OA, t, - - cqw ptw u t1 lar_ :_Y.I. -- yeather ay: Partly cloudy. High 47. Low 31. omorrow: Cloudy. High 48. One hundred nine years of editonz dfreedom Wednesday December 8, 1999 11 !1 U !I IN gg I IN: I IN: III!: I staff member obbed, ,bbed Michael ras aly Staff Reporter A 35-year-old University staff mem- er was stabbed multiple times in her g and had her purse stolen yesterday orning while walking behind the ichigan League. The victim was walking north on a walk between the Lydia delssohn Theater and the Alumni enter toward Fletcher Street sometime etween 7 a.m. and 7:15 a.m. when the uspect approached her from behind nd attacked her. Department of Public Safety Lt. 'esley Skowron said the woman was eleased yesterday afternoon from the niversity Hospitals after treatment for er injuries. DPS is investigating the obbery but has no suspects in the inci- iane Brown, University Facilities nd Operations spokesperson, said the uspect took the woman's purse. Brown vas unsure of the amount of money, the umber of credit cards and forms of ersonal identification stolen. Brown said a passer-by alerted a acilities security guard of the njured woman, who apparently had > n on the ground for several min- The guard then called DPS fficers, who were dispatched at 7:24 a.m. Huron Valley Ambulance transported he woman to the University Hospitals' smergency room. DPS currently is looking for the sus- >ect, who is described as a 6-foot-tall iale wearing a brown coat with a black iood and dark trousers. Brown said she could not confirm division of the University the vic- im works but said she is not a faculty Tember. This incident follows a similar attack hat occurred Thursday in the park- ng area off Palmer Drive, which is See STABBING, Page 2 pi pledges speak out 4 blow whistle on fraternity hazing SAM HOLLENSHEAD/ Daily Ann Arbor Fire Department firefighter Lea Strickfaden and Mark Lulck of the AAFD talk last night after Strickfaden helped to put out a fire in South Quad Residence Hall. A menorah left unattended in a student's room caused the fire. Menorah ignites fr i n S outh Qu a d r o om dIA0 By David Enders Daily Staff Reporter The Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity's national chapter officially suspended the campus chapter yesterday after a fraterni- ty pledge was injured in an alleged haz- ing incident. A fraternity member allegedly shot the pledge, who is an LSA first-year student, in the penis at close range with a BB gun early Monday morning. The injured pledge was clad only in boxer shorts at the time of the incident. The 19-year-old victim, whose name has not been released, was scheduled for surgery yesterday at University Hospitals. The family has requested that the hospital not release further informa- tion on the victim's condition. The incident prompted other Pi pledges to speak out on initiation rites they endured while pledging the frater- nity this semester. Many of the pledges stated the fraternity practices some of the most brutal initiation rites on cam- pus. Speaking on the condition of anonymity, the pledges discussed activi- ties that took place in the house this SAM HOLLENSHEAD/Daly A fraternity member leaves the Alpha Epsilon PI house, located on Cambridge Road, yesterday morning. semester. Among the activities, pledges said they were duct taped to chairs and each other, and placed into a bathroom for seven hours while members of the housethrew eggs into an open window of the room. Active Pi members declined yesterday to comment yesterday either via the tele- phone or in person on any of the pledges' See PLEDGES, Page 9 By Yael Kohen and Hanna LoPatin Daily Staff Reporters Hundreds of students evacuated South Quad Residence Hall after a fire broke out on the fifth floor of Bush House last night. A Hanukkah menorah left unattended on a paper towel in front of the television caused the fire, Ann Arbor Fire Department Battalion Chief Dave Wilson said. The fire department received the call at 5:49 p.m. LSA first-year student Will Lamphear was on the fifth floor at the time the fire ignited. "A girl ran to ask me if an (residential adviser) was around," he said. "I saw smoke coming out of her room. We got the RA on the floor above us and I was leaving when the alarm went off." LSA first-year student Sarah McGuire, who lives across the hall from the room where the fire began, said the room's smoke alarm rang for five to seven minutes before black smoke began to seep underneath the door into the hall. The fire damage was confined to the room where it began, but heavy smoke damaged the hallway, Wilson said. Damage from the fire is estimated to be nearly $2,000. Even though the fire was contained on the fifth floor, carbon monoxide levels were high throughout the entire building, Wilson said. Firefighters in the building used fans and opened windows in an attempt to reduce carbon monoxide levels and allow students to re-enter to the building. Students were allowed back into the residence hall at 6:38 p.m., but fifth floor Bush house remained closed for a few minutes longer. University Facilities and Operations spokesperson See FIRE, Page 9 bookseller files to dismiss suit NACS charges false advertising y Jewel Gopwanl ily Staff Reporter Varsitybooks.com recently filed a motion to dis- iss a suit brought against the online textbook store by the National Association of College Stores, which represents about 3,000 college textbook stores. ynthia D'Angelo, NACS senior associate execu- ti irector, claims Varsitybooks.com damages tradi- tional college bookstores by implying that they over- charge students for textbooks. She also claims the suggested prices arsitybooks.com lists on its Website do not accurate- ly represent the prices of its textbooks. She alleges that arsitybooks.com advertisements that boast up to 40 percent off on textbook prices are false. NACS demands that Varsitybooks.com stops advertis- ing the percentage it claims to discount from its distribu- tor's suggested price and asks that the company retract what NACS calls "false and misleading advertising." Jon Kaplan, Varsitybooks.com vice president, said he could not discuss the number of books Varsitybooks.com discounts at 40 percent. Claiming that the case is "completely without merit," Kaplan said, "Varsitybooks.com has advertised that we sell textbooks at up to 40 percent off and we will continue to advertise that we sell textbooks at up to 40 percent." Varsitybooks.com works directly under the book distributor Baker & Taylor, which Kaplan said deter- mines the suggested price listed on its Website. John Bataglino, manager of Michigan Union Book Store, said although he welcomes the competition, he expects the store to lose about 2 percent of its profits. Bataglino also said online textbook stores have affected the industry as a whole by the same extent. "All indications are that it will be 4 percent next year and 8 percent after that." Varsitybooks.com, which recently has filed to go an initial public offering with the Securities and Exchange Commission, went online in August 1998. Since its first selling season, Varsitybooks.com has sold textbooks to more than 2,400 students at schools across the nation. "Historically, there has been very little competition See BOOKSELLER, Page 7 SAM HOLLENSHEAD/Daily Richard Joel (left) and Edgar Bronfman (center) talk with William Berman after Bronfman, chair of the Hillel international Board of Governors, addressed an audience at the campus Hillel Foundation yesterday. Bronfman calls for JewI Sh *retnaiM*,osesance I1 Students, staff caw about bird problem By Jeannie Baumann Daily Staff Reporter Before the first snow fell in Ann Arbor this semester, campus sidewalks - especially near Angell Hall and Betsey Barbour Residence Hall - were already covered in white from excessive crow droppings that have hit campus. According to University Pest Management Specialist Dale Hodgson, about 8,000 crows occupy Ann Arbor's trees. "Around mid-afternoon, they'll start to flock around the golf course and they'll fly over to the cemetery. Then just about dusk, they'll start to move toward Central Campus," he said. Bird curator and zoology Prof. Bob Payne explained that the crows prefer the State Street area because "the trees are high and there are lights around." Payne also said the crows prefer the area for safety reasons. "They sleep up in the trees at night," he said. "From that altitude, they can See CROWS, Page 7 By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter Edgar Bronfman, chair of the Hillel International Board of Governors, envi- sions a Jewish renaissance, "symboliz- ing a rebirth of our Jewishness that somehow we had lost in the last three or four generations," he told an audience at the campus Hillel Foundation last, night. "Now we're asking that 100 percent of Jews know something about their Judaism," he said. Bronfman, who also serves as chair of the World Jewish Congress and chair of media and beverage conglom- erate Seagram Co., is "the most famous Jew in the world," said Richard Joel, president and international direc- tor of Hillel. Through the World Jewish Congress, Bronfman has worked to return as much as $7 billion in Swiss bank account assets taken from Holocaust victims. President Clinton awarded Bronfman the Presidential Medal of Freedom in August. Though he didn't lose any family members during the Holocaust, Bronfman said he regards Swiss repara- tions as a personal cause. "Six million Jews died and I consid- er them part of my family," he said. Bronfman and Joel have visited more than 50 Hillel centers on campuses across the country. Their hope is to instill in college students the need to perpetuate belief in and knowledge of the Jewish faith, Joel said. "If you can't articulate why this Jewish story should go on, you have to See BRONFMAN, Page 9 Labor activists set Feb. 2 ultimatum By Michael Grass Daily Staff Reporter Seven members of Students Organizing for Economic Equality met with University President Lee Bollinger yesterday, giving him a ultimatum to sign onto a student-organized code of labor ctndAarrc fnr the rnlleaiate annarel industrv by In October, Brown University was the first school to become part of the WRC. A number of smaller schools, including Middlebury College, Haverford College and Bard College, are considering becoming WRC members. But SOLE member Peter Romer- Friedman, an LSA junior, said the WRC needs a larg- er school such as the University of Michigan to sign office in the Fleming Administration Building. "We hope the University will make the right decision before we have to resort to some sort of civil disobe- dience." Although Bollinger did not commit to the WRC yesterday, SOLE members said they were hopeful that the administration would join the WRC alliance by the I - I