Roberts sleeps with the enemy. See ARTS Page 5. 1£.46 TDAY Mixd sn an d clouds; Hih 5, Low: 10. TOMORROW Increasing clouds; High: 31, Low: 18. Since 1890 Vol. Cl, No.94 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, February 12,1991 ThMcigheanDaiy 'U' releases names for members of .Safety panel by Sarah Schweitzer Daily Administration Reporter The names of the 12 students, staff, and faculty members who will serve on the Safety and Security Advisory Committee were released by Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Gilbert Whitaker last week. The students selected include: LSA junior Peter McPartlin, a fraternity member; Engineering junior *Trudy Robertson; second-year law student Timothy Williams; and LSA sophomore Jennifer Eshelman, a member of Safewalk and the Residence Hall Association. Architecture and urban planning Prof. James Snyder will serve as the committee's chair. Three other faculty members and four staff members will also serve on the committee. The committee's primary responsibility will be to monitor the implementation of the twelve recom- mendations made last March by the University's Task Force on Campus Safety and Security. Among the task force's recommendations were improved lighting, expanded walking services and the contro- versial deputization of campus security officers. Additionally, the committee will receive and make recommendations to Whitaker regarding com- plaints against the University's deputized security officers. Assistant to the Provost E. Kay Dawson empha-. sized that the committee will not be a policy making body, although will be able to propose policy to Whitaker and Vice President and Chief Financial Of- ficer Faris Womack. Dawson said the students, faculty and staff se- lected for the committee were chosen from recom- mendations solicited from the student governments of 17 schools and colleges, deans of specific colleges, Panhellenic Association, Interfraternity Council, and the Residence Hall Association. In the selection of the student representatives, 50 nominations from student groups were received and 9 four were chosen on the basis of their residence loca- See COMMITTEE, Page 2 Engler says education is top priority Governor addresses tax cut, budget in State by Bethany Robertson and Shalini Patel Daily staff reporters LANSING - Gov. John Engler skirted the controversy surrounding his proposed deficit reductions and instead discussed his goal to make education the government's "absolute spending priority" in his first State of the State address last night. Engler also proposed "strong medicine" for the ailing economy by reinforcing his plan to cut property taxes by 20 percent, thereby creating new jobs. "Those who oppose (the tax of State speech cut) are voting to send jobs to other states, to pull our people out of work, and to force thousands more of our fellow citizens either to leave Michigan in search of opportunity, or to remain here, dependent upon the state," Engler said before the joint session of the House and Senate. "This is why I believe if we are serious about creating jobs in Michigan, this legislature will support my program." Engler said his goals for educational reform include See ENGLER, Page 7 Pointing the way First year LSA student, Yan Baczkowski, gives prospective students and their parents a tour of the University "amazin blue" style. Amazin blue is a student organization that runs campus tours. Regents' by Sarah Schweitzer Daily Administration ReporterI Daily News Analysisa In the past year, student disruptions of University Board of Regents' meetings have been so common theyl have almost become regular agendaa items. Yet, while student disruptions doe not appear to be subsiding, regental tolerance does seem to be waning. C After a student disruption of lastr week's regents' meeting, Regent Neal Nielsen (R-Brighton) proposed- suspension as a punishment fort students who engage in disruptivec activity. patienCec Nielsen said after the meeting his primary concern was with the teaching assistants whom he believed to be the instigators and leaders of the disruptions. Being employees of the University, he said, the TA's should accord the regents the same respect an employee in the private sector would give to an employer. Otherwise, their contracts should be terminated, Nielsen said. While the motion was not seconded by any other regents, it did mark a break from the usual regental manner of handling student protest or disrup- tion: quiet tolerance while turning the is wear other cheek and waiting for more "civilized" student behavior to come forth. Last November, when large demonstrations protesting the deputiza- tion of campus security officers were held outside the Fleming Administra- tion Building and 40 students stormed University President James Duder- stadt's office to hold a sit-in, regents reacted by moving the meeting to Chrisler Arena for safety purposes. To the dismay of the student protestors, entry to both the meeting and the public comments session which followed the meeting was restricted. gthin Similarly in January, when Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) representative Corey Dolgon and others interrupted the regents' meeting, the students were physically removed and the meeting was moved up the third floor of the Fleming Building. Public comments were cancelled. Of the six regents' meetings and public comments sessions held within the last year, only one went off without hitch. The other five were disrupted by student protests, interruptions, and die- ins. Yet prior to the February meeting, See REGENTS, Page 2 MSA V.P. Burks prefers 'people over politics' by Julie Foster Daily MSA Reporter Many students would recognize MSA Vice President Angie Burks standing near a podium with a mi- crophone in front of the many dep- utization or anti-war rallies. Few people would imagine her as a Sunday School teacher at the Sec- ond Baptist Church in Ann Arbor. Indiana - a small midwestern town. She said she was very driven by her successful family, starting with her grandmother. She said her grandmother had to sneak to school in Kentucky to evade the segregation laws. "She wanted to be a business woman and see more Black women in power in Louisville." Eventually, she started Burks Enterprise, which is composed of many different companies. Burks said her grand- mother has appeared in Money Magazine, Black Enterprise, and was invited to the White House during the Carter administration. The motivation to succeed passed to the next generation. Her father, after being told he would never be anything more than a plumber, became a Colonel in the military and is now the Associate Director of Intercollegiate Athlet- ics. Her mother is the Director of personnel for a marketing company covering the entire North Ameri- can continent. "There is a lot of pressure for success in my family. It was diffi- cult sometimes. I think that is why I'm such a spiritual person," Burks said. Like her parents, Burks said she fights racism by channeling her anger into a motivation to succeed. She said one man made a racist comment to her when she was a child. She said she responded by trying hard to be nice to him and, "ten years later that same man was telling everyone to vote for Angie Burks" in MSA elections. Burks tries to convey these feelings to children in her Sunday school class. "Sunday school is re- ally important because we not only have the basic type of educa- tion... but we have that combined with the teaching of ethics, morals and values," she said. Burks said she enjoys working with people to help them improve their lifestyles. She also worked in a drug rehabilitation center in De- troit. "All they needed was some- one to tell them that they were good people. Eventually, they started to believe it." She said the highlight of her week was when she could make one of the inmates smile. Because Burks is so active on campus, she says she has little time to "sit down and enjoy life." She said one thing she does like to do is "dance in front of the mirror to the Supremes or Marvin Gaye." She also likes to make people laugh. "If I was real rich I think I would be a comedian," she said. Instead, Burks said her goal is simply "to improve the quality of life for a population... in terms of things that I see as being ne- glected" such as education, sub- stance abuse, and homeless people. Weather aids U.S. air war in Gulf DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia (AP) - U.S. and allied jets stepped up the air war yesterday due to brightening skies with hundreds more bombing runs against Iraqi targets, while Presi- dent Bush said that he will hold off a bloody ground war against Iraq for now. Better weather yesterday en- abled air commanders to mount 2,900 sorties over 24 hours. The U.S command said 750 missions were directed against Iraqi posi- tions in the Kuwait theater, includ- ing 200 against the dug-in Repub- lican Guard, the Iraqi army's elite units. "We hated to come back, but we ran out of bombs," an exuber- ant U.S. Air Force pilot told re- porters on his return from the city of Basra, the strategic heart of Iraq's defense. Emerging from a White House meeting with Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and joint chiefs chair Gen. Colin Powell, both just back from Saudi Arabia, the president said the air war "will continue for a while." As for a ground offensive, Bush said, "we're not talking about dates." In Baghdad, the government announced it was reaching still deeperminto the Iraqi population for teen-age soldiers to help "destroy the e~nemies of God and human- Burks Despite her image as one of the more visible political leaders on campus, Burks says she is more concerned about people and the quality of life rather than political issues. "The main reason why I am so involved is for change and for progression. It's not for any type of self-fulfillment. If I was in for that I would want to go into business, and I want to go into politics," Burks said. Burks was raised in Columbus, - KENNETH SMOLI1/UDaIy Holding on tight Mary Lynn Doletzky lends support to Peter from Dexter, Mich., during the noon skate session at Yost Ice Arena. Mayoral letter on deputization draws criticism from Council