eather nIght: Mostly cloudy, low round 2d. morrow: Mostly cloudy, high round 40°. 2 irran Unt h One hundred sixs years of editorial freedom Tuesday November 19, 1996 .. ........ ............ ...... . . .......................... ' V'., r gr g ' t . ., ; ~ .,,. ,';_ w xm ik '4 # .. ,. ,.... r, 3 ..; & r " . :;, ,. 63x I mnters ested for eating of pfarher y Anupama Reddy aily Staff Reporter A Michigan football player will not ttend the upcoming Ohio State niversity game after he was arrested or allegedly beating his ex-stepfather nconscious with a baseball bat last eek in Detroit. LSA senior Charles Winters was ted the night of Nov. 12 for beating 2-year-old Horace Davis at a residence the 19400 block of Blackstone Street. inters was later released and has not n charged with a crime pending fur- er investigation, according to Detroit olice Department officials. Four days later, Winters played in aturday's home loss to Penn State. Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr aid in a press conference yesterday at Winters will not play in the Ohio game this weekend due to person- I problems, but he said Winters is not uspended from the team. "My major concern is based on his elfare," Carr said. "He has been hrough an emotional time. "What this kid went through, as it ecomes more public, I think you'll nderstand how difficult it was," Carr aid. nrett Irons, co-captain of the gan football team, said in yester- day's conference that he had no comment about the matter because he was "not familiar with the situa- tion." Davis was listed in critical condition yester- Winters day at Grace Hospital. Jessie Jordan, vis' sister, told the Detroit Free Press esterday that the fight began when inters waited for Davis at the home f Winters' mother. Jordan said Davis as returning a car to the home when inters attacked him repeatedly with a ajin retaliation for Davis allegedly W his mother. Jordan told the Free Press that Davis d six hours of surgery to control a ssive blood clot in his head. DAD officers said yesterday Winters a, not been charged in connection ith the incident but said the depart- nent's investigation is ongoing. A free safety on the football team, inters also has pitched for the ichigan baseball team for the past years. ichigan baseball coach Geoff Zahn escribed Winters as an "easy-going y" and said he did not usually display its of violence. "He always seems under control," ahn said. "It's out of character. I hought of him as a pretty classy indi- idual. "I hope he can get it straightened ut," Zahn said. seball team player Brian 'i nbach said Winters has an upbeat See WINTERS, Page 7 Minority enrollment tops 25% By Ann Stewart Daily Staff Reporter This year's entering class at the University is more diverse than ever, according to race and ethnicity figures released yesterday. And for the second year in a row and the second time in the University's his- tory, women make up more than half of the first-year class. While the University's total enroll- ment declined 0.4 percent, minority stu- dent enrollment is at an all time high. According to statistics released yester- day, students of color now make up 25.4 percent of all students, up from 24.8 percent last year. Figures released last month indicate that of the 5,327 entering students this fall, 2,709 were women, compared to 2,618 men. John Matlock, director of the Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives, said the increasing minority and female enrollment is reflective of the nation's demographics. "In terms of diversity, as we increase the number of students of color and women, it more and more starts to reflect what the figures are nation- wide," Matlock said. Matlock said the numbers indicate what the work force of tomorrow will look like. "When you look at the future work force, the majority going in will be minorities and women," Matlock said. However, this is only the second time in University history that women have outnumbered men in a first-year class, and there are twice as many men than women in this year's entering class of the College of Engineering. "Proportionately, (the number of) women enrolling at the undergraduate level at Michigan has tended to be below the national average - so this is simply moving closer to the national norm, but the difference is still relatively small," said Carol Hollinshead, director of the Center for the Education of Women. The number of enrolling minorities this year is double what it was in 1986, the year before the Michigan Mandate was established. The Michigan Mandate, initiated under then-President James Duderstadt, is a University pro- gram aimed at increasing minority enrollment. See ENROLLMENT, Page 7 Minority Enrollment At its Highest Ever Asian American African American 8.9% Hispanic/Latino Native American .7% WomenL The Class of 2000 is the second class in a row to have more women than men. Minority enrollment at the University jumped to 25.4 percent this year. This year's figure is more than double minority enrollment in 1986, the year before the Michigan Mandate began. t KSU prof. speaks. on A " diversity By Jenni Yachnin Daily Staff Reporter Diversity isn't necessarily race, cul- ture or religion, said a national lecturer on the topic of campus multiculturalism. "Everything I've said about racism can be extended to sexism, elitism and ageism,' said James Boyer, a professor of curriculum and American ethnic studies at Kansas State University. Boyer addressed the subject of changing views of racial and cultural differences on campus in his lecture yesterday to the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs. "It was an interesting speech," said Jackie McClain, executive director of human resources and affirmative action for the University. "It was an arms'- length view of the issues (and) a really good perspective of the bigger picture." Boyer opened his speech with statis- tics on the different racial divisions in the country, pertaining to poverty, edu- cation and population rate. "I've been a higher education person for the last 25-plus years, and I've watched the evolvement of our lives, our country, the issues associated with race and language and ethnicity and gender and economics, and I'd like to offer some ideas about that," Boyer said. Boyer spoke for a little more than an hour to the crowd of faculty members and some graduate students. "I was overpowered and stimulated," said Philip Meyers, professor of geo- logical sciences. "He covered a lot of territory." Boyer discussed the changing face of students on campus with regard to age. "More than 30 percent of all univer- sity students are not in the category of ages 19 to 25. We are having an increasing number of students intro- duced to the university or come back to the university who are in their 30s or beyond," Boyer said. "So that now we are in the midst of a transition in terms of student popula- tion, a lot of things, of policies, will See DIVERSITY, Page 7 JOHN KRAFT/Daily Steam fitter Mike Klapperich takes a closer look at just one of the steam tunnels that snake for miles just beneath the University. Tunnels connect 'U' to heat and history By Katie Wang Daily Staff Reporter Every morning at sunrise, Mike Klapperich picks up his hard hat and flashlight to head to work. But unlike the millions of Americans who report to an office building with a scenic view, Klapperich's office is six feet below the ground, and his only view is of miles of steam and water pipes. As students walk across campus to classes, Klapperich and 18 other steam fitters work under- ground to service and maintain the six miles of steam tunnels that connect the University's central and med- ical campuses together. Not only do these tunnels connect underground and provide heat from a central powerhouse to campus buildings, but they are also a link to the University's past. The narrow tunnels, which are about 6 feet tall and 7 feet wide, contain 29 miles of pipe that distribute steam, hot water and condensation to all campus buildings. Because none of the buildings on campus has a boiler, the University is dependent on this sys- tem to provide these utilities. "(The system) generates electricity and steam with the same fuel - natural gas," said Bill Verge, manag- er of the University's utility systems. "The two sources of energy out of one fuel source is very efficient." Although students in the past had easy access to the tunnels, today it is nearly impossible to take a trip underground because of tight security measures. "We are very concerned about the safety of the tun- nel for students and the security of the building," Verge said. "In the past, students used to get in quite often. Most of the time they were just fooling around." Students caught trespassing in the tunnel could potentially be charged with unlawful entry, a misde- meanor charge, according to Department of Public Safety officials. But there was a moment in University history where the tunnel served as more than a utility source. It served as an escape route. Under the administration of former University pres- ident Harold Shapiro, who served in the 1980s, the Board of Regents and Shapiro had to use the tunnel as an escape route to bypass protesting students. The regents were holding their monthly meeting in the ballroom of the Michigan League when they were met by an onslaught of angry students who were demand- See TUNNEL, Page 7 I I Partie could By Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter A resounding cry almost all the parties v a c a n t Michigan S t u d e n t Assembly seats in this week's e ions: Bring bmthe real Entree Plus. B u t financial offi- cials said legal Constraints hae left it s say M-Card use some work Russell said that when Entree Plus was accepted by non-University mer- is coming from chants such as Wendy's and the hoping to gain Michigan Union Bookstore, the University and area merchants needed a "financial institution to legally settle with the third-party merchants." Enter First of America bank, which presented the highest bid of area banks - and just like that, the .cx University had the M- "' Card and Entree Plus s hands tied. and was confined to dorm snack bars and CIA announces officer betrayed top secrets to Russia 1 The Washington Post WASHINGTON - At the very time in 1994 that top CIA officials were touting new counterintelligence proce- dures designed to prevent another dis- aster like the Aldrich Ames spy case, veteran case officer Harold Nicholson was allegedly following in Ames' foot- steps by betraying secrets to Russian intelligence agents, depositing unex- plained sums in his bank accounts and running up big credit card bills. Such brazen willingness to risk portrayed Nicholson's arrest over the weekend as proof that they had learned their lesson after the humiliating Ames case, some former CIA officials and case officers warned it was too soon to be certain of that. On one hand, the FBI, exercising new counterintelligence powers, caught Nicholson and says it has overwhelm- ing evidence against him, including a surveillance videotape showing him photographing classified documents. The case shows that the CIA is much II "~ 'I' i