LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 6,1 Expert: Defendant capable of premeditation 996 -- 3.1 Four arrested at ndate-rape drug' use case olice arrested four Clemson uversity students in Clemson, S.C., last week and charged them with pos- sessing Rohypnol, more commonly known as the- "date-rape drug," The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. The arrests are among the first in the country involving the controversial drug. Banned in the United States, it is legal in more than 60 countries as a treatment for sleeping disorders. Women p reportedly have had "roofies" pedin drinks have blacked out. According to The Chronicle, the stu- dents, all sophomores, were all released on bond. A student who did not wish to be iden- tified called the drug "recreational" and said linking it to rape was "ridiculous." College GOP iticizes Sanger our members of the College Republicans at the University of Minnesota have demanded that the campus remove a poster of Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger 'due to their claim that Sanger was racist, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. Tom Gromacki, a Minnesota junior demanding the poster's removal, said Sajiger spoke at Klu Klux Klan rallies. *oand his peers also criticized the stu- dent center's birth control literature, which urges students to "be like .Margaret Sanger." According to The Chronicle, Helen Phin, head of the Student Association at Minnesota, said she thinks the four are "against birth control altogether." The association is to vote o, the stu- dents' demands this week. *ommittee to A study retirement A new committee will be forming at the University of Wisconsin to address faculty and staff retirement. According to university records, many faculty and staff members are beaching retirement age and deciding not to continue full-time. The numbers have led Wisconsin's Wversity Committee, the Academic . ff Executive Committee, and Provost John Wiley to create the Ad Hoc Committee on Retired Faculty and Staff. Committee Chair Edna Mora Szymanski said the "purpose of the committee is to develop a plan to help 'us better value our retiring faculty and staff members." The committee will meet for the first time on Nov. 19 and plans to present a :>rt to the faculty senate in the spring. Criticism costs positions for two A dean and a department chair at Baylor University in Waco, Texas, were removed from their administrative posi- tions last week after publicly criticizing the university's president, Robert Sloan. Henry Walbesser, dean of the gradu- ;e school, and Michael Bishop, chair he journalism department, received letters from Sloan after being quoted in the Dallas Morning News, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education. Sloan wrote that their "public and intemperate" comments indicated a "flack of respect" for the administration :of which they were a part. - The Chronicle reported that Walbesser told the newspaper he 0ieved that religious discrimination s could be filed against Baylor unless the university balanced its reli- gious and academic missions. Bishop criticized the president for dismissing Baylor's chaplain last month. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Janet Adamv. PONTIAC (AP) - If Jonathan Schmitz was able to form the intent to commit suicide, he also would have been able to form the intent to commit murder, a psychologist testified yesterday. Dr. Carol Holden was called as a rebuttal wit- ness by the prosecution in Schmitz's first-degree murder trial in Oakland County Circuit Court. The defense rested its case yesterday. Schmitz, who was not called to testify, is on trial for the shotgun slaying of Scott Amedure, a gay acquaintance who revealed a crush on Schmitz during a taping of the "Jenny Jones Show" in March 1995. Holden, who evaluated Schmitz Schmitz in July, said she did not believe he lacked the mental capacity to com- mit premeditated murder. "It was my opinion that Mr. Schmitz did not have diminished capacity," Holden said. "He told me he was quite capable of forming a number of intents." Schmitz admitted shooting Amedure three days after the two attended a taping of the show in Chicago on March 6, 1995. Defense attorneys say Schmitz, a heterosexual. was humiliated to learn his secret admirer was a man. The humiliation, combined with Schmitz' history of mental illness, alcoholism and a thyroid condition rendered him incapable of forming the intent to kill, they contended. Holden was called to rebut testimony by Dr. Michael Abramsky and Dr. Carole Lieberman, both defense witnesses. Abramsky testified that Schmitz probably did not intend to hurt anyone but himself on the day he shot Amedure. Abramsky, who had examined Schmitz about a month after the shooting, said Schmitz's mind was "bombarded" by thoughts that included killing himself and feelings of anger toward Amedure. There were "too many contradicting thoughts being bombarded on his mind," Abramsky said. He said Schmitz's pattern the day he shot Amedure was similar to his actions in March 1994, when he bought a gun and bullets at separate loca- tions and then told family members he was going to kill himself. His sister talked him out of it in 1994, Abramsky said. Witnesses have testified that the day Amedure It was my opinion that Mr. Schmitz did not have diminished capacity He told me he was quite capable of forming a number of in _tentg, - Dr. Carol Holden Prosecution rebuttal witness was shot, Schmitz made separate stops to buy shells and then a shotgun before proceeding to Amedure's Orion Township home where the shoot- ing occurred. Schmitz tried to commit suicide other times and always followed a similar pattern, Abramsky said. The pattern started with Schmitz getting despon- dent, followed by drinking, bizarre behavior and finally an "explosion," usually breaking something. Oakland County assistant prosecutor Roman Kalytiak pointed out that Schmitz never referred to suicide during his 911 call or during police ques- tioning. Lieberman, a Beverly Hills, Calif. psychologist who has been a paid guest on several talk shows. including Jones', said the day Amedure was shot was significant because it coincided with the day a year earlier that Schmitz tried to commit suicide. Lieberman said Schmitz carried the n into Amedure's house, and acted only after Amedii made a threatening gesture with a wicker chair. Prosecutors contend Arnedure raised the chair m self-defense. Lieberman said the chair brought back unpleasant memories of a year earlier w1hen Schmitz got into a fight with his tliher oer an embarrassing incident when Jon was in the sixth grade. During the fight. his father picked up a chair. Lieberman contends the chair caused Schnzit; to snap and kill Amedure. Schmitz, 26, of Lake Orion, faces life in prisn without parole if convicted. Closing arguments are expected tomorro\. when the trial resumes. ill 0 Welfare reform aggravates chil~o care inspection # . More facilities, fewer regulators strain system LANSING (AP) - The state's abil- ity to properly inspect day care centers is being strained by an increasing number of facilities - fueled by wel- fare reform - and fewer regulators to inspect them. "We simply aren't going to be able to address those increasing needs with decreasing staff," Alana Voight, chair of the Michigan Coalition for Children and Families, which represents more than 75 child advocacy groups, told Booth Newspapers in a story pub- lished Monday. Since 1994, Michigan's licensing consultant staff has dropped from 95 positions to 85.5 with three more scheduled to be reassigned. During the same period, about 2,000 new day care facilities have opened, boosting avail- able, regulated child care slots from 300,000 to 320,000. Ted deWolf, director of child day care licensing in the Michigan Department of Consumer and Industry Services, said his office isfocusing on complaints and delaying required rou- tine inspections of day care centers. In Detroit, two-year license renewals for child care progranrs at public schools are being extende to three years. In other areas of the state, annual visits to day care centers have been conducted only sporadically, Booth said. Delays are also occurring for home day care providers. It takes two months in some areas for potential home oper- ators - where up to six children are cared for in a private home - to attend an orientation session. deWol ! said. The office's goal is a two-week minimum wait. The problem could be aggraxated by the fact that an estimated 10,000 to 12,000 families on welfare ---where parents also hold jobs - will see their child care allowances from the state increase. The intent is to help them better afford child care. The expected result is that more will hire child care providers. The policy will require 200 to 400 more facilities, deWolf estimated. "It's going to stretch us. The bigger problem is that it's adding on to an already overburdened licensing sys- tem," he said. The state has been unable to fill vacancies from deaths, retirement and resignations because of a state hiring freeze and downsizing goals, deWolf said. AP PHOTO Civic pride Third graders from Conewago Elementary School near York, Pa., recite the Pledge of Allegiance yesterday. About 800 paper hands cut out by the children make up the flag, left, in the hallway of the school as a part of a unit on citizen- ship. Executive diector named for Detroit empowerment zone DETROIT (AP) - Nearly two years after it was awarded by the federal gov- ernment, the city's empowerment zone has an executive director. The zone's 50-member board of directors announced Monday that Denise Gray, 42, would be head of the Empowerment Zone Development Corp. The former executive director of the Michigan chapter of the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America next week will take charge of the agency responsible for monitoring and coordi- nating more than 80 social and eco- nomic development programs in the zone. Tax breaks and a federal grant of $100 million are earmarked for bolster- ing economic development and improv- ing some of Detroit's most distressed neighborhoods. But the federal fund so far has been tapped for only $108,654 for a youth and anti-violence program conducted by the Detroit Urban League. And directors of the zone hired Gray only after reopening the search when they could not find a suitable candidate. City Councilmember Kay Everett director's job, said John Waller Jr., chairman of the development corpora- tion's board. Waller acknowledged that Gray has only limited experience in economic RAF terrorist gets life for killing U.S. soldier development. But complained Monday that the city has little to show for the empowerment zone designa- tion it won in December 1994. "I don't understand the slowness of it all," Everett told " Up to now, it's all glitter and no substance.," - Kay Everett Detroit City Councilmember he said her work with the sickle cell organiza- tion - a human services agency - would bene- fit the empower- ment zone, which is "focused on cre- ating healthy and secure and safe families the Detroit Free Press. "This is a pre- mier program, put out by the president, to show meaningful changes in city. Up to now, it's all glitter and no substance." Gray, however, has the "qualities and temperament and experience" for the and restoring neighborhoods." Gray, a doctoral student at Wayne State University, will hire and oversee a staff of about 14 professionals. Zone officials declined to disclose her salary. FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) - A Red Army Faction terrorist charged in the 1985 murder of an American soldier and a bomb attack at a U.S. Air Force base that killed two people, including a Michigan man, was convicted yesterday and sentenced to life in prison. Chief Judge Erich Schieferstein said testimony had shown that Birgit Hogefeld lured U.S. Army Spc. Edward Pimental of New York City out ofa disco near Mainz the night of Aug. 7 to obtain his military ID. He was later found shot to the head in nearby woods. The bombers used Pimental's ID card to get a Volkswagen sedan packed with 240 kilograms (529 pounds) of explo- sives onto the U.S. Air Force Rhine- Main Air Base as people were arriving for work the next morning. Airman 1st Class Frank Scarton, 19, of Woodhaven, Mich., and Becky Joe Bristol, a civilian Air Force employee from San Antonio, Texas, were killed by the 7:30 a.m. blast; 29 others were seri- ously injured. The French leftist group Action Directe claimed joint responsibility for the bombing with the Red Army Faction, which grew out of the late 1960s leftst student movement and staged numrptas attacks on NATO and U.S. military tar- gets as well as German business leaders over more than two decades. Another Red Army Faction terrorist,. Eva Haule, was convicted in the three deaths in 1994. Hogefeld, 40, a former teacher from Wiesbaden, admitted her Red Army Faction membership, but told reporters before the decision was read "that no proof was provided" during the two-year trial for her involvement in the crimes for which she was charged. In addition to the three counts of mjBr- der, Hogefeld was also found guilty of attempted murder in a failed attack on the federal Finance Ministry state secre- tary Hans Tietmeyer in 1988, andnsrt'- ing and destroying a newly constructed( prison complex near Darmstadt on March 27, 1993. Hogefeld, who was on Germaiti'_+ most-wanted list of leftist Red Arn. Faction terrorists since 1986, was arrst- ed in June 1993. Correction Karie Morgan is an SNRE representative. This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. , '. ?3 LN!LLN L L What's happening in Ann Arbor today GRouP MEETINGS O College Republicans, meeting, Mosher- Jordan, Chavez Lounge, 9 p.m. Q University Students Against Cancer, Michigan Union, Wolverine Room, 8:30 p.m. EVENTS 0 "At Montaigne's Table," sponsored by Department of Romance Languages, Rackham Building, East Conference Room, 4 p.m. n iurann..tim " nnncnori y Hirii Concentrations," sponsored by CP&P, Angell Hall, Auditorium D, 5:10-6:30 p.m. Q "Exploring Graduate School Options: Political Science, Public Policy and International Affairs," sponsored by CP&P, Michigan League, Kalamazoo Room, 7:10-8:30 p.m. J "Larry Gregory of the Parke-Davis Corporation," sponsored by Association for Worksite Health Promotion, CCRB, 6-7 p.m. J "Information Meeting About Study Abroad in Great Britain." soon- Conference Room 6, 7 p.m. SERVICES J Campus information Centers, Michigan Union and Pierpont Commons, 763- INFO, info@umich.edu, UM Events on GOpherBLUE, and http:// www.umich.edu ~info J English Composition Board Peer Tutoring, Angell Hall, Room 444C, 7-11 p.m. J Northwaik, 763-WALK, Bursley Hall, 8-11:30 p.m. 1 Pcvrhniano APr ad eamir Advising- _______________________________________________________I 1 I '