1 LoCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 14, 1996 - 3 Callers report two separate knife attacks caller reported to the Ann Arbor lice Department that his roommate assaulted him Wednesday night in their home on 700 Miller Ave. According to AAPD reports, the caller got into an argument with his friend over a loan. The suspect then allegedly pulled out a small folding knife and made several gestures toward the victim, until finally striking him with the knife. The victim had a quarter-inch cut oss his abdomen and was taken to the emergency room at University Hospitals. The second incident occurred at 3100 LaSalle St. on Wednesday after- noon. A caller reported to AAPD that his sister attacked him with two knives and threatened him several times in the past two weeks. The victim escaped and called the police. AAPD arrested 0 suspect on two outstanding war- ts and is currently investigating the incident. Peeping Tom seen in West Hall A caller reported to the Department of Public Safety that a suspicious man was peering under a stall on the first floor of the women's bathroom of West Hall. W ccording to DPS reports, the sus- pect was described as 5-foot-10 and 180 pounds, wearing an orange ski- mask and a black sweat suit. Several painters who were working outside the bathroom tried to grab the sus- pect, but he evaded them. DPS has no suspects but is currently investigating the incident. ast Quad undry room vandalized An East Quad laundry room was vandalized Wednesday night, a caller reported to DPS. According to DPS reports, the caller reported that she had left the laundry room for a half hour and heard a com- tion downstairs, she found that sev- eal items of clothing, washing machines and walls were spray painted. The damage was estimated at more than $2,000. The symbols that were found are believed to be gang related, reports stat- ed. DPS is currently investigating the incident but has no suspects. Iwo injured on orth Campus A caller reported to DPS that his friend was injured while practicing mar- tial arts Tuesday night at Bursley Residence Hall. The caller reported that his friend had fallen when performing a kick- ing routine and fell on his head, causing shortness of breath and ziness, according to DPS reports. S transported the subject to the emergency room at University Hospitals. The second incident occurred at Pierpont Commons. A caller reported to DPS that she had slipped and fallen in front of Little Caesar's restaurant. The victim broke both front teeth on the sidewalk in front of the restaurant. DPS transferred the *tim to the emergency room at miversity Hospitals. Equipment worth $1500 stolen An employee of Industrial Technology Institute reported that sev- eral items were stolen over the past two weeks from the first floor of the build- According to DPS reports, the items including two keyboards and three electronic adding machines. The value of the items was estimated by DPS at more than $1500..DPS is currently investigating the incident but has no suspects. -- Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Ajit K. Thavarajah. Orientation leader selection process to begin By Susan T. Port Daily Staff Reporter Summer may seem far away, but the Office of New Student Programs has already started plan- ning this year's orientation activities. ONSP Director Penny Reed said her office has begun the process of hiring orientation leaders and diversity facilitators. "We have a great batch of applicants in the pool," Reed said. "We are looking for someone with a great deal of integrity." Reed said orientation leaders are expected to have no other commitments for the summer and to live in a residence hall. Leaders receive a salary stipend in addition to free room and board. Since diversity facilitators can have other commitments, they are not required to live in a residence hall and are paid on an hourly basis. Julie Peterson, director of News and Information Services and a member of the diversi- ty committee, said facilitators have challenging positions. "The diversity facilitators have to face their own emotions and be able to bring a group of students from all over and try to help them process infor- mation,' Peterson said. Reed said many people collaborate to put together orientation programs. "Orientation is a coordinated effort by the ser- year's sessions. vices of everyone on campus," Reed said. "In the coffee shop everyone was able to relax Reed said there is certain information a student and meet each other" Reed said. must learn during orientation. LSA first-year student Gillian Alexander said "We have a difficult avenue on how to provide orientation helped her make friends. the necessary information r le a student must know," 6 Reed said. "There is a orient time-relevant basis on what does a student needs gave me to know. When does the student need to know it? insight What form should the information be in?"-D Engineering first-year Engineering fi student Douglas MacKay said he enjoyed his orien- tation experience last sum- mer. "Orientation gave me a small insight into the beginnings of college life," Mackay said. Last years' orientation was a success overall, Reed said. "Orientation was great," Reed said. "Things behind the scenes went much smoother." The U-Club will once again be transformed into Cafe Wolverine, a temporary coffee shop and ration Y a small )ouglas MacKay rst-year student "I thought orientation united so many different people together," Alexander said. "I had a good time." Reed said last year's ori- entation tried to offer more convenience to incoming Engineering students. "Engineering students spent more time on North Campus;" Reed said. "For the first time there was a permanent CRISP site at the Media Union so the students would not lose time." MacKay said this allowed for easier registration. "I did not run into any problems getting any of my classes," MacKay said. Reed said this year's orientation will be better organized for students. "Last year, orientation began with an academic program for both parents and students," Reed said. "It worked well for the parents but not so well for social area. The cafe was a new addition to last the students." Going down the mountain Senate cigareti LANSING (AP) - Le aimed at curbing cigarett gling by requiring a Mich stamp on each package of smokes won I approval yes- terday in the to ha state Senate. t "Smuggling that is rampant now," said COuh Sen. DougR S o u nt moni Cl e m e n s), sponsor of the bill. " S o m e crooks are get- ting rich off our policy - it's a non-policy," he said, re Alexander said this arrangement didn't benefit some incoming students. "Basically. the parents want to be comforted that the school will be adequate for their children, while the kids do not care to listen to speakers," Alexander said. Due to the increasing numbers of students coming with computers, orientation's format will attempt to answer computer questions this year. "ResComp and lTD will be having comput- er sessions together to answer students' ques- tions," Reed said Peterson said improving orientation comes from evaluating past programs. "We are learning from last year's experi- ences," Peterson said. "We have to ask our- selves, 'What can we take from last year ? - and improve on it."' Orientation leaders raised concerns last summer about the structure and leadership within the programs. Concerns primarily cen- tered around the selection and training of diversity facilitators. "With any problems we may have had, we gave the students the best orientation for the University as possible," said Atiba Bell, who worked as an orientation leader last summer. app01roves :e stamp b ill gislation S15 million next year. e smug- Michigan's 75 cents-a-pack tax is igan tax second highest in the natiop - behind only Wa s h i n g t on would expect state's 81.5-cent tax and ive a deal Michigan is one of only six the House states without a bY tax stamp to d 00 $$$9 by help enforce the med of the taxUlaw. Under the In bill, wholesalers " would beper- - Sen. Doug Carl mitted a 1.5- (R-Mount Clemens) percent discount off the state tax to help finance the mandate, up from the current AP PHOTO ferring to .AP PHOTO James Baily gives his son Chris, 6, a push down an icy hill at Kearsly Park in Flint yesterday. Temperatures in Michigan dipped into the single digits this week. State House vote to ra GOP photo ID voting law Voters may not need to show photo ID at the polls LANSING (AP)- The Democrat- run state House yesterday voted to repeal a Republican-sponsored law requiring Michigan voters to show photo identification at the polls. But the GOP-controlled Senate is unlikely to follow suit, meaning the real battle over the issue is still likely to be Michigan's lack of a tax stamp. The bill, almost identical to one which narrowly failed in December, passed on a vote of 35-1 and now goes to an uncertain future in the state House. The only opponent was Sen. Donald Koivisto, (D- Ironwood). "Tobacco smugglers won a big victory in December," Carl said. "I would expect to have a deal that the House could consider by the end of the month." According to Carl and others, truckloads of cigarettes enter Michigan from lower-tax states, and the cigarettes are sold illegally with- out Michigan's tax applied. Carl has said the State of Michigan is losing up to $150 mil- lion a year in uncollected tax money because of cigarette smuggling, although other officials give a much smaller number - the Senate Fiscal Agency estimates a loss of about 1 percent. That issue may be a sticking point in Carl's search for House agree- ment, in part because the Senate Fiscal Agency estimated it would reduce the state's net revenue increase to $12.2 million. And Jeff McAlvey, legislative lob- byist for Gov. John Engler, said the administration wants to keep the reimbursement at 1 percent. "We think that's adequate," he said. "It is average for what stamp- ing states provide in reimburse- ment." About 63.4 percent of the revenue goes to the state School Aid Fund. The bill would require tax stamps on cigarettes for sale to the public begin- ning Jan. 1, 1998. Anyone possessing -more: than 3,000 unstamped cigarettes wpuld be guilty of a felony punishable Jy a fine of up to $50,000 and five years in prison, with lesser penalties for smaller numbers of cigarettes. of all voters, to make elections in Michigan as free from fraud as possi- ble. He called GOP amendments to set up a task force to study whether election fraud exists in the state, to require checks of voters' signatures when possible and to allow poll workers to ask for lD only when unsure about a voter's "modest requirements" that would not hinder voting. Rejection of those proposals was "disturbing," Sikkema said. "The mes- Democratic Attorney General Frank Kelley has ruled the law unconstitution- al. Since his opinion has the force of law unless overturned in court, it now is blocked. Gov. John Engler supports the law, and plans to challenge Kelley's opinion before a judge. Sikkema said GOP leaders in the Senate told him they will not approve a repeal, but may enact changes similar to ones Republicans tried in the House. fought in the courts. The bill passed yesterday to repeal the new law received sup- port from all 57 Democrats and n i n e Republicans. Forty GOP law- makers voted against it. Democrats argued there is no need to require photo IDs. U U sage we got from the major- ity party today was, 'We don't want to do any- thing at all, we don't even want to look at the issue of ensur- of the electoral ing the integrity process,"' he said. It was the second of 13 items on House Democrats' "90-day priority list" to be approved so far. The first came Wednesday when the House passed an increase in the state mini- mum wage. Republicans attempted to turn the bill into only a semi-repeal of the mea- sure they passed last year as the session and total GOP control of the Legislature drew to a close. Now in the minority in the House, the GOP amend- ments were unsuccessful each time. Minority Leader Ken Sikkema lamented what he said was the Democrats' unwillingness to find mid- dle ground on the issue. The Grandville Republican said his caucus wanted some way, short of requiring photo IDs But Democrats argued there is no need to require photo IDs of voters because no one has produced evidence of fraud in elections. In fact, they say the measure was never intended to prevent fraud, but rather a thinly veiled attempt to make it more difficult for people who tend to support Democrats - such as minorities, the poor and the elderly - to vote. Under the law Democrats want to repeal, voters lacking an ID can sign an affidavit stating they don't have one and still be allowed to vote. But that person's vote would be sub- ject to challenge by a party poll-watch- er. InL AL E;L' L What's happening in Ann Arbor this weekend WE'LL GIVE YOU 10 WEEKS. n..:t J:.... A..,.I:L............ ''7 G AA .. ..n S-! ilr-#ern tl bnlaflnnc PnMMIffaa n V"NVav Building Auditorium 3, 5-11 p.m. U "External Relations committee," Tnn I i-LIr m -%I Inot rnom JrLa m, ir-h firrma to nmun trni f'ra rinaFilo of hpinrn A I