2 The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 19, 1996 NATION/WORLD LAW Continued from Page 1 would get tired writing nigger," said Law third-year student Travis Richardson. However, Law second-year student Lauren Francis emphasized that increas- ing the number of minority faculty is not enough, and that the school needs "faculty members of color with con- sciences." At the conclusion of the meeting, Lehman said, "I don't agree with ev- erything that's been said, but I agree with some things." Although students said the meeting was a welcome opportunity for stu- dents to express viewpoints, some ques- tioned the meeting's ability to inspire change. "I get tired of going to forums like this," said Law second-year student Lashawn Gillon. "I honestly don't think anything will be done after this forum." But Law first-year student Ann Jochnick called the meeting "a good beginning." "I think that this was a good start," she said. "But what we need is concrete, specific change." Jones said he felt the meeting was beneficial. "I thought it was an excellent forum forstudentsto express their viewpoints," he said. At the entrance to Hutchins Hall, the Ad Hoc Student Committee of Issues of Race, Gender and Sexuality was collecting signatures on a letter to Jones expressing its disappoint- ment and anger over the recent inci- dent. "Your presence and perspective make the University of Michigan Law School a better place. We, as a group of con- cerned students, support you as we con- tinue to challenge the University of Michigan Law School to become an institution in which everyone is treated with respect and dignity," the letter reads. More than 250 students have signed the letter. "It's gratifying and reassuring to receive that type of comment from the Law School," Jones said ofthe group's letter. IRS Continued from Page 1 business income tax," Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison said. "They said those areas were not part of our educational mission." But Harrison said the University care- fully distinguishes activities that should be considered tax-exempt and that it did not owe the IRS any money. "We were confident all along we had been declaring these things correctly," Harrison said. "So we are very pleased to have this matter settled." Harrison said the University appealed the case on grounds that the facilities were related to the University's educa- tional mission. "We said the areas were in fact there primarily for the benefit of students, faculty and staff," Harrison said. "The appeals office agreed with us." The approximate $125,000 the Uni- versity is required to pay the IRS stems from scoreboard advertising income. The University will pay an additional $5,100 in taxes for 1989, no additional amount for 1990, and $119, 266 for 1991. The assessment came on the heels of a 1992 IRS audit that was part of a larger look at higher education institu- tions, which included investigations of more than 15 schools. University officials negotiated Michigan's audit findings for about three months in the fall of 1994, but gave up in December 1994 when dis- cussions came to a standstill. Since the negotiations were stalled, Harrison said the University requested that the IRS issue a 90-day letter, a state- ment charging the University for back taxes. The 90 days refers to the amount of time the University had to either pay the taxes or appeal. "That gave us the chance to take it to tax court," Harrison said. Harrison added he is unsure how many universities disagreed with the IRS audits, but said Michigan State and Ohio State settled without contesting. "Unlike other major universities, we felt strongly enough about our position that we went to court," Duderstadt said. "Many' of the other universities should have contested the IRS on this issue. Harrison said the settlement agree- ment may have implications for other institutions. Court to hear abortion buffer-zone case WASHINGTON - Stepping back into the abortion fray, the Supreme Court announced yesterday it would clarify how far judges can go in keeping raucous protesters away from health clinics that perform abortions. The case accepted yesterday arose from protests in Buffalo and Rochester, N.Y. It concerns a court order that created a 15-foot buffer zone around abortion clinic entrances, as well as around vehicles entering clinic driveways and patients entering or leaving the clinics. The order also permitted only two protesters come within 15 feet of a patient. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the order, saying the buffer zones were narrowly tailored to protect the clinics and patients: The Second Circuit stressed the importance of keeping protesters at a distance. Referring to the clamor and' intimidation caused by abortion foes, the lower court said,;"These activities, on some occaisions, have so intimidated and confused patients approachingthe clinics that they have left the areas, causing them to suffer a delay in obtaining medical care." But two abortion opponents affiliated with Project Rescue, the Rev. Paul Schenck' and Dwight Saunders, asserted in their petition to the Supreme Court that the appeals court attacked the core of the First Amendment: "the protection of unpopular and despised speech in the traditional public forum of public sidewalks and streets." U Please return by April 4th to the Daily at 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 481o9. Results will be printed on April 18th in the Best of Ann Arbor issue of Weekend. Thank you for your time. A best restaurants/ frch tries bars pian hftdogs best of the university k low calorie food_ chap beer bar drinks icecream/froz n yogur sandwiches suts coe p professor course Glow-oft course_ residence hail___________ sports team_________ Michlan athlete ______ ibrary' place to study _ place to work out__ ________ campus tradition cause/issue/movement activist group___ Protest slogan__ ______ speaker/leurer in past Year_ computing center_ student group/organization_ fraternit to Party h _th sorority to t'arty with_________ co-op uglest building_ Salvi convicted of clinic slayings BOSTON-John Salvi III,thetroubled young man who went on a shooting ram- page at two suburban abortion clinics, was found guilty ofmurderyesterday and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Despite his lawyers' attempts to prove him insane, Salvi, 24, was convicted of all charges against him: two counts of first-degree murder and five counts of armed assault with intent to murder, all arising from his Dec. 20, 1994, attack on the two clinics. He was quickly taken to state prison. The attack was the worst violence against an abortion clinic in U.S. his- tory and capped a decade of assaults on the clinics and their staff across the country. Cries of anguish were heard in court from the families of the victims - Shannon Lowney, 25, and Lee Ann Nichols, 38. Their parents, brothers, sisters, fiancees and friends wept, as they have many times during trial. Salvi shot the two women and wounded five other people during his attack on the two clinics in the Boston suburb of Brookline. Witnesses testi- fied during the trial that he had shouted, "This is what you get! You should pray the rosary," as he fired 10 bullets into Nichols. Salvi was arrested the next day in Norfolk, Va., after he began shooting at an abortion clinic there. Cigarette company manipulates nicotine WASHINGTON - Tobacco giant Philip Morris manipulates nicotine lev- els in cigarettes to fine-tune the drug's "impact"on smokers, according to three new affidavits from two former scien- tists and a production official at the company made public yesterday by the Food and Drug Administration. "Nicotine levels were routinely h geted and adjusted by Philip Morris, stated Ian Uydess, a former Philip Morris research scientist who said the company used tobacco blending and other tech- nologies to maintain nicotine levels. Philip Morris issued a statement late yesterday that it had just received the documents and would not comment fully until it had "thoroughly reviewed" them. best businesses bagl itaan food indian food mniddleeastern food chinese food__________ _____ korean food Mexican food__________ _____ veein food_ ____ restaurant service_ reasy spoon sports bar breakfast lunch dinner -take-out cafe late-night munchies_ place for folks to take You_ .nmn~ania , liino r" ' , - .,: . records used records_ {{tens clothing____________ women's clothing_ thrift/used clothn ________ bicwie saes/ repair books textbooks used books tan ing salon haircut- first-run theater_ test sre s video store liquor/ party store___________ photocopying_______________ snorting -000d____ ______ groceries florist travel agenc magazines mlchiean items {sweats, mugs, etc.)____ posters lecture hall____________ best dlace to meet a mate dating Picts-up line_ ________ stuff place for first date place for secret rendezvous idea for unusual date "date move"_____________ . I L D THE F, 1 , -,. ' ...x: i best of the rest excuse for late Paper mcuse for cuttng class_ fad thing aboutA_ hangout for smoker_ Place for people watching_ new stare or business thine about football safurdaw____ rvmamc everuna dorm cafeteria _ hapY hour best ovrall restaurant_ best overab _ar_ best entertainment local band- dancing spot_ concert In the PastYear_ 0a station Place to go when in an altered state; Scotland begins burying its dead DUNBLANE, Scotland-They were baptized together. They went to school together, and squirmed in churchtogether. Yesterday, Emma Crozier and Joanna Ross, both 5, were buried together, five days after gunman Thomas Hamilton killed the pair, 14 other classmates, their teacher and then himself in Britain's worst modern-day massacre. "I recall on Sundays that Emma and Joanna would sit together at the front pew, bobbing around and chatting," the Rev. William Gilmour said at the fu- neral, attended by a crowd of 800 that spilled over into the graveyard andpark- ing lot of the Episcopal church in Bridge on Allan, near Dunblane. "The two constant friends were cut down as innocent 5-year-olds in the evil terror which struck their primary school last Wednesday, which event will haunt their parents and us in this community well into the future. "Each family has lost one whom her parents refer to as their 'wee angel' and our human parental hearts go out to them today in love," Gilmour told mourners. "How are theseparents and theirrela- tives going to cope without their trea- sures being beside them at home? "Only by our combined prayers, outheld compassion and practical sup- port in the months ahead." Croats, Serbs to tun in war criminals GENEVA, Switzerland-Thepresi- dents of Serbia and Croatia agreed to surrender three accused war criminals to international prosecutors yesterday, and leaders of all three Bosnian fac- tions promised to release remaining prisoners in a new effort to refurbish t tarnished Dayton peace accord. Following more than eight hours of meetings with Secretary of State War- ren Christopher, Presidents Slobodan Milosevic of Serbiaand Franjo Tudjman of Croatia and Vice President EjupW Ganic of Bosnia renewed their commit- ment to a multi-ethnic Bosnia, Herzegovina despite weeks of violent "ethnic cleansing". in formerly Serb- controlled suburbs of Sarajevo. - From Daily wire servi 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 $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $165, On-campus subscriptions 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 764-0552'I Circulation 764.0558; Classified advertising 7640557; Display advertising 164-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/. EDITORIAL. STAF Ronie lasber, Ei 'ief NEWS Amy Klein, Managing Editor EDITORS: Tim O'Connell, Megan Schimpf, Michelle Lee Thompson, Josh White. STAFF: Patience Atkin, Cathy Boguslaski, Matthew Buckley, Anita Chik, Jodi Cohen, Lisa Dines, Sam T. Dudek, Jeff Eldridge, Kate Glickman, Lisa Gray, Jennifer Harvey, Stephanie Jo Klein, Jeff Lawson, Marisa Ma, Laurie Mayk, Heather Miller, Soumya Mohan, Laura Nelson, Anupama.Reddy, Alice Robinson, Matthew Smart, Carissa Ven Heest, Christopher Wan, Katie Wang, Will Weissert, Maggie Weyhing. CALENDAR: Josh White. EDITORIAL Adrienne Janney, Zachary M. Raimi, Editors STAFF: Erena Baybik, Kate Epstein, NirajiR. Ganatra, Ephraim R. Gerstein, Keren Kay Hahn, Katie Hutchins, Chris Kaye, Jeff Keating, Jim Lasser, Erin Marsh, Brent McIntosh; Trisha Miller, Steven Musto, Paul Serilla, Jordan Stancil, Ron Steiger, Jason Stoffer, Jean Twenge, Matt Wimsatt. SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managing Ed EDITORS: John Leroi. Brent McIntosh, Barry Sollenberger. STAFF: Donald Adamek, Paul Barger, Nancy Berger, Susan Dann, Darren Everson, Jiten Ghelani, Alan Goldenbach, James Goldstein, Jennifer Houdilik, Chaim Hyman, Andy Knudsen, Marc Lightdale, Will McCahill. Chris Murphy, Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy, Jim Rose, Michael Rosenberg, Danielle Rumore, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder. Dan Stillman, Doug Stevens, Ryan White. ARTS Dean Bakopoulos, Joshua Rich, Editors WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Kari Jones. Elan Stavros. SUB-EDITORS: Melissa Rose Bernardo (Theater), Brian A. Gnatt (Music), Jennifer Petlinski (Film), Ted Watts (Fine Arts), James Wilson (Books). STAFF: Colin Bartos, Eugene Bowen, Jennifer Buckley, Neal C. Carruth, Christopher Corbett, Jeffrey Dinsmore,:Tim Furlong, Lise Harwin, Emily Lambert, Bryan Lark, Kristin Long, Elizabeth Lucas, James Miller, Greg Parker, Heather Phares, Ryan Posly, Michael Rosenberg, Dave Snyder, Prashant Tamaskar, Alexandra Twin, Kelly Xintaris, Michael Zilberman. PHOTO MarkFriedman, Jonathan Lurie, Editors STAFF: Josh Biggs, Jennifer Bradley-Swift, Tonya Broad, Diane Cook, Nopporn Kichanantha, Margaret Myers, Stephanie Grace Lim, Elizabeth Lippman, Kristen Schaefer, Sara Stillman, Walker VanDyke, Joe Westrate, Warren Zinn, AA COPY DESK Elizabeth Lucas, EditoR STAFF: Jodi Cohen, Lili Kalish, Jill Litwin, Heather Miller. ONLINE Scott Wilcox, Editor STAFF: Dennis Fitzgerald, Jeffrey Greenstein, Charles Harrison, Travis Patrick, Victoria Salipande, Matthew Smart, Joe Westrate. Anthony Zak. Im BUSINESS STQF :n '1 DISPLAY SALES Dan Ryan, Manage ASSOCIATE MANAGER: Erin Green. STAFF: Shavannia Anderson-Williams, Chris Barry. Mry Coles, Alexis Costinew, Bryan Freeman, Stephanie Hu, Keith Litwin, Iran Naqui, Dana Reichman, Emily Shapiro, Marcy Sheiman, Kristen Shuster, Tracy Sinclair, Sekah Sirrine, Mike Spector, Zac 9C I i7i i .... i i f.iii it .S t.. .i...t i ...i i.i.t.. 3. a . is , it t .. ti tt.kii..i fifii.i i ......:.:.:.:.:.::::...:................................................................................................................................................. .i ... ... .. .t... ili .S. 3 u I1..... .3 .3 F }, i .. 3 . . .......................................... .... ! ....... ...... f.t .. ss 3 3# .. ...... I4 ! .... # ... I Z ..................... .. .# t .. {.. a., .a. s. t. .st ...i F.s t ........................................................................................................................................................................................... ..t.....1.l.,...,. .I..,... .i. £4::......# ...I...1.f.i.i I .. ., 3 ,,,..., . ....... ..3 . . , .F.£ .t.. ................ ............................................................................................_............................... ........... .. ,. ..,............F...... f a# iE