'nelaran One hundred four years of editorial freedom ti AAPD heads task force to locate rapist Gov. John Engler (left) and challenger Howard Wolpe field questions following last night's final gubernatorial debate in East Lansing. Verbal fr mr fd By FRANK C. LEE Daily Staff Reporter Ann Arbor police released addi- tional information yesterday on the multi-agency task force responsible for identifying and apprehending the man who allegedly raped and beat a 41-year-old Ann Arbor woman last Thursday night near Community High School. The suspect is believed to have sexually assaulted three other women, raped and killed a fourth, and is in- volved in six attempted rapes on the city's west side in the past two years. These brutal acts have prompted police and the University to join forces to prevent further attacks. The task force, which was formed Monday, is currently comprised of 12 investigators and a secretary from the Ann Arbor Police Department (AAPD), two detectives from the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Depart- ment, two detectives from the Michi- gan State Police Post in Ypsilanti and three investigators from the Criminal Intelligence Division Office of the Michigan State Police in Livonia. Two detectives from the University's Department of Public Safety (DPS) and a support staff are also on the task force to investigate See TASK FORCE, Page 2 Calls to Safewalk rise 200 % By FRANK C. LEE Daily Staff Reporter With students' fear of the se- rial rapist mounting, calls to the University's student-run walk- ing services have skyrocketed. Thursday's attack of an Ann Arbor woman is believed to be the 10th attack over two years. "We've had record numbers," said Eric Kessell, a Safewalk co- coordinator. "Last night, we had 95 walks which is about 200 per- cent more than we usually do. At this point, we're pretty much stretched to capacity. We have more walks than we can handle within our 20 minute radius." Safewalk and Northwalk are volunteer organizations that pro- vide an alternative to walking alone at night. A co-ed or all- female team will accompany a person to any location within a See SAFEWALK, Page 2 By JONATHAN BERNDT Daily Staff Reporter EAST LANSING- With a chance to sit down and clash without time limits, Michigan's gubernatorial candidates zipped through numerous issues during last night's final tele- vised debate. The candidates said they enjoyed e "no-rules" format, which allowed interruptions - something both took advantage of several times. "I like it," said Democratic chal- lenger Howard Wolpe. "You can do a little direct engagement." C) V C .": "We liked the interchange," said John Truscott, Republican incumbent John Engler's press secretary. "That's definitely the governor's forte. We liked the opportunity to correct the record." The candidates' interpretations of each other's record clashed, as did numbers and priorities on funding education and law enforcement. "The issue in education is how do we empower parents," said Engler, who has been an outspoken advocate for school choice and charter schools as ways to improve public education. "Governor, what you have done is put a $1 billion timebomb under the children of this state," Wolpe said, referring to the shortfall some econo- mists are predicting for 1995. Engler said economic growth and Proposal A's mix of taxes in which voters traded a sales tax for hike a cut in property and income taxes in March, would provide adequate funding. "I can make that guarantee. There won't be a shortfall," he said. And Engler this time closed the door on diverting funds to religious schools, something Wolpe has at- tacked the governor on since their debate 11 days ago although it is currently prohibited under the state constitution. On the college funding front, Wolpe renewed his pledge to reopen the Michigan Educational Trust pro- gram, which invested parents' depos- its to guarantee four years of tuition at See DEBATE, Page 2 I'U' to ask state for additional $26.9M in funding By LISA DINES Daily Staff Reporter The University will ask the state for an additional $26.9 million over the next two years, to reverse the decline in state funding. The University's Board of Regents must approve the request today before it can be sent to the Legislature. The plan calls for $9 million in addi- nal funding next year, or a 3.2-percent increase, based on the expected rate of in- flation. - alleged to have attacked a 10th woman Thursday \The plan then asks for an additional $17.9 million in fiscal year 1996- 97 to compensate for what the University deems low funding levels in past years. A funding increase would translate into lower tuition in the future, said President James J. Duderstadt. "If the state can begin to restore an ad- equate level of funding, then we would not have to charge as much," he said. The University received an additional $6 million last year - an increase of 2.3 percent - but inflation is expected to remain at 3.2 percent. "Since the state is not subsidizing (in-state tuition), we've had to ask students to pay a little more," Duderstadt said. Associate Vice President for Government Relations Keith Molin said the state is unable to keep up with the rising costs of running schoosl like the University. The state pro- vided 51.6 percent of the University's general fund in 1985-86, compared to 37.3 percent of this year's fund. "The cost of higher education is increas- ing much more quickly than the state's ability to generate the revenue," Molin said. State Sen. John Schwartz (R-Battle Creek), chair of the educational appropriations com- mittee, said it is too early to predict alloca- tions. "Most universities will come in with a request that may be on the high side," he said. "My policy is to try and get as much money into higher education as possible." Funding for higher education depends on the state budget, which is to be proposed in February. Schwartz said the University must com- pete with other universities for scarce state dollars. "You have an infinite amount of needs chasing a finite number of dollars," he said. "I have to consider 14 other budgets and be fair." Duderstadt said he was optimistic about the prospects for increased funding because the state economy is strong. He added that he hopes the state will examine its priorities before making appro- priations. Duderstadt said corrections, feder- ally mandated programs and K-12 education take up a large part of the budget. "At what point do we stop spending our future?" he asked. "We must invest in the' future." Schwartz disagreed. "I think (higher edu- cation) is given a high priority. It's one of the largest budgets - $1.5 billion." 22 die in Jsraeli bus bombing Los Angeles Times TEL AVIV, Israel - A suicide bomber, apparently an Islamic mili- tant opposed to the Arab-Israeli peace negotiations, blew up a crowded bus ring the morning rush hour in the heart of Tel Aviv yesterday, killing 22 people and wounding 48. The explosion lifted the bus off the pavement and scattered charred bodies of passengers, many of them dismembered, up and down Dizengoff Street, turning cosmopolitan Tel Aviv's central thoroughfare into a slaughterhouse. "People went flying into the air, ns and legs thrown in different di- rections," said Moshe Reiner, who was walking to work when the blast occurred at 8:55 a.m. "It was a very terrible thing. There are no words, $250,000 state grant will fund new 'U' engineering institute By MICHELLE LEE THOMPSON Daily Staff Reporter A new University institute will help improve the productivity and efficiency of small businesses and will provide an opportunity for Engi- neering students to learn skills that may eventually land them jobs in the "real world" of engineering. Gov. John Engler and University officials jointly announced Tuesday the establishment of a new University Institute for Manufacturing Technolo- gies. The state has pledged an initial $250,000 start-up grant. The not-for-profit institute is the first of its kind in the country. "It is a not-for-profit institute that is related to the University but not directly con- trolled by the University," said Engi- neering Dean Peter Banks, a co-orga- nizer of the project. The institute will employ approxi- mately 100 University graduate and undergraduate students to develop new engineering technologies in re- sponse to the growing needs of small- and medium-sized private industry. Students will solve problems re- lated to agile machining, laser tech- nology and auto body assembly. George Carnigan, associate dean for graduate education in Engineer- ing and co-organizer of the project, said the institute will help prepare engineering students for careers after college and graduate school. "The major motivation for estab- lishing (the institute) is providing another mechanism for engineering education," Carnigan said. He added that the project is "intended mostly to provide more or less a hospital or clinic to gain some experience that industry tells us is missing." Mechanical engineering students will be primarily involved in the insti- tute, along with industrial and opera- tions engineering, electrical engineer- ing and materials science engineering concentrators. Mechanical engineer- ing is currently the largest depart- ment in the college and offers more openings in the job market than most engineering fields. Engler said the research from the institute will create and retain 9,000 jobs in engineering. "It's tying together bits and pieces, something new, something bor- rowed," Banks said. "Basically what the state is saying is that the institute is a good idea, the state is going to invest in it." The most notable of the institute's four or five centers will be a Center for Laser Processing, which will be modeled after the internationally re- See INSTITUTE, Page 2 AP PHOTO A victim is carried off after a bus was bombed in Israel yesterday. really, to describe the horror we saw." The Islamic Resistance Move- ment, known as Hamas, said in tele- phone calls to local radio stations that it was responsible for the bombing, its third and most devastating attack in Israel in two weeks. Hamas opposes the year-old peace accord between Israel and the Palestine Liberation See ISRAEL, Page 2 New rules strengthen fraternities' role in sanctioning haZing Buttons inform on alcohol abuse By AMY KLEIN Daily Staff Reporter A University sorority is supporting a nationwide campaign this week to address the problem of alcohol abuse as part of National Collegiate Alcohol Aware- ..11.-1. /LATC' A A [IT\ By DANIELLE BELKIN Rat DNTRIJ JTRIKINr ff chainte'r nremises to nroduce I ยข 3 4 9