it I Un IUtI Weather Tonight: Partly cloudy, dry, low around 370, Tomorrow: Partly sunny, dry, high around 530. One hundred six' years of editoria~l freedom Wednesday October 2, 1996 ,,. ." 5 6 l :'" 4 C (:', 6 .? urv .+..:. Lw y ...,. )1 :. "r c % R 5' 'C P k't wily* PNN I Mideast conference hushed gut hopeful '[he Washington Post WASHINGTON - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat huddled privately yesterday at a White House luncheon that stretched nearly three hours on the first day of talks that the Clinton administration Ocribed as a halting but hopeful step ward restoring peace in the Middle East. U.S. officials said the session, between two bitter adversaries who have met only once before, produced no breakthroughs. But the officials described a sense of relief at the White House, where they earlier had warned that there was such ill will between the two men that they might not meet with- out President Clinton and King *ssein of Jordan present as diplomat- ic chaperons. The first meeting went well enough for the two leaders to agree to hold a second face-to-face meeting before the summit's scheduled end today, and high-level talks continued into the night at Blair House. While few details emerged about the substance of the talks, Israeli officials said all the dis- ted issues between the two sides re under discussion. The Israelis made clear, however, that Netanyahu is inflexible on some subjects - including Palestinian demands that he close an ancient tun- nel near Muslim and Jewish holy sites in East Jerusalem. Israel's opening of the tunnel last week sparked Palestinian riots that left more than 70 dead. "We've been at a profoundly grave *ment in the process in which the capacity of these two sides to have this type of dialogue was just not present, period," said White House spokesper- son Michael McCurry. "Re-establishing some ability for the leaders to address their differences directly was one of our principal goals here, and we've moved in that direction today." Beyond the improved ambiance, however, it was far from clear that the *stily arranged summit would pro- duce solid results. Israeli officials said they rejected a request from Clinton to set a precise date by which Israeli troops would complete a promised par- tial withdrawal from the West Bank city of Hebron. See SUMMIT, Page 7 MSA looks to hike student fee to $4.19 By Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter During the Michigan Student Assembly elections in November, stu- dents will have the opportunity to vote on whether to raise their own student fee by $1.50 -a 55.8-percent increase. The $1.50 increase per term would go to fund Project Serve and the Black Volunteer Network, bringing the total student fee to $4.19 per term. If the fee increase passes, the two stu- dent groups will receive $123,752 in additional funding. MSA will allocate $70,000 in additional funding to Project Serve and will give the BVN an additional $25,000. The two groups also hope to estab- lish a $5,000 general scholarship and provide the remaining $23,752 to other student groups. After last night's meeting, the major- ity of MSA members supported the assembly's decision to allow students to vote on increasing their own fee. "I am always happy when the stu- dents have an opportunity to vote on an issue in a democratic forum," said MSA President Fiona Rose. "We have opened up a medium for students to truly voice their opinions." Normally, student groups receive funding through MSA's Budget Priorities Committee, which has $90,000 this year to allocate to student groups. But BVN Vice President Dwayne Fuqua said BPC did not provide ade- quate funding for his group in the past. "When we went before MSA (last summer), $500 was all we could get," he said. Fuqua said the group was forced to raise its own funds. Fuqua said he is pleased the assem- bly cleared the way for students to decide on the increase in funding to both BVN and Project Serve. "This is great news," he said. "We had pretty much plotted out that this was going to pass the assembly." Carmen Tomshack, a member of Project Serve's Leadership Team, said she is confident students would vote to increase their own fee. "I definitely think it will pass during the elections; we have over 4,000 stu- dents working for Project Serve and a large number working for BVN, she said. "But this is also good news for all students because the (scholarship) will See FEE, Page 2 Celebrating the harvest season Above: LSA sophomore Dave Caroline (right) shows ISA sophomore Dina Goldwasser (left) how to shake the Lulav and hold the Etrog, two tradi- tional symbols of the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. The annual holiday cele- brates the coming of the harvest season just after the Jewish new year. Participants stand and watch the lesson in a traditional Sukkah, a thatched hut with holes in the roof, allowing people inside to see the sky. Fruits and vegetables hang from the roof and walls. Right: A student holds the Lulav, which is made of palm stalks, and the Etrog, a citrus fruit, after a demonstration of rituals regarding their use during the annual holiday. WARREN ZINN/Daily MSA's budget committee doles out .dollars to groups By Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter If student groups take the time to fill out an application and appear at a hear- ing, chances are they will receive some money from the Michigan Student Assembly. The assembly's Budget Priorities Committee has been allocated $90,000 of the $200,000 internal budget - and, "if groups go through the motions we very, very rarely give them no money," said BPC Chair Karie Morgan. "We have $7,000 more than last year and that means we can fund a lot more student groups." BPC provides funding for speaker's and performer's fees for group events, groups' publicity costs and operating expenses. It may also cover group trav- eling expenses. The MSA rules forbid the assembly to fund food and meals for individual group members. "We look at each group individually - we have no set standards about amount of allocation," said BPC Vice Chair John Lopez. "We will allocate very large sums of money to groups if they can prove they will use it effec- tively." To be eligible for BPC funding, stu- dent groups must have at least five See BPC, Page 2 RHA discusses plans for ding center Site to be larger than 2 football fields mail :;c By Chris Metinko For the Daily Some of the most common com- plaints among students about resi- dence hall life are the quality of cafa- ia food and the dining experience. University Housing is trying to eliminate these complaints with a newly proposed dining center for the Hill residence halls, which will seat 2,100 students per meal and replace the Couzens, Alice Lloyd and Stockwell dining halls by fall 1999. William Zeller, director of University Housing, said the pro- posed project will solve several prob- lems with the existing facilities. "It's a win-win situation between needing the ren- ovation and needing the it's a space," Zeller said last night at situation a resident forum in Alice Lloyd, needing t sponsored by the Residence renovatic la s ssiociation nee ding "The main dri- ving force is to provide more Director of U modern dining services and avoid the costs of reno- vatin." Casey said the proposed dining center would be modeled after similar com- plexes at Boston College and Duke University, where students can experi- ence a variety of dining styles - cafe, fast-food, conventional and marche - in which the food is prepared Zeller said the new dining center is necessary to avoid costly renovations to the dining facilities already in the residence halls on the Hill. "This was an idea proposed in the late 1970s or early 1980s, but didn't pass," he said. "But now we're faced with millions of dollars worth of ren- ovations with our four current dining halls." Neal letter to explain secret salary deals Under the Win-win1 between the mn and the space, proposal, Mosher- Jordan's din- ing hall would be remodeled and an under- gound floor would be added to the building so as not to dis- , turb the By Jodi S. Cohen Daily Staff Reporter Chemistry Prof. Thomas Dunn said yesterday that faculty members have been "wanting to know" the facts about the compensation agreements former University President James Duderstadt made with top administrative officers before he left office. Interim President Homer Neal will formally respond to questions about the benefits packages in a five-page letter he plans to send to the faculty this week. The letter "addresses several of the issues raised in the press regarding the executive officer compensation pack- ages," Neal said. Neal said there have been many "inaccuracies" about the deals that Duderstadt gave to seven top officials - including Neal - before he stepped down June 30. The compensation agreements, which were made without the knowledge of the University Board of Regents, included yearlong leaves of absence and future salary guarantees. Regents indicated at last week's meeting that they plan to develop a tighter compensation policy for University presidents to follow. Neal is the appropriate person to address the issue. "The faculty would like to know a lit- tle bit more about it," Dunn said. Dunn said his own e-mail "has lit up like a neon sign during the past week or so," with faculty members posting messages and questions in response to the news. Since there has been no formal reac- tion from the University's administra- tion, Dunn said the faculty have heard only one-sided accounts, mostly from the media. "To not respond allows many of the inaccuracies to stand on their own," Neal said. The interim president went on to say it is inaccurate to / report that Neal D u d e r s t a d t made the agreements after his decision to step down. "The letters were just codifying agreements made, in some cases, years before" Neal said. While Duderstadt's letters were dated William Zeller, director of University Housing, explains the ramifications of unifying the cafeterias of the Hill area. n courtyard - William Zeller and Palmer iversity Housing Field. All four Hill resi- dence halls would have covered exte- rinor walkways that would connect to ing structures would cause student fees to rise. Juip, an LSA senior, said the amount of space that the project would free up - more than 50,000 square feet - would be a great bene- fit to campus. "If you ever try to coordinate an event on campus, you.become keenly aware of the lack of space avalible," learning community," Andrews said. However, he said there has already been talk of using the space for student housing to ease the burden of over- crowding. Most students at last night's forum seemed to like the proposal. "Overall, it's a fiscally sound idea," said Engineering junior James Stoops. "And the idea of a modern II