locky'la./sIrAirt The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 22, 1995 - 3 Student suspended in nois for aAssment Despite writing a letter to his profes- sors maintaining his innocence, North- ern Illinois University senior Eric J. Preuss pleaded no contest to charges of harassment by phone and was expelled for four years. During his NIU judicial hearing, Preuss's roommate, Jason S. Gussman, testified against him, DeKalb County State's Attorney Michael Coughlan confirmed to The Northern Star, the school newspaper. Both of the students were suspects in the case and were administratively sus- pended from NIU on Nov. 2 for alleg- edly leaving a racist and threatening phone call on a black female's voice mail. The 19-year-old female student, who wishes to remain anonymous, lives in the residence halls. She checked her voice mail on Oct. 24 to hear the message: "We just want to (expletive) tell you about the KKK and our rally to- night. It's going to be at about 10:30 so bring your white sheets you (exple- tive) bitch. Nazis rule." r The woman traced the call toPreuss's room through an automatic callback feature of the phone system. L.ong Island psych grads help runners At the recent New York City Mara- thon, adozen graduate students in clin- cal psychology from Long Island Uni- versity volunteered to be part of the marathon's "psyching team." The "psyching team" is a group of about 100 psychologists, psychiatrists and social workers who help the runners deal with performance anxiety before the race. Paul Ramirez, an associate professor of clinical psychology at LIU, told the Chronicle of Higher Education that the race gave his students practical experi- ence. Runners were given ribbons made out of the same material as the finish line so that they could touch it when they were feeling discouraged in the middle of the race. Vitale funds new scholarship at Notre Dame *Dick Vitale, a college basketball ana- lyst for ABC and ESPN and a Notre Dame university parent, has estab- lished a scholarship fund for the Fight- ing Irish. The fund assists students with fi- nancial needs who are members of spirit boosting organizations such as the marching band; the cheerleading and pom-pom squads; and also the Notre Dame Leprechaun, reports The Observer, the school newspaper of : .Notre Dame and Saint Mary's univer- ~sities. Vitale said he felt these groups de- served financial assistance as much ,as the recipients of sports scholar- ;ships. Delta College builds new planetarium A new planetarium will open in Bay City, Mich.,next fall, Peter Boyse, presi- dent of Delta College, told The Delta Collegiate. The foundation is already in place and the steel structure will be complete by the end of the week. The planetarium will be state-of- the-art, containing an observation deck equipped with telescopes to in- teractive classrooms and a 50-foot- tall tilted dome located in a lecture theater. The construction is completely funded by NASA. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Lisa Poris from staff and wire reports Newspaper strikers: No fun on lines Los Angeles Times TAYLOR - The call to the union hall at 3 a.m. on a recent Sunday sent 200 strikers and supporters scrambling. Within minutes, they massed in an ugly mood outside a newspaper distribution center in this small Detroit suburb. With no police there yet, the pickets were confronted by a few guards with video cameras. Insults were exchanged and rocks hurled. The guards retreated and picket signs became clubs used to smash windshields and headlights on cars whose drivers dared to cross the picket line. "Welcome to Detroit, assholes!" taunted one picket, his face shrouded by a ski mask against the biting wind. The angry scene was part of a de- structive battle that has been played out every weekend since July 13, when 2,500 union workers went on strike against the Detroit Free Press and De- troit News. There is no end in sight. Indeed, the stakes climbed sharply this week with the unions' publication of their own 300,000-copy Sunday newspaper to shopping and advertising season kicks off. Detroit Newspapers Inc., the joint operating agency for the Detroit Free Press and Detroit News, is bracing for demonstrations tonight at the suburban Detroit plant, site ofprevious violence, where the traditionally ad-rich Thanks- giving Day editions will be printed. And holiday shoppers on Friday will encounter5,000leafleteers urgingboy- cotts of the papers' retail advertisers. "We're going to send a message to those retailers that there is a price to pay for still remaining in that strike paper," said Lou Mleczko, president of the Newspaper Guild of Detroit, Local 22. What began as a disagreement over work rules and job security has degen- erated into an often violent test ofwills: The unions say the companies want to bust them; managers say they must hack away at inefficiencies to survive. And over the course ofthe unexpect- edly long struggle it has taken on broader significance. The strike has become Exhibit A in the ongoing economic trials of the newspaper industry, and a worrisome challenge to organized la- bor on turf it has owned since the 1930s. The newspapers, scrambling to cut costs in a shrinking industry, have hired more than 1,300 permanent replace- ments for striking workers - a rude echo of President Reagan's action in the 1981 strike of air traffic controllers that came to symbolize labor's decline. The strike pits the nation's two larg- est newspaper publishers - Knight- Ridder Inc. and Gannett Corp.-against some of the nation's biggest trade unions, including the powerful Interna- tional Brotherhood of Teamsters. Detroit, home oflabor legends Walter Reuther and Jimmy Hoffa, is hallowed union ground. A defeat here could have lasting repercussions. "If a paper can keep publishing dur- ing a strike in a labor intensive city like Detroit," said John Morton, a media analyst for Lynch, Jones & Ryan, "they can do it anywhere." The walkout is not about economic issues but rather control of the work- place. The main stumbling block was the two papers' desire to restructure an antiquated distribution system, under- mining the Teamsters' district manager jobs and designating 2,800 carriers as employees - directly responsible to the papers - rather than independent contractors. The newspapers also want to automate many circulation jobs and substitute newsroom merit pay for au- tomatic cost-of-living raises, It is a struggle guaranteed to bare deep fissures in Detroit, where one in four workers belongs to a union. The unions battle for community support with radio and billboard ads, and have enlisted the support of religious and political leaders. The dispute has be- come a subject of Sunday sermons and an issue in local elections. It has di- vided friends and families. As the strike enters its fifth month, the newspapers appear to be winning largely because the unions have been unable to stop delivery. After publish- ing a joint edition for the first two months of the strike, the papers - run under a joint operating agreement that lets them share circulation, advertising and production operations but maintain separate newsrooms - resumed sepa- rate publication on Sept. 18. U.S. files appeal in dismissed Baker case By Zachary M. Rami Daily Staff Reporter The U.S. government yesterday offi- cially filed an appeal in the case of former University student Jake Baker. The brief, submitted to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincin- nati, appeals the case's June dismissal by a U.S. District Court judge in De- troit. Neither Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Yates, who is handling the case, nor a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Detroit would com- ment on the brief. The defense will have at least a month to review and re- spond to the government's brief, Baker's attorney, Douglas Mullkoff, said yesterday. Baker was sus- pended from the Baker University last Feb- ruary after posting a story on the Internet that graphically detailed the abuse of a specific female University student. He was jailed for 29 days and was charged with five counts related to the interstate transmission of a threat. Federal District Court Judge Avem Cohn dismissed the case against Baker this summer, saying there was not enough evidence for trial, and he de- fended Baker's free-speech rights. The case gained national attention both for its bizarre nature and for its potential to set precedent. As the Internet has evolved in the last few years, lawmakers and citizens have been engaged in a debate over its regu- lation. Mullkoff said he does not think the appeal will be successful. "The govern- ment is attempting to persuade an ap- pellate court that a judge made a mis- take," he said. "We believe justice has been done," he added. The appeals court is comprised of three judges. The government and Baker's defense will present oral ar- guments before the court, and the judges will decide if the case will go to trial. If it does, the case will then shift back to U.S. District Court in Detroit. The appellate court's decision, however, could take months to reach. JOE WESTRATE/Daily Charge it! A University student takes advantage of the MCard system at the Michigan Union yesterday. Michigangponders raising speed limits LANSING (AP)-Legislation scrap- ping the federal speed limit is on a fast track in Washington. In Michigan, state officials have yet to agree on where motorists may drive faster than they already do. President Clinton is expected to sign legislation repealing the nationwide speed limit --55 mph on most roads, 65 mph on rural interstates. State police and state highway engi- neers already are studying which portions of Michigan's 433 miles of urban free- ways, now limited to 55 mph, could oper- ate at 65 mph, Lt. Col. James Bolger said. Older roads that carry heavy volumes of traffic within city limits, such as the Ford and Lodge freeways in Detroit, are among the estimated 175 miles of urban freeways where the 55-mph limit is likely to stay in place, he said. "On most urban roads that were built for 65, we don't have a problem letting them drive 65," Bolger said. Neither does Gov. John Engler, ac- cording to press secretary John Truscott, TA, 45, dies of natural causes From Staff Reports Susanne Evelina Baker, a University teaching assistant, died ofnatural causes Nov. 13 at Blanchard Valley Regional Health Center in Findlay, Ohio. She was 45 years old. Baker was pursuing a doctoral de- gree in reading literacy at the Univer- sity. Previously, Baker had taught in the education department at the Univer- sity of Findlay, in addition to other public and private schools. A graduate of George Mason Uni- versity, in Fairfax, Va., she earned a master's degree from the University of South Carolina. She has been a swim- ming coach and was a swimmer at the Junior Olympics. Baker was born May 7, 1950, at Fort Bragg, N.C. She is survived by her husband, C. Daniel Baker, whom she married on June 5, 1970, and by her two sons, Marshall and Jonathan, both of Findlay. She also is survived by her three broth- ers. Memorials can be sent to the Mazza Collection in the Virginia B. Gardner Fine Arts Center at the University of Findlay, or to a memorial fund estab- lished in her name by the School of Education, in care of Eric Warden, director of development, Room 1001 School of Education Building, Uni- versity of Michigan, Ann Arbor MI, 48109. "onf...roads that were built for 65, we don't have a problem letting them drive 65." - James Bolger Michigan State Police who said, "It could probably go to 65 in some urban areas where traffic patterns suggest it would still be safe." But state Rep. Carl Gnodtke (R-Saw- yer) has introduced legislation lifting the 55-mph limit on all urban freeways. Since the federal government imposed that ceiling in 1974 in response to gaso- line shortages, Gnodtke argues, fuel has become abundant. "I would just as soon get the 65-mph speed limit off the ground for all urban areas and get it over with," he said. The most recent Michigan Depart- ment of Transportation studies have found that drivers average 58 mph on urban interstates and 62 mph on other urban freeways including the Southfield in and around Detroit, U.S. 131 around Grand Rapids and U.S. 31 at Muskegon. As for Michigan's 1,420 miles of rural freeways, Engler would "take a very serious look" at raising the speed limit above the current 65 mph, Truscott said. But that drew opposition from Secre- tary of State Candice Miller, who said: "A wholesale increase in speed limits would not be prudent. The higher the travel speed, the greater the risk of serious injury or death in a crash." Speeding drivers already account for about one-third of all traffic fatalities, according to U.S. Department ofTrans- portation estimates. A University study performed in 1990 - three years after the speed limit was restored to 65 mph on rural freeways - found that deaths increased 28 percent and that serious injuries were up 39 percent. ON'T FORGET YOU OVER THE HOLIDAYS Campaign with SIERR A CL UB to keep public lands and wilderness areas open earn $225-$350/wk call (313) 562-65 r o f . 5u f p0 4 Q 0~o inoA,,. 0 ' * Y'11u caul' \c *60 b too muchW v "fora parking spot Don't let excuses make you DIZZY - With our high-speed machines you can still get by with a little help from your friends. Gift Certificates to the: */ ia a 4 I 6 6 1 * I 4a ?tip rri -t 1 L ..' _IL _i r & . OUT OF BUSINESS SALE! great scores... Law School Business School Denta School e fi 11 1 ,h . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i