2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 8, 1994 PRESIDENTS Continued from page 1. presidential guard along with three Cabinet ministers. There were also unconfirmed reports of other U.N. personnel missing, The whereabouts of the ministers remained unknown. Radio France Internationale, citing unidentified dip- lomats, said Labor and Social Affairs Minister Landouald Ndasingwa had been killed. The two presidents, both Hutus, were on their way home from a summit in Tanzania that was aimed at finding a .Ztegional solution to ethnic hostilities 'when their plane crashed. Rwanda's government said the plane "was shot down" while landing "by unidentified elements in circum- stances which are still unclear." Sills said U.N. officers were de- nied access to the wreckage and could not confirm whether the plane was shot down. Witnesses reported hear- ing heavy-weapons fire moments be- fore the presidential plane crashed, the French Embassy in Kigali said. Intense gunfire and explosions echoed across the city, U.N. spokes- person Moctar Gueye reported by tele- phone early in the day. He said that there were reports of house-to-house killings and that the city's streets were empty except for small, quick-mov- ing groups of youths armed with ma- chetes and clubs. He said it was not clear if the presi- dential guards who kidnapped the Cabi- net ministers and U.N. soldiers were acting under orders from some author- ity or were rogue elements. U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali said he had ordered U.N. peacekeepers to help Rwanda's government determine what caused the crash. Belgian Foreign Minister Willy Claes called for a stronger U.N. man- date in Rwanda "as a precaution in case the situation gets out of control." Habyarimana, took power in Rwanda in a bloodless coup in 1973. Ntaryamira, was elected president by Burundi's National Assembly in January as Hutus retained control of the civilian government. BOOK EXTRAVAGANZA U.P. man charged with arson, drug production ISHPEMING, Mich. (AP) -Aa Upper Peninsula man was charged wit intentionally endangering people's lives because of a fire that broke out while he was allegedly concocting an illegal drug. Police say Armando Ruiz of Ishpeming was producing methcathinone, also called "cat," when the fire began in December 1992 in his former Negaunee home. Fourteen people, including five children and seven Negaunee firefighters, were injured by the chemi- cal-laden smoke. Ruiz and two other men were ar- raigned Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Marquette on a six-count indictment by a federal grand jury. Ruiz and two otherIshpeming men, Richard Colberg and William Langso were charged with conspiracy to manu- facture methcathinone between August 1991 andDecember 1992. If convicted, each faces up to 20 years in prison and a $1 million fine. Ruiz also was charged with know- ingly risking lives in the fire. He faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine on that count. "This is for the firefighters who got sick and went to the hospital," Streicher said. Many books about Asian American culture were shown at the Michigan League yesterday. PRINTING HIGHQUALITY IOW PRICES 1002 PONTiAC TR. 994-1367 GRAD fAT~j ti ' u' 1 11'I e'^av tr IN R X t M I Hanging around this summer? Come work for the weekly summer Daily. Gain valuable experience in journalism while getting paid. We need writers for news, sports, opinion and arts as well as photographers. MASS MEETING WHEN: Thursday, April 14 at 7:30 WHERE: 2nd floor Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard next door to the Student Activities Building Questions? Ask for James Nash or James Cho 764-0552 Religious Services AVAVAVAVA ANN ARBOR CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH 1717 Broadway (near N. Campus) 665-0105 SUNDAY: Traditional Service-9 a.m. Contemporary Service-11:15 a.m. Evening Service-6 p.m. Complete Education Program Nursery care available at all services CAMPUS CHAPEL (Christian Reformed campus ministry) 1236 Washtenaw Ct. 668-7421/662-2402 [one block south of CCRB] EXPLORE and ENJOY your FAITH SUNDAY: 10 a.m. - "The doors locked, Jesus came." 6 p.m. - No service WEDNESDAY: 9-10 p.m. - R.O.C.K. student gathering Fun, food, provocative discussion. Rev. Don Postema, pastor Ms. Barb O'Day, ministry to students CHRISTIAN LIFE CHURCH Schorling Auditorium School of Education SUNDAY: Service 11 a.m. HURON VALLEY COMMUNITY CHURCH Gay-Lesbian Ministry 741-1174 LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY Lord of Light Lutheran Church, ELCA 801 S. Forest (at Hill St.), 668-7622 SUNDAY 10 a.m.- Contemporary Liturgy for the Easter Season WEDNESDAY: 6 p.m. - "Message of Mark" Study 7 p.m. - Holden Vespers ST. MARY'S STUDENT PARISH (A Roman Catholic Parish at U-M) REPORT Continued from page 1 responsibility for reining in faculty," White said. She said she thinks senior faculty members do think sexual harassment is wrong, but, "The problem comes when one of their close colleagues is charged." Carol Hollenshead, chair of the President's Advisory Commission on Women's Issues and director of the Center for the Education of Women, said the University has both formal and informal means of dealing with harassment complaints. "Very few complaints take the formal route; most are handled infor- mally," she said. Law Prof. Christine Godsil Coo- per of Loyola University in Chicago was critical of Dey's study. She said, "I'm always skeptical of surveys that don'tgiveaclear definition of what is sexual harassment." Dey said the questions dealing with sexual harassment were part of a larger survey, and there was not room for a definition of sexual harassment. "It was basically up to the indi- vidual to determine that," Dey said. He added that the reported incidents HARASSMENTTA A University study on sexual harassment at colleges and universities found: Native American and Hispanic women report the highest rates of sexual harassment, at 20 percent and 19 percent respectively. African American women reported the highest rates after adjusting for length of service. Female faculty in fine arts (22 percent) and English departments (20 percent) report the highest rates of harassment. Three percent of male faculty nationwide reported being victims of sexual harassment. probably represented the most clear- cut instances of sexual harassment, and under a broad definition, the num- bers could be "much higher." - The Associated Press contributed to this report MARCH Continuedfrom page 1 said they will not complete the march with the men. While some men are eager to par- ticipate in the march, others choose to support women from the sidelines. "Seeing women leave and come back is the best part about (Take Back the Night)," Ruhmkorff said. "It's great to see theirpowerand empowerment." After the march, there will be mu- sic and dancing at City Hall. n The main rally will begin at6:30 p.m. Saturday at City Hall on the corner of Fifth and Huron streets. BLACKMUN Continued from page 1 White Housespokesperson DeeDee Myers said a decision would be made in "weeks, not months." Last year, it took Clinton three months to choose Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to replace retiring Justice Byron R. White. The departure of the 85-year-old Blackmun will continue a trend towar a younger court. The court's average age was 72 in 1986, when five justices were over 75. Two years later, after Chief Justice Warren Burger and Justice Lewis Powell had retired, the average age dropped to 66. I The iMiichi anily {ISSN I U +- O i puiieU UMnUdayt hougFnriuy uUrng thet lla nU wine tersUy 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 7640558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. NEWS David Shepardson, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nate Hurley, Mona Qureshi, Karen Sabgir, Karen Talaski. STAFF: Robin Barry, Hope Calet, James R. ChoK Rebecca Detken. Lisa Dines, Sam T. Dudek, Ronnie Glassberg, Michele Hatty. Katie Hutchins, Judith Kafka, Maria Kovac, Andrea MacAdam, Patricia Montgomery, James M. Nash. Zachary M. Raimi, Rachel Scharfman. Megan Schimpf, Shari Sitron, Mpatanishi Tayari, Michelle Lee Thompson, Maggie Weyhing, April Wood, Scot Woods. CALENDAR EDITOR: Andrew Taylor. GRAPHICS: Jonathan Berndt (Editor), Jennifer Angeles, Andrew Taylor. EDITORIAL Sam Goodstein, Fihnt Wainess, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Julie Becker, Jason Lichtstein. STAFF Cathy Boguslaski. Eugene Bowen, Jed Friedman, Patrick Javid. Jeff Keating, Jim Lasser, Christopher Mordy, Elisa Smith. Allison Stevens, Beth Wierzbinski. LETTERS EDITOR: Randy Hardin. SPORTS Chad A. Safran, Maagng Editor EDITORS: Rachel Bachman, Brett Forrest, Tim Rardin. Michael Rosenberg, Jaeson Rosenfeld. STAFF: Bob Abramson, Paul Barger, Tom Bausano, Charlie Breitrose. Aaron Bums, Scott Burton, Ryan Cuskaden, Marc Diller. Darren Everson, Ravi Gopal. Ryan Herrington, Brett Johnson. Josh Kaplan, Josh Karp, Will McCahil., Brent McIntosh, Dan McKenzie, Antoine Pitts, Melinda RocoH.L. RostamAbadi. Melanie Schuman, Dave Schwartz, Tom Seeley, Brian Sklar, Tim Smith. Elisa Sneed. Bany Sollenberger, Doug Stevens, Jeremy Strachan, Ken Sugiura, Ryan White, Heather Windt. ARTS Melissa Rose Bemnado, Nhna Hodael, Editors 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 Pagenhoef. Mami Raitt, Austin Ratner, Dirk Schulze. Liz Shaw, Sarah Stewart. Alexandra Twin, Ted Watts. PHOTO Michele Guy, Evan Petrie, Editors STAFF: Anastasia Banicki, Mark Friedman, Mary Koukhab. Elizabeth Lippman, Jonathan Lurie, Rebecca Margolis. Judith Perkins. Joe Westrate, Sarah Whiting, Chris Wolf. 01 i