nelan One unded eeve yeas oedz~orfilfred- "Uil NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 ww. michigandaily.com Wednesday April 17, 2002 I . CA A, @20 Tg D. Police may deter potential runners I By Jeremy Berkowitz and Karen Schwartz Daily Staff Reporters A Naked Mile crackdown last year that resulted in a dramatic decrease in runners left many students and law enforcement officials speculating whether the 17-year-old tradition will die this year or whether a revival is in the works. "I'm not sure if it's a dead tradition. ... I think maybe we'll have a couple years where it's gonna be smaller and then maybe there'll be some peo- ple who'll want to bring back the tradition," Engineering senior Suzanne Martin said. Ann Arbor Police Department spokesman Sgt. Michael Logghe said the danger of the Naked Mile has grown in recent years. "What Campus frustrated b search process By Sh non Pettypiece and Kara Wenzei Daily Staff Reporters started as a prank has grown into something that has gone out of control," he said. Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Diane Brown said DPS and AAPD are collabo- rating to patrol the event. DPS will patrol cam- pus locations, while AAPD plans to stay primarily on South University Avenue, east of Cava Java. Construction areas around campus will be fenced off from students, and the West Engineering Arch will also be closed. Brown added enforcement officials from around Washtenaw County plan to be present in Ann Arbor tonight as a part of a state task force to crack down on drunk driving. "You could see a police car from one of these outlined jurisdictions on Washtenaw Avenue enforcing liquor law violations," Brown said. Though the number of participants decreased last year, arrests increased from previous years. Brown said 16 people were arrested last year by DPS and AAPD combined - nine for inde- cent exposure, five for disorderly conduct, one for a minor in possession of alcohol citation and one for marijuana possession. Logghe said similar enforcement tactics plan to be utilized this year. He said the AAPD and the University issued strong concerns for the safety of students, particularly with a growing number of pedophiles in recent Naked Mile crowds. But he conceded that in the end it is up to the runners whether the event will take place. . "We're concerned with, obviously, what hap- pens on the city streets," Logghe said. "I think we've gotten the word out. It depends on whether people decide to take our advice." Student reaction to the crackdown is mixed. Many students say they see the pedophiles as the Mile's main problem and believe law enforcement officials should be paying more attention to unwanted audience members rather than the runners. "I think there has been a lot of people with video cameras, that should be a problem," Kinesiology senior Bradley Kenna said. "I think that should be banned and just let people have their fun." LSA junior Edgar Zapata, former co-chair of the MSA Community Service Commission, said the main problem with the Naked Mile is the recent commercialization of the event. The police should pay more attention to out-of-towners, he added. But he said he understands law enforce- ment officials cannot endorse an illegal activity. "The police department is not going to form a line to that because that would show indirect- ly," Zapata said. Last year's Naked Mile was broadcast over the Internet. To preserve the tradition and avoid arrests, some students are trying to come up with alternative versions of the mile. Engineering sen- ior Nicholas Noreus said he is hoping to establish the "skivvy mile" which would have students running in their underwear. While Brown said it is difficult to tell what officers' reaction would be to this alteration, some students responded with disgust or apathy to the idea. "I don't really think (running in underwear) would be the same. I think that'd be almost worse than not having it because it wouldn't be tradi- tion. It would just make it obvious that the Uni- versity has cracked down and that we're not free to do what we want to do;' Martin said. Students act out funeral procession By Soojung Chang Daily Staff Reporter As the semester draws to a close and the campus begins to empty, members of the University community are express- ing frustration and concern about the confidentiality of the presidential search. "I've heard nothing about the search process. I wish the search committee would give the faculty and staff some information as to where they are, how many candidates they have, are they interviewing anyone ... when will they be done," Dental School Prof Jack Gob- etti said. "I know there has to be some security, but they should be able to tell the faculty something by now." Michigan law stipulates that the Uni- versity Board of Regents must release a list of finalists, but it can have as few as one finalist. The regents must elect the president in public from that list of finalists. Theoretically, the regents could publi- cize the finalists' names and hire one of them the same day. The search committee does not have to release any information about the can- didates besides the list of finalists, Uni- versity spokeswoman Julie Peterson said. The process differs substantially from the last presidential search, in which the regents held more than one public ses- sion of interviews and released all infor- mation on candidates and finalists. The Michigan Supreme Court ruled that universities are not required to dis- close anything more than a list of final- ists during a presidential search in 1999, two years after the University hired former President Lee Bollinger. See SEARCH, Page 2 Students carrying four stretchers draped with Palestinian and Israeli flags representing the victims of the Israeli occu- pation of the West Bank were the focus of a mock Middle East funeral procession that gathered outside the Fleming Administration. Building yesterday. Recent events, including what Palestinians call a massacre at the Jenin refugee camp, inspired the event. Engineering junior Ashraf Zahr said the main purposes of the procession were to heighten awareness about the loss of both Israeli and Palestinian lives, and to show the University administration that they want them to end backing of corpo- rations that support the occupation. DAVID KATZ/Daily Zahr said students on other college campuses across the Students and members of Students Allied for Freedom and Equality march around the Fleming Administration Building yesterday during a mock country are also trying to get their administrations to divest funeral possession representing victims of Israeli occupation in the Middle East. See RALLY, Page 5 30 w1nners named at pwood Aads By Tyler Boersen Daily Staff Reporter Following a tradition of excellence, more than 30 students were inaugurated yesterday into a unique brotherhood of distinguished Hopwood Award winners including "Death of a Salesman" playwright Arthur Miller and "Star Wars" screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan. "This is the oldest and best known series of writing prizes in the country and it is a very good indicator of future success," said Eng- lish Prof. Nicholas Delbanco, director of the Hopwood Awards Program. Music freshman Andrew Horowitz said he was stunned when he won his $3,000 award for short fiction and was excited as he looked back on a childhood spent in remedial reading class- es. As one of two freshman to win, he said the award has been especially encouraging. "It was very unexpected, and it was bigger than any award I won for music. It made me kind of think twice about just pursuing a music career," Horowitz said. Rackham student Ava Justine Pawlak said she was a little overwhelmed with her two awards in graduate short fiction. She hopes her winnings will allow her to spend the summer working on her writing rather than at a job. "I don't normally win things," she said. Among other big winners, LSA senior Corey Michael Madsen won three awards totaling more than $11,000, and Rackham student David Morse earned three awards totaling $8,500. The ceremony included a lecture from Univer- sity alum and previous Hopwood winner Edmund White on "writing gay." White "It was very unexpected, and it was bigger than any award I won for music. It made me think twice about just pursuing a music career. -Andrew Horowitz Music freshman and $3,000 Hopwood Award winner described his attempts at writing fiction with a homosexual theme before the gay liberation movement began in 1969. His works, including an off-Broadway play that won a 1962 Hopwood, were often trounced in newspaper reviews. White said he hopes the award will help to embolden the winners in "this struggle of a writer's life." Awards are presented in several areas includ- ing drama, screenplay, essay, novel, short fic- tion and poetry. Entries in each area are judged by two nationally recognized authors and prizes ranged from $1,000 to. $7,000. The Hopwood Awards were created through the will of University alum Avery Hopwood, who bequeathed one-fifth of his estate for the encouragement of creative writing at the Uni- versity. MSA offers free shuttle to airpor By Tomlsiav Ladika Daily Staff Reporter Resolutions establishing a free bus shuttle for students this week to Detroit Metropolitan Airport and supporting Ride to Remember 9/11 were passed last night at the final Michigan Student Assembly meeting of the winter term. MSA approved the allocation of $2,400 - half of which pays for a security deposit and will be reimbursed - to cre- ate a free shuttle that will pick up students at the Michigan Union, Hill area and Bursley Residence Hall and transport them to Metro. The bus will leave the Union at noon tomor- row and Friday, and at 7:30 a.m. Saturday and weekdays during finals week. MSA President Sarah Boot said the shuttle, which will transport up to 30 students at a time with one piece of lug- gage, can "have a huge impact for the students who are able to use it." Engineering junior Elliott Wells-Reid, who organized much of the project, said MSA hopes to encourage the administration to pursue the creation of future shuttles dur- ing Thanksgiving and Winter breaks by proving that a sig- Sing measong Powell attempts to expand withdrawal JERUSALEM (AP) - Secretary of State Colin Powell, struggling for progress at the end of a frustrating trip to the Middle East, pushed Israel yes- terday to expand its withdrawal from the West Bank and sought fresh assur- ances from the Palestinians to stop vio- lence. Powell also raised prospects of a peace conference in the United States that would accelerate the political process, one that President Bush and Powell have said must produce a Pales- tinian state. "I think we are making progress and are looking forward to making more progress in the next 24 hours," Powell said. But Israeli forces moved into a West Bank town and three villages near Jerusalem and imposed curfews as part of a high security alert timed to Israel's Independence Day. Palestinians condemned the new incursions. But Powell has tempered his public calls for a total and quick military departure now that Israeli Ramallah and Bethlehem within a week. In any event, Israeli officials said the withdrawal would not preclude efforts to arrest Fuad Shobaki, whom they accused of overseeing attacks on Israel and the abortive shipment of 50 tons of Iranian weapons to the Palestinians. And, the officials said on condition of anonymity, they remained deter- mined to arrest the plotters of the assassination last October of Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi. Powell will have a second and final session with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat today at his rocket-battered Ramallah headquarters, where he's been confined by Israeli troops for nearly three weeks. In his meeting with Arafat, and in a one-hour session yesterday with Sharon at the prime minister's home in midtown Jerusalem, Powell also was taking up the international peace con- ference that is quickly taking shape. He would like to wind up the trip with fresh assurances from Arafat to DAVID KATZ/Daily Blues guitarist Paul Miles plays his guitar in front of , i S ( k L' .... Y ~ r mu a44, /, tta 'i .?: . x ,._P a k .. s d . .3!r