The Michigan Daily -Monday, March 4, 1991 - Page 3 'U' hopes to name 'visionary' CAAS Icy roads cause 50-car pileups but no injuries edirector by July by Garrick Wang Daily Staff Reporter The Center for Afroamerican 'and African Studies (CAAS) is conducting a nationwide search to find a new program director. "The new director, should have vision and the ability to think where CAAS should be in ten Ses, and that's more critical than 'any other set of criteria," said 'Associate History Prof. Earl Lewis, interim director of CAAS. Lewis, who is not an official candidate because of family matters, said he hopes a new 'director will be appointed by July ' the beginning of the University's fiscal year. Lewis said he was named ,interim director last July to replace English Prof. Lemuel Johnson whose three-year, non-renewable term expired in June. Psychology Prof. James Jackson, chair of the search committee, said the committee ,was created in Fall 1989 to find nationally-recognized candidates to fill the vacant director position. We added that no one has been selected to fill the vacancy. Lewis said the committee has not produced a list of candidates because the candidates are nationally renowned in specific areas of African-American studies and nominees' home are working hard to faculty members. institutions retain their Associated Press Lewis said all candidates must meet the specific tenure requirements of the LSA department they would join. CAAS also has a set of criteria the candidates must meet to be ap- proved. 'The new director should have vision' - Prof. Earl Lewis, Interim Director of CAAS The committee will draft a writ- ten list of nominees after the necessary qualification checks have been made. The list of candidates will then be sent to LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg and the LSA Executive Committee:. Lewis said Goldenberg will look at the list, interview candidates, and make a final decision. Lewis added that Goldenberg has taken an active role in filling the vacant CAAS directorship. Goldenberg was unavailable to comment on the search. The dean's office will present the selection to the University's Board of Regents, who must approve -the nomination. Freezing rain caused two 50-car pileups and power outages across Michigan on Sunday, and a sliding car pinned a Detroit police officer against his squad car. State police Sgt. Chris Ignaszak in Detroit said no serious injuries were reported in the two 50-car pileups on southbound Interstate 75 and the Southfield Freeway. Ramps were closed for several hours in the early morningias tow trucks dragged off the remains. "It was awful slippery," said Howard Gibson of Executive Tow- ing in Detroit. "Some were totaled, some were hit several times. Some were able to drive away. It was a mixture of everything. The police officer was struck by a car while directing traffic on the southbound Southfield Freeway service drive about 6:25 a.m. yes- terday, Officer George Anthony said. The officer, who he would not identify, was in stable condition at Mount Carmel Hospital with head injuries and a broken right leg, he said. A Detroit driver was released pending further investigation, Anthony said. More than 40,000 customers scattered across the state lost power beginning Saturday night. Detroit Edison Co. spokesperson Lori Kessler said 30,000 customers in St. Clair, Marine City, Algonac, Macomb County's Macomb Town- ship, Sterling Heights and parts of north Oakland County were with- out power for a few hours. Prof. to aid in repair A2 News under attack Rackham graduate student Eric Thurston joins protesters who marched from the Federal Building to the Ann Arbor News to demonstrate against what they call the newspaper's pro-war views. Baltic republics vote on RIGA, U.S.S.R. (AP) - Lat- vians and Estonians voted over- whelmingly for independence from the Soviet Union yesterday, offi- #cials said after counting more than three-quarters of the ballots. In Latvia, nearly complete vote totals showed 77 percent voted in favor of separation and 21 percent against, officials said. * In Estonia, 77.8 percent voted for independence, election offi- cials said. Officials had hoped for a strong pro-independence vote so the three Baltic republics could march in step away from the So- viet Union. On Feb. 9, 91 percent of Lithuanian casting ballots voted in favor of independence. The Lithuanian government scheduled the referendum after Kremlin forces imposed a crackdown in the Baltics that left more than 20 peo- ple dead. Like the Lithuanian vote, the elections in Latvia and Estonia were mostly public opinion polls and carried no legal weight. They did, however, represent a strong challenge to President Mikhail Gorbachev, who has branded as illegal last year's inde- pendence declarations by the Baltic republics. Gorbachev has scheduled a na- tionwide referendum for March 17 on holding the Soviet Union and its 15 republics to of the Baltics, as w publics of Armeni Moldavia, have s participate in thatN Only 54 percent million people are 33 percent are Rus percent of Estoni residents are ethni 28 percent are Rus< The margin of% pendence was as 1 cent in the Talsu r and on Hiiumaa Is indicating many voted to leave thet In some areas, as the predominant independence gether. Leaders of Sillamae, Estonia, voters stayed iell as in the re- away from the polls or voted no. ia, Georgia and The Latvian election commis- aid they won't sion said 88 percent of Latvia's 1.8 vote. million voters had cast ballots. Es- t of Latvia's 2.7 tonian officials said 83 percent of ethnic Latvians; those eligible voted. sians. Sixty-five "We have dreamed all our lives a's 1.5 million about independence. Our fathers c Estonians and lived in a free Latvia," said Zi- sians. naigur Radjabova. The three Baltic victory for inde- republics were independent for 20 high as 98 per- years before being incorporated region of Latvia into the Soviet Union in 1940. land in Estonia, In Latvia, pro-Kremlin forces Russians had passed leaflets warning a "yes" union. vote would lead to a "totalitarian" however, such regime and turn non-ethnic Lat- ly Russian town vians into second-class citizens. of Hubble by Julie Schupper A University professor is work- ing with a team of researchers na- tionwide to repair the Hubble Space Telescope. Expectations soared last April as the Hubble Space Telescope was launched into the solar sys- tem. However, these expectations soon dwindled when an imperfec- tion in the telescope's main mirror became apparent, indicating a se- vere focusing defect in the camera. NASA immediately responded to the malfunction by appointing ten scientists to redesign the cam- era instrument. John Clarke, an assistant pro- fessor of Atmospheric, Oceanic, and Space Sciences at the Univer- sity, is working with other scien- tists and engineers to produce the new Wide Field/Planetary Camera (WF/PC II) to be implemented on the telescope. "Researchers are scattered throughout the country," Clarke said. "Work is currently being Ielescope conducted at Arizona State Uni- versity, John Hopkins University, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the University of Wisconsin, and at the California Institute of Tech- nology." He said that while the new camera is basically a clone of the original, the slight redesign in the optics of the camera will restore the original potential of the Hubble telescope. Kim Leschly, a system engi- neer for NASA, said she has a great deal of confidence in the WF/PC II. "It will be quite a chal- lenge since the replacement cam- era will be more difficult to align than the original camera," she said. "But it is certainly do-able." "I'm excited we will be able to do this kind of rescue mission.," Leschley said. "The telescope will do the kind of astrophysics and astronomy that is done by earth based observers," said George Carignan, associate dean of engineering. Molotov cocktail starts patio fire A molotov cocktail started a fire on the patio of a home on the 2000 block of Independence at about 3:30 Saturday morning. The small bomb, made from a glass bottle filled with gasoline and ignited by a gasoline-drenched rag, was thrown at the home's glass door but bounced off without breaking the window and fell on the porch where it caught fire, causing minor damage, Ann Arbor police reports said. Several more molotov cocktails were found during the ongoing investigation. Reports said there is a possible suspect. Bonnie and Clyde strike again? Two suspects entered the Michigan National Bank at 201 S. Main last Thursday afternoon, walked up to the teller and handed her a note explaining that they in- tended to rob the bank. The teller handed the robbers between $1,000 and $2,000 in cash, after the suspects implied they had a gun, Ann Arbor police_ reports said. The teller never saw a weapon. The robbers ran away and were last seen fleeing northbound on S. Ashley from W. Washington. Two men looking for some change drop their pants A man not wearing any clothes approached a woman in the Art and Architecture building at about 4 a.m. last Friday. The man asked the woman if he could have some change for the telephone, according to reports from the University's Department of Safety and Security (DPSS). A woman also reported having been flashed by a housemate in a residence on the 1800 block of Hill in late January. The victim asked her house- mate for some change, and he told her to come to his room to get it. When the woman knocked on the door, the man opened it and was standing there stark naked, accord- ing to Ann Arbor police reports. The woman left quickly, reports said. Ann Arbor police also reported an indecent exposure incident on the 900 block of Baldwin Saturday night. The complainants were sitting in a cafeteria when they noticed a man outside gyrating by the win- dow with his pants down. Staff report thefts over spring break At least a dozen thefts from University buildings and offices were reported to DPS S over the past week. Three thefts occurred the Natu- ral Science building. Early Tuesday morning, staff reported about $25 cash missing from an office coffee fund, and told DPSS officers it must have been taken overnight. That same afternoon, staff in a lab reported that $100 in lab prop- erty had been stolen. There are no suspects in either incident. Late Monday afternoon, a purse of undetermined value was stolen from a Nat. Sci. office. Purses and wallets were also stolen from of- fices in the Med Sci II, W. Eng- neering, CCRB, and Public Health buildings during the break. KRISTOFFER GILLETTE/Daily Back to work LSA junior Robert Jackson, a philosophy major, works on a paper dealing Computing Center. with existentialism at the Angell Hall TTHE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Enact, weekly meeting. DANA Bldg., Rm. 1040,7:00. People of Color Against War & Racism, weekly meeting. West Engi- neering, 1st floor Center for African & Afro-American Studies Lounge, 5:00. U of M Asian American Student Coalition (UMAASC), weekly mtg. E. Quad, rm 126, 7 p.m. Speakers "The International Impact of AIDS," Polly Paulson. International Center, rm 9, noon. "Democracy and Middle Eastern Exceptionalism," Dr. John Waterbury service. Functions 8-1:30 Sun.-Thurs., Fr.-Sat. 8-11:30. Call 936-1000 or stop by 102 UGLi. Northwalk, nighttime safety walking service. Functions Sun.-Thurs. 8-1:30 am., Fri.-Sat. 8-11:30. Call 763- WALK or stop by 2333 Bursley. ECB Peer Writing Tutors available to help with your papers Sun.-Thurs., Angell/Haven Computing Center, 7- 11:00 p.m.; 611 Church Street Com- puting Center, Tue. and Thurs. 7-11:00 p.m., Wed. 8-10:00. p.m. U of M Shorin-Ryu Karate-do Club. For info call 994-3620. Every Monday, CCRB, Small Gym, 8-9:00. U of M Tae Kwon Do Club. Every Monday. CCRB Martial Arts Rm.. 7- Don't like what you see? Tell our readers what you think. Write to the Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard Street, or send UAn1 T PttPrcrT i doc maple hae y ~ou) becaus yoo're 1*wUrlrv L 0 2r~d S~A WCE Wtk need wtkIsjr our i