It I Un Unt One hundred four years of editorial freedom I , A' The gD Campus walk finds night-time hazards By CATHY BOGUSLASKI Daily Staff Reporter Several University and city offi- cials saw campus from a student's point of view last night - and found that in many places, the lack of light- ing, overgrown foliage and other haz- ards posed serious safety concerns. The Michigan Student Assembly nsored the Campus Safety Aware- nss Walk-Through in hopes that University and city officials would cooperate to improve conditions for students. MSA members and other student volunteers met the officials at 11:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union. From there, participants divided into groups that covered different areas of campus. Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid Sheldon , "We observed that porch lights in some areas made a tremendous difference. That could provide an immediate quick fix." Sheldon's group covered the area from Fifth Street east to State Street, and from Huron Street north to High Street. She said they noticed the old residential areas often had only two street lights in addition to the light at corner, and that overgrown foli- age sometimes obscured lighting and made paths dangerous. Lighting and shrubbery also were concerns for Vice President for Stu- dent Affairs Maureen A. Hartford. Her group covered an area around the Nursing School. "There were also some stairwells that opened right onto Alums head to for parade, Homecoming By AMY KLEIN Daily Staff Reporter This weekend, more than 4,000 alums will flock to the University to watch the Michigan-Wisconsin foot- ball game, tour the campus and relive old memories. For the first time in five years. Homecoming weekend will include a parade to celebrate this "Spirit of Michigan." Today at 4:30 p.m., 18 floats, cars, performing groups and University stu- dent organizations will march along the outskirts of campus. Jonathan Fish, Homecoming 1994 UAC co-coordinator and LSA senior, believes that the parade is an impor- tant part of a real homecoming. "We wanted to make Homecom- ing 1994 huge, so that it can continue for years after we've left. The theme 'The Spirit of Michigan' is the maize and blue feeling on campus, the feel- ing of connection to this school," Fish said. Homecoming 1994 Committee member Michelle Van Ooteghem believes that the function of both the parade and Homecoming weekend is to bring students and alumni together. "There has been a real feeling of enthusiasm around campus. We're really working to reflect the tradition and pride that the students feel about the University," Van Ooteghem said. Fish said the weekend is planned for both alumni and current students. "We wanted to let the students know what it was like to have a Home- coming weekend, and at the same time, it's created in the honor of the alumni. We want everyone to feel the spirit here," Fish said. The parade will travel from the corner of South and East University, down State Street and complete its route at Hill Auditorium. The floats will then be judged out- side Hill Auditorium by Vice Presi- dent for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford, Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid B. Sheldon, co-Grand Marshals and former Michigan football players Anthony Carter and John Wangler and one University alum. Three awards will be presented to the floats on the basis of spirit and creativity. In addition, ROTC is sponsoring a haunted house in North Hall tonight and tomorrow night to raise money for charity. In celebration of home- coming, Sigma Alpha Epsilon will host the 61st Annual Mud Bowl to- morrow morning. MSA President and Homecoming 1994 Committee member Julie Neenan helped to reinstate the Home- coming parade. Neenan said she or- ganized parades in high school and missed the homecoming spirit at the See HOMECOMING, Page 2 P See Calendar of Events, Page 2 Eric Kessell of Safewalk, Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid B. Sheldon, William Krumm, associate vice president for business operations and MSA External Relations Chair Andrew Wright look for campus safety hazards Wednesday night. the street, that seemed like a place where someone could hide. That would be very different if they were lit," she said. "We also noticed that even if an area was well lit, if you were walking alone, it didn't feel very safe," Hart- ford said. MSA Vice President Jacob Stern covered the South Forest Avenue-Ox- ford Street-Washtenaw Avenue area with his group. "We saw streetlights that weren't on, and in many areas, the shrubbery was overgrown and some- one could easily jump out of there and attack somebody," he said, He also noted that some streets, such as Oakland, had few streetlights. Although streetlights are costly, he said, trimming shrubs and replacing lightbulbs are inexpensive precautions. Another group, which covered the Diag area, included Department of Public Safety Director Leo Heatley. This group noted several areas, such as the Dennison Building, where lights were present, but not turned on. DPS checks lights and emergency phones to make sure they are func- tional at least once every two weeks, Heatley said. Also important, Heatley said, was that students feel safe on campus. "The perception is important because students need to feel comfortable walking around." Many MSA members and students attended the walk-through, which was prompted by students' concerns, heightened by reports of a serial rap- ist in Ann Arbor. "(Campus safety) is an important issue," said LSA sophomore Tonya Fuhs. "I live on South Forest, over in 'darkville' there. I don't walk home alone anymore because of everything that's happened, but if I did, I'd be See SAFETY, Page 2 Clinton Jerusale Los Angeles Times JERUSALEM - What Presid wanted to see in Jerusalem was tor wants to see - the walled C urch of the Holy Sepulcher, the V the Western Wall of Judaism's Sec and Al Aqsa Mosque. But even before he set foot i yesterday, Clinton ran into the me and probably the most difficult Arab-Israeli conflict - the future d its religious shrines - and in anceled the walking tour his sta fjjy planned for days. WIm on my last leg. I'm r linton said, arriving an hour late ascus, the third capital of his six d looking very weary indeed. The president instead dispatc odham Clinton to the Western Wa oliest site as the only major part f King Herod's temple after its de e Roman army in A.D. 70. Amid elaborate security precau al clearing of all the men and ad been praying at the wall, a numerous chinks and holes and undreds of police - Rodham Cli the wall for about 15 minutes la prayed there briefly. Although President Clinton'sI real, the political controversy had See ISRA cancels tour of m dung visit dent Clinton U.S ..Israeli what every )ld C ity , th e e D rot ia Dolorosa, ond TempleP. n Jerusalem ost sensitive' issue in the of the city By MATTHEW SMART_ the end he aily Staff Reporter f thaed hae- Several student organizations have joined ff had care- forces to bring Israel Shahak, an outspoken -a r,, critic of U.S.-Israeli policy, to campus Sunday eally tired," Shahak will speak abouthis new book in the from Dam- Rackham Amphitheatre Sunday at 7:30 p.m. -nation tour, The book, "Jewish History, Jewish Reli- hed Hly gion: The Weight of Three Thousand Years," , as covers themes such as the relationship of_ dl, Judaism's Jewish culture on class structure and the that remains discounting of non-Jewish life by orthodox -struction by -Jews. tions - the The talk is being sponsored by a myriad of women who groups. The coalition of sponsors includes check of its the Palestine Solidarity Committee, the Arab acok ofis American Students' Association, the Inter- a cordon of faith Council for Peace and Justice, the New nton went to Jewish Agenda and the Progressive Zionist st night and Caucus. fatigue was Khytam Dawood, a member of the Pales- J proved n- tine Solidarity Committee, said the number EL, Page 2 See CRITIC, Page 2 Nobel laureate details research for his success By MATTHEW SMART Daily Staff Reporter Nobel laureate Prof. Joseph Taylor spoke before a standing-room only crowd in the Rackham Amphitheatre yesterday afternoon about the technology and research that lead to his success as a scientist. In 1974, Taylor and Russel Hulse, one of his graduate students, discovered a binary pulsar that led to their receiving the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1993. "Binary pulsars have become some of the most useful tools in astronomical science," Taylor said. Taylor's observations of a binary pulsar system showed that the pulsars were losing energy and slowing down. Taylor showed that the energy lost is equal to that pre- dicted by Einstein's theory of general relativity for gravi- tational radiation. A pulsar is a star comprised of almost purely neutrons. These stars are incredibly dense - they have approxi- mately the same mass as the sun but are only 10 kilometers in diameter. Pulsars emit powerful radio waves that sweep across the sky like a lighthouse beacon as they spin. These radio waves can be detected by radio telescopes on the earth. A binary pulsar is a pair of pulsars orbiting each other. At the beginning of the lecture, Taylor played a record- ing of three different pulsar signals. The first two were of pulsars spinning "slowly" and sounded like thumps. The third was of a "fast" spinning pulsar. It was a continuous, high-pitched tone. Taylor discussed the procedure which he and Hulse See TAYLOR, Page 5 Nobel laureate Prof. Joseph Taylor speaks at Rackham yesterday. ; Med School alum speaks of i , breaking obstacles for success INSIDE SPORTS 11 By JOSH WHITE Daily Staff Reporter "I tend to be soft-spoken," Dr. Benjamin S. Carson began his speech to a full Hale Auctorium last night. And while his voice may not have rattled the crowd, his message did. Carson, director of Pediatric Neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Uni- versity and Medical School alum, described overcoming barriers and only react to the environment. They choose not to plan, and that is their downfall." Carson, who speaks across the country and is most widely recog- nized for his work on the separation of the Binder Siamese Twins in 1987, spoke in the First Annual Spotlight on African American Alumni, sponsored by the newly-formed African Ameri- can Student Programs Task Force. "At school I was always the dummy. I had no competition for last place." But, as Carson explained, he had to be shown that he was capable of using his brain, capable of achieving anything he decided to do. "My mother made me read two books each week and give her book reports about them," he said. "I never knew that she couldn't read the re- Michigan tries for revenge against Wisconsin in tomorrow's game. Turn Back Time Sunday morning turn your clock back one hour. l L."; X, e'-, ., t 't r r U