itL 'Today: Sunny. High 62. Low 30. Tomorrow: Sunny. High 65. Low 41. One hundred eight years ofedtonW freedom Tuesday March 30, 1999 ,,. A rstrikes hit Serb police sation PRISTINA, Yugoslavia - A pall of black smoke poured from police head- quarters in Kosovo's capital yesterday, and ethnic Albanians saw it as a sign to hide indoors or get out of town. They knew that by striking at the heart of the police operation that has tu ed much of Kosovo to ruins, NATO hfurther enraged the Serbs. In recent days, a dirty war in the cap- ital's streets has left at least five more prominent Kosovar Albanians dead. NATO said that among them were one of the Albanians' representatives to the failed peace talks and a prominent newspaper editor. NATO's airstrikes hammered central Pristina into the early hours yesterday, destroying the police headquarters and e Ifing the complex in flames. e blaze spread to a barracks where Serbian policemen lived with their families, and many of them staggered dazed, and blackened by soot, into the nearby Grand Hotel. More than 20 families living in the barracks are now homeless, the police reported, but did not give any casualty figures. Massive explosions also struck a R Cross building and the city's den- tai inic. Far from demoralizing police patrolling the capital's streets, the destruction only hardened them. See BALKANS, Page 9 ;'U'target qf sexual harassment lawsuit By YaeI Kohan Da Staff Reporter *lawsuit is scheduled to be filed against the University tomorrow on the grounds that former School of Music student Maureen Johnson was sexually harassed by Music Prof. Pier Calabria during the 1997 fall term and University administration failed to act on Johnson's complaints. Attorneys representing Johnson plan to file the suit against Calabria, the School of Music and administration. iranda Massie, an attorney at Scheff a Washington Professional Corporation, said Johnson will be suing for sizable monetary compensation for a loss of tuition, emotional distress and wounding her relationship with music. University officials said they were unable to comment specifically on the lawsuit because it has not yet been filed. Massie said Johnson and her sup- porters want to take a stand and change Lhway the University deals with iss es of sexual harassment. Johnson has made claims that Calabria, her ensemble professor, sexu- ally harassed her. She also said she was a victim of the administration when the School of Music and the University failed to act, Massie said. But University officials defended their actions."As far as I can tell, appro- priate procedures were followed," said See LAWSUIT, Page 9 A TIME TO REFLECT Elections board asks for revote Speakers unlock. mys teries By Jeannie Baumann For the Daily New research and old stories came together last night at Rackham Auditorium as Melissa Muller, author of "Anne Frank: The Biography," and Nanette Konig, a Holocaust survivor and schoolmate of Anne Frank, spoke about Frank from historical and personal perspec- tives. Muller, who lives in Germany, began working on her book four years ago after reading Frank's diary for the first time since she was a young girl. "I was surprised at how much she had to tell adults," Muller said. "After reading her words again, I became interested in her family background .. What happened in the last seven to eight months before she died?" In compiling her research, Muller spoke to more than 20 people who had connections to Frank. "It was difficult to make them trust me, to make them speak," she recalled. Two major revelations came out of her biography. The first, Miller said, pertains to who betrayed the Frank By Jewel Gopwani Daily Staff Reporter Responding to fraudulent ballots cast in last week's Michigan Student Assembly elections, the MSA Elections Board debated yesterday whether cer- tain students will be asked to recast their votes. The request was prompted by 71 false votes cast Thursday between 5:24 p.m. and 8:03 p.m. on a com- puter in the Mary Markley Residence H a 1 1 Computing Site. The fraudulent votes were discovered T h u r s day eve n i n g. T h e Information Technology D i vi s i o n MSA ly," Bernstein said, adding that all plans will be finalized tonight. If a partial revote is held, the false ballots will not be removed from the election results, Bernstein said. The online voting system can only note which students voted, but not whom they cast their ballots for. Elections Director Andrew Serowik said that at midnight Wednesday the elections board plans to e-mail about 300 students who voted in MSA elec- tions Thursday evening, requesting that they vote again. The online voting site will be open from 12 a.m. Wednesday to 11:59 p.m. Thursday, but only to students who voted during the period in which the false votes were cast. "The students will be asked to only revote in the races which would be affect- ed," by the false votes, Serowik said. Bernstein added that in the MSA elections, students may be asked to recast their votes in the race'for nine LSA seats. Serowik explained that the revote is the most realistic solution to this situa- tion compared to other options the board has contemplated. "We considered things as severe as having an entirely new election," he said. The elections board opted not to embark on a new elections process because this has the potential to result in a completely new outcome. "We want to get the results most true to the past election," Serowik said. Members of the Defend Affirmative Action Party, the Students' Party and See ELECTIONS, Page 9 ES JOHNSONfliU~/Daily Nanette Konig, a Holocaust survivor, gives her perspective on the tragic event last night at Rackham Auditorium. family. Miep Gies, whom Muller said is the last of the "still-living helpers" - someone who helped to hide Frank's family - provided much information that had not been includ- 'ed in Gies' own book, published in 1987. Miller's biography also reveals five previously unseen pages of Frank's diary. "Two of the pages are the alterna- tive introduction to a version of the diary, and others describe the rela- tionship between Anne, her mother and her father," Muller explained. Cor Suijk, a close friend of Frank's father Otto, provided Muller with the excerpts. Muller said the content of the pages "was amazing." When writing her biography, Miller said she wanted to show the humanistic aspect of Frank. "Publicity has transferred her into a myth, a symbol. It has made her the most wanted target of the Holocaust," Muller said. "They're taking the risk See SPEAKER, Page 7 and the Department of Public Safety are investigating the incident. In conjunction with ITD, the elec- tions board will accept the election results tallied before the faulty votes were cast as valid. It will add to that results collected between the point the false votes were cast and the point when all voting con- cluded Thursday at 11:59 p.m., said elections board member Joe Bernstein. Although Bernstein said the elec- tions board has not officially decid- ed on what action it will take, he is certain the board will call for the partial revote. "This has not been decided concrete- UBC lecturer opposes new dean By..J....e.W.n..e. Go on and bang on a bongo By Jalmle Winkler Daily Staff Reporter Former University of British Columbia session- al Gary Arbuckle said documents he found on the University's Website about UBC Dean of Faculty of Arts Shirley Neuman becoming the University's next LSA dean did not describe the Neuman he remembers. After screen- Dailv In-d th ing more than r 100 applicants, the College of Literature, Science and the Arts Dean Search Advisory Committee confidently recom- mended Neuman's appointment to LSA's top post. But Arbuckle, a lecturer, said he cannot believe Neuman is the University's first. choice. He said she broke UBC research com- plaint policy and demonstrated a conflict of interest by getting involved with a UBC inves- tigation regarding research that had been fund- ed by the Social Science and Humanities Research Council Board - a prominent board Neuman served on. Arbuckle's relationship with UBC included his doctorate work for which he won an award in 1991 for presenting the best doctoral dissertation at the UBC that year. But as a result of his constant pursuit of the research funding matter with SSHRC, Arbuckle said Neuman blacklisted him from UBC. Breaking down the complaint According to information Arbuckle supplied, UBC's 1995 policy on scholarly integrity stated that there are three ways to handle a complaint - all of which require department heads to take the initial step and then if they see fit, make a disposi- tion or recommendation to the dean - at which point Neuman would get involved. UBC Law professor and counsel Dennis Pavlich said Neuman followed the correct procedure as it stood in 1996, when the incident occurred. Pavlich said the procedures Arbuckle uses to make his claim against Neuman were amended by the board in February 1997 - so they were different from the procedures in place in 1996. The complaint originated that year when UBC graduate student Sherry Tanaka filed a complaint with the UBC sociology department regarding the ethical practices of Prof. Millie Creighton. Tanaka filed the complaint on behalf of Creighton's human research subjects - an aboriginal people in Japan. Arbuckle said Neuman violated UBC procedure by diverting the complaint from the department head directly to herself. "She did not just violate See DEAN, Page 2 JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily Aaron Jacobs leans against his mom Cheryl as they listen to LSA junior Kwesi Hutchful play drums with a friend In the Diag yesterday. Daily to assess affirmative action attitudes The Michigan Daily will conduct the first comprehensive survey of student opinions on affirmative action and admissions policies at the University. The survey, designed in conjunction with the Department of Communications Studies and the Institute for Social s Research, will be a probability sample of 1,600 University students, selected at random from all cur- rently enrolled University students. Students selected to take the survey will receive an e-mail with the subject heading, "Michigan Daily Student Survey." To ensure all University students are represented, a high level of participation is required. If you receive an e-mail with this subject line, please respond as soon as possible. The survey takes about 15 minutes to complete. Mosher served as dean of women By Yaet Kohen Daily Staff Reporter "You will need a wise and pious matron with such lady assistants as to keep up sufficient supervision." According to "A Dangerous Experiment" by Dorothy McGuigan, this was an instruction given by former Oberlin College President C.G. Finney regarding the admission of women to the University of Michigan in the 19th Century. - and rowdiness and drinking increased on campus, said Education assistant Prof. Jana Nidiffer, a historian at the Center for the Study of Higher and Post- y Secondary r Education. "As young men became increasingly rambunctious, some parents and faculty members were worried about the freedom women had and wanted to enforce more restrictions.a But not everyone agreed with the University's deci- sion to create a dean specifically for women. "Early women woman," according to the book "Women at Michigan" by Ruth Bordin. Nevertheless, University officials decided a dean of women would have to be appointed. But finding this woman would not be easy. The first women offered the position declined. "They expected to be equals in an equal society," Bordin wrote, and hav- ing a dean of women did not represent the equality they were looking for. ,I I