--'!Fl Or'tArw *rnw One hundred four years of editorial freedom Jnvestigators still looking for answers From Staff and Wire Reports Federal investigators have not determined the cause of Thursday's medical helicopter crash near North Campus, which killed a doctor, nurse and pilot. The helicopter crashed shortly after takeoff, after the pilot apparently attempted an emergency landing in a grassy field near the Philips Components building on Huron Parkway. Witnesses reported that they saw smoke coming from the helicopter and said the helicopter plunged to the ground, adjoining the University's Transportation Research Institute. Richard Elliot, 43, the F pilot from Ypsilanti who was married and has two teenage , r daughters, Dr. Terry Helicopter crash site Racicot, 37, a doctor of oste- * opathy and emergency medi- cal specialist from Troy who was married with two chil- dren and flight nurse Janice D. Nowacki-Tobin, 43, of Canton Township who was single were all killed on impact, police said. On Friday afternoon, the remains of the twin-prop blue back-up helicopter, owned by Midwest MedFlight, were placed on a flatbed trailer and moved to a secure facility at the Ann Arbor City Airport where investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board and Federal Avia- n Administration will attempt to piece together the cause of the accident. Gene Doub, who is heading the NTSB's investigation, said it could take five or six months before a final determi- nation of the crash's cause is made. Federal investigators at the scene Friday said the crash was only the second fatal crash of an Agusta 109 helicop- ter during its 18 years of service. The University suspended its Survival Flights for part of the day Thursday and flew flags at half mast around campus. 1 Friends and family have been inundated with cards, flowers and remembrances at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Superior Township, where the helicopter took off from in its ill-fated trip to Howell to pick up a routine cardiac patient. The patient was picked up by a MedFlight helicopter, based at St. Vincent's Hospital in Toledo. The patient is said to be recovering well. See CRASH, Page 2 . ° U, employee arraigned child's murder By FRANK C. LEE Daily Staff Reporter A University employee stood emotionless Friday as he was arraigned on charges of killing a 2-year-old child on the University's North Campus while his attorney failed to appear for the hearing. James Mark Chatman, 31, was charged with second-degree murder and first-degree child abuse Friday afternoon in 14th District Court at the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department Ser- vice Center. Chatman allegedly beat to death Jaylon Jones on Aug. 31 while he was baby-sitting the boy and his twin sister, Charde, at an apartment on the 2500 block of Stone Drive. The apartment is located in the Northwood V complex - part of the University's family housiag. Judge Truesdell followed a recommenda- tion from Department of Public Safety Sgt. Paul Vaughan and set bond at $50,000 cash retainer. Thejudge expressed concern that Chatman's attorney skipped the hearing and appointed a public defender. The date for the preliminary hearing was set for Dec. 14 at 1 p.m. "The purpose of the preliminary hearing is to determine two things: No. 1, is there a prob- able cause that a crime was committed, and No. 2. is there a probable cause that (Chatman) committed it," Judge Truesdell said. Chatman, an X-ray technician at the Univer- sity Hospitals, and the victim's mother, Yvette Jones, an employee in the hospital's material management division, had been acquaintances. Chatman sometimes watched the children while their mother was working the night shift. University officials have never identified Chatman as a University employee in press releases, nor have other media accounts. Chatman told the judge Friday in sworn testimony that he has worked at the University Hospitals for the past two years, making about $150 per week as an X-ray technician. A DPS officer confirmed that Chatman had worked at University hospitals. as do Univer- sity records. Chatman is listed in the 1993-94 staff directory. No one in the Radiology depart- ment reached last night would comment on Chatman's employment record. Julie Peterson, director of the University's News and Information Services, said last night she was unaware of, and taken by surprise by, Chatman's employment record. Second-degree murder carries a maximum penalty of life in prison. First-degree child abuse - intentionally causing serious, physi- cal harm to a child - carries a maximum penalty See CHATMAN, Page 2 KRIS TEN UHAhHJaily James Mark Chatman listens to the charges against him at Friday's arraignment on murder charges as DPS Sgt. Paul Vaughan looks on. Survey: Job outlook improving for college grads EAST LANSING (AP) - For the second year in a row, college students have a better chance of marching off the stage at commencement ceremonies next spring and into a job, a new survey shows. The survey by the Collegiate Employment Research Institute at Michigan State University projects a 5.9 percent increase in hiring for the class of 1994-95. Yet, the institute's director, Patrick Scheetz, said that represents "a modest recovery from a very severe erosion of the job market." Hiring of new college graduates had declined more than 30 percent in the four years prior to last year's uptick of 1.1 percent. "It's still a very competitive market, so new graduates should get better replies from employers than they have been receiving for the last three or four years, but it won't be easy hunting, not by a long shot," he said. The survey, to be released later today, covered 545 businesses, industries and government agencies. It found brighter job prospects in all parts of the country compared to a year ago. Especially strong were the south central and north central regions while 8 1 percent of employers rated job availability extremely high, high or medium. In the southeastern region. 79 p;cenmt gave it such ratings, followed by 68 percent in the southwestern re- gion, 66 percent in the northeastern region and 57 percent in the northwestern. New college grads can expect to take home annual See JOBS, Page 2 THE NOT-SO-MERRY Yi 'U' studentsn kept apart by border crossing By SCOT WOODS Daily Staff Reporter Sunny Kim Roest sits alone in her small Windsor Ontario apart-$ -e Bosnian Muslim tanks make their way to the frontline in the town of Velika adusa, some 25 miles north of the besieged Muslim enclave of Bihac. U N. for.es in B osni a endure Ser attack Los Angeles Times ZAGREB, Croatia - A U.N. sol- Aer trapped in the Serb-besieged ihac region died from lack of medi- cal treatment and rebels failed to re- lease a peacekeeper taken hostage and suffering from a life-threatening heart condition, U.N. officials said yesterday. The latest evidence of harassment of the U.N. Protection Force - com- ing even as the Serbs released a token ember of peacekeeper hostages - incided with a visit by the British and French foreign ministers to INSIDE ARTS5 Belgrade, the Yugoslav capital, to warn that U.N. troops may pull out of Bosnia-Herzegovina within weeks unless rebel Serbs agree to their peace terms. But Bosnian Serb gunmen loyal to warlord Radovan Karadzic have made it clear that they want the peacekeep- ing contingent to leave, and they have spurned the international community's proposals for a negotiated settlement. A Bangladeshi peacekeeper from among the 1,200 deployed within Bosnia's besieged Bihac pocket died Saturday from a heart attack brought on by bronchial asthma that was ag- gravated by a Serbian blockade of supplies for the troops, mission spokesman Paul Risley said. One 15-truck convoy was finally -.. -a. - ---fil-. \lfttt--- t .-- lfl' ment, afraid.1 More disturbing than the bars on the doors and windows, she says, are- the screams and fights in the street below at night. In the last month, there have been two break-ins at her building. Sunny would like to return to Michigan, where her husband lives in South Lyon and where, until re- cently, she was pursuing a master's degree in Southeast Asian Studies at the Uniiversity. A citizen of South Korea, Sunny has been stranded in Canada since Aug. 8, when U.S. immigration offi- cials in Detroit denied her re-entry to the United States for an invalid stu- dent visa. She has no documentation to work or study in Canada, so she is often idle. She waits. in Windsor while the Immigration and Natural- ization Service (INS) considers her application for residency, a process that will take at least until late Janu- ary. Both Sunny and her husband Kevin have had to dropout of school. Sunny was researching her master's thesis toward her Southeast Asian Studies degree; Kevin was 14 cred- Professors foresee cuts in education financing By DANIELLE BELKIN Daily Staff Reporter As a result of the Republican take- over of Congress, the American As- sociation of University Professors (AAUP) anticipates that defense spending will take precedence over higher education in future budgets. AAUP represents more than 43,000 faculty members at colleges and universities throughout the coun- try, including the University of Michi- gan. In a news release, the president of AAUP predicted that federal invest- ment in higher education will fall as a consequence of a leadership in the Congress that is committed to cutting federal spending. "I honestly think there are reasons to be worried, but it's too early to tell," said John D'Arms, the outgoing dean of the Rackham School of Gradu- ate Studies, in reaction to AAUP's predictions. "These cuts will directly influ- ence the lives of the students who are in universities in this country," AAUP representative in Washington Iris Molotsky said in a telephone inter- view. "Student aid, grants and loans will all be affected," she continued. Some representatives have said they plan to propose an "in-school interest subsidy." This would require students to start paying interest on their loans while still in school. Kevin Roest, an Engineering senior, and Rackham student Sunny Kim Roest pose on Aug. 7, their wedding day, for a family photo. Love and Marriage gn a woman pursing a graduate de- I! I