Weather Tonight: Increasing clouds, low 43*. Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy, chance of rain, high 63°. C44b t tt One hundredfve years of editorialfreedom Wednesday April 17, 1996 x . , I Rose, Meh By Laurie Mayk Daily Staff Reporter After more than four hours of debates, goodbyes and parting poems, the Michigan Student Assembly gavel officially changed hands last night. MSA President Fiona Rose and Vice President P bir Mehta were officially sworn in as the mbly's new executive officers, following the first half of the assembly's annual "in-out" meet- ing. In their last meeting, former MSA President Flint Wainess and Vice President Sam Goodstein offered parting thoughts as their reign came to an end. "People will look back on Flint's era much more fondly than people involved with it do," Goodstein said. "Ninety percent of the things Flint and I have e ... have nothing to do with Tuesday night T etings." Wainess said Rose's election is a "parting gift" from the students. "The person replacing me in this seat is highly capable," Wainess said. ta take gavel; Mic Party retains nile After the traditional passing of the gavel, Rose took the reins of the new assembly for the second half of the evening. With new members filling the seats of departing or graduating veteran representatives, continuing members offered advice and encouraged the as- sembly to make a commitment to remain non- partisan. Mehta challenged assembly members to be "non- partisan on the assembly, but partisan everywhere else - partisan for the students." The orientation meetings for new representatives last week helped them to feel comfortable at last night's meeting, Mehta said. Rose and Mehta intro- duced newly elected students to assembly protocol and campus issues, as well as a few current MSA members. "The 'new' meeting ... went smoothly. We had a good, respective debate," Rose said. "This student government means business." LSA Rep. Ryan Friedrichs, a new member on the assembly, said the Rose-Mehta administration has already taken steps toward the nonpartisan assembly encouraged by old and new members. "Probir and Fiona are already trying to distance themselves from the daily operations of the Michi- gan Party," said Friedrichs, a Michigan Party mem- ber. Outgoing independent Engineering Rep. Bryan Theis took the nonpartisan vows a step further in the first half of the meeting and asked assembly members to participate in an "electronic town hall on the MSA confer" discussion about the relevance of political parties at the University. "I'd like the students to discuss whether the advan- tages of having parties outweigh the disadvantages," Theis said. Theis invited all representatives and students to comment on his research about political parties on item 48 of"MSA-Talks." Also during the first meeting, MSA members de- feated a resolution that criticized The Michigan Daily's coverage of the recent theft of 8,700 newspapers and that encouraged MSA's minority affairs commission to ensure minority students' views are accurately portrayed in the newspaper. KRISTEN SCHAEFER/Daily Former Michigan Student Assembly President Flint Wainess hands over the gavel last night to new MSA President Fiona Rose. Limitations maydictate Unabomber penalties ASHINGTVON (AP) - The five- r federal limit on prosecuting most crimes other than capital offenses means state officials may ultimately control whether a Unabomber suspect faces trial in attacks that occurred years ago. "Federal prosecutors face potentially serious statute of limitation problems," said Jay Stephens, former U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia. Of the dozen Unabomber attacks that occurred more than five years ago, none *ld have brought the federal death penaltyanyway. A 1985 bombing killed a man, but there was no federal capital punishment at the time. The Unabomber, if convicted of ei- ther of two later killings, could face the death penalty because that punishment was restored to federal law in August 1994. Besides the three deaths, 23 people I e been injured in the string of bomb- ls that began in 1978. To allow for federal prosecution in attacks that happened more than five years before indictment would require the involvement of a conspiracy or of racketeering or criminal organizations, not the act of a lone assailant, attorneys said. Details ofthose earlier bombings may well be used as evidence of a pattern of behavior to bolster cases that can be Aught, said Edward S.G. Dennis Jr., a rner assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department's criminal division. Theodore Kaczynski, who was taken into custody two weeks ago from his remote Montana cabin, has beencharged only with possession of bomb compo- nents. He has not been charged in any of the 16 attacks authorities suspect of the man dubbed the Unabomber. *'he older attacks include the Dec. I1, 1985, bombing death of 38-year- old Hugh Scrutton outside his com- puter rental store in Sacramento, Calif. There was no effective federal death penalty when Scrutton was killed. But since California has no statute of limi- tation on homicide, the state could still try a Unabomber suspect in that death. The two lethal Unabomber attacks that might bring federal capital punish- nt were the deaths of New Jersey ertising executive Thomas Mosser on Dec. 10, 1994, and of California Forestry Association President Gilbert Murray in Sacramento on April 24, 1995. In older cases in Utah, federal pros- ecutors may have avoided the statute of limitations problem. They are re- ported to have filed a sealed indict- ment years ago in connection with * Unabomber attacks there, in 1981 and 1987, naming the assailant only as "John Doe." Specific enough charges might have stopped the federal statute of limita- tion from running in those attacks, said Dennis, who is also a former U.S. attornev in Philadelnhia and is now U.S. works for cease-fire in Mideast KRISTEN SCHAEFER/Daily Lending a helping voice Members of the a cappella group 58 Greene raise their voices last night at Not Another Cafe on South University. From left to right are Gary Castaneda, Roxanne Hoch, Susan Holmes, Claudia Toth, Madeline Neri, Alvin Borlaza, and Samir Gupta. The group sang to raise money for cancer research. A large crowd filled NAC, each paying $3 for admission to the event. WETDW wsuspends uer'accounts By Ann Stewart Daily Staff Reporter Students who use mass e-mail to ad- vertise summer sublets may find them- selves temporarily without an electronic mailbox. The Information Technology Division is cracking down on e-mail misuse by temporarily suspending the accounts of students who send unsolicited mass e- mail on University computers, said ITD Associate Director Laurie Burns. "They're not supposed to send unso- licited e-mail -either to one person or a group. That's not within the scope of our intended use," Burns said. Burns said misuse of e-mail could re- sult in a short suspension ofa student's e- mail account. A student would be warned at least once before any action is taken. "We need to get people's attention, and if they lose their e-mail privileges for a day or two, that's too bad," Burns said. A violation could result in permanent suspension of the account, though this action has not been taken so far. How- ever, several students have lost their ITD account privileges for one or two days. Burns said increased misuse has af- fected bandwidth and mailing capacity. "It slows things down, just like mail to Santa at Christmas slows down the postal service," Burns said. Students have used the University's network to transmit summer sublet ad- vertisements, complaints about campus organizations and publicity for events. But Burns said not all students appre- ciate receiving these messages. "(It's) unsolicited, invasive, annoy- ing, unwanted," Burns said. Josh Henschell, an ITD systems spe- cialist, said he and his co-workers find the floods of mass e-mail used for ads, petitions and "propaganda" from stu- dent groups to be a nuisance. "We get tons of that crap, and it's really annoying," Henschell said. Another systems specialist, Mik Zolikoff, said many users get e-mail addresses from classes and use them for other purposes, such as advertising. ITD's User Responsibilities "... To respect the intended usage of systems for electronic exchange. you shall not send forged electronic mail, mail that will intimidate or harass otherusers, chain messages that can interfere with the efficiency of the system, or promotional mail for profit-making purposes." "It's free. It's quick. Anybody has ac- cess to it," Zolikoff said. "I just delete it." The move to suspend accounts rein- forces ITD's policy for user responsi- bilities, which states that students must refrain from sending e-mail that intimi- dates or harasses other users, or promo- tional mail for profit-making purposes. "We're sort of stepping up the use of existing policies, policies that have been in place for a long time," Burns said. - Dai/v News Editor Michelle Lee Thompson contributed to this report. Diplomats host parallel talks in Israel, Lebanon, Syria The Washington Post TEL AVIV, Israel - American diplo- mats conducted parallel negotiations in Israel, Lebanon and Syria yesterday seek- ing to win agreement on a U.S. cease-fire proposal to halt the intense six-day-old Israeli offensive in Lebanon. The draft truce, conveyed to the three governments Monday and discussed fur- ther yesterday, was said by Israeli and Lebanese officials 4 to hew closely to Israel's central de- There mands at the start of its assault last difficulty Thursday. Among its pro- accepting visions are said to be a guaranteed currentA halt to rocket fire from Lebanese territory into Leanese Israel's northern Galilee region, an end to attacks on Israelitroopsin south- ern Lebanon from civilian population centers nearby and a resumption of Is- raeli-Syrian peace talks that were cut off by Prime Minister Shimon Peres last month. As diplomats pursued their search for a cease-fire, Israeli helicopters and warplanes kept up their onslaught against targets in Lebanon. At the same time, Lebanese guerrillas fired more volleys of Katyusha rockets into north- ern Israel, continuing a cycle of attack and counterattack that has killed more than 30 people since last Thursday, all of them in Lebanon and most of them Lebanese civilians. isa ~i g it in its lormE. - Rafiq Hariri prime minister Five civilians, including a 2-year-old Lebanese girl, were killed yesterday in rocket attacks on Lebanese guerrilla offices and installations in the southern Beirut suburbs, reports from Lebanon said. Israeli gunships also loosed a rocket barrage at the house of a radical Pales- tinian guerrilla leader, Col. Munir Makdah, in the Ein Hilweh refugee camp near Sidon. The attack, the first against a Palestinian target in the cur- rent offensive, wounded Makdah's 2- year-old son and two of his bodyguards, but he was away and unhurt, according to Lebanese police quoted by news 1 agencies. Neither the text of the cease-fire proposal nor full details of the ne- gotiations were made public. But authoritative sources said agreement is at least some days away, suggesting more such attacks are likely. Among the most important ques- tions is Syria's willingness to extend its guarantee to the cease-fire terms, as Israel demands and the draft ac- cord suggests. Because Lebanon and Syria have no diplomatic relations with Israel, the seven-paragraph document was pre- sented as a written statement of the U.S. government's "understanding" of mutual obligations to be assumed by the governments involved in the Middle East's last active Arab-Israeli war front. Israel's central antagonist in Lebanon, the Lebanese Shiite Muslim Hezbollah movement is not represented in the talks. Nursing semors organize bone marrow drive to fight cancer By Erena Baybik Daily Staff Reporter By organizing a bone-marrow drive yesterday in the Michigan Union, Nursing seniors Ellen Gavin and Stephanie Perrett made Ann Arbor the only Michigan city represented in Because I Care, a worldwide organization for bone marrow and blood drives. The drive began as a community nursing project and expanded to international proportions. "It's an international event because we joined up with the Because I Care Organization, which has rep- resentatives and sponsors in the United States and five other countries, including France and Italy," Perrett said. Every year, Because I Care sponsors an interna- tional bone-marrow-drive month, and helps reg- istered cities advertise and organize drives. "Ann Arbor is such a diverse community that "Cancer doesn't differentiate between ethnic groups, so all of these ethnic groups get it and they have nothing to be matched with," Perrett said. "Out of 4,000 bone-marrow transplants done by National Bone Marrow Program since 1987, 357 have been done for all of those groups combined because there's nobody to match to." One of the main goals of yesterday's drive was to raise the numbers on the register and to educate people about bone-marrow donation. "I've lived in Ann Arbormy whole life and this is the first time I've ever heard of a bone-marrow drive here," Perrett said. "I donate blood all the time - this is just an extension ofthat," said LSA seniorJennifer Bissbis, who gave blood yesterday to register for marrow donation. Prospective donors fill out a health history form, review it with a nurse. nick un a donor card with i vim- - I