S Trwl DE Heeding the lessons of a jogger's death See OPINION Page 4. ail EAT TODAY T-storms likely; High 73, Low 45. TOMORROW Rain showers; High 60. Low 36. Since 1890 Copyghts1991 V ol. CI, No. 129 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, April 9, 1991 the Mihigan Daly Kurdish refugees flee from Iraq NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - Iraqi helicopter gunships have been firing on Kurdish refugees as they try to flee, a Kurdish rebel group said yes- terday, and one guerrilla leader said a whole village had been wiped out by Iraqi forces. Foreign governments and aid groups have mounted a huge relief operation to save the hundreds of *housands of refugees, many of whom are sick, hungry and suffering from exposure in the cold of the mountainous border region. In northern Iraq, Kurdish rebel leader Masoud Barzani charged that Iraqi troops had rampaged through Kara Henjir, a village near the northern oil center of Kirkuk, killing the entire population of 0,000 to 3,000 people. The report could not be con- firmed independently. In Rawandiz, Efty reported, ter- rified residents fled in the middle of the night toward the Iranian border, spurred by reports that Iraqi forces were pushing northward. Official Iranian radio quoted a refugee named Mohammed Saleh vMarouf, an engineer from the north- ern Iraqi city of Erbil, as saying that in one case, Iraqi helicopters fired at refugees along Iran's border as an American aircraft flew nearby. The U.S. plane did not react, he said. Both Iran and Turkey say they cannot handle the huge influx of refugees, displaced by the conflict between Kurdish minority rebels and the Iraqi government. However, th continued to allow the Kurds to camp inside their borders. Bush visit verified by state official 'Tis the season University students rush tensely through the first day of the CRISP process yesterday in the basement of Angell Hall. Conservatives to assue, control otonig by Jay Garcia month's assembly elections and CC proposed change to the MSA com- Daily MSA Reporter candidate James Green captured the piled code which would abolish the Fans of the Michigan Student MSA presidency. After running the student group recognition process. Assembly have reason to rejoice. first meeting of the night, current and proposals involving the aboli- They have, not one, but two MSA MSA President Jennifer Van Valey tion of MSA commissions. by Bethany Robertson and Henry Goldblatt Daily Staff Reporters Although there has been no offi- cial White House or Univeristy confirmation, lawmakers in Lansing said yesterday that all signs indicate that President George Bush will speak at the University's May 4 commencement ceremony. . University administrators still will not confirm or deny the report, although a unified graduation cere- mony is now being planned. Bush's attendance would be a po- litical catch for Republican Gov. John Engler if he were able to reel in Bush for a public visit. Engler Press Secretary John Truscott said the governor's office has contacted the White House to arrange a presidential visit. "Our preliminary reports indi- cate that he plans to attend," Truscott said. "We're glad that he chose to come." But a White House spokesperson was unable to confirm the visit. "The official commencement list hasn't come out yet," the spokesperson said, but she added that the president's schedule is clear so far for May 4. Although a combined ceremony is being planned, individual schools may hold their own receptions. Rackham Dean John D'Arms, Special Events Committees chair, said he is scheduling a Rackham cer- emony to supplement the campus- wide event. "Some schools and colleges plan reception events. At those there can be special guests invited to speak meetings they can attend tonight. Tonight's MSA meetings, the last of the term, mark the end of one student government administration and the beginning of a very different one. Although this transition occurs annually, tonight's meeting will witness a takeover by conservative leaders who have consistently op- posed the actions of the outgoing liberal MSA leadership. Conservative Coalition (CC) won 14 out of 24 seats in last will say farewell to the assembly. Green will conduct the second meet- ing as the new president. Green said he wants MSA to be administratively sound before he proceeds with reform. He plans to nominate current MSA representa- tives Tim Darr and Andrew Kanfer to the posts of Student General Counsel and Treasurer respectively. However, certain representatives' plan to make additions to tonight's agenda which could lead to drastic changes in MSA. These include a During the election, Green re- peatedly advocated the abolition of the Peace and Justice Commission. The proposal will supposedly call for a referendum next fall which would ask students to vote on which of MSA's six commissions, if any, should be abolished. A student vote is required to abolish MSA commissions since it involves amending the MSA Constitution. If introduced, the ballot propos- See MSA, Page 2 Brater and new A2 council inaugurated at City Hall and be honored," he said. D'Arms said details regarding the confirmed speakers at individual ceremonies would be determined by the end of the week. However, Rackham has not scheduled a major speaker. LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg said LSA will not have an individual ceremony in addition to the all- campus exercises. "We are not considering an LSA- wide reception. There's not time to have a separate ceremony in a lim- ited number of hours," Goldenberg said. ABC News Anchor Carole Simpson, LSA confirmed speaker, will not speak at the campus-wide ceremony Goldenberg said. Sen. Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor) said a presidential and gu- bernatorial visit would benefit the University. "Having the attention of the President and the Governor is obvi- ously good for the University," Pollack said. A presidential visit would also help boost Engler's administration - especially his goal to put educa- tion at the top of Michigan's politi- cal agenda. "It helps focus attention on edu- cation," Truscott said of Bush's visit. "It's bound to have some kind of positive effect for us." Pollack said she had heard no of- ficial reports of a Bush visit, but she believes that Bush is coming. "That's clearly because of the president coming, or else they wouldn't do it," Pollack said of the See BUSH, Page 2 Law school paper returns by Jill Parrott The Res Gestae (RG) is back on the streets. After shutting down last January due to personnel problems, the Law school's weekly newspaper resumed publishing last month un- der the leadership of Editor in Chief Mark Sanor. The editor and most of the staff are first year Law students. "The paper just sort of fell into our hands as a windfall... It's definitely a first-year movement." Sanor said. "We have some second-year staff, and the past editor is still involved in the transition, but the writing began with a lot of first-year enthusiasm." Sanor attributed the personnel problems to the recession. Students felt a need to spend more time studying due to a more limited job field, Sanor said. The new RG editorial staff said they are confident the paper will not encounter the difficulties it ex- perienced previously. " I guess you could say we have our own opinion of what we're trying to do with the paper - we want to be not just a newspaper," Sanor said. Instead of focusing only on the news, the staff is hoping to make the RG a forum for discussion and de- bate for the entire Law school community. RG Opinion Editor Sadath Sayeed said, "We've picked un a lot of resnonses which is basi- by Lynne Cohn Daily City Reporter City Hall was packed with people and filled with enthusiasm last night as Ann Arbor ushered in a new mayor and three new' councilmembers. Liz Brater took her mayoral seat along with newly-elected Councilmembers Kirk Dodge (R- Second Ward), Kurt Zimmer (D- Fourth Ward), and Robert Eckstein (D-Fifth Ward). "It's an honor to be sitting in this seat and serving this distin- guished council," Brater said. After the swearing-in, the council unanimously appointed Robert Grady to fill Brater's Third Ward council seat. "I'm humbled and pleased at the confidence that Liz and Nelson and a few others have de- cided to place in me," said Grady, a political science professor at Eastern Michigan University. "I am almost overcome at the amount of work." Councilmember Ann Marie Coleman (D-First Ward) nomi- nated Councilmember Larry Hunter (D-First Ward) as mayor pro tem, with unanimous support. Coleman nominated Hunter for mayor pro tem "because not only is he the longest-serving Democrat on council, but he is committed as a person to justice for all. He is an extraordinary human being, and he will make an excellent mayor pro tem," she added. Acting City Administrator Donald Mason said he expects a positive experience with the new mayor and councilmembers. "People have spoken in terms of what changes they want," he said about the new Democratic stronghold. "I know (Brater) has new ideas and things to do differ- ently, and I am looking forward to working with her." The Mayor strongly supported Grady's council appointment. "He's a very dedicated, hard- working citizen of the third ward, and I think he'll do a great job of representing the third ward," Brater said. Grady has worked on, Democratic campaigns since the 1970s and has lobbied the council on development issues. "I don't come to council with an agenda," Grady said. "I am con- cerned that the city does not have a reasonable supply of affordable housing." Grady said he is very cautious about the council's new 8-3 Democratic majority. "I am also very thankful about it. It says something about what the people in this city are con- cerned with," he added. Despite his academic position, Grady does not think he has exper- tise in city-University relations. "There is a big difference be- tween academic theory and prac- tice," Grady said. "I move from being observer to actor - it's a " See COUNCIL, Page 2 Democratic Mayor Liz Brater being sworn in at City Hall. 'U' negotiators threaten legal action against GEO by Stefanie Vines WDaily Faculty Reporter The University has threatened to. take legal against the Graduate Employees Organization (GEO) for its work stoppage last week. A letter sent Friday to GEO president Chris Roberson asserted the University's right to prosecute the TA union, but made no commitment to actually initiating any legal action. The letter also reminded the TA union of the University's warning against the strike prior to last Thursday. University spokesperson and Director of News and Information ServicesJoseph Owsley said the let- Dolan-Greene echoed Owsley's statement. "We addressed the letter to GEO officials because we felt they shouldn't have done what they did when they told us they wouldn't," she said. "The University has the the major effect in question is a question of their good faith in nego- tiating. It makes negotiating very difficult." GEO Counsel Mark Cousens re- fused comment on any legal action. Roberson was not surprised by the letter. "They are telling us stuff we know already," he said. Dolan-Greene and Owsley would no nnn :.mu-- fhis,.-r nr ot th GEG bargainer David Jaeger agreed with Kock. "I think it is a bargaining tactic. I really don't know whether the University will take action, but my guess is if we settle this week they would be less likely to," he said. Jaeger added that the letter will not keep the membership from pass- ing a resolution calling for a three- day work stoppage April 17-19. "If nvthiny it seems that it 'This letter is simply serving notice that we have the option to take legal action. We're not anina to unveil any legal DIans'