One hundred eleven years ofediorilfreedom NEWS: 76-DAILY 0 CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 www~michigandaily.com Friday February 22, 2002 I [VOLexi. Noas . An- # M~y 3. . 202 he N :. 4 1 Personal admissions. *files stored in hallway DalyStf Reporter * Over 40 boxes of confidential paper files, allegedly containing undergrad- uate admissions applications and related materials, were stored in an unsecured hallway in the basement of the Student Activities Building until yesterday afternoon. The boxes had been accumulating in the hallway, which was unlocked during normal business hours for over a week. "It's mainly a matter of space;'said Andrea Williamson, an employee of the * Office of Undergraduate Admissions. "We've put it in the isles in the past" She added that the boxes are picked up when the admissions staff makes arrangements. Most of the boxes were labeled "CONFIDENTIAL WASTE" with black magic marker. Less than an hour after The Michigan Daily inquired about the boxes, they had been removed.. "We don't like the fact that we have to * put boxes in the hallway' Director of Undergraduate Admissions Ted Spencer said. "We don't put them in the trash' Spencer said that the privacy of stu- dent records is a top priority. "I didn't realize we have as much as there is;' he said. "They probably should be in a much more secure area." University employees said limited storage space caused by the legal chal- lenge of the University's admissions policies were responsible for the tempo- rary storage of the boxes. The Universi- ty's race-conscious undergraduate admissions policy was legally chal- lenged in 1997 by the Center for Individ- ual Rights, a Washington D.C.-based law firm. The University is legally required to store all admissions-related materials. "We have warehouses and warehouses of materials," Barry said 'We are required because of the law- suits to save all the materials that come i," University Deputy General Counsel Liz Barry said. "In the past those records would have been destroyed' *The admissions office received over 23,700 applications for 5,400 spaces in the incoming freshman class last yea "For us, space is a real issue," Spencer said. "Its a very busy place ... a lot of paper and things need to be stored' According to admissions officials, it . is currently the busiest time of year for their office. "There's a process ... during peak times it doesn't work as well as we would like" Spencer said. Federal Law requires the Universi- ty to protect the privacy of student records. The University's policy on student rights and student records requires that the University obtain a . tudent's written permission before *releasing their records to anyone out- side the University. Spencer said the admissions office would work to solve the problem. "It's not as secure as we would like. ... We will make every attempt to be more vigilant," he said. Aibright. U.S. not the', cause of Iraqi starvation By Louie Molziish and Jay Uhler Daily Staff Reporters Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright defended the Clinton administration's record on fighting terrorism and Iraqi Presi- dent Saddam Hussein and expressed mild con- cern over President Bush's tactics in fighting al-Qaida and other alleged terrorist groups as well as terrorist-supporting states yesterday Albright, who served as secretary from 1997-200 1 and as the U .S. ambassador to the United Nations from 1993-97, taped an episode of the locally-pioduced "Todd Mundt Show" for Michigan before an audience of about 200 people at the University Business School's Hale Auditorium. Albright currently serves as the distin- guished scholar at the Business School's William Davidson Institute. Meeting Albright at the event was a group of several students holding signs bearing mes- sages, including "No child killers for UM pro- fessor' in reference to the sanctions posed on Iraq by Clinton. Prior to the event the group distributed handouts which say Albright is "wanted by the world community." Responding to a question from the audience which suggested that sanctions against Iraq imposed by the U.S. have caused the death of millions of people, Albright responded that the sanctions are not the cause of many Iraqis' starvation. "It is not the U.S. that is starving the Iraqi people. It is Saddam Hussein who is starving the Iraqi people,' she said. She does favor a change of regime in kraq. Another audience member questioned why the U.S. "walked away" from the people of Rwanda during the 1994 genocide there, in which 800,000 civilians are believed to have died. Albright said she regrets what had hap- pened but does not know how it could have been prevented. She did, however, say they succeeded to some extent in getting the administration to take a more aggressive stance. "I didn't like my instructions,"she said, referring to those she received while serv- ing at the U.N. "I went back to Washington and screamed that they give me better instructions." Albright also expressed caution about Presi- dent Bush's statement during his State of the Union address last month classify'ing Iran, Iraq and North Korea as part of an "axis of evil." "I think that while there is a problem with all of those countries, I don't think they all belong together," she said. Albright's remarks were made while Presi- dent Bush continues his tour of Asia. He met with South Korean President Kim Dae-Jung Wednesday and yesterday met with Chinese President Jiang Zemin. One of Kim's stated goals is to improve relations with North Korea. "We have to be careful with what we say because the North Koreans have a million-man army and the demilitarized zone is 35 kilome- ters from Seoul (South Korea's capital),' she said. Albright, who currently heads an interna- tional consulting group bearing her -name, See ALBRIGHT, Page 7 PATRICK JONES/Daily Former Sdcretary of State Madeleine Abright spoke last night at the Business School's Hale Auditorium. Among her topics of discussion, President Bush's "axis of evil." Detroit Public Schools sick- out unsuccessful Officers in training By Jeremy Berkowitz Daily Staff Reporter The Coalition to Defend Affirma- tive Action and Integration and Fight for Equality by Any Means Necessary was dealt a setback Wednesday in their attempts to get involved in disputes between Detroit Public School teachers and the Detroit Board of Education. BAMN, upset by a recent massive layoff of Detroit School District employees, unsuccessfully tried to organize a one-day sick-out for school employees. Instead, 96 percent of teachers, secretaries and other school work- ers showed up for class. Janna Garrison, president of the Detroit Federation of Teachers, said that the federation did not support the strike, and serves to represent most of Detroit Public School employees. "We were not in support of any I don't know why this issue is important. ... I think it's trying to make it worse... No one wants to go on strike."- - Kathleen Bostick Fifth-grade teacher, Atkinson Elementary School type of work stoppage, we denounced it, we would be in school ... educating our children," Garrison said. Garrison also said that flyers pro- moting the sick-out that were post- ed in Detroit schools a few weeks ago did not give any indication into what organization was behind the stoppage. On Tuesday, Garrison said she found out about BAMN's involve- ment, which she says clashes with the goals of her union members. "We have an agenda, the Detroit Federation of Teachers. Their agen- da is different from ours," she said. Kathleen Bostick, a fifth-grade teacher at Atkinson Elementary School, was confused about BAMN's involvement in union dis- putes and if they are actually help- ing the situation. "I don't know why this issue is important. ... I think it's trying to make it worse. ... No one wants to go on strike," she said. The 12 Detroit Public School workers unions, which include the Detroit Federation of Teachers, are currently in the middle of talks with the Board of Education over 320 layoffs issued last month because of See DETROIT, Page 7 LESLIE WARD/Daily Freshmen members of the Reserve Officer Training Corps train yesterday In Nichols Arboretum. Inside: Members of ROTC speak out on current global issues. Page 10. Pearl declared dead b officials More funds needed in, AIDS fight ByMichael Gazdecki *D~aily Staff Reporter Since the identification of the HIV virus in the 1 980s, the concern among global leaders has heightened dramatically over the years as the problem has worsened. Estimates place the total world population that is currently HIV positive to be nearly 40 million. Many of the worst cases are seen in the newly develop- ing industrial nations of Africa. "There are a dozen countries in Africa whose populations have a third to a half of the AIDS facts Almost 40 million people are HIIV positive throughout the world. The United Nations estimates that $7 billion a year is required to help nations plagued by AIDS. The U.S. has spent $500 million over the last three years in the international AIDS fight. K In President Bush's latest request, he asked for $900 million next year to use toward helping AIDS sufferers, $200 million of, which will go to the United Nations relief fund. Bender said. "This risks throwing Africa back into a pre- industrial society, which could have political consequences," he added Along with the mounting fear came a call to arms from United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan to begin a world relief fund for countries with poor economic backgrounds help in AIDS prevention and treatment. An estimated $7 billion a year is needed to help RHA discusses campus safetyo Daily Staff Reporter Several new security measures the University 'added to resi- dence halls recently - such as an increase in security person- nel and round-the-clock locked entrances - aren't effective at protecting students, said several members of the Residence Hall Association last night. ."The 24-hour lock-down is the best thing that they could come up with for now, but I don't really see that helping;' said Music freshman and Alice Lloyd resident Anup Aurora. Though most members agreed that new security measures in University residence halls have to be taken, they said they see the current measures as temporary solutions and wanted to look for new methods to combat breaches of security, such as peeping toms, forced and illegal entries, theft and rape. Members said that locking entrance doors is not a solution because students continue to prop open doors and let NEW YORK (AP) - Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal reporter taken hostage a monthI ago by Islamic extremists in Pak-isa ,i ed h State Department < said yesterday. Te U .~ Embassy in Pak- istan received evi- dence yesterday that Pearl is dead,Per the State Depart- ment said. "We have informed Mr. Pearl's family and expressed our sin- cere condolences." State Department spokesman Richard Boucher provided no details on the evidence. Two U.S. officials said, however, the FBI had obtained a videotape purportedly showing Pearl either dead or being killed, and is eval- uating the tape's authenticity. The offi- cials spoke on condition of anonymity. The Journal said it believed Pearl "We now believe, based on reports from the U.S. State Department and police officials of the Pakistani province of Sind, that Danny Pearl was killed by his captors. We are heartbro- ken at his death," the newspaper said in a statement. Syed Kamal Shah, police chief of the province that includes Karachi, told The Associated Press by telephone that a videotape sent to the U.S. consulate in Karachi indicated that Pearl was dead. Pearl was abducted in the port city of Karachi on Jan. 23 after arranging to interview the leader of a radical Muslim faction with purported ties to the al- Qaida terrorist network and terror sus- pect Richard Reid, arrested in December on a Paris-Miami flight he allegedly boarded with explosives in his shoes. The Journal statement, signed by Publisher Peter Kann and Managing Editor Paul Steiger, called Pearl "an out- standing colleague, a great reporter, and a dear friend of many at the Journal?' "His murder is an act of bar- Spa PARL Pno 7