One hundred eleven years ofeditonalfreedom tti NEWS: 76-DAILY. ' CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 wwwmichigandally.com Tuesday April 2, 2002 I V+ui. xli N Ki 'Ann Arbor, Michigan 02002 The Michigan Daily I resident dies Friday By Karen Schwartz Daily Staff Reporter The Ann Arbor Police Department is awaiting the results of an autopsy following the death of 21-year-old Ann Arbor resident Dustin Goodman, who died sometime Fri- day morning at the Zeta Psi fraternity on East University Avenue. Goodman was not a University student, but he was a member of the fraternity. A Zeta Psi alum who wished to remain anony- mous said Goodman had not lived in the house since 1999. The fraternity, which is riot currently affiliat- ed with the University's Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil, held a party Thursday night that Goodman attended. AAPD Lt. Khurum Sheikh said the police received a call from Zeta Psi at about 1:10 p.m. Friday. When police went to the house, they found Goodman's body in the basement. "He could have had a medical problem we didn't know about. There was no obvious trau- ma to the body," Sheikh said. "The autopsy will tell us what it was. At this point, there is no indication of foul play." Zeta Psi member and LSA sophomore Bill Gitterman said Goodman was "definitely up dur- ing the whole party" and "one of the last ones at the party." Gitterman also said that at one point Goodman "separated himself from the party." Gitterman recalled Goodman as a "great guy" with many friends. "He made a lot of friends in Ann Arbor. He probably had more friends than anyone," Gitterman said. Zeta Psi Alumni Association President Michael Hertzel said the organization has a strong policy against drug abuse. "This is a senseless tragedy," he said. "The Zeta Psi alums are very concerned about substance abuse on campus and that's after partying what it looks like." Goodman worked at Jimmy's Sgt. Pepper, a Hertzel added that he has plans to contact the convenience store on East University Avenue. national chapter and said he was not sure if "He had been with me for four years," Sgt. anyone else already had. He said a decision Pepper owner Jimmy Elia said. "So that's a big has not been reached yet as far as further action loss for me, not just of an employee but a friend." because additional information has not been "I walked in, talked to him for a couple of released by the police. minutes, had a drink with him and then walked "The death of someone that is part of a out around midnight," Elia said. He added that fraternity is always a concern and so the he had been to other parties at the house and fact that the police are involved is notewor- that they were not the kind of events where bad thy," he said. "We're cooperating and we're things happened. waiting to hear from them what happened." "Nobody ever got hurt there, nobody ever "I don't know what happened that night," hurt anybody," Elia said. "They're all nice guys Hertzel said. "Its only been four days." and girls that just wanna unwind." Palestinian security camp hit with fire RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) - Israeli forces moved into Bethlehem early today after inside: A wave of attacking Palestin- anti-Semitic senti- ian security head- ment emanates quarters near through Europe. Ramallah with Page 2. tanks and machine guns, Palestinians said, signaling further intensification of an offensive the Israelis say is aimed at stamping out ter- rorism. Tanks entered Bethlehem from two directions, witnesses said, head- ing toward the center of town, where the Church of the Nativity marks the traditional birthplace of Jesus. Witnesses heard exchanges of gunfire a few hundred yards from the church. The Israeli military said forces took up controlling positions in the town and were searching for suspect- ed terrorists and weapons. A state- ment said Israeli forces also searched three Palestinian villages in the northern West Bank. Earlier, the Israelis attacked the headquarters of Palestinian Preventive Security outside Ramallah, firing tank shells and machine guns, Palestinian officials said. They said Palestinian security chief Jibril Rajoub had given orders to the 400 men inside to resist. Palestinians said the building had been set on fire and there was an unknown number of casualties. The battle wound down just before daybreak, they said. See MIDEAST, Page 2 71 "1 U I ° ,m TI U Webber says he did not accept money from Ed Martin Mf sr "F74'A O R ? By Steve Jackson Daily Sports Editor KELLY LIN/Daily the Diag LSA junior Viviana yesterday. Rodriguez views a display at the mock Palestinian refugee camp on1 Diag display shows mock refugee camp Michigan Athletic Director Bill Martin has urged * people to remember that the allegations in the Ed Martin case have yet to be proven. But most people didn't listen. Now former Michigan basketball player Chris Webber has made them take notice - by publicly denying he accepted any money from former Michigan booster Ed Martin. "There's no way in the world that I took $280,000 from someone," Webber told ESPN Clas- sic. "I've said this a million times. We had to actual- ly go to court to testify about it, so if the judge, if the lawyers, if everyone else respected it, I thought it would get out to the media outlets as well. So, no, I didn't take anything." Webber, now a member of the NBA's Sacramen- to Kings, was accused of receiving $280,000 in loans from Ed Martin, who allegedly loaned more than $600,000 to four Michigan basketball players.. According to the indictment, Ed Martin used the loans to conceal the money he made in an illegal gambling ring, which he allegedly operated out of Detroit auto plants. "And in no way do I want to mess up the name of college basketball, especially my university, the University of Michigan, which is the greatest uni- versity ever in the world," Webber said on the pro- gram. "I don't want to put a bad mark on my family's name, so as I said before, no, I did not accept the money. And how can you take the word of a criminal anyway?" Ed Martin and his wife plead innocent to charges of conspiracy, running an illegal gambling ring and money laundering after the two were arrested March 21. These charges led many people to call for immediate action within the athletic depart- ment, but Bill Martin urged patience, saying that any University action would be "premature" at this point. "These are allegations, and we can't lose sight of that," Bill Martin said last week. "Our judicial sys- tem talks in terms of proven guilty, and we're deal- See MARTIN, Page 7 SEconomy looin tyema By Ted Borden Daily Staff Reporter By Shabina S. Khaui Daily Staff Reporter University students received a taste of the latest strife caused by boiling tensions in the Middle East yesterday as they walked through a Diag filled with display tents and mock refugee camps. The displays, which consisted of graphic photos of suffering Afghani, Iraqi and Palestinian people as well as literature on the respective conflicts, drew campus-wide attention. Many of the canvas refugee camps bore inscriptions about real Palestinian refugees. One mock campsite read, "This is the tent of Ali El Khatib. Displaced from Tarshiha, 1948. Re-dis- placedf Khan Y Anoth ment of sands o Israeli o LSAj Equality ize thee as a trib people. "Inten by the I against1 Profiled ProfI: Mike H arnum T V r This was the year photo Prof. Mike Padt Hannum, fresh out of Art School at the University wast asked to begin the photography program in the Resi- 0 - dential College. Since then, he has seen many stu- dents gravitate toward different areas of photography.= Hannum feels it is important to make students feel comfortable with differ- ent techniques and materials. He also believes that you have to be careful not to give students too much to grasp at one time. "It is important to get the student where they want to go in the shortest amount of time.You can't teach them everything." In line with the general philosophy of the Residential College and their focus on small class size and personal attention, Hannum tries to treat each student on a case by case basis and adapt a personal curriculum for the semester to the individual. "The bottom line is the student. Finding out with the student what they need to do and how we are going to get them there is what's important." from Imwas, 1967. Re-re-displaced from bunis, 2001." ther listed a timeline explaining the move- f Palestinian refugees as well as the thou- f home demolitions that resulted from ccupation policies. junior and Students Allied for Freedom and y President Fadi Kiblawi, who helped organ- exhibit, said the mock refugee camps serve ute to the forgotten rights of the Palestinian rnational law has been completely ignored sraelis, and Israel needs to end its terrorism the 3.5 million Palestinians they've been See CAMPS, Page 5 Search for president should end beforeVJuly By Kara Wenzel Daily Staff Reporter Though it remains shielded from the public eye, the search for someone to replace former University President Lee Bollinger, who left to become president of Columbia University in December, is expected to be completed sometime before the summer begins. "I think we're sticking with the plan set forth a few months ago," University Regent David Brandon (R-Ann Arbor) said. "If we can name a new president by late spring, we will have achieved our goal." "Yes, it's gonna happen." University Board of Regents' Search Committee chairman Larry Deitch (D-Bingham Farms) said. The regents themselves comprise the presidential search committee. To aid them in the process, they also appointed a 16-member Presidential Search Advi- sory Committee in December to help review nominees and make a final list of candidates. This committee, made up of faculty, staff, students and alumni, has been at work since January. Rackham Dean Earl Lewis, chair of DAVID KATZ/Daily Tonight, Michigan Student Assembly President Matt Nolan and Vice President Jessica Cash will step down from the positions they've held for the past year. Nolan, Cash reflect on MSAreign By Tomislav Ladika Daily Staff Reporter With an economic recovery underway and unemployment claims slowly sub- siding, consumers feel the most opti- mistic about the economy and their finances then they have in over a year, according to University surveys. As a result, consumer spending attitudes are stronger, the University's Index of Con- sumer Sentiment announced Friday. "Record numbers of consumers expected the economy to improve during the year ahead, and a falling unemploy- ment rate was expected by more con- sumers than any other time in nearly 10 years," Richard Curtin, director of the University's Surveys of Consumers, said in a statement. The survey has received increased attention in recent months as economists and market analysts look for continuing signs that the economy is sustaining growth. Consumer sentiment is widely considered to be a forecaster of con- sumer spending, which accounts for about two-thirds of all economic activity. The Index of Consumer Sentiment rose to 95.7 in March, from a reading of 90.7 in February. This is the highest level since December 2000. The Index of Consumer Expectations, a component of the Index of Leading Economic Indica- tors, increased to 92.7 in March, up from 87.2 a month earlier. John Schmitz, head of equity strategy at Fifth Third Investment Advisors in Cincinnati, said the consumer is vital to the recovering economy. "Sustained growth is what we're look- ing for and the growth rate will be muted. The consumer is still extended from a credit perspective and demand for technology is not expected to match While sitting in his office for one of the last times, Michigan Student Assembly President Tonigt:Michig Student Matt Nolan reflected on his Assernbly PresidentMatt term and said his and MSA Nolan oficially hands the gavel Vice President Jessica Cash's over to Sarah Boot at 7:30 p.m. greatest accomplishment was in AssemblyChambers. converting an assembly "on life- - support" into a governing body responsive to the concerns of students. "The big thing that Jessica and I have done this year is take MSA and make its focus making tangible results for students on this campus," Nolan said. During Nolan's presidency, MSA played a direct role in cre- ating several visible changes on campus, including instituting a Adlk i I