Watm Tonight Partly cloudy, low around 65. Tomorrow: Scattered showers and sunshine, high 840. F 6.40 icrq *ar One /undredfive years ofeditorizlfreedom Thursday September s,1im I 1 111111 111111111jjj i I I1 11 1111 ,11 311 UJ' policy benefits relig ious observers By Heather Miller Daily Staff Reporter Students who experience academic conflicts on religious holidays now have a policy that works in their favor. The New U-M Policy On Religious- Academic Conflicts was written by a dent for students, and has recently Ined the approval of the administra- tion. Within the next two weeks, students are scheduled to receive mass mailings of the policy from the Office of Student Affairs. LSA senior Anthony Scaglione, who chairs the Hillel governing board, began working on the policy last spring. "It was an issue that I have personal- ly encountered and am concerned *ut," Scaglione said. "We get these few professors who are not willing to accommodate students with religious- academic conflicts." Scaglione negotiated the policy throughout the summer with Associate Provost Susan Lipschutz, while solicit- ing advice from students and professors. "The University had not really taken a stand on this," Scaglione said. Lipschutz said the provost's office Othe past regularly mailed memos to faculty asking them to accommo- date students who have religious conflicts. "But no one ever told the students about this," Lipschutz said. "What Anthony was able to do was to come at this from the students' point of view.... Anthony articulated the policy and pub- licized it to students." The new policy states that students A o miss class due to religious obser- ces are responsible for giving their instructor "reasonable notice" of their absence. Students are also responsible for making up missed classwork. In turn, instructors are expected to offer students "a reasonable alternative to make up missed classwork." However, instructors who believe that alternatives would create an jnreasonable burden" on them or the 4ss do not have to oblige. Students who continue to encounter See CONFLICTS, Page SA U.S." Slanes patrol no-fly zone Clinton pronounces attack mission a success The \Xashington Post WASHINGTON - U.S. warplanes began patrolling an expanded "no-fly" zone in southern Iraq yesterday, as President Clinton declared that two days of U.S. cruise missile strikes had been a success and left President Saddam Hussein "strategically worse off than he was before." Iraqi forces sporadically challenged U.S. planes enforc- ing the ban on mil-} itary flights in the new corridor south of the 33rd paral- lel, but to little effect. Pentagon officials said a U.S. F-16 fired a. missile at an Iraqi radar battery that had tracked the Saddam Hussein plane from the A member of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, KDP artillery, patrols the streets of Irbil in northern Iraq yesterday. U.S. Sends a message to Saddm NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - Saddam Hussein's army attacked the Kurds in northern Iraq. So why did the United States respond with missiles and an expanded no- fly zone hundreds of miles away in the south? The Americans made clear they were not trying to clean up the mess in northern Iraq, a region where many armed groups are active and no one has more than partial control. In choosing a target, the Americans opted for Iraqi air defense systems in the south for at least three apparent reasons: Reason No. 1: Quite simply. the Nei Americans consider southern Iraq more important than the north. Iraq's southern Anal neighbors, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, are major oil producers with staunchly pro- American governments that favor tough action against Saddam. The Americans blasted Iraqi air defense systems in the south and pushed a southern no-fly zone from the 32nd par- allel to the 33rd parallel. a line that runs only 30 miles south of Baghdad. As a result, it will be more difficult for Saddam to mobi- All i 13 I lize his army and send it south to threaten Kuwait or Saudi Arabia, two countries that can't match Iraq's military might. U Reason No. 2: Northern Iraq is a complete mess, and a U.S. strike there would have been filled with risk. The two main Iraqi Kurdish factions in the north have been quarreling on and off for decades, and they again came to blows on Aug. 1 7. ending a fragile cease-fire. Iraq intervened on behalf of one faction, the Kurdish Democratic Party, alleging that archrival Iran was supporting the other Kurdish VS group. the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan=.That intervention sparked the U.S. attack. Northern Iraq is even more volatile thanks to periodic attacks by Turkey, which pursues its own rebellious Kurds when they retreat into the rugged mountains across the border. Yet no one group has dominance, making the region extremely unstable. When Iraq saw Iran meddling recently. Saddam apparently decided he could not let that pass without responding. But that in turn provoked the Americans. ' Reason No. 3: U.S. relations with Turkey, a key NATO See IRAQ, Page 10A ground. Also, two Iraqi MiG-29 jets approached the enlarged no-fly zone yesterday, but turned away when con- fronted by U.S. jets. Clinton asserted that "this mission has achieved the objectives we've set for it," even as the Iraqi military gains in Kurdish northern Iraq that prompted the U.S. retaliation remained intact. While Clinton said there are signs of' a "withdrawal" or "dispersal of forces" in the north, he added that "it's too soon to say that this is permanent." Secretary of State Warren Christopher. en route to Europe for meetings with the allies. added that the United States does not expect Saddam to withdraw all the troops and security officials he sent into the Kurdish zone. The purpose of the 44 missiles hur- tIed from US. ships and bombers at 15 air defense sites.-officials said, was not to forcibly evict the Iraqi army from the north but to make it safe for American and other jets to enforce the new restrictions that took effect yesterday on airspace in the south. Turkey. meanwhile, was pushing a new idea to pinch Iraqi sovereignty in the north. The new Ankara government wants to send a contingent of Turkish forces into the Kurdish area of Iraq near the border with Turkey. The goal is to curb attacks on Turkey from Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas based in Iraq. White House spokesperson David Johnson said the U.S. government understand Turkey's concerns but needs more time to assess the proposal. Another Clinton administration official said privately that Washington does not oppose the plan. Public opinion surveys showed that Clinton's strike against Iraq was win- ning strong majority support at home, as military actions usually do in their early stages. Reaction from political leaders was mixed, although few voices were sharply critical. Republican presi- dential nominee Bob Dole said Clinton was "doing what he should do" and pledged to hold any criticism for later. While Congress has generally sup- ported the military action, Senate pas- sage of a resolution endorsing it has been held up by squabbling between Republicans and Democrats over how far to go in endorsing Clinton's policy, senators said. Retired Army Gen. Colin Powell, the U.S. military's top officer during the 1991 Persian Gulf War against 4raq, said he thought "the president did exactly the right thing" But House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) said many lawmakers were troubled by the lack of international support for the strike: "The contrast between Desert Storm and the current level of (allied) support is a concern. Reform Party nominee Ross Perot was the most barbed, suggesting that Clinton was motivated by domestic pol- itics. He told an American Legion con- vention in Salt Lake City that "war is not a place for a politician to create a positive image and get a bump in the polls." Similar suggestions that Clinton had fashioned an inappropriately bellicose response in order to give himself a boost at home have come from foreign capitals. France and Russia have said they were opposed to the assaults, while in the Middle East even generally sup- portive governments like Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia expressed opposition to varying degrees. Dole pushes 4ax cuts in q=~ A DEARBORN (AP) - Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole told small business owners yesterday he would :p his word and deliver a bevy of tax cuts while slashing 6vernment regulations. "When we give our word, we keep it," Dole told a group of 1,500 at National TechTeam Inc., a computer services provider. "When President Clinton gives his word, you don't know what is going to happen." Dole, in a short early evening speech, focused almost sole- ly on his economic plan. He said he would balance the feder- al budget, give a 15-percent tax cut, slice capital gains rates in half, cut estate taxes and restore a deduction for people who work out of their homes. He also promised a "flatter, fairer sim- *er system for the A*erican tax payers that will end the IRS as we know it." Gesturing to a I-year-old in the audi- ence, Dole said the $500-per-child tax credit that is part of his package would result in $25,000 by the time the child reached age 18. And just as vice presidential candidate Jack Kemp did in Michigan on Tuesday, Dole criticized Clinton for targeting his Dole roposed income-tax break to certain ge earners. "The trouble is, the Clinton tax cut is never for you. It's always for someone else. Ours is fair, ours is across the board ours will work," Dole said. The event marked Dole's seventh visit to Michigan this year. Campaign officials said they chose TechTeam because it is one of the fastest growing businesses in the state. It went A2 rakes in more than $1M in parking tickets By Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter They're out there. and while their appearance is never a total shock, they can quickly ruin your day. Parking tickets. "It's pathetic. There's never enough parking." Engineering junior Chris Zent said. "It doesn't matter if you're on campus, off campus or any- where else." Zent said he has been lucky and has gotten only one parking ticket in a year of parking on campus. But he has never heard of anyone who drives on campus consistently without getting a ticket. But besides causing stu- dents major headaches. Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid Sheldon says parking tickets are quite, lucrative for the city. "There is a net gain of more than $1 million per year we get from writing tickets," she said. "We've found , through experience that the money from parking tickets4 always comes in." Sheldon said she didn't know what the city would do without the money collected by parking tickets.. "It would be interesting to see what would happen if everybody parked where they were supposed to - it would definitely change our budget practices," she said. longer relies on the Ann Arbor Police Departnient to regulate parking. Ann Arbor police spokesperson Susan Whitaker said Ann Arbor does not use the boot, a device that police in other cities can attach to the wheel of a car, rendering it undrivable until parking fines'are paid. But Whitaker said the city has other ways of catching up with people like Jason who have unpaid parking fines. "If you have multiple tickets, the city will tow your car," she said. .t ;i. A ,h r* :4 "?: : .'+ ,ti 'ti.,. t '{ ti ' :t % G " .y : r . fiTt ,_ {! IC' , . , ,,, a. . q; :S ...... ,_i tiY In Ann Arbor, city offi- cials may tow the cars of those with four outstanding parking tickets. That policy is more strict than state law, which says cars will be towed if the owner has six outstanding tickets, Whitaker said. In addition to city parking officials, University Department of Public Safety officers also scour the school's lots and property in search of illegally parked cars. "We take steps to make sure people who pay for spots can park there," said DPS spokesperson Elizabeth Hall. However, unlike the city, Hall said the University One driver who is tired of contributing to the city's surplus is Jason, a senior who did not want does not use parking tickets to increase rev- enue. Money from parking fines goes towards "safety-related issues" including increased I In .- CC nAC I--- - -i