WE One hundred four years of editorial freedom ti Weather Tonight: Warmer, high 45. Tomorrow: Dry and milder, high around 50'. Friday March 10, 1995 z~. p 0 I.Advisory committee begins national search for provost By Cathy Boguslaski Daily Staff Reporter A committee to advise President James J. Duderstadt on a replacement for outgoing Provost Gilbert R. Whitaker Jr. held its first meeting yesterday. Whitaker, who is also the University's xecutive vice president for academic affairs, nnounced in December that he will not seek reappointment. Whitaker's five-year term ends in August. The Provost Search Advisory Committee is composed of 15 members, including two students - one undergraduate and one gradu- ate. The committee will conduct a national search for provost candidates, said Kenneth E. Warner, chair of the search committee. "Hopefully we will be able to identify a siz- able pool of applicants," he said. "Clearly, it's s central to find a dynamic individual who can pro- vide real excellence of Whitaker vision for academics and can handle a sizable bud- get." The committee will be soliciting input from students, faculty and staff for nomina- "It could very well be that we could have someone in place by ,September." - James J. Duderstadt University president tions as well as the qualifications a provost should have. The committee's mission is to identify a group of applicants for further con- sideration by Duderstadt and the University Board of Regents, Warner said. Because the committee is not a decision- making body, its meetings do not fall under Michigan's Open Meetings Act and will be closed to the public, said University spokes- woman Kim Clarke. The president would like to see a list of candidates by July, Clarke said. The regents will make the final selection of a provost. In a February interview, Duderstadt said that if the new provost is selected from within the University, he or she may be appointed as early as September. "My suspicion is that the search process itself will take about six months," Duderstadt said. "It could very well be that we could have someone in place by September." But if the new provost comes from outside the University, the appointment may not come until January, and Whitaker may continue to serve as provost in the interim, Duderstadt said last month. Warner said students, faculty and staff may forward comments about the provost position or nominations to the Provost Search Advisory Committee in care of Ejner Jensen, special counsel to the president. House GOP sends tax cut plan to floor The Washington Post WASHINGTON - House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Archer (R-Tex) yesterday dismissed a barrage of Democratic and Senate GOP warnings and presented a costly tax plan that includes a $500-per-child tax credit, a deep cut in the capital gains tax and a cornucopia of business and cor- porate tax breaks. The package reflects practically all of the tax provisions in the House GOP ing, Archer predicted House Republi- cans would pass the tax package to fulfill a key provision of the "Contract with America."The plan, he said, would provide crucial incentives to strengthen families, deliver long-awaited middle- class-tax relief and bolster the economy. "We have done exactly what we promised we would do - no ifs, ands or buts," Archer told a cheering gath- ering on Capitol Hill. "I challenge the anti-growth Democrats to stop throw- JUDITH PERKINS/Daily Panel members take questions from the audience at last night's "Beyond Jake Baker" forum in Hutchins Hall of the Law School. Panel addresses Iternet policy issues By Lisa Poris Daily Staff Reporter In a packed Hutchins Hall, five panelists debated the legal ramifications of the informa- tion superhighway last night. The 2-1/2 hour discussion, "Beyond Jake Baker: Policing the Internet," was sponsored by the Michigan Telecommunications and Technology Law Review. University Law professor Catharine MacKinnon said, "Words and pictures in cyberspace do what words and pictures any- Vhere else in society do. I don't think that the Internet is different from other forms of speech." The issue of pornography was brought up repeatedly throughout the discussion, particu- larly by MacKinnon. The professor discussed pornography in relation to Baker's case. "(The woman named in Baker's stories) has been pimped to the world to be mastur- bated over," MacKinnon said. Baker, an LSA sophomore, faces charges temming from stories he posted on the Internet and e-mail correspondence he had with other Internet users. In one of his sexually explicit stories he named a University student as his victim. At several points, MacKinnon restated her opinion on pornography and broader topics raised by the case. American Civil Liverties Union associate director Barry Steinhardt ques- tioned the validity of her opinions. He said MacKinnon was probably afraid of the Internet, which affects her beliefs. He fur- ther went on to say, "I think that Jake Baker is a very unusual incident. Baker is by far and away the exception." MacKinnon rebutted by saying how it is impossible to know exactly how many women's names have been posted on the Internet. "Mr. Steinhardt has no way of knowing how many real women are out there in pornog- raphy," she said. "It's hard to know how many Lisas and Jennys aren't real." At various points the audience broke into applause following MacKinnon's rebuttals. University Law student Robbi Sackville said, "MacKinnon brings out in this discussion the very real possibility of harm to the women on this campus." See PANEL, Page 7 MacKinnon advising woman in messages By Josh White Daily Staff Reporter University Law Prof. Catharine MacKinnon said last- night she is advising the woman who LSA sophomore Jake Baker named in one of his sexually explicit Internet postings. Despite MacKinnon's call to adopt "civil remedies" for Internet attacks against women, she said -she is not representing the woman in court. "The woman is represented by a U.S. Attorney and the* governmeint in a criminal case," MacKinnon said. "There is no civil case being brought on behalf of the woman." MacKinnon said the woman has no desire to express her opinions because "everything about her is confidential." "But it is not all that difficult to imagine what a person's feelings in her case would be," she said. "Think about any woman you know and insert her name in the story, then you will know how this woman feels. "The shock is that this woman is not a no-one, not just a name. She is somebody, and the horror is that she could be anybody." "Contract with: even further byi that was de- signed to assure that corpora- tions do not to- tally escape pay- ing corporate in- come taxes t h r o u g h writeoffs and loopholes. Elimination of the corporate alternative America" and goes repealing a measure 44 N M ing roadblocks in who want to try a we nave done exactly wha we said we promised we would do - no ifs, ands or buts"f - Bill Archer (R-Tex.) Ways and Means chair the path of those new way - those who seek to help our em- ployees by helping our em- ployers." "I challenge them to cease the class war- fare and their scare tactics," he added. But House Democrats and minimum tax would greatly benefit capital-intensive industries, such as Texas oil and gas companies that heavily invest in equipment. Many of the provisions would be a boon to middle and upper income families, such as the $500 tax credit for families earning up to $200,000 a year, a separate credit to help defray the cost of adopting children, and a new Individual Retirement Account that would chiefly benefit middle and upper income families that don't cur- rently qualify for IRA tax benefits. But the proposed tax credits are "non-refundable," which means they are of no value to families that have little or no tax liability. All told, an estimated one third of the overall tax benefits for individuals would go to those earning more than $100,000 a year, or roughly 5 percent of all families and individuals. In a speech to the conservative Fam- ily Research Council yesterday morn- the White House immediately tagged the $189-billion, five-year plan as a windfall for wealthier Americans and businessmen and a direct violation of an earlier pledge by House Majority Leader Richard K. Armey, R-Texas, and House Budget Committee Chair- man John R. Kasich, R-Ohio, to out- line, approve and bank spending cuts before putting tax cuts on the table. GOP leaders have promised to make offsetting cuts in-the 1995 budget and to make other savings in welfare programs and Medicare to pay for the tax pack- age. House appropriators recently slashed more than $17 billion of current spending, including heating assistance and nutritional programs for the poor, to help pay for the tax package. However, some Democrats and key Senate GOP leaders have argued that, in light of growing anxiety about the deficit, that the tax package should take a back seat to efforts to balance the budget. African American task force to sponsor events " Leadership, time management to be addressed in workshops By Spencer Dickinson Daily Staff Reporter The University's African Ameri- can Programs Task Force tomorrow dill sponsor the first in a series of events "to address the cultural, social and academic needs of African Ameri- can students." Michael Jones-Coleman, a task force co-chair, said, "These events should be of interest to students of color, and anyone interested in racial issues." The first event, a leadership con- rence, will take place in the North Campus Commons from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow. Barbara Reynolds, a noted journal- ist and author, will deliver the keynote address, titled "Pieces of a Dream: Our Ancient America," and has edited several books dealing with Blacks in history. The speech is co-sponsored by the University's Minority Engineering Programs Office and the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies. It begins at 4 p.m. in the Michigan League Ballroom. The following weekend, the task force will present a musical called "Our Young Black Men Are Dying and Nobody Seems to Care." The play will address issues rang- ing from gay-bashing to homicide using "humor and music to address these issues with determination and hope." A question-and-answer period will follow the play, which starts at 5 p.m. Sunday, March 19 in the Power Cen- ter. Aspiring Black business people are invited to attend "Business Acu- men for the 21st Century" at 6:30 n~ m Anril 6 n the Mrhurnni,,mnn'c Circuit Court to hear city, YMCA dispute By Maureen Sirhal Daily Staff Reporter Ann Arbor City Council is realizing the worst-case scenario in its dispute with the YMCA over a five-year-old loan, as Washtenaw County Circuit Court today will begin hearing the first of several lawsuits in the case. In the case of Great Lakes Bancorp vs. the City of Ann Arbor, the YMCA and the law firm of Miller, Cflfeld, Paddock and Stone, the city heads through the legal system today at 10 a.m. in Circuit Court. The case comes after years of hag- gling over funding .of the YMCA's Canfield stated, "As long as a public purpose was being met, then it would be appropriate" to back the YMCA. After hearing the law firm's opin- ion, City Council unanimously passed the loan agreement into action. The YMCA then contracted with Great Lakes Bancorp to obtain $1,640,000 to cover the estimated construction costs. After the loan was approved, Miller, Canfield then rep- resented the bank in legal matters including modifications to the loan. The agreement stipulated that if the YMCA should fail in its repay- ment, the bank could call upon Ann .., : ii :. ,~