2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 31, 1995 CLOSED Continued from page 1. Harrison said. "I still think any step we can take to make searches confi- dential are good steps." Smith said the changes to the bill would not increase public involve- ment in the process. "I've been a member of governing bodies, and I know how easy it is to manipulate the selection process," she said. Duderstadt said an open search limits the number of strong candi- dates who would apply. "I think the Open Meetings Act has a very significant negative impact on the quality of people chosen in those searches," Duderstadt said. "It makes it increasingly difficult to get the kind of candidate you want." Duderstadt also said it would make it more difficult to compete with private universities and public institutions in other states that allow closed searches. But Smith said it is important to know how the candidates respond to public pressures. "I think the problem is not with the Open Meetings Act, but with the can- didates themselves," Smith said. She said if candidates fear being fired for applying to apost, it would have more to do with their relationship with their current institution. Members of the Michigan Student Assembly went to Lansing yesterday to oppose the changes. "There's no evidence that an open presidential search hinders a univer- sity from attracting qualified candi- dates," said Flint Wainess, MSA presi- dent-elect. Besides Wainess, LSA Reps. Paul Scublinsky, Fiona Rose and Emily Berry, and LSA Rep.-elect Probir Mehta traveled to Lansing. Schwarz said he has no problem with the Open Meetings Act, but said university presidential searches should be exempt. "The state constitution is unam- biguous on the point that the presi- dent of a university must be elected by the board or trustees of that univer- sity," Schwarz said. "They should have control over the process. I be- lieve it is impossible to do a thorough search in the present climate." But Wainess said the voters should be involved in the selection. "We're asking for a voice. We're asking for the rights that every voter in the state of Michigan should be entitled to," Wainess said. - The Associated Press contributed to this report. NATIONAL . EPORT Specter announces bid for President HARRISBURG, Pa. -- Sen. Arlen Specter, a moderate who supports abortion rights, declared his presidential candi- dacy yesterday with a warning to fellow Republicans not to become "so captive to the demands of the intolerant right" that they end up re-electing President Clinton. Specter, 65, launched his long-shotbid in the shadow oftho Lincoln Memorial and then repeated his declaration in the rotunda of the state Capitol in his home state of Pennsylvania. His harshest words were reserved for abortion foes and religious conservatives, not Clinton. Specter He pledged to "lead the fight to strip the strident anti- choice language from the Republican national platform." And he criticized religious broadcaster Pat Robertson and others he said were bent on ripping down a constitutional barrier separating church and state and on blacklisting Republicans who support abortion rights. Specter said his centerpiece economic proposal was to junk an income ta system riddled with loopholes for the rich in favor of a 20 percent flat tax, wit deductions only for mortgage interest and charitable contributions. I 1fif MADNWSSO Present This Coupon U KING GEORGE When Purchasing A 1 "ENORMOUSLYI E FUNNY" Large Popcorn & 1 t(A% . F TME Receive One I W e I mm mm = = mm mmm=mm mm mm=m m HASH BASH Continued from page 1 wards," Brook said. Musical group Enuff Z'Nuff is scheduled to perform during that hour. Steve Hager, editor of High Times magazine, will speak at the event, along with a host of other legalization proponents, including Brook. "We just want to give out support of those people because we support medical use as well as other uses like paper, clothes and stuff like that," Christoff said. The group had to pay a $735 clean- up deposit, which does not include security costs. Students asked local businesses for sponsorship, but only two donated money: Stairway to Heaven and In Flight, both on State Street. Christoff said one individual also contributed $200 and that Brook as- sembled the remainder of the deposit money. "We just tried to do whatever we could to make it possible," Christoff said. Although last year's event left the Diag in a state of shambles, gatherers usually just want to come out and have a good time. Engineering first-year student Jon Ameel said, "I'm looking forward to the drums, the drum circles." For many hackey-sackers and people-watchers, the event is merely a social one, but 108 arrests at last year's event indicate that many at- tendees engage in pot smoking or other illegal activities. "We support theirright to free speech and free expression - the University has always supported that - but with this particular group, they sometimes go beyond that," Peterson said. The Department of Public Safety is coordinating efforts to patrol the Diag and the Ann Arbor Police will patrol off-campus areas. HEMP A2 has paid its clean-up fees and performers are getting ready for tomorrow. The weather may be the only obstacle in the way of a safe and fun Hash Bash -tomorrow's low is in the 20s with winds and clouds. Simpson prosecutors to bring in trash can LOS ANGELES - Prosecutors plan to haul an airport trash can into court along with a new witness to suggest O.J. Simpson disposed of something before leaving town the night his ex-wife and a friend were murdered, according to a court tran- script released yesterday. Deputy District Marcia Clark said a witness had come forward with rec- ollections of seeing Simpson stand- ing by a trash can at Los Angeles International Airport before his late- night flight to Chicago on June 12, 1994. "This witness will state that he saw Mr. Simpson reach down, then reach back up and go into his bag and zip it up," Clark told attorneys and the judge at a sidebar conference Wednes- day. "The trash can is coming, too," she said. The witness's name was not re- leased, but Clark said his testimony would corroborate limousine :driver Allan Park's statement that Simpson placed a duffel bag on a trash can as he checked his luggage around 11:30 p.m. FCC: Plan will lower long-distance rates WASHINGTON - Americans' long-distance telephone bills could go down as much as $1 billion this year because of a federal agency's decision to reduce the payments big carriers must make to local compa- nies. But the new plan will translate into mere pocket change for the aver- age customer. The Federal Communications Com- mission voted 4-1 yesterday to order a cut in the charges long-distance carriers pay to local phone companies to begin and end long-distance calls. Long-distance customers will see roughly 2 percent trimmed off their total bills by the action, said Mark Uretsky, a chief economist at the FCC's Common Carrier Bureau. STATE Continued from page 1 ment which denied the University its annual appropriations increase for next year, which was set at 3 percent, or $8.4 million. Hood's amendment passed the House Appropriations Committee last week, and the House will vote on both amendments. Hood proposed his amendment be- cause 33.4 percent of University under- T A i PRINTING HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICES Come see the graduates are out-of-state students.-The state Legislature requests that the Uni- versity keeps its undergraduate non- resident enrollment at 30 percent, but cannot enforce this request because of the University's autonomy under the state Constitution. Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D- South Lyon) said yesterday that Engler's budget was unfair, but she had not yet seen Profit's amendment. She questioned Engler' s method of awarding appropriations based on the Carnegie classification system, which groups schools by their mission. "If we commit to the concept of the Carnegie Credit," Smith said, "we're going to be committed to pick- ing out favorites every year." Instead, Smith favors an across- the-board increase for all universi- ties. Truscott defended Engler's deci- sion to give the three schools the bonus appropriation. "Michigan has already received one of the highest in-state contributions," he said. He added that the three universities slated for bonuses were at the bottom of state funding in their respective cat- egories. Smith said she plans to vote against Hood's amendment should it pass the House and come up in the Senate. "I disagree with the amendment in that it took away all of the University's increase for the year," Smith said. "I think it has a rather devastating im- pact on the University and its stu- dents. "I think there are other ways we could have approached the situation," Smith said, suggesting that the Legis- lature could have warned the Univer- sity a year in advance. The University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society is now accepting petitions for "Grand Duke" (fall '95)for: Director, music director, set and costume designer Call 434-4722 by April, 1995 Religious Services AVAVAVAVA Episcopal Church at UofM CANTERBURY HOUSE 518 E. Wshington St. (behind Laura Ashley) S IUNAY: 5 p.m. Holy Eucharist followed by informal supper All Welcome 665-0606 The Rev'd Virginia Peacock, Chaplin CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER CHURCH Worship: 11 a.m. & 7 p.m. 2146 Moeller Ave. Ypsilanti 4854670 Pastor Henry J. Healey PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - "Operation Uphold Democracy" is ending in triumph for President Clinton, who arrives today to transfer responsibility for the U.S.-led mis- sion to the United Nations. But as Haiti gears up for June elec- tions, the smaller U.N. force will have to deal with a new kind of insecurity resulting from political killings,afright- ening crime wave and the unfinished business of economic recovery. The new violence has raised doubts about whether the American inter- vention has produced the "secure and stable environment" that U.N. resolu- tions set as a precondition for the handover to the smaller U.N. force. Politician Jean-Claude Roy, who saw his friend and fellow conserva- tive assassinated last week, was highly skeptical. "A stable and secure envi- ronment?" he asked. "Sure, for the Americans. But not for us Haitians." American troops landed Sept. 19 to oversee a deal by which the mili- tary regime agreed to step down peace- fully and turn overpower to President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, whom they had overthrown three years earlier. Aristide returned Oct. 15 to begin Japan opens manhunt in wake of shootings 0 TOKYO - Officers mounted a huge manhunt in a quiet neighbor- hood yesterday after a brazen day- light ambush on Japan's top police official and threats of new attacks if policecontinue investigating adooms- day cult. The sect, called Aum Shinri Kyo or Supreme Truth, is the prime sus-@ pect in the March 20 nerve gas attack on the Tokyo subways that killed 10 people and sickened 5,500 others. It denies involvement, but police have seized a cache of chemicals and equip- ment for making nerve gas in raids at the sect's compounds. The cult also denied involvement in the attack on National Police Agency head Takaji Kunimatsu, who. was shot four times from behind by a masked assailant as he was leaving his Tokyo condominium for work yesterday morning. Kunimatsu was in serious condition after surgery in which he needed 21 pints of blood. AROUND WORLD Clinton visits Haiti as re-establishing democracy, which will get a crucial test in June 4 legislative U.S. authority ends elections. YBERM RTS ANIMATION - From Daily wire services If he had a PowerMac Beethoven cohld have finishe( hi s IPhorij. GRAPHICS The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is publisned Monday througn naay ounng me m and winter terms uy 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-OAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 7640552 Circulation 764-0558: Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 7640554; Billing 7640550. NEWS Nate Hurley, Managing Editor EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, Lisa Dines, Andrew TpyJk, Scot Woods. STAFF: Patience Atkin, Danielle Belkin. Cathy Boguslaski, Kiran Chaudhn, Jodi Cohen. Spencer Dickinson, Kelly Feeney. Christy Glass. Ronnie Glassberg. Jennifer Harvey, Katie Hutchins, Daniel Johnson, Amy Klein. Stephanie Jo Klein. Maria Kovac. Talii Kravitz Frank C. Lee, Timothy Lord, Lisa Michalski, Gail Mongkolpradit, Tim O'Connell, Lisa Poris. Zachary M. Raimi. Megan Schimpf, Maureen Sirhai, Matthew Smart. Vahe Tazian, Michelie Lee Thompson, Karin Waleistein. Josh White. CALENDAR EDITOR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Julie Becker, Jam Nash, Editors STAFF: Bobby Angel, James R. ChQ, Allison Dimond, Jed Friedman, Zach Gelber, Ephraim y. Gerstein, Adrienne Janney, Chris Kaye, Jeff Keating, Joel F. Knutson, Jim Lasser, Jason Lichtstein Partha MukhopadhyayeScott Pence, Jean Twenge, David WartowskJ, SPORTS Paul Barger, Managing Editor EDITORS: Darren Everson, Antoine Pitts, Tom Seeley, Ryan White. STAFF: Rachel Bachtman, Eugene Bowen, Scott Burton, Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Sarah DeMar. Marc Diller, Brett Forrest, Alan Goldenbach, James Goldstein, Ravi Gopal, Chaim Hymian, Michael Joshua. Julie Keating. Brett Kramnove. John Leroi, Marc Lightdole, Dan McKenzie, Rebecca Moatz, Chris Murphy, Jed Rosenthal, Danielle Rumore, Brian Sklar, Tim Smith, Barry Sollenberger, Dan Stillman, Doug Stevens. Michelle Lee Thompson, ARTS Tomn Erlewine, Heather Plueres, Editors EDITORS: Melissa Rose Bernardo (Theater), Matt Carlson (Fine Arts), Kirk Miller (Books), Andy Dolan (Music). Liz Shaw (Weekend etc-. Alexandra Twin (Fim). Ted Watts (Weekend, etc.). STAFF: Sangita Baxi. Matt Benz. Eugene Bowen, Jennifer Buckley. Mark Carlson, David Cook, Thomas Crowley, Ella de Leon. Ben Ewy, Brian Gnatt. Jessie Halladay, Josh Herrington, Kari Jones. Emily Lambert, Shirley Lee, Scott Piagenhoef. Fred Rice. Joshua Rich, Sarah Rogacki, Dirk Schiulze, Sarah Stewart. Prashant Tamaskar, Brian Wise. Robert Yoon, Michael Zilberman. PHOTO Jonathan Lurie, Evan Petrie, Editors MULTI-MEDIA SDAY Mus T II I