LOCAL/SATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 30, 1996 - 7 Volunteers mobilize on week of Devil's Night DETROIT (AP) - Remembering the fires and crime that marked Devil's Night in 1990, Detroit resident Ida Cummins plans to spend the two nights before Halloween this year guarding the vacant apartment building behind her house. "They won't get it as long as I'm breathing,' Cummins said as she demonstrated how she would sit at her kitchen window to watch the building. Cummins is not alone in anger and shame over arson on Devil's Night in the city. As of Monday, the city had about 26,000 volunteers to help patrol neigh- borhoods and guard abandoned build- ings and vehicles, mayoral spokesper- son Anthony Neely said. "Most of the work is being done in the communities," Neely said, adding the number of volunteers was expected to reach 30,000 for tonight - Halloween Eve - and tomorrow. Last year Mayor Dennis Archer said 61 fires were reported on Devil's Night. In 1994 - Archer's first Halloween in office -there were 182, the most since 215 Devil's Night blazes in 1986. During the past decade, Detroit's Halloween Eve arson blitz has drawn media attention from around the world as fires burn in abandoned buildings, vehi- cles and vacant lots. The number of fires peaked in 1985 at 297 but had been decreasing annually until 1994's sharp increase. The city has 40 to 60 fires daily. The spotlight also was on Detroit when Zeev Chafets wrote in his book, "Devil's Night and Other True Tales of Detroit," that suburbanites looked for- ward to the night where they could see the city burning. In early September, city officials launched radio, television and billboard ads discouraging arson. The campaign used bright orange ribbons as its sym- bol, placing one on the Spirit of Detroit statue outside city offices. Hundreds of abandoned buildings have been razed. Others bear signs warn- ing the buildings are under watch and offering rewards for information in arson cases. Over the weekend, more than 300 tow trucks from the police department identified and towed abandoned vehicles. A curfew for city residents 17 and under also was put in place from 6 pin. tonight until 6 a.m. tomorrow. Last year, police reported 17 arrests on arson-related offenses, up from seven in 1994. They also reported 210 curfew violation arrests. Some businesses also have jumped on the bandwagon. Ameritech loaned 120 cellular and free air time to the vol- unteers and police department for use in reporting fires and suspicious activi- ty. McDonald's restaurants in Detroit, Hamtramck and Highland Park were providing free soft drinks and coffee to volunteers, police officers, fire and EMS personnel. Cummins believes she can do more. She won't say "Devil's Night,' prefer- ring to call it Angel's Night. "Why give it a derogatory name?" she asked. "It should be Angel's Night because the volunteers out there are angels protecting not only the image of our city, but the well-being of our resi- dents." WARREN ZlNNJ .Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) shakes hands after a debate last night in the Michigan League. The debate, which fea- 'tured four regent candidates, focused on the presidential search, which Baker said should end early next week. .'U'may have pres. bTusa PRESI DENT Continued from Page 1 Chodorow said technology will influence "a real revolution" in how the University will function. - - Faulkner emphasized the need for :a president to be a visible spokesper- son for the University and public high- er education. McFee deemed the process success- ful. "I think the open interview process lis an integral part of the selection of a president," McFee said. "You find out ,AD a public setting how well a person -.an think on his or her feet." Michigan Student Assembly .President Fiona Rose questioned the *regents' ability to conduct the search effectively while under legal con- straints. She said regents should be allowed to meet privately with candi- dates. "I think it's ridiculous that the egents are so constrained with the amount of contact they have with can- didates' Rose said. "We've lost some- thing by having such a strict and con- - strained interview process." Sometimes subtle questions of phi- 1lsophy surfaced. At an invitation-only dinner at Inglis House, Faulkner and Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor) dis- cussed the priorities and characteris- tics needed to assemble a successful executive team. "You have to look ... vigorously and 'WIELFAR E Continued from Page 1 be made. "Welfare reform is an issue of major concern to the voters," Brewer said. "He thought it was important to change the system" Brewer said Clinton wants to change specific things about the bill, namely reversing cuts in benefits for older legal immigrants and taking steps to ensure provisions for child welfare. * "This is not the end of welfare reform," Clinton said in statement. "This is the beginning." Clinton said he wants to set up a tax- credit system for employers who hire long-term welfare recipients. He pro- poses granting employers a 50-percent credit on the first $10,000 of annual wages for such employees. He also plans to initiate several other hiring- incentive programs. ..According to literature provided by 'the Michigan Dole/Kemp campaign, Dole has plans for more welfare revi- sions of his own. The statement says Dole supports permitting states to sanction welfare recipients who test positive for drugs, increasing penalties for food stamp fraud and making $60 billion in cuts to federal welfare bureaucracy. hard to find the best people," Faulkner said, saying "integrity, intelligence and imagination, in that order" would be the final factors in hiring top University leaders. Power replied by questioning Faulkner closely about the importance of imagination in leadership and quot- ed former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Faulkner, who has a doctor- ate in chemistry, replied by saying, "imagination without intelligence tends to be unrealistic." Bollinger returned to Ann Arbor for his interview after 21 years at the University's Law School and two years at Dartmouth. After he spoke at the afternoon town meeting last Thursday, he was hugged and congratulated by. several audience members. Coming back and interviewing at a place where he has so many connec- tions led to conflicting feelings, Bollinger said. "It's a whole complex set of emo- tions," he said. "It's tremendous excitement. And yet it's always diffi- cult to interview at your own institu- tion because the feelings run so high. You have a lot of memories of a life, really, that you've created at a place like this." Christ, who was the first candidate to go before the regents, said the back- and-forth dialogue she had with the regents was helpful. She said the expe- rience helped illustrate how the University functions. "I have come away from this with a far fuller, deeper, richer sense of the University and the relationship with the Board of Regents;' Christ said. "I found it a very rewarding experience, and one that I learned a tremendous amount from." For Chodorow, expanding interdis- ciplinary education is important for universities. He said clarifying the connection between research and the benefits it has for students will prompt a rising tide that lifts everyone involved. He said it's important for schools to have a collective sense of community. "(The University) seems to have a sense of community that's unusual;' Chodorow said. "People care about sustaining that sense of community interest." "All four of them are very academic in nature and background," said Patrick McGinnis, LSA senior and chair of the Student-Alumni Council. "Probably all four are going to be lead- ing this university in a similar direc- tion." McGinnis, who was present at the Faulkner dinner, said relatively small issues of character and belief will probably determine whom the regents choose. Harrison said the board will "decide on Tuesday if they can reach a meeting of the minds of who the best candidate is." "The regents need to decide which of the four people they're most com- fortable with." Controversial sex ed curriculum may lead to Fenton School Board recall FENTON, Mich. (AP) - Some par- ents are upset that the Fenton Board of Education has reaffirmed its plans for a sexual education curriculum that include instructions on condom use. About 100 people attended a board meeting Monday where the "Healthy Students 2000" curriculum was dis- cussed. Opponents called it "filthy" and "obscene;' while proponents said it was "necessary" and "lifesaving." The board voted 6-1 to reaffirm its March decision to implement the cur- riculum. Stephanie Pytlowanyj, president of Truth in Education, a group formed to oppose the curriculum, said the pro- gram advocates sexual activity and is inappropriate. The curriculum promotes abstinence as the safest choice to avoid AIDS, sex- ually transmitted diseases and pregnan- cy. It also includes diagrams of anato- my. During the segment on sexually transmitted diseases, the curriculum provides instruction on the use of con- doms. The lessons are to begin next semes- ter for students in fifth through ninth grades. Students can "opt out" of the lessons if their parents wish. Pytlowanyj, a nurse who is home- schooling her children, said she collect- ed more than 500 signatures demanding the district reconsider its support of the curriculum. "You eroded our ability to protect our children," Pytlowanyj said. "I hold you, the Fenton school board, accountable for the terrible consequences that will occur." Michelle Primeau, a Fenton High School senior, told the adults that many teens are making uninformed choices that risk their lives. "The misinformation is out there. We need to give the students the informa- tion this curriculum provides;' she said. "AIDS is a huge thing. AIDS is an immense thing. AIDS is killing my peers." The statement says Dole also sup- ports "strengthening families and per- sonal responsibility by funding state initiatives to establish abstinence edu- cation programs in public schools, which discourage teen pregnancy and illegitimacy." Sheldon Danziger, a University pro- fessor of social work and public policy Republicans contend that people have to start somewhere. People mov- ing off welfare will not immediately jump into middle management posi- tions, Engler said. "They've got to begin a work history." Rivers said one basic difference between Republicans and Democrats about welfare can be summed up in just and an expert on welfare, said Dole's plans for drug restric- tions and absti- nence initia- tives will not help the sys- tem. "That's just showboating. They offer appeals to emo- tion that don't really get at the cash issue (of we I fare) ," Danziger said. This welfare bill is mostly about cutting the budget and scoring political points." - Sheldon Danziger University professor of social work and public policy a few words: "who controls the dollars." Democrats maintain that some national c o n t r o .l ensures people* will be helped. Rivers said she is definitely against state control of wel- fare. She said national stan- dards are nec- e s s a r y some states that Romney, a Republican candidate for U.S. Senate. John Truscott, a spokesperson for Engler, said state control of welfare would allow people to receive more specialized help. "This one-size-fits-all welfare across the country isn't cutting it,' he said. Truscott said recipients' welfare needs vary from state to state and even within states. "State control would allow for those regional changes to be addressed," Truscott said. Politicians can argue all they want, Danziger said, but the current bill does- n't measure up. "This welfare bill is mostly about cutting the budget and scoring politi- cal points," Danziger said. "It wasn't about moving people from welfare to work." Danziger said it will take two to five years for the negative effects of the wel- fare reform bill to show up, when the lifetime limits begin to expire. "Over time there will be enormous effects;' he said. Danziger said the bill offered a "bet- ter deal for states" but did not include enough protections. "It was great politics;' Danziger said. "It was lousy policy." "because there are Some have voiced opposition to the bill because many welfare recipients do not have the training and skills neces- sary to acquire higher-paying jobs, and the lower-paying jobs they could get do not pay enough to live on. refuse to give basic services to their cit- izens." Republicans want welfare control out of Washington, D.C. 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