LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 13, 1999 - 3 *RIME "na Student robbed at knife-point struck on head A student was robbed at knife point Thursday on Ingalls Mall, according to Department of Public Safety reports. The woman was approached near the Mdern Languages Building around 2 a.Iw by an unidentified man, DPS .rqports state. The alleged attacker produced a knife and brandished it at the victim, scratching her and taking her money. The subject also struck the female student on the head, causing her to ass out for an unknown length of time. The assailant had left the area by the time the victim regained con- sciousness. After she became conscious, the vic- tim returned home before reporting the attack, according to DPS reports. the victim told DPS officers the man did not sexually assault her. As *tated in a report, the victim was reluc- tant to answer any further questions '*out the attacker's description and injuries she sustained. The incident is under investiga- ti9l. Subjects arrested at carport on gun related charge . the Ann Arbor Police Department arrested two subjects and impounded their vehicle at the Church Street car- prt Saturday on several charges, including one that involved a gun. AAPD requested assistance from DPS at. the carport for the man with a gun. No initial description of the sub- jepts was available, but DPS officers ,Were dispatched and later received a Aiecription of a male wearing blue 'eans and a New York Yankees jack- et. AAPD advised DPS that it had found the firearm and that the incident was under its jurisdiction. OPS gave AAPD officers the assis- tance they had requested on level three of the carport. AAPD filed a report and DPS filed an "assist other agency." ubjects steal parking signs :Three unknown subjects entered the lackentrance of a building on the 1000 1l6ckof Palmer Street on Sunday. They , were carrying parking lot signs with -the posts still attached, according to ,iAPS reports. a. It is unknown what direction the group iwentonce inside the building, and offi- *ers were unable to locate the two men or the woman, DPS reports state. :.-DPS officers located the stolen 'sigs and tried contacting parking .maintenance via radio but received no response. --The officers took the signs into DPS possession. r A report was filed. Baby saved trying ,*o cross road A 1-year-old child attempted to cross a street alone at 1000 Cedar Bend on :f1rsday before being rescued by an Flhamed man, DPS reports state. The good samaritan was going to ring the unattended child to DPS headquarters, but a women from the apartment complex across the street claimed the child. The incident was reported to child rtective services. :Man discovered 1ondling himself n bathroom A male subject was standing nude in the second-floor Mason Hall men's W6throom fondling himself Saturday, according to DPS reports. "The subject was masturbating while siading in an open door stall in the bathroom. -He was described as being between 20 to 30 years old, heavy set and about six "feet tall. -bPS was dispatched, but the subject had left the scene before the officers camne. aA report was filed. -- Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter * Avram S. Turkel. MSU Board of Trustees OKs riot policy By Melissa Burden The State News EAST LANSING (U-WIRE) - The MSU Board of Trustees voted 5-1 Friday to institute a temporary riot policy, effective immediately, that gives MSU the power to suspend rioting students. The board tabled a general off-campus conduct policy at its meeting, but will continue to discuss that possibility. The policy on riot behavior will become perma- nent April 30, 2001, unless the Academic Governance system proposes another policy to the board by that time. It does not apply to students charged in the March 27-28 riot. Trustees Robert Weiss and Joel Ferguson were not present for the vote on the temporary policy. The policy defines a riot as "five or more persons, acting in concert, who engage in violent conduct and thereby intentionally or recklessly cause or create a serious risk of causing public terror or alarm." Temporary policy d fin viot alowsseso of viltr Conduct that violates the policy includes: setting fires. throwing bottles. destroying or defacing property. failing to disperse when directed by police. theft or looting. N disrupting police or safety officials. The policy applies to actions on campus, in local government jurisdictions, on other college campuses and in local jurisdictions adjacent to those campuses. MSU officials can temporarily suspend students who violate the policy. MSU President Peter McPherson said the riot policy is needed immediately "because the campus did not have the adequate authority to deal with a situation like the 27th of March. "I think this is a very focused policy that tells students we are serious about this," he said. Crowds of up to 10,000 people filled campus and East Lansing streets March 27-28, setting fires and causing at least $160,000 in damages. At least four students have been suspended for their alleged involvement in the March 27-28 riot and the disturbance following MSU's loss to Kentucky. Two of those students were suspended for alleged off-campus crimes. Those suspensions for off-campus crimes were allowed by a university policy that allows MSU offi- cials to temporarily suspend students who they believe present a "clear and present" danger to "health or safety of persons or property." In 1996, MSU considered an off-campus code of conduct that would have allowed the university to take action against students for violent behavior, arson, possession of firearms or explosives and criminal sexual conduct. The code was never voted on by the trustees. Trustee Bob Traxler proposed the board only approve the riot policy so faculty members and students could join the discussion on other off- campus codes. Traxler urged the board to "adopt a policy that makes it clear that participating in a riot ... consti- tutes a violation of university policy and is subject to disciplinary action." Art cubed I Kevorkian may spend life in jail for murder conviction PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Jack Kevorkian's nine years out- side the boundaries of conventional medicine during his assist- ed-suicide crusade may end with him sentenced today to the confines of a prison cell. Kevorkian was convicted last month of second-degree murder for giving a lethal injection to a man with Lou Gehrig's disease and putting it on videotape to goad pros- ecutors into charging him. Prosecutors will ask a judge to send the retired pathologist to prison for a minimum of 10 to 25 years. The maximum sentence is life. Kevorkian's lawyers will tell Judge Jessica Cooper that the case shouldn't be treated as any other murder and doesn't require sending a 70-year-old man to prison. The judge can go outside the state's sentencing guidelines for a "compelling" reason and let Kevorkian off with proba- tion. Kevorkian was found guilty March 26 in the death of 52- year-old Thomas Youk. Kevorkian taped Youk's death on Sept. 17 and gave the video to CBS' "60 Minutes," which aired the footage. Kevorkian's previous trials, all on assisted-suicide charges, had resulted in three acquittals and one mistrial, He has admitted helping 130 people commit suicide; this was the first time he stood trial for murder. In his "60 Minutes" interview, Kevorkian threatened d hunger strike if sent to prison - a claim he has not repeated. If he does start a hunger strike, prison policy calls for forced feeding. Assisted-suicide advocates have said they were dismayed at Kevorkian's conviction. But Ed Pierce, who led a failed effort to legalize assisted suicide in Michigan last year, said Kevorkian's tactics iw recent years have not helped the cause. "I think on the whole he's been a pioneer in bringing the issue to our attention. But I don't think he can go on, like he's been doing in the past," Pierce said yesterday; adding that Kevorkian has been known to help people who weren't terminally ill, something most assisted-su. cide advocates oppose. Host defends show in lawsuit JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily Members of Art Matters adorned various campus landmarks with clothing and other objects yesterday, including the Cube, which had ropes thrown over it, in support of the group's display running this week. Computer netork exceeds set bde PONTIAC (AP) - Jenny Jones tes- tified in a $50 million lawsuit yesterday that she treats those who appear on her talk show with respect and didn't try to humiliate a man who killed a fellow guest after a segment on secret gay crushes. "I treat the guests on the show the same way I would expect to be treated if I appeared on the show - with respect," she said. Scott Amedure's family is wing "The Jenny Jones Show," its producer and distributor for Amedure's slaying by Jonathan Schmitz. Schmitz shot Amedure three days after the taping of a 1995 episode that never aired. Amedure's family alleges the show tricked a mentally troubled Schmitz into appearing on an episode, then humiliated him by letting Amedure reveal his crush on Schmitz. Schmitz has said he is heterosexual. On the witness stand yesterday, Jones bristled at claims by Amedure family attorney Geoffrey Fieger that she ridiculed Schmitz before a studio audience in pursuit of ratings and ad revenue. "It's not my intent to embarrass the guests," Jones testified, appearing more confident and assertive than when she took the stand during Schmitz's 1996 murder trial. She is not being sued. As for the show's revenue and ratings, Jones testified: "That's not what I'm thinking about when I'm taping the show" She said Schmitz "didn't seem to be embarrassed to me" after hearing Amedure describe his sexual fantasy involving Schmitz. When asked whether she would find such fantasies offensive, she countered that "it could be exciting." Earlier yesterday, a counselor who treats former talk show guests testified "The Jenny Jones Show" refused his services for a prescreening before Schmitz and Amedure appeared. Schmitz was known to have been, depressed and had attempted suicide four times since 1989. IBM still working on statewide system that would make legislation easier to publish online LANSING (AP) - The plan was to develop a computer network that would make it easier for lawmakers to write, track and print legislation, then put the bills that become law on the Internet for public access. IBM Corp. was to complete the pro- ject within one year for $3.6 million. That was March 1996, and $5.2 million as been spent on the system and it's still not complete, the Detroit Free Press reported yesterday. Although state law is on the Internet, legislator's and their staffs still use an old, unconnected system with almost as much manual labor as before. "We knew two years ago it wouldn't work," said Steve Willis, a computer technician who worked on the project and is now retired from state govern- ment. "The product couldn't function as it was originally intended." House and Senate leaders quietly canceled IBM's contract in February. "We had recommendations it wasn't working," said Sen. Dan DeGrow (R- Port Huron). "IBM felt they couldn't deliver what they promised. They said we changed. some conditions. Both sides agreed the simplest way was to just walk away from it." Mark Nelson, a spokesperson for IBM Global Government Industry in Maryland, said the project accomr- plished some goals, such as the Internet function, and created a ,basis for the Legislature to finish the elec- tronic document network it hired IBM to design. "Once they realized how much addi- tional work was required to satisfy the original goal, they decided to stop the project. We mutually agreed to termi- nate the project; Nelson said. "It's not a question of a failed project" Nelson said it was not uncommon for such a large computer project to bog down. "Often, until you really start doing the work, you don't know exactly what's going to be involved," he said. "It helps to have a clear understanding from the beginning what you want to accomplish and how you want to get there." The system, called the Legislative Session Integration System, is one of a list of troubled taxpayer-funded com- puter projects during the 1990s. In 1996, an audit discovered little to show for $103 million spent on a com- puter system to help track child support payments. The audit reported poor management and overspending, and the work resulted in a system that still doesn't work as intended, the Free Press reported. A computer system for the Family Independence Agency to track welfare cases went on-line last August - three years after the target date. Dianne Odrobina, Legislative Council administrator, said she will meet with House and Senate leaders to decide how to finish the LSIS net- work. She said she will consider using in-house staff, who she said have become knowledgeable about the pro- ject. "The complexity with these projects, the experience of people in these areas are such that there are difficulties, and you have to work through them,' she said. i 1N AN CMPN_ S 1 TKEfYAR atsTO PRbOVE YOU CAN _"LEAD*** 1:. :; II :: , ; - ^," v Ce "°. aa 'a 'FE- -' n ... a'cF'v, , "yv " z x " .: 'f" ,_. ip V: : a 4 t ^ AIiL2 AR I What's happening in Ann Arbor today