irran s Weather Tonight: Decreasing cloudiness, low 24*. Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, high around 45. One hundredfive years of editor~ialfreedom Thursday March 14,19'96 a -. ' ,. FARE= Black prof. finds racial epithet on fce door L Law School dean calls graffiti an 'act of cowardice' By Heather Miller Daily Staff Reporter An African American Law professor returned to the office after spring break find a racist epithet scrawled outside .door. "It's just inconsistent behavior with the norms of the Law School," said Catherine Cureton, a spokesperson for the Law School. The incident was reported to the De- partment of Public Safety on Tuesday for investigation. DPS spokesperson Elizabeth Hall said the department is unsure when the act occurred. DPS is not releasing the identity of professor or the exact content of the essage during their current investiga- tion. "It was graffiti that appeared to have racial overtones," Hall said. Currently, five of the Law School's full professors are African American. Law School Dean Jeffrey Lehman released a statement yesterday to stu- dents about the recent event. "This act of cowardice is manifestly *onsistent with the norms of our com- munity and is subject to punishment under the rules of the University," the statement read. Lehman was out oftown and could not be reached for further comment. "1 have feelings about it-very strong feelings," said Law School Associate Dean Kent Syverud, who refused to comment further and said that Lehman's statement is the official statement from lip Law School. any Law students reacted nega- tively to the incident. "It angered me that someone in this community would resort to that kind of a horrible and cowardly act," said Law first-year student John Humphrey. "Freedom of speech is real important here, but that is not speech. That's in- tent to harm someone." Other students said that while they Ore disappointed about what happened they were not surprised, due to what they feel are "racial problems" within the school and society as a whole. "There are a lot of racial problems here," said Law third-year student David Cade. "A lot of people assume because of skin pigmentation people are un- qualified (to teach and be a student at See GRAFFITI, Page 7A GOP hopefuls stump in Michigan By Stephanie Jo Klein aily Staff Reporterwant With only five days remaininguntil Bob Dole Tuesday's Midwestern primaries, When: 11:30 a.m. candidates for the Republican presi- Where: Hayden CorI dential nomination are scheduled to meet and greet Michigan voters to- Pat Buchanan day, keeping up the high levels of When: 10 a.m. politicking needed to carry the state. Where: Walt Industi GOP front-runner Sen. Bob Dole When: 7 p.m. (R-Kan.) is scheduled to tour and Where: Royalty Hou address the Hayden Corporation in Auburn Hills this morning. A Dole campaign rally is scheduled in Battle Creek in the early afternoon at the W.K. Kellogg Airport, with a visit to the Battle Creek Federal Center planned afterwards. Dole will return to Michigan again Monday night in Grand Rapids. Publishing giant Steve Forbes, who spoke in Bloomfield Hills on Tuesday, was scheduled to visit Detroit and Grand Rapids today. With rumors circulating that Forbes will withdraw from the race today, The Associated Press reported his new plans to remain in the Washington, D.C., area where he may announce his future plans. Conservative commentator Pat Buchanan is following in the use footsteps of President Clinton's visit go to Taylor, where he will make a mid- morning speech at Walt Industries. Tonight, Buchanan's camp will hold a ration, Auburn Hills rally in the Royalty House in Warren. Area Republicans say they hope the campaign visits will drum up support for the candidates and the party. s, Taylor John Truscott, spokesperson for Gov. John Engler, said the visits D Warren would help voters see the candidates in action. "You get a better idea of who the candidates are and what they stand for," he said. "It will be a big day." Truscott said Buchanan's isolationist trade stance could hurt his Michigan support as state workers may not like these policies. The fourth largest exporting state in the country, Michigan workers take great interest in trade issues, Truscott said. Steve Gools, comrunications director for the state Demo- cratic Party, said visits have residual effects on the candidates. "If it were not for the eventual importance of Michigan in an electoral college strategy," he asked, "why would they spend (such an) inordinate amount of time in the state?" Forbes to pullout of race WASHINGTON (AP) - With just 76 delegates to show for his $30 million investment, Steve Forbes de- cided yesterday to abandon his bid for the Republican presidential nomination and throw his support to GOP front-runner Bob Dole, aides said. Forbes plans to make a 1 p.m. with- drawal announcement today in Wash- ington, said campaign manager Bill Dal Col. A senior Forbes aide, speak- ing on condition of anonymity, said Forbes would endorse Dole and pledge his help in defeating President Clinton in the fall. Dal Col said one reason Forbes put off the formal announcement for a day was so that his family could join him. "No doubt about it - it helps," Dole said when asked about th'e effect of Forbes' with- drawal. He de- clined further comment until Forbes makes his remarks today. Forbes Forbes had vowed as recently as yesterday morning to stay in the race through the March 19 Midwestern pri- maries, maintaining as he has in recent weeks that he wants to take his flat-tax message to the voters. GEO extends contmct fo,'rr fourth time By Anupama Reddy Daily Staff Reporter With their fourth contract deadline hours away, members of the Graduate Employees Organization met with Univer- sity negotiators yesterday and agreed to extend the current contract to March 20. On Feb. 23, 81 percent of CEO's voting members voted to support a strike if the organization's steering committee decided it was necessary. GEO bargaining team member Jeanne Theoharis said yesterday's talks were "disappointing." "We hoped to have serious discussion on economic pro- posals and see movement on the table, but there was none," she said. GEO bargaining secretary Mike Sell agreed. "We hoped (yesterday's) discussion would be a pivotal meeting, but nothing happened." Theoharis warned that if contract talks did not improve GEO would seriously consider calling a walk-out on classes. "If this is indicative of how bargaining is going to go in March, we're going to be looking at some kind of work stoppage," she said. University chief negotiator Dan Gamble said any kind of work stoppage by GEO would "be against the non-interfer- ence clause of the contract and a state law prohibiting public employees from striking." GEO spokesperson Pete Church said, "The question of whether we'll strike is not based on technicalities of Michi- gan law but signing a fair contract." Gamble said he could only comment on the University's response to a strike by "accessing the situation if and when See GEO, Page 7A JOE WESTRATE/Daily CenterU stag Thom Brooks, a staff member of the CAEN Advanced Visualization Laboratory, studies the new television studio at the recently opened media union on North Campus. The new studio will play a role in bringing together different departments interested in broadcast video. 16 children killed in Scotland schoolyard R Gunman shoots teacher, himself Future of LSA-SG, parties in limbo; MSA calls meeting DUNBLANE, Scotland (AP)-One *ild, sobbing, leaned heavily against a car door. Another, her eyes glazed, stumbled through the jostling crowd at the primary school gate. In the main street nearby, a woman shrieked, "Victoria! Victoria!" Dunblane, a tranquil cathedral town at the foot of the Scottish Highlands, roiled in grief and horror yesterday af- tera disgraced former Boy Scout leader armed with four handguns killed or *ounded all but one of 29 kindergart- ners playing in the school gymnasium, and killed their teacher. The slaughter of the innocents was over in moments. Just setting in is the shock, the devas- tation, the sheer sense of stunned disbe- lief in this beautiful country town, and throughout a nation with strict gun con- trol laws and very few multiple slayings. "Just now, to most people, this is a *ghtmare," said school board member Gerry McDermott. Five-year-old Stewart Weirwill never forget the man with the guns. The boy ran, escaped with only a bullet-grazed leg and was able to tell his dad about it. "Stewart said he thought the gunman tar ~ ,n e. A+t;m1 7n~r x a "I can only describe what 1 saw ... as a medieval vision of hell," paramedic John McEwan told The Sun, a London tabloid. "There were little bodies in piles, dotted around the room, and items of children's clothing like shoes and pumps around the floor." The final toll was 16 dead children, 12 wounded children and two dead adults, one of them the gunman, who took his own life. Dunblane is the sort of place people almost never leave, a place whose 9,000 residents clearly care about each other. Just 35 miles northwest of Edinburgh, it straddles the River Allan in the spec- tacular Perthshire countryside leading into the highlands. An ecclesiastical center since the sev- enth century, it has a cathedral, which, like the town's life, was described by Victorian social theorist John Ruskin as "perfect in its simplicity." It also had Thomas Hamilton, 43, a reclusive individual who lived in a pub- lic housing project in Stirling, five miles away, and came to Dunblane to super- vise a boys' athletic group. Balding and bespectacled, Hamilton belonged to a local gun club and liked +,.i,:., ...1. - DR. , vn n that neio .. By Laurie Mayk and Will Weissert lDaily Staff Reporters Less than two weeks before elections, the recognition of LSA-Student Gov- ernment -and two major parties in the election was put in jeopardy last night. Following a decision by LSA-SG Election Director Mark Borgman on election code technicalities, LSA-SG candi- No st dates who filed as Michigan Party should v and Students' ~ Party members le t n will be listed as independents if liggeU they do not cor- rectly file their party affiliations. Borgman later issued a statement postponing the dead- line for filing party affiliation permis- sions to 5 p.m. tomorrow. "What was probably going to happen is that after a trial (before the Michigan Student Assembly's Central Student Ju- diciary committee), none of the parties 15 Il r majority of the previous party slate and a majority of the "student group mem- bers" fora candidate to use aparty name. LSA Rep. Fiona Rose said CSJ is scheduled to rule on the appropriate- ness of the clause's enforcement at an emergency hearing today. "The entire judiciary system needs to be revamped," said MSA President Flint Wainess."No stu- dent should vote dent in an election that's rigged." re in an Wainess last night called an sat'S emergency assem - bly meeting for 5 p.m. tomorrow to Flint Wainess considerde-recog- ISA president nizing LSA-SG. ____________ Wainess said this action would dis- credit and dissolve the body. "The MSA constitution clearly states that we recognize student governments that conduct open and democratic elec- tions," Wainess said. "When we pull recognition ... it's automatic." "(The law) is a technicality and it is AP PHOTO Some of the unidentified relatives cry near the elementary school in Dunblane, Scotland, where a gunman killed 16 children and a teacher yesterday. young people, however, running boys' groups that met in municipal halls in g irlina n nhlane and neiahhorint Five days ago Hamilton wrote to. Queen Elizabeth II, scouting's patron, renortedly to comnlain the Boy Scouts I { 7 I I