WE ran i k I- -LIL - - Veather ay: Mostly sunny. High 69. Low 54. morrow: Partly cloudy. High 74. One hundred eight years of edantldfreedom Wednesday September 22, 1999 J ,., F adison repares or nval eekend y Jodie Kaufman aily Staff Reporter Wolverine and Badger football fans hare a rivalry that runs deep. In 1993, after the Michigan football earn won at the Badgers' stadium in adison, students rushed the field ausing serious injuries and near-riot * ity. Two years ago, there was a eries of bar brawls in Wisconsin the ight before the Badgers played the olverines. University of Wisconsin at Madison tudent Tim Hong, a member of the ssociated Students of Madison, attrib- tes this violence to the "connections etween the two schools: academic competition), location and athletic ompetition. "Michigan is one of the rare people *my beat us," Hong added. Wisconsin student Jill Cartwright aid. "the behavior is irrational, but fun; nimosities come up and people need nemies." Madison Police Capt. George Silverwood said the behavior is "unusu- al." He describes the pre-game bar brawls two years ago as "a lot of fights, a bit of confrontations between fans and sent disputes." Silverwood said one bar owner recalled the behavior as "get- ting close to a riot." But Silverwood said this year there will be "additional staff in the area, focusing in on behavior." The Madison Police Department is "asking the bars to strictly abide by capacity and serving," Silverwood said. The policies are strict, and Silverwood said "we have a very low to ance for out-of-control behavior. O hope is that people will come here and drink and act responsibly. If they do not, they will be charged - pure and simple:' "Alcohol is the biggest contributor" to the rowdiness, Wong said. MS to ij U Investigation targets possible misuse of assembly funds by Peace and Justice Commission chair By Jeannie Baumann D~aily Staff Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly voted last night to form an investigative committee on the possible misuse of assem- bly funds as well as misrepresentation of MSA by Rackham Rep. Jessica Curtin, a member of the Defend Affirmative Action Party and the chair for the Peace and Justice Commission. "We're not worried," Curtin said, speaking as a representa- tive for the DAAP and PJC. "The committee can investigate and will find nothing. We have been nothing but scrupulous- ly honest and upstanding" The motion to form the committee sparked a heated debate, as more than 50 constituents gathered in the assembly chambers located in the Michigan Union to discuss the issue. A maximum of 15 constituents are normally permitted to speak for 10 min- utes each, but last night only eight speakers were allowed to liV..Sti gat speak - four supporting and four contesting the motion. "MSA is urowing up," MSA President Bram Elias com- mented after the voting. "This was a test of our ability to be fair and thoughtful, while considering passionate and emo- tional arguments. We have a commitment to be fair." Arguments for the formation of the committee centered around the principle of bi-partisanship and delving into the truth, while opposing arguments claimed the motion was merely a political attack. "When there's not an election committee to oversee every- thing an investigative committee is the only objective way not to politicize the event," said MSA Rep. Rory Diamond, an LSA junior. MSA Rep. Erika Dowdell, an LSA sophomore. claimed DAAP has been named in the allegation, but it is actually the PJC that is under attack by the assembly. Several students attending the meeting argued similar points of view as some MSA representatives. LSA Junior Amit Pandya said that forming a committee was not a conspiracy against the campus group Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary, but rather a See MSA, Page 7 use of funds SAM HOLLENSHEAD Daily Michigan Student Assembly President Bram Elias and MSA Vice President Andy Coulouris preside over last night's meeting. Cautious crossings Taiwan quake kills 1,700, rescuers search rubble TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - Two strong aftershocks rocked Taiwan yesterday even as rescuers struggled to reach vic- tims of a more powerful quake a' day earlier that killed more than 1,700 peo- ple. Rescuers scrambled all night and into the daylight yesterday, pressing to unearth thousands of people trapped under the debris of the powerful tem- blor. More than 100,000 Taiwanese were homeless after the 7.6-magnitude quake toppled houses and high-rise apartment complexes across central Taiwan early yesterday. Roads buckled in waves, chunks of land rose up to create new hills, cracked buildings tilted at crazy angles and a bridge was left dangling in the air. By yesterday. 1.712 people were dead more than 4.000 were injured and almost 3,000 were believed trapped in the rubble, according to the Interior Ministry's disaster management center. Aboutfour million households were still without power. The aftershocks that rocked the island yesterday had preliminary mag- nitudes of 6.8 and 6.1, respectively. They were among more than 2,000 aftershocks since Tuesday. "We're pulling the dead out one by one. " - Chen Wen-Hsien Fengyuan rescue official Yesterday's tremors were felt in Taipei, shaking buildings and sending many frightened citizens out of their homes and into the streets again. There were no immediate reports of injury. After the strong aftershocks, state radio said cracks had been discovered at one of the island's largest reservoirs and warned downstream residents to evacu- ate their homes. It said some water was already flowing through the cracks. Taiwan is hit by dozens of quakes each year, but most are centered in the Pacific Ocean east of the island and cause no damage. The earthquake Tuesday was the island's second dead- liest quake - after a 7.4 magnitude one killed,3.276 people in 1935. "We're pulling the dead out one by one, but it's hard to get an overall pic- ture of the number of fatalities." said Chen Wen-Hsien, a rescue official in the central city of Fengyuan, 30 miles from the epicenter. He had to plug his nose with tissue after part of a building began shifting from an aftershock, releasing the stench of a corpse still inside. Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau listed the quake at 7.3 magnitude, a lit- tle less than the U.S. Geological Survey's estimate. The bureau said the quake's epicenter was in Nantou County, 120 miles south of the capital of Taipei, where most of the deaths occurred. Morgues filled up with bodies and officials appealed for donations of bull- dozers, cars, quilts and food. Rescue crews from the United States, Singapore, Japan, Switzerland and Russia were on their way to provide assistance, as was a U.N. disaster assessment team. Taiwan's political nemesis, the com- munist regime in Beijing, offered aid, but with a subtle dig at the island it con- See TAIWAN, Page 2 the ,.a r ,. y : ? ; ' .s , .y University of Wisconsin Police Capt. Dale Burke said fans will be checked for alcohol when enter- ing the stadi- um by a pri- vate security companyy. Many of the company's officers are college stu- dents who are attired in T- s hi r ts rather than uniforms. SAM HVOLLENSHumDay LSA first-year student Randi Levinson crosses North University Avenue near the Natural History Museum on her way back to Alice Uoyd Residence Hail yesterday. 4t wekend Burke said the initial check by the private officers is intended to reduce possible contact between uni- formed officers and fans. f fans are caught with alcohol at the i al checkpoint, the only penalty is to forfeit it, Burke said. But if fans are found with alcohol inside the gates by police they will be "ejected and receive a citation." "This has worked very well:' Burke said. Warmer weather is expected for Saturday "and it will be tougher to smuggle alcohol in, without all the lay- ers of winter clothes." Inside Camp Randall Stadium many ges were made to make it a safer P~e to watch football and avoid poten- tial dangers. Alterations include the isolation of the student section, to reduce the num- ber of fans allowed into the section. Aisles are monitored and must remain clear at all times, and no one in the student section is allowed to sit in the back row of the section to allow police greater access to the section, ke said. Burke said he hopes "the memory of 1993 is still fresh enough that people know what can happen when things get out of control, that bad things can hap- pen to fellow classmates." In the revised stadium safety plan, fans are not allowed to linger between Services adapt campus for student needs By Hanna LoPatin For the Daily Lecture courses are different for Rachel Arfa, who has to watch her professors lips more closely than her class- mates. But, Arfa, who is hearing impaired, doesn't let this slow her down, in fact, it provides motivation. Arfa, an LSA senior, is president of the Hearing Impaired Students Organization, one of the only clubs for disabled stu- dents on campus. They gather monthly, often to watch close-captioned movies. Arfa said the group provides a comfort zone for stu- dents. "You need to know that someone else is going through the same issues that you are," she said. Like other students with disabilities on campus, Arfa has looked to the Services for Students with Disabilities to help make her college experience as normal as possi- ble. SSD's statement of purpose says it is committed to providing free services for disabled students and increasing awareness of disability issues on campus. Arfa said the services on campus are adequate, but the awareness is not. "There aren't enough programs to educate people about dis- abilities," she said. The SSD provides hearing-impaired students with several options to obtain notes for classes. Notetakers, real-time captioning for a verbatim set of notes, sign- language and oral interpreters provide options for a variety of class sizes. Students with visual impairments can acquire taped textbooks or Braille texts. For handouts and workbooks, they can arrange for a reader, professional or volunteer, to help them. SSD will supply tactile maps to assist stu- dents in traveling across campus independently. RECALLING TURBULENT TIMES SAM HOLLENSHEAD/Daily ABOVE: Former University President Robben Fleming speaks last night in the Chemistry Building on student activism of the '60s and '70s. LEFT: The Black Action Movement's massive protest in 1970 halted University classes for 10 days. Fleming speaks on protests By Callie Scott Daily Staff Reporter "Turbulence" is not a foreign concept to college campuses or former University President Robben Fleming. But never was it more familiar at the University and elsewhere than during the tumul- tuous decades of the 1960s and '70s. Fleming, who served as University president from 1968 to 1979 explored this issue last night in his speech titled other campuses. But in the spring of 1965, "it began," Fleming told a small crowd - most of whom belong to the event sponsor, the Shipman Society - in the Chemistry Building. "Overnight, the whole country just came alive and students united," said K.C. Lohmann, a geology professor and the Shipman Society's faculty advisor, validating Fleming's description of the time period. The largest movement on campus, Fleming said, was the first Black Action Movement strike that lasted for 10 days in 1970. The daily protests were non-violent. Community members demanded that the University increase the number of black students enrolled to 10 percent by the 1973-74 school year. The University Board of Regents agreed to these demands and a few I Il