24b 'clanut Unti One hundred four years of editorial freedom ,Duderstadt predicts changes to grad students By LISA DINES Daily Staff Reporter Setting a broad vision for the fu- ture, President James J. Duderstadt said the University is moving to break down traditional boundaries in an ef- fort to change the way that students learn. "I think that one can make the case that (today's) University is better, stronger, more vital and a more excit- ing place," Duderstadt told a group of graduate students Friday afternoon. GARP ,sanctions Sig Eps for hazing Sigma Phi Epsilon has been suspended ! from activities sponsored by the I nterfraternity Council for 1 year By KATIE HUTCHINS Daily Staff Reporter The Greek Activities Review Panel (CARP), the University's Greek judi- cial branch, smacked Sigma Phi Epsi- *on with a new set of sanctions Friday, to be added to the sanctions already made by its national headquarters for a hazing incident that occurred Sept. 4 at the fraternity, according to a report GARP issued last night. The chapter has been suspended from the Interfraternity Council (IFC) for one year. That means it is banned from voting in Greek legislative mat- ers, participating in intramural sports r inter-Greek activities (such as Greek Week) and recruiting new mem- bers through IFC. Steve Townsend, GARP's co- chair, said he believes these sanctions will result in "there being a decrease in interest in rushing that house" that will give Sig Eps "some time to re- consider how they do things inter- nally." " Sig Eps President Scott Sandler said he thought the sanctions were excessive. "I think it's very harsh," he said. "I don't think its purpose is to improve us or to improve the Greek system as a whole. "I think it's just a punitive mea- sure to do nothing more than to pun- ish the entire fraternity." GARP declared after more than wo hours of deliberation that Sig Eps See GARP, Page 2 He said the University has a more diverse student and faculty body, lower administrative costs and a larger fund-raising effort than many of its peer institutions. "We are competing with the best and the brightest." Unfortunately, he said, the rules of the game are changing and the University and other schools must adapt to its new environment - less state funding, a racially diverse workforce, increased globalization and the information age. "What we think of as the Univer- sity may not be able to serve our rapidly changing society," he said. "The 90s are a time of change in higher education that is almost un- precedented." Duderstadt said the University has already glimpsed into the future in a number of ways. The University is moving into a global market. University-sponsored research and development takes place worldwide. "We attract students and faculty from around the world," he said. Duderstadt said technology is changing the way people learn by making information more readily available to students. He said the uni- versity of the future will be partially a "cyberspace university." "There will be a component of the University that will be in the Ether(net) - that will be virtual," he said. See DUDERSTADT, Page 2 U.S., Japan strike deal to. open markets NIMBY Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - In a dramatic end to a tense round of trade diplo- macy, the United States and Japan reached a series of agreements Satur- day that Clinton administration offi- cials said would crack open the lucra- tive Japanese market for four major U.S. industries and generate billions of dollars in new exports. Twenty hours of overnight nego- tiations, concluded only minutes be- fore senior Japanese officials were about to return to Tokyo, produced surprising breakthroughs in every area under discussion with one significant exception: The two sides could not come to terms over autos and auto parts. These exports account for two- thirds of America's $60-billion an- nual trade deficit with Japan. With no progress achieved on au- tomotive issues - a senior trade offi- cial said the Japanese "weren't ready to be serious" - U.S. Trade Repre- sentative Mickey Kantor said he would take steps that could lead to the imposition of sanctions on Japan. The penalties, if imposed, would be in- tended to force Japan to increase its limited purchases of replacementparts made in the United States. Japan s top government spokes- man, Chief Cabinet Secretary Kozo Igarashi, said in Tokyo that the U.S. decision to take steps toward sanc- tions over the auto parts issue "is extremely regrettable." "Japan hopes the United States- will act in a sensible manner," Igarashi said. But the auto parts impasse was overshadowed by the progress made on other fronts, as government offi- cials and business executives cheered: the sudden turnabout in an angry rela- tionship that had been sliding toward the brink of a trade war. The agreements will make it easier for insurance companies to do busi- ness in Japan, for manufacturers of" medical and telecommunications equipment to sell their products to the Japanese government, and for mak- ers of flat glass, used in automobiles - and construction, to enter a lucrative market that had been virtually closed - to them. "This is a good deal for the United States and a good deal for Japan," observed Kantor, a view he said was shared by President Clinton. In the view of U.S. officials and outside trade experts, Saturday's breakthroughs represent a genuine milestone. After nearly 15 months of. bickering, the two countries, whose trade relations produce ripple effects See JAPAN, Page 7 DOUGLAS KANTER/Daily A protester is arrested outside the Fermi 2 nuclear power plant yesterday. See story on Page 3. Minority student services appoints new interim Asian American rep. By JANET HUANG For the Daily Sylvia Kwan, the new interim Asian American representative for the Office of Minority Student Services, saysAsian American studens need to learn their history. By studying the past, Kwan said, students can gain a better sense of their own identity and have a more profound effect on the University community. Kwan, a first-year graduate stu- dent in the School of Education, will replace Yee Leng Hang. He is leaving to become the senior program coordi- nator at McAllister College in St. Paul, Minn. Kwan's main responsibility will be to serveas a liaison between Asian American students and the Univer- sity administration. A Flint native, the 23-year old Kwan graduated from Oberlin College with a degree in En- glish. "I'm really excited about her be- ing in the position. Oberlin is well- known for its active Asian American community and I think she's coming in with that active attitude," said Varisa T. Boriboon, secretary of the United Asian American Organizations (UAAO), the umbrella organization for many of the Asian American groups on campus. Appointed in September, Kwan has begun settling into her new office in the Michigan Union. She noted some similarities between the stu- dents at Oberlin and those here at the University. "Tradition among students at Oberlin is to be very active and vocal with campus politics. At Michigan, I see the same thing. The student popu- lation is very put together and it knows what it needs and isn't afraid to ask for it." The adjustment has been a diffi- cult one for Kwan. "I'm coming from a different perspective - a different understanding of what Asian Ameri- can' means. I have my own goals and ideas for the office. Sometimes I don't know what is appropriate. I don't want to alienate certain students." After graduating from Oberlin, Kwan held a similar position as the Asian American community coordi- nator in the school's Office of Multicultural Affairs. Outlining her goals, Kwan said, "I want to make sure the administration sticks to its promises of hiring a di- verse faculty that recognizes and re- See KWAN, Page 2 U.S. troops to disarm Haitian attaches Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - U.S. troops will begin disarming the Haitian "at- taches" who have attacked pro-de- mocracy demonstrators if Haiti's po- lice and military do not, a senior sena- tor said yesterday after returning with the first congressional delegation to visit the Caribbean nation since U.S. forces intervened there. The difficult and potentially dan- gerous operation, in which U.S. troops could be forced to search out not only weapons caches but small arms held by individuals, could put the soldiers into direct confrontation with the shad- owy civilian militia allied with the Haitian police and military. "Our forces there are going to take steps in the coming days to disarm this crowd, and they'd like to do it working with the Haitian armed forces," said Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) "But ... if that doesn't work out, they're going to disarm them one way or the other." The U.S. military has avoided the task because of its great difficulty and the possibility of sustaining casualties. Before the U.S. intervention, rifles, hand grenades and other portable weapons were distrib- uted by the Haitian regime among paramilitary forces numbering more than 1,000 and spread throughout the See HAITI, Page 7 Pres. initiative to 'break glass ceiling' Cases on Supreme Court docket are highly political By ROBIN BARRY Daily Staff Reporter University President James J. Duderstadt told faculty and staff mem- bers that his initiative - the Michi- gan Agenda for Women - will break the glass ceiling at the University. Duderstadt addressed about 50 faculty and staff at the Women of Color Task Force town meeting held Friday at Rackham. S Duderstadt came out from behind the podium and told the audience that what he most wanted to do was, "lis- ten, not talk." He fielded questions and listened - to some concerns of women at the University. "As long as I am in the place where the buck stops last. I'm going to be committed to changing .these hings," he said. One of the issues discussed was workplace violence against women. Duderstadt explained that the Uni- versity is working on consolidating its efforts against sexual harassment. He said the Affirmative Action Of- for research purposes and are not pre- pared to manage their staff or assist in their training. "I don't have a lot of hope left," she said. Duderstadt acknowledged that the only way to gain compliance from some departments would be to en- force their participation. "We will tell the dean and the department chair that they are on the line and we expect results," he said. He said these problems would be resolved even if it meant letting resis- tant employees go. "Our first approach will be to change the attitudes, but if that doesn't work than we will have to change the people," he said. Duderstadt compared the Michi- gan Agenda for Women totthe Michi- gan Mandate - initiated in 1987 to engender diversity within the Univer- sity. He also encouraged female fac- ulty and staff to continue offering input and personal knowledge. "The process of communication is The Washington Post WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court session that opens today has a distinctively political docket. Of overriding significance in the term, the justices, with Stephen G. Breyer in the freshman chair, will decide whether it is constitutional for states - many of them gripped by anti-incumbency fever - to impose limits on the number of terms their U.S. senators and House members may serve. Legal scholars, impressed by a line of reasoning tracing some ballot restrictions to colonial times, have backed off earlier predictions of an easy win for opponents of term limits. The court also will decide whether states may ban anonymously distrib- uted campaign leaflets and, separately, whether the makeup of the Federal Election Commission is constitu- tional. The justices will resolve a free- speech challenge to a ban on federal workers' honoraria that Congress adopted in a 1989 ethics law. On other politically charged top- ics, the court will decide whether Congress can ban guns at local schools, give preferences to minority contractors or punish someone for selling child pornography when the seller may not know that the per- former in the video was under 18. "The court historically has made the crucial decisions pertaining to elections," said Thomas E. Mann, di- rector of governmental studies at the Brookings Institution, surveying the upcoming cases and recalling, for example, the 1963 decision requiring political equality through "one per- son, one vote." Many legal experts think the term limits case, arising from a 1992 Ar- kansas vote, will be this session's blockbuster. It could force from of- fice dozens of veteran lawmakers. "Even if the court rules against states' efforts on term limits," Mann said, "all of the money that has gone into the lobbying (for state referendums) will now go toward working on an amendment" to the Constitution. Voting rights and disputes over zig-zagging Black-majority districts also could come back in the new term. Lower federal courts disagree over how to interpret a 1993 Supreme Court decision that allowed challenges by white voters to "bizarre"-looking dis- tricts. The unusual shapes come from state efforts to consolidate Black, His- panic or other minority voters to en- hance their representation in Con- gress while preserving power bases of white incumbents. The districts resemble Rorschach inkblots, and the complex Supreme Court decision similarly "can be read to mean anything," said Georgetown law professor L. Michael Seidman. The court will not announce until later this term whether it will clarify its ruling, which said some district shapes may be so "bizarre" that they could offend "principles of racial equality." INSIDE Investing in Abilities week starts today ARTS 5 Robert Redford's latest directorial effort, "Quiz Show," makes its debut. See if it hits the jackpot. By JANET BURKITT Daily Staff Reporter Starting today, a series of lectures, workshops and performances will be presented as part of the Universities' fourth annual "Investing in Abilities known for his appearance in an award- winning DuPont television commer- cial playing basketball on artificial liibs. Demby will speak at the Union Ballroom at 3 p.m. today. "During Investing in Abilities WPl arp chnina , the' .mnm disabilities at the University is actu- ally higher. "We know that there are many students with disabilities that do not come to our office for various rea- sons. Some do not feel the need for nccinct'ri'0('th',c nrt ally in it rn -