2 - TheMichigan Daily - Wednesday, March 8, 2000 NATION/WORLD Loss of license may orce closing ALA.STARMardini filed a lawsuit against the city during A LL STAR the closure on the grounds that the action was Continued from Page 1 unlawful. cooperation " Mardini said he feels the impetus for the clos- The All Star Cafe closed for two weeks after a ing was the police department's dislike of some fight there in September when glass was thrown of the club's patrons. at performers on stage. An over-capacity crowd The city is expected to respond to the lawsuit of nearly 400 people spilled out of the club and this month, and Mardini said he believes the cur- -into the street. rent trouble is a result of the litigation. The melee was broken up by police and firefighters. "This is 100 percent a result of suing the city," Firefighters who were at the club during the Mardini said. "This problem has been going on incident reported possible zoning violations to since last September. Now they're using other the city, wh'ch then closed All Star. things." V It reopened in October with new management Mardini said his club is responsible for fewer and food service, to comply with its zoning as a violations than police claim. restaurant. "All we have is one ticket, for selling to a Sharon Kirttman and Bill Zeruld walk in front of the All Star Cafe on South University Avenue yesterday. The cafe's liquor license may not be renewed. minor," adding that the minor was using a fake ID. "We tried to work with the police, but they want us to do some stuff we aren't ready to do." I ATTENTION UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE STUDENTS ° WORLDWIDE ~ IE TERC TOUR Continued from Page i Delgado said Michigamua wants to clear up the racist association that the SCC has placed with the society. "We feel the most pertinent issue now is the amount of slander and mis- information the SCC has provided for the community," he said. "Simply, we are not racist, yet the SCC continues to claim that this is an issue of racism,. Reilly said he believes the SCC has presented an objective consideration of the events during the tower tours. "We tell them our side, but we tell them to formulate their own opinions," he said. "The space really speaks for itself, The truth ultimately speaks for itself." Reilly sent Delgado an e-mail letter Sunday asking him to answer SCC"s request for Michigamua to change its name. "Michigamua is working on the issue and everything that has heen deemed offensive with the SCC We are not working with the SCC," Delga- do said, Delgado said SCC needs to retract the racist associations they have alleged against Michigamua before the two groups can work together toward a Frustrated and disappointed with the University? Need help making sense of your U of M experience? Check out http://universitysecrets.com PURSUE JOB AND INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES THAT SPAN THE GLOBE Campus :h ; rCenter com The world's largest campus job fair '1 77-1 t ~~CFIi am -7 , solution. SCC needs "to share with the cam- pus community that they were misin- formed," Delgado said. "The SCC needs to take responsibility for every- thing they have done." But Reilly said the intent was to cul- tivate change for Michigamua, not to slander any individual members. "If people have been harmed on an individual level, we apologize. We realize this whole thing has been diffi- cult for everybody," he said, Reilly said there is still a history of racism with Michigamua that needs to be changed. "While they might not have been informed of that history, it does not get rid of the fact that they inherited a 98- year-old tradition of degrading a spe- cific racial group and they have intentionally or unintentionally perpet- uated these decisions," Reilly said. "TO say that the organization is not racist is not a true statement." Michigamua members also had their first meeting yesterday with University President Lee Bollinger since Feb 6., the day KCC began their occupation of the Michigan Union tower. "It was not a meeting where we met to find a resolution. It was not a negotia- tion, it was a dialogue," Delgado said. ARBOR Continued from Page 1 also." Most adolescents stay between six months to a year at the center and are released when they are ready to func- tion normally within their families and the community. "We take a victim focused stance in restorative justice work - it is to get kids to be responsible and accountable for the things they've done and when possible, to make direct reparations to their victims," Walsh said. Arbor Heights residents - current- ly nine boys and 16 girls - are housed in the center during the week and allowed home on the weekends. They rise at 5:30 a.m, and attend in- house classes at 7:40 a.m. While some residents attend a full day of school at the center, others attend morning classes at nearby Huron High School. "Every kid is tested when admitted and a decision is made by teachers and treatment teams as to whether we can mainstream them," Richards said. Those residents who attend Huron High School during the morning also attend classes at the center in the after- noon. Patricia Manley, Huron High School's assistant principal and direc- tor of guidance said the scheduling has not caused any problems. "It works out just fine, there haven't been any major issues," Manley said. Classes end by 2:10 p.m. leaving time in the afternoon for doing homework and attending therapy sessions. Volunteers from campus outreach groups work with the resi- dents in the afternoons through tutoring and mentoring, aiding in their rehabilitation. "The idea is to repair their relation- ship with their community," Walsh said. "We are about healing." And while the center aids in the rehabilitation of the residents, those living at Arbor Heights are helping others in return. Today, the center's residents will present a S500 check to Safe House, a local domestic violence shelter. The money was raised through a car wash as part of their attempt to give back to the community. COURSES Continued from Page 1 based on the Science One Program at the University of British Colum- bia. "It's much more scaled down than the UBC program," Becker said. The Science One Program is a first- year, interdisciplinary life sciences program, which accepts about 70 stu- dents a year. ACROSS THE NATION Clinton asks lawmakers to pass gun law WASHINGTON - Complaining that Congress "has kept the American peo- ple waiting long enough," President Clinton urged lawmakers yesterday to break an eight-month deadlock and require background checks on gun show sales. But Senate Republicans reacted cooly to Clinton's plea. "We are poles apart," said Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), chairman of a House- Senate negotiating committee charged with writing a compromise juvenile ju- tice bill containing gun control provisions. Clinton called on Congress to pass a gun bill by the April 20 anniversary of the Columbine High School slayings a year ago. "How many people have to get killed before we do something?" he asked. A week after the fatal shooting of Michigan first-grader Kayla Rolland, Clin- ton met privately with the 6-year-old girl's mother, Veronica McQueen. In a tele- vision interview earlier, McQueen said, "I just don't want to see another parent have to bury another baby over this, over something that is preventable, some- thing that is very, very preventable." With election-year politics clouding Congress' agenda, Clinton summoned the leaders of the House-Senate conference committee led by Hatch. Last year, the Senate voted to institute 72 hour background checks on gun show sales, but t House rejected that provision when Republicans complained it was too strict ar some Democrats complained it was too weak. Oklahoma bomber Jones denied the allegations. "Attacks on former counsel are requests new trial the price any lawyer pays when he agrees to represent a defendant in a DENVER - Timothy McVeigh death case," he said. asked a federal judge for a new "Personal and professional trial in the Oklahoma bombing attacks - no matter how false, yesterday, claiming his lawyer untrue and misleading - are p' leaked inflammatory stories about for the course," he said. him to the media, including a pur- ported confession from him, 4±,UUU Jscar baliots In court papers, McVeigh also accused defense attorney Stephen discovered missing Jones of promoting a questionable BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. - Ten theory about foreign terrorists to mailbags with all 4,000 Oscar ballots stoke interest in his book about the were missing yesterday in a real Hol- case. lywood whodunit for Academy In addition, Jones allegedly Awards executives, a distinguished failed to disclose to McVeigh that accounting firm and the Postal Ser- he was close friends with a family vice. whose daughter was killed in the Part of the mystery was solved in attack. the early afternoon when postal "Repeatedly, throughout the time workers found two of the missing that Stephen Jones represented Mr. sacks, Academy of Motion Picture McVeigh, the mass media reported Arts and Sciences spokesman John inflammatory stories based on Pavlik said. information supplied by the They had been hauled from the defense," McVeigh's attorney on 90210 post office to a bulk mail appeal, Dennis Hartley, said in warehouse in South Central Los court papers. Angeles. AROUND THE WORLD Kosovo civilians very many injured, especially French soldiers." peacekee prs hurt About four to five grenades exploded. Twenty Serbs, 16 French KOSOVSKA MITROVICA, peacekeepers and four ethnic Albani- Yugoslavia - Sixteen French peace- ans were injured in the fightir keepers and 24 civilians were wound- according to Lt. Col. Patrick Chanli- ed yesterday when a street fight au, another spokesman for the French escalated into a fiery battle in this eth- peacekeepers. A seventeenth peace- nically divided town, another sign of keeper was injured in a separate inci- the difficulties NATO faces in easing dent, he said. tensions in Kosovo. Two rockets later hit a high-rise Mordechai resigns apartment complex, in the northern, Serb-held part of Kosovska Mitrovi- due to investigation ca, where dozens of ethnic Albanians __ had recently been resettled by NATO JERUSALEM - To his admire, peacekeepers. An apartment on the Yitzhak Mordechai is Israeli machis- seventh floor of one building was mo personified, a gruff war hero who damaged, but there were no injuries. always fought on the front lines. Earlier in the day, a fight between a Yesterday, Mordechai, a one-time Serb and an ethnic Albanian sparked a contender for prime minister, took a brawl, a French spokesman said. Then leave from his job as transport minis- shots were heard. ter after police announced they were "That created panic," said Lt. investigating a complaint that he sexu- Matthieu Mabin, a spokesman for the ally assaulted a young employee. He French peacekeepers. "Hand grenades denied the allegation. were thrown, we don't know from whom or from where ... but it created - Compiled from Daily wire report NO b *1fi: lb The Michigan Dally (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fail and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336: Opinion 764-01 Circulation 764-0558; Classified Advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554: Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaily.com. EDTOIA SAF.. M .e , n Eitorin h NEWS Jewel Gopwani, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nick Bunkley, Michael Grass, Nika Schulte, Jaimie Winkler STAFF: Lindsey Alpert, Jeannie Baumann. Risa Berrin, Marta Bril, Charles Chen. Anna Clark, Adam Brian Cohen, Shabnam Daneshvar. Sana Danish, Nikita Easley, Dave Enders. Jen Fish. Josie Gingrich, Anand Giridharadas. Robert Gold. Krista Gulio, David Jenkins, Elizabeth Kassab. Jodie Kaufman. Yaei Kohen, Lisa Koivu, Karolyn Kokko, Dan Krauth. Hanna LoPatin, Tiffany Maggard. Kevin Magnuson, Caitlin Nish, Kelly O'Connor, Jeremy W. Peters. Katie Plona, Jennifer Sterling, Shomari Terrelonge-Stone. Jennifer Yachnin, Jon Zemke. CALENDAR: Jaimie Winkler. EDITORIAL Emily Achenbaum, Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Ryan DePietro, Nicholas Woomer STAFF Ryan Blay, Michelle Bolek. Kevin Clune, Josh Cowen. Chip Cullen. Peter Cunniffe. Seth Fisher. Lea Frost. Jenna Greditor, Kyle Goodridge. Ethan Johnson. Heather Kamins. Molly Kennedy, Jonathan Kinkel, Cortney Konner, Jeffrey Kosseff, Thomas Kuijurgis. Erin McQumn. Del Mendez, Camille Noe, Elizabeth Pensler, Erin Podolsky, randen Sanz, Jack Schillaci, Jim Secreto, Jeb Singer, W ilSyt Katie Tibaldi. Josh Wickerham. Dave Wallace, Paul Wong. SPORTS David Den Herder, Managing Editor SENIOR EDITORS: Chris Duprey, Mark Francescutti, Chris Grandstaff, Stephanie Offen, Jacob Wheeler NIGHT EDITORS: Geoff Gagnon. Raphael Goodstein. Arun Gopal, Michael Kern, Ryan C. Moloney. Uma Subramanian STAFF: T. J. Berka. Rohit Shave, Sam Duwe, Dan Dingersrn David Edelran, Sarah Ensor. Rick Freeman Brian Galvir, Ron Garber. Richard Haddad, David Horn. Josh Kleinbaum. Dena Krischer. Andy Latack, David Mosse. Jeff Phillips. David Roth, Jon Schwartz, Benjamin Singer, Jeb Singer, Joe Smith. Brian Steere, Dan Wiliams. ARTS Christopher Cousino, Managing Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Gabe Fajuri, Chris Kula WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Toyin Akinmusuru, Jeff DOuchniak SUB-EDITORS: Matthew Barrett (Film), Jenni Glenn (Fie/Performirg ArtsI Ben Goldat inC(Bookst Calun Hall (TV/New Medial John Uhl (Musicl STAFF: Gautam Baksi. Eduardo Baraf. Nick Broughten, Jason Birchmeier. Nick FaIzone, Laura Flyer Andy Klein, AnikQ Kohon, Jacari Melton, Lane Meyer. Joshua Pederson. Erin Podolsky. David Reamer, Aaron Rich. Adlin Rosh Neshe Sarkozy, Jim Schiff. David Victor, Ted Watts. PHOTO Louis Brown, Dana Lnnane, Edit ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Sam Hollenshead, Jessica Johnson, David Rochkind STAFF Kristen Goble. Danny Kaick, Davio Katz, Majorie Marshall. Jeremy Menc hick. Joanna Paine, Sara Schenclk, Alex Walk Kinitsu Yogacti. ONLINE Toyin Akinmusuru, Paul Wong, Managing Editors EDITOR; Rachel Berger STAFF Aieanora Chmieinici Dana Goldberg. Jenna Hirschman. Vmce Sust. Peter lhou DESIGNER. Seth Benson CONSULTANT: Satadru Pramanik ., -v