2 - The Michigan Daily -- Monday, February 13, 1995 PEDAL FOR THE PLANET THIS SUMMER with Bike-Aid is... *bicycling across the U.S. in a community of 15-20 others 0raising money for environmentally sustainable development eparticipating in educational exchanges with local communities *experiencing life to its fullest!! Routes Available: June 12-Aug 24 Seattle to Washington, DC June 12-Aug 24 Portland to Washington, DC (All Women's Route) June 12-Aug 24 San Francisco to Washington, DC July 15-Aug 24 Austin to Washington, DC July 31-Aug 24 Montreal to Washington, DC (no support van) Space is limited, register now for an incredible summer! For more info, contact f4Bike-Aid '95 j 333 Valencia Street, Suite 330 a San Francisco, CA 94103 e-mail: odn@igc.org 1-800-RIDE-808 BAKER Continued from page I ously unreleased document, was an incomplete story that Department of Public Safety officers discovered in Baker's East Quad dorm room. FBI Special Agent Greg Stejskal, the only witness to testify at the Fri- day hearings, said the incomplete story named the same female University student and posed a further threat to her safety. "The story involves Mr. Baker abducting the female student at gun- point and taking her to a secluded place off of Route 23 in Ann Arbor," Stejskal said. "He tells her to disrobe, to take a toolbox from his car and then uses the tools to torture her." Baker, in his unfinished story, describes the abduction in detail. "I plan it well," Baker wrote. "It will be my first kidnapping; my first real rape of a pretty young girl. My first experimentation with all the de- vices of pain I had thought up before. I obsessed about my target more than any other girl on campus." Baker's mother, Vilma Baker, said she was shocked after watching her son handcuffed and taken out of the courtroom by U.S. marshals. "The judge must have woken up this morning and thought that he was a psychiatrist," said Mrs. Baker, a creative writing teacher in Ohio. "While his writing is alarming and I don't particularly like my son's genre; then again I don't like Stephen King or sitcoms. It was just fantasy." But Chadwell said Baker's stories went beyond being creative. "He takes delight in thinking about what horrible things he can do to women," Chadwell said. "He was talk- ing about getting together with Gonda. It is not just fantasy anymore; there are real people involved. "There is a natural progression in these cases," Chadwell said. "He was actually talking about taking action in things he could do to women. He writes in a message to Gonda that 'just thinking about it anymore doesn't do the trick. I need to DO IT."' Mullkoff said writing such litera- ture is not reason to prosecute. "The idea that anyone who writes what is found to be distasteful is dan- gerous is false," he said. "He has no criminal record, has no history of violence or aggressive behavior. He is not dangerous." Chadwell points to Baker's e-mail messages as a key factor in the case, while the defense says that the mes- sages sent to Ontario were merely part of the fantasy Baker had created. The letters themselves sent mixed messages. "Sometimes, I'll see apretty one alone in the quad and think 'Go on Jake, it'd be easy.' But the fear of getting caught always stays my hand," Baker wrote to Gonda on Dec. 9. "Sorry, can't come up with an ending to that Asian story yet. I will soon though, hang in there." Psychiatric evaluations that Mullkoff presented to the court do not portray Baker as a dangerous man, but Friedman found evidence in the state- ments that led him to his decision. "The evaluations may say that he is not a danger, but they do say that he will continue to get into trouble with authorities," Friedman said. "They also say that he shows a minimal capacity to delay impulses." Chadwell said he is seeking a grand jury indictment prior to Friday's pre- trial hearing. Mullkoff said he will appeal the detention ruling to the 6th Circuit Court in Cincinnati this week. Federal authorities learned of Baker's activity after DPS notified them in late January. The University became aware of the stories on the Internet after a 16-year-old Moscow girl told her father about discovering the stories in "alt.sex.stories." The girl's father told his friend, aUniversity alum, about the stories and he later sent them to the University for review. The FBI is continuing its investi- gation. The Ontario Provincial Police are searching for Gonda and investi- gating his connection to the case. r ...' J,.. ,. 4 \ Jurors tour Brown Simpson condo LOS ANGELES - 0.J. Simpson sat in a police car yesterday, while a block away jurors in his murder trial toured the Brentwood murder scene. Simpson had decided against visiting his slain ex- wife's condominium, but he accompanied jurors, the judge and an entourage of police and attorneys as they visited other key sites in the case. He reportedly wore a belt that would deliver a disabling jolt of electricity if he tried to escape or acted up. Eight months to the day after the murders of Nicole Simp°n Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman, Superior Court Judge Lance Ito convened an unusual Sunday session for the tour. Traveling in a motorcade of presidential proportions, jurors arrived at the scene. They stepped out of their bus with smoked-glass windows and were escorted in groups of four in and around Ms. Simpson's condominium. Jurors took copious notes of their observations where the slashed, crumpled bodies of Ms. Simpson and Ronald Goldman were found in pools of blood. China holds out on non-nuclear treaty WASHINGTON - The Clinton administration, trying to bolster its campaign to prevent the spread of nuclear arms, hopes to persuade the four other nuclear powers to end pro- duction of a key weapons component. A senior administration official said Russia, Britain and France have agreed to join the United States in announcing that they will no longer produce weapons-grade plutonium and uranium. The announcement is to come before the April 17 start of an international conference to renew the 25-year-old Nuclear Non-Prolifera- tion Treaty. But China has not yet agreed to go along. Such an agreement would have little practical effect because there is a substantial surplus of recyclable material that can provide weapons fuel. But U.S. officials believe that it could have a huge symbolic impact. A hard-core group of 20 or so countries, including Nigeria, Indone- sia, Mexico and Egypt, are against making the pact permanent, although U.S officials say most of them ap- pear willing to approve an extension for a set period of years. 12,600 gallons of oil spill near New Jersey* NEW YORK - About 12,600 gallons of oil leaked from'a ruptured tanker off the New Jersey coast but didn't threaten nearby beaches, offi- cials said Saturday. Workers drained thousands of gal- lons of the diesel fuel oil from a dam- aged cargo hold to a barge, stopping the leak. By Saturday afternoon, theO Mormac Star was heading for deeper water, where divers would try to patch the punctured hull. The ship, carrying 135,000 bar- rels of diesel fuel oil and 112,000 barrels of jet fuel, ran aground about two miles east of Sandy Hook, N.J., Friday night, while en route to New York from the Virgin Islands. I. Don't Panic!! If you think you're pregnant... call us-we listen, we care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 769-7283 Any time, any day, 24 hours. Fully confidential. Serving Students since 1970. Peopie ask, How didyou get in there? SUSA"NAU KASEXS Girl ite rrupt d "Not since Sylvia Plath's The BellJar has a personal account of life in a mental hospital achieved as much popularity and acclaim." --ime 1ste DsriMC LSAT" GIYAT.GRE *MCAT Clinton urges Arabs, President A rity adviser Israelis to reconcile the opening WASHINGTON - President the PLO to Clinton implored balking Arabs and ity on the W Israelis yesterday to go beyond rheto- Maqic ric and move quickly, despite terror- ism, to expand Palestinian rule on the pursue West Bank. "We are at a critical moment in the SAN C peace process," Clinton said as he CASAS, M opened a meeting of foreign ministers diers pursue and other representatives on the jungles of so Middle East peace process. sending dozy Quoting Yasser Arafat, the chair- No new viol man of the Palestine Liberation Orga- The gov nization, Clinton said, "We cannot avoid confro allow (terrorism) to kill the Palestin- promised to ian dream." by preventi Clinton sat at the head of a long, the border. polished table in the Garden Room of "In now Blair House, the presidential guest like a war," d quarters across Pennsylvania Avenue istry said in from the White House. The-gove Attending the one-day conference troop moven were Foreign Ministers Shimon Peres enforce an a of Israel, Amre Moussa of Egypt, roadblocksI Karim al-Kabariti of Jordan and Nabil medical sup Shaath, a senior PLO official. erished Indi Secretary of State Warren Chris- Humanr topher presided, with Russian Deputy concern that Foreign Minister Viktor Posuvalyuk major offer representing his government. To help Zapatista N give the meeting a high profile, Vice -F i Gore and national secu- Anthony Lake joined in .Talks between Israel and expand Palestinian author- est Bank are at a standstill. in troops i rebels south RISTOBAL DE LAS exico -Government sol- d guerrilla leaders into the iuthern Mexico yesterday, zens of peasants fleeing. lence was reported. ernment says it is trying to ontations, and Guatemala assist the Mexican army ng rebels from crossing way is this being treated the Mexican Interior Min- a statement. ernment has portrayed its rments as a police effort to rrest warrant, but military prevented the passage of. pplies and food to impov- an villages. rights groups expressed t the army was planning a nsive against the rebel ational Liberation Army. From Daily wire services In) pape)rb~ack GE 0 BOOKS a JO/I- PO#)FTM Your Competitive Advantage in Scoring the Offer! e Becord ilp from Harvard Software Associates - - .*... Target companies in the industries / locations y> C i W S iwe IN soont Bard Elk Edftlew Becord Help you choose from over 6,000 leading U.S. firms. _ Ca wV LNanm.eE . . Save time creating customized cover letters and - - resumes for each company you target. G .j[md... -Rakaulng Evs. .. -solo jc ;w -- . Quickly organize your job hunting information. __a,,n 3de....ne p 1, Company information, resume deadlines, interview sue! Dw dates, contact information, personal notes and more. T. CrosCA mawnSciadVIO: E INeR lii.e""''"" uR' ° " W . . Easily update the status of your job hunt. T ! .wn : I ( Iilrsiww ' Ar,..-.~t 1t The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $160. On-campus subscrip- tions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 7640552 Circulation 7640558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 7640550. EITRA STAF M ..el osebeg, ditr n Cie NEWS Nate Hurley, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, Lisa Dines, Andrew Taylor, Scot Woods. STAFF: Danielle Belkin, Cathy Boguslaski, Jodi Cohen, Spencer Dickinson, Kelly Feeney-Christy Glass, Ronnie Glassberg, Jennifer Harvey. Katie Hutchins, Daniel Johnson, Amy Klein, Stephanie Jo Klein, Maria Kovac, Tali Kravitz, Frank C. Lei, Lisa Michalski, Gail Mongkolpradit Zachary M. Raimi, Maureen Sirhal, Matthew Smart.,Vahe Tazian, Michelle Lee Thompson, Josh White. GRAPHICS: Julie Tsai. CALENDAR EDITOR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, Janes Nash, Editors STAFF: Bobby Angel, James R. Cho, Allison Dimond, Jed Friedman, Zach Gelber, Ephraim R. Gerstein, Lauren Goldfarb, Craig Greenberg, Adrienne Janney, Patrick JavidaChrisdKaye, Jeff Keating, Joel F. Knutson, Jim Lasser, Jason Lchtstein, Partha Mukhopadhyay, Scott Pence. Jean Twenge, David Wartowski. SPORTS Paul Barger, Managing Editor EDITORS: Darren Everson, Antoine Pitts, Tom Seeley, Ryan White. STAFF Rachel Bachman, Roderick Beard, Eugene Bowen, Scott Burton, Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Sarah DeMar, Marc Diller Brett Forrest, Alan Goldenbach, James Goldstein. Ravi Gopal, Chaim Hyman, Michael Joshua. Julie Keating, Brett Krasnove, John Leroi, Marc Lightdale, Dan McKenzie, Rebecca Moatz, Jed Rosenthal, Davy Rothbart, Danielle Rumore, Melanie Schuman, Brian Sklar, Tim Smith, Barry Sollenberger, Doug Stevens, Michelle Lee Thompson. ARTS Tom Erlewine, Heather Phares, Editors EDITORS: Melissa Rose Bernardo (Theater), Matt Carlson (Fine Arts), Kirk Miller (Books), Heather Phares (Music), Liz Shaw (Weekend etc.), Alexandra Twin (Film), Ted Watts (Weekend, etc.). STAFF: Matt Benz, Jennifer Buckley, Mark Carlson, Thomas Crowley, Ella de Leon, Ben Ewy, Ariel Gandsman, Brian Gnatt, Josh Herrington, Kari Jones, Shirley Lee, Scott Plagenhoef, Fred Rice, Joshua Rich, Dirk Schulze. Sarah Stewart, Prashant Tamaskar, Brian Wise, Robert Yoon. PHOTO Jonathan Lurie, Evan Petrie, Editors STAFF: Tonya Broad, Mike Ftzhugh, Mark Friedman, Douglas Kanter, Stephanie Lim, Judith Perkins, Kristen Schaefer, Molly Stevens, Sara Stillman, David Valazzi, Joe Westrate. 01 ' i I