i z > Safewalk expands walking hours To accomodate requests from the public, Safewalk has extended its hours of operation five days a week. * Walks on Sunday through Thurs- day now begin at 6 p.m. instead of 8 p.m., and continue until 2:30 a.m. Hours for Friday and Saturday re- main 8 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. More walkers willing to put forth the time made the extension of hours possible. Safewalk co-coordinator Eric Kessell said, "We had a success- ful volunteer drive." 4 Volunteers said it was important o extend the hours during the winter. Tia Barnard, a Safewalk dispatcher and volunteer, said, "It's really won- derful that they are providing the ser- vice earlier because people are asking for it earlier because it gets darker earlier in the winter." Kessel said he hopes the extended hours become permenant. The change comes as a result of *alls and letters to the Department of Public Safety and Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford. Hours for the Northwalk service on North Campus will remain 8 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Sunday through Thurs- day, and 8 to 11:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. To request a walk from volun- teers, call Safewalk at 936-1000 or 4 orthwalk at 763-WALK. Bursley Hall plays 'Gotcha' At least 43 people in Bursley Hall have been "assasinated" by pillowcase. About 90 Bursley residents are currently participating in a game of "Gotcha." Given a student's mug shot, name and concentration, they are told to get a pillowcase and whap 'em. Edwidge DuQuella, an SNRE se- Oior and a resident adviser at Bursley, helped facilitate the "Gotcha" pro- gram along with Bursley Council. DuQuella said he has heard great tales about how people have survived "Gotcha" attempts. "My hall was staked out," he said. "The guy they were after was in the bathroom doing his dishes. He fig- ured out he was being stalked so he idn't leave the bathroom." Eventually, DuQuella said, 'The hall rallied around him and formed ahuman wall so he could run back to his room." Engineering student Amber Thweatt said she was "killed" while studying in the main lobby. "Someone said my name and this guy wapped me upside the head with a pillowcase," she said. Suzanne Henderson, an LSA first- ear student and a wing chair to the Bursley Council said this was the residence hall's first year of "Gotcha" but similar games have been played at other residence halls. Former 'U' student receives new heart A former University student is in critical condition at University Hospi- ais after getting a new heart last week. Erik Morganroth gained wide- spread attention for his battle against a viral infection which destroyed much of the muscle tissue in his heart. Morganroth survived for 34 days on life support while waiting for a suitable donor heart to be found; doctors had predicted that the man would only live. for two weeks after being connected to he artificial heart machine. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporters Robin Barry and Carly Sorscher The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 30, 1995 - 3 Informal code setting shows judicial leeway By Nate Hurley Daily News Editor Friday's open code hearing provided the first opportunity for interested parties to see the process in action and the procedural latitude it provided. Informality pervaded the hearing, due in part to the requirement that the accused and complainant do all questioning, including of each other. The relaxed atmosphere granted leeway to the judicial adviser, the faculty chair, the student panel, and the participants. ; Admission of evidence, propriety of ques- tioning and procedural questions were subject to interpretation of the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities by Judicial Advisor Mary Lou Antieau; English Prof. Peter Bauland, faculty chair; and the six-member student panel. "I don't intercede unless something's egre- gious," Antieau said of her role in code hear- ings. "People are not supposed to do character evidence. Part of what I do is listen and see if there is any harm (from the testimony)." Before Friday's open case, information on the hearing process was available to the public only through brief case summaries, case statistics and some juror training sessions. Student jurors, wit- nesses, the complainant and the accused are told to keep all proceedings confidential. Students can be tried under the code for releasing information. Friday's hearing began with the accused, American culture doctoral student Melanie Welch, submitting three procedural motions: To allow the media to tape record the hearing or be provided with a copy of the University's official audio tape of the proceedings. ® To allow her attorney to represent her. To limit testimony to events occurring within the six-month period before complain- ant Yaakov Lavie's filed under the code. Antieau and Bauland refused Welch's re- quest to allow tape recorders. "I see a possibility for exploitation," Bauland said. Welch asked, "What exploitation?" and Bauland replied, "I don't want to discuss that right now." When Welch claimed the restriction vio- lated state law, University Assistant General Counsel Daniel Sharphorn said, "We're not going to talk about that now." Antieau said a representative from the gen- eral counsel's office provides input on legal precedent. "If there is precedent (from code cases), we use precedent. If there is legal prece- dent ... then we depend on the legal precedent," Antieau said. The student panel deliberated and denied "Any document, no maer how carefully written, is going to have To be interpreted .." -Mary Lou Antieau judicial adviser for the code Welch's request for attorney representation. Welch's attorney. David Cahill, later criti- cized the decision. "I think the process was inherently flawed because people who are not trained in advocacy" must plead their own cases. Testimony from more than six months be- fore Lavie filed his complaint was a recurring issue after the panel decided to allow it. Welch argued that the code sets a six-month limit for charges to be filed and asked the panel to disallow any earlier evidence, which she claimed violated the code. Bauland turned to Antieau for advice. "Does that render anything before six months irrelevant?" he asked. Antieau replied: "I don't think so." Bauland then asked: "What does the state- News Analysis ment say?" Antieau replied: "We'd have to get it out." It was then noted that Section IIIA of the "Procedures for Responding to Violation of These Standards" portion of the code states, in part: "All complaints must be filed within six months of the date of the violation or the discov- ery of the violation." Lavie argued that disallowing the earlier evidence "would cause the panel to not under- stand and might induce their ability to judge." Bauland added, "The more we know, the bet- ter we are to come to a reasonable adjudication." After the hearing, Ann Arbor attorney Jonathan Rose charged that the University has an upper hand through interpretation of the code during hearings. "The administration in- tends to operate both as prosecutor and judicial adviser," Rose asserted. Antieau denied Rose's claims. "We have no vested interest in the outcome of the cases," she said in an interview yesterday. She said interpretation is inevitable. "Any document, no matter how carefully written, is going to have to be interpreted at some time," Antieau said. "Certainly, it is appropriate for people to challenge that interpretation." Antieau interceded several times as judicial adviser during Friday's hearing. On one occasion, when Lavie was question- ing his wife, Snadal, to corroborate their stories of the June 16, 1993 garden-hose incident, the Lavies, who are from Israel, began conversing in Hebrew. When Mrs. Lavie later asked if her husband could translate questions, Antieau said, "I prefer he speaks in English." Bauland, the faculty chair, used the flexible atmosphere to limit the testimony. At one point, Welch asked Lavie, whom she accused of assaulting her, to give his weight and height. She then asked,"Were you in a special unit in Israel?" "That's none of your interest," Lavie replied. Bauland then said. "Unit schmoonit. I was in a paratrooper unit and never jumped out of a plane for God's sake." The setting also gave leeway to the student jurors, which proved useful on several occa- sions. One juror offered to convert metric dis- tances given by the Lavies into the English system. The jurors could also step in during questioning to ask for clarification, pose further questions, and speak to the accused, the com- plainant or witnesses. Lavie and Welch both chose unconventional ways to present their side to the student jurors. Lavie quoted a dictionary definition of "no contest" - which Welch pleaded in Washtenaw County District Court to a similar charge of assault stemming from the June 16, 1993 inci- dent. The judge dismissed the charges. Lavie asked Welch why she did not plead innocent. Welch began to respond and Lavie said, "I don't want to hear that," leaving the-room. After Lavie and Antieau had left the room, Welch took the opportunity to address the panel. "I know you guys are probably going to think I'm guilty because I'm acting so strident," she said. "How many of you have ever been beaten by a man? ... It's upsetting to be falsely accused of a crime, particularly assault and battery." The panel members remained silent. Antieau later told the Daily such lines of ques- tioning do not generally take place. "Usually the exchanges are much more structured," she said. The hearing ended as it began - with a procedural squabble. Bauland said he would limited closing statements to five minutes each. Welch balked, noting that there are no such time limits in the code. Bauland replied: "This is a conclusion. It's all been done. You will be limited to five minutes." 'U' code process draws criticism after 1st open hearing -I CODE I Continued from page 1. dent and a member of the Student Civil Liberties Watch, said the proce- dure duplicated the court's action. "The code is simply another way of saying the same thing without as fair a process," said Ellison, who ob- served the hearing. "I saw a panel that was chosen, guided and advised by the judicial adviser. I saw a moderator who's not knowledgeable about the procedure." Vince Keenan, chair of the Michi- gan Student Assembly Student Rights Commission, said Welch's alleged actions should not have affected her academic record. "This is not a situation where a person would be further traumatized by being in the same class with her," Keenan said. "I think there should be a strong burden on the person who brings the charge to make the connec- tion between why the person's non- academic conduct should threaten their academic existence." Lavie, however, supports the code. "I was very pleased by the way the University was protecting the rights of the academic community," Lavie said. After the panel found Welch guilty of harassment, Antieau met privately with the jurors to advise them in sanc- tioning. "While the jury was deliberating, Mary Lou, who is essentially the pros- ecutor, was deliberating with them on the sanctions," said Ann Arbor attor- ney Jonathan Rose, who witnessed the hearing. "We walked past and Mary Lou was in the room deliberat- ing with the jury." The panel members did not de- scribe their reasons for finding Welch guilty of harassment. But Welch main- tained that her actions should not have been considered harassment. "As far as the harassment is con- cerned, I have a right to express my- self under the Constitution of the United States," she said during the hearing. "How frightened can a per- son get because you put an American Cancer Society flier on their door? I don't know if they realized how dan- gerous the smoke could be." The audience consisted mainly of students, lawyers and representatives from the Division of Student Affairs, including Dean of'Students Royster Harper and several clerical workers. Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford remained out- side the room during the hearing since she handles the appeals procedure. Amendment hearing tonight A public hearing is scheduled for 6 p.m. today to consider amendments' to the code in the Pendleton Room of the Michigan Union. The amendments have been proposed by MSA, the Sen- ate Assembly Committee on Univer- sity Affairs and the Office of Student Affairs. A majority of the code's 50 stu- dent jurors must attend for the hear- ing to take place. Three other amend- ment hearings have been scheduled since the code was implemented in January 1993. None of those hearings drew a majority of the student jurors, therefore no amendments have been heard. Antieau said yesterday that 30 of the jurors have committed to attend. "'We're going to do a massive call-out tomorrow (Monday)," she said. Any amendments approved by the student jurors in attendance will be. forwarded to the regents for their con- sideration. SARA SILLMAN/Daily Testimony is presented in the Pendelton Room in the Michigan League during Friday's code hearing. Cameras and recording devices were not allowed inside the room. Comet makes waves on Jupiter, with MIT astronomer By Lisa Michalski For the Daily Last July's collision of comet Shoemaker- Levy 9 into Jupiter allowed astronomers to observe for the first time a cosmic event compa- rable to one that may have wiped out the dino- saurs 65 million years ago, researchers say. Heidi Hammel, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology research scientist, delivered an hour- long presentation titled "The Spectacular Swan Song of Shoemaker-Levy 9" in the Bagnoud Aerospace Building on North Campus Friday. Her talk featured Hubble Space Telescope images of the impact sites where the comet's 21 fragments plunged into Jupiter's atmosphere. "It's an absolutely beautiful experiment that Mother Nature provided for us. We couldn't have done this any other way," Hammel said to a group of 100 students and faculty. lt's an absolutely beautiful experiment that Mother Nature provided for us." - Heidi Hammel MIT research scientist Hammel, who directed the Hubble Space Telescope's visible wavelength imaging of the crash, described the great tension in the air as researchers waited to see the HST images of the first fragment's impact July 16. "One thing that kept going through everyone's head was Kohoutek," Hammel said. Kohoutek, the comet that passed near Earth in December 1973, was billed as the "comet of the century," but turned out to be barely visible. Contrary to Kohoutek's disappointment, University Research Scientist John Clarke called the results obtained after last summer's crash "truly remarkable." Hammel said one of the biggest surprises was the observation of large plumes of dark soot that erupted through Jupiter's cloud tops at the impact sites. Diameters of the sites ranged from less than 6,000 km to more than 10,000 km. Astronomers also viewed waves around the larger impact sites, which researchers had predicted before the collision, Hammel said. "Just like when you throw a stone in a pond, the ripples move out." She said her team saw waves for five differ- ent sites, adding that they disappeared about three hours after impact. Hammel said Jupiter's high-altitude winds and quick rate of rotation caused the impact sites to form a dark band circling the planet, but she predicts it will disappear within two years. She also said the effects from the collision of Shoemaker-Levy 9 into Jupiter are comparable to evidence found on Earth that suggests a similar crash occurred here 65 million years ago. Scientists have found geologic evidence sug- gesting an asteroid hit the Earth on the northern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula at the end of the Cretaceous period, Hammel said. Researchers believe the crater, 185 miles in diameter and discovered in 1978, is the impact site of an asteroid that blasted the planet into darkness. Hammel said it was "one possible explanation for the wipeout of the dinosaurs." Correction Robert Morgan is not a member of the Ann Arbor Homeless Action committee. This was incorrectly reported in Thursday's Daily. What's happening In Ann Arbor today Financial Aid Applicants: The deadline for applications for Spring/Summer 1995 Financial Aid is: Iiesday, January 31,1995 The Office of Fiancial Ad :-: ..:-- . 1 1 GROUP MEETINGS Q Campus Awareness Information Tables, sponsored by Golden Key National Honor Society, Michigan Union, Basement, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Q Ninjitsu Club, beginners welcome, 761-8251, IMSB, Room G 21,7:30- 9 p.m. Q Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, men and women, beginners welcome, 994- 3620, CCRB, Room 2275, 7-8 p.m. Q Society For Creative Anachronism, North Campus, EECS, Room 1311, ? nrn unrzc - Q n m -nnin sponsored by CP&P, Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room, 6-7:30 p.m. Q "Marketing Your Liberal Arts De- gree," sponsored by CP&P, Stu- dent Activities Building, Room 3200, 4:10-5 p.m. Q "Open Hearing on Proposal Amend- ments to the SSRR," sponsored by Office of the Judicial Advisor, Michigan Union, Pendleton Room, 6 p.m. Q "Price Waterhouse Information Session," sponsored by CP&P, Michigan Union. Pond Room ABC. Q "Writing Your Resume," sponsored by CP&P, Dow Building, Room 1018, 4:10-5 p.m. STUDENT SERVICES Q 76-GUIDE, peer counseling phone line, 7 p.m.-8 a.m. Q ECB Peer Tutorial, Angell Hall Computing Site, 747-4526, 7- 11 p.m. Q Campus Information Center, Michi- gan Union, 763-INFO; events info 76-EVENT or UM*Events on f'Ono m I I I