including Investment Banking, Public Finance, Sales and Ali I