v~ ,I;"/ We"ather Tonight: Chance of showers, high 75°. Tomorrow: Morning shower, high 75-. itt mx t t til- IROPW One hundredfour years offeditorialfreedom Wednesday September 13.1995 Emmons= NATO to expand attacks on Serbs ,. ZAGREB, Croatia - NATO yester- day brushed aside Russian demands to halt its air campaign against Bosnian Serb forces and announced an expansion of its attacks including the possible introduc- tion of the Stealth fighter-bomber. But as the campaign entered its sec- ond week with more than 3,000 sorties flown against defiant rebels, the Bosnian government questioned how much dam- age the attacks are inflicting. Gen. Jovan Divjak, the Bosnian deputy chief of staff, said in London that the bombing had not altered the balance of military power or improved Bosnia's front lines. Divjak said NATO bombing so far had destroyed only 4 percent of Bosnian Serb heavy weapons. Bosnian govt. questions impact of air campaign "It doesn't affect the situation on the ground," he told reporters. "It seems to be intended to give a lesson to the Serbs that they are vulnerable to attack." Whatever the Bosnian government's complaints, the bombing appears to be tying the Serbs down in their armed areas. In central and western Bosnia, well removed from Sarajevo or other "safe areas," the Bosnian government and its Bosnian Croat allies reported strategic gains against the Bosnian Serbs. Yesterday's bombing raids produced more spectacular 'TV pictures. NATO aircraft attacked Bosnian Serb ammu- nition dumps at Vogoscajust northwest of Sarajevo, causing explosions heard clearly in the Bosnian capital. NATO sources said 28 bombs were dropped. It includes ammunition pro- duction and storage facilities, as well as a 500-yard tunnel where Serbs are be- lieved to have stashed heavy weapons. Sources in the Bosnian Serb strong- hold of Pale, southeast of Sarajevo, said the ammunition site was "leveled" in the overnight attack. Bosnian radio, cit- ing a government army report, said sec- ondary detonations came from the am- munition complex in Vogosca and fires burned in the area for hours, with flames rising several hundred feet into the air. U.S. sources said the Clinton adminis- tration wants to send F-117 stealth attack planes at Aviano air base in Italy for use against the Serbs as soon as it receives permission from the Italian government. Inside: UN officials say bombings have failed to eliminate Serb threat. Page 7. 3 { AP , PHOT A family preparing for the coming winter drags a carriage full of firewood in a western suburb of Sarajevo yesterday. Comm. dept. endowment use disputed By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter While the University works to write guidelines and to restore misused com- munication department endowment funds, there is new disagreement over using a scholarship fund to help pay a faculty member's salary. In a 1992 letter recently obtained by The Michigan Daily, John Cross, asso- ciate LSA dean for budget and admin- istration, authorized using money from ajournalism scholarship endowment to pay 25 percent of the salary of Jonathan Friendly, the director of the master's program in journalism. "I understand your feeling that en- dowment funds should not be used to replace the 'normal' responsibilities of the University, but in fact this Univer- sity, like most others, has for many years been turning to gift and endow- ment funds as means for supporting its basic mission," Cross wrote to then- communication department chair Neil Malamuth. Friendly, whose salary is still sup- ported by the fund, said that the endow- ment is being misused, and that he only spends about 10 percent of his time on the program. "You've got the associate dean say- ingit's OK toraidthesefunds," Friendly said. "Either this is a University that pays for its basic mission or it's a place that just takes money from people and just uses it as it pleases." LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg, how- ever, said there were no specific direc- tions for the endowment's use at the time of the letter. Following a 1994 audit that exposed misuse of both the Weber and Howard R. Marsh Center for the Study of Jour- nalistic Performance endowments, the University directed the LSA Dean's Office to write guidelines detailing the specific uses of the funds. While draft Endowments * March 1993,- The University asked auditor Carl Smith to audit .the Marsh and Weber funds. 0 July 1994 - The department of communication adopted a first draft of guidelines for the funds. guidelines for the Weber fund have been written, the Marsh guidelines re- main incomplete. Goldenberg said Friendly is being paid from the endowment because of his participation and leadership in the journalism internship program. "Internships are part of our basic mission, which is learning," Goldenberg said. "But with the Weber endowments I don't recall a pattern of paying a faculty member." Wesley Maurer Jr., whose father helped establish the fund, supported Friendly's claims, and said the University's use of the endowment vio- lated the donor's intent. "That was not the intent of the en- dowment - to support the 'basic mis- sion.' It was specifically intended for the journalism internship program," Maurer said. "If they had wanted some generic, non-specific thing, they would have left the money to the Registrar's Office." Cross said he stands by his 1992 state- ment, and that donors are aware that money sometimes goes to pay salaries. "(Friendly) is hired to run the jour- nalism program and if he only spends 10 percent of his time on it, then that's a separate problem," Cross said. "The fact that this is done is well understood with donors." Friendly is suing the University in a July 1994 lawsuit, claiming his role in prompting an audit of the communica- tion department cost him his three-year contract. JOE WEST RA IT/Uaily The employees of Shaman Drum dressed in drag yesterday in honor of a co-worker who died of AIDS last year. Store remembers employee with Drag Day By Jeff Eldridge For the Daily Unsuspecting customers who came to Shaman Drum Bookshop yesterday were in for a surprise - Drag Day. "A year ago, an employee here named Earl Gebott died of AIDS," said Bob Curry, an employee of the store for 10 years. "Last year, as a tribute, we cross- dressed to remember him, as well as to bring aware- ness to the community." Gebott was infected with the HIV virus for 10 years before dying of AIDS in August 1994. An employee of the local bookstore for four years, Gebbott had been a mainstay, said Curry, who compared the store's personnel to a family. At the time of Gebott's death, 10-15 coworkers gathered in the hospital. Both Shaman Drum owner Carl Pohrt and Curry credit that moment as a main inspiration for Drag Day, which they expect to be- come an annual event. "Earl, at one time, was a very flamboyant cross- dresser," Pohrt said. "Everybody is trying to honor Earl, who was a real fun person." Employee Alison Swan added: "This is more about having fun than anything else. At this time of year, the staff needs it." Pohrt said, "I find that for people younger than I am, there's a more fluid sense of gender identity. "My daughter works here, and she's wearing a suit and tie. That's a playfulness that people of my genera- tion don't have." Along with the general lightness of the day, the store used the occasion to promote AIDS awareness using literature from the HIV/AIDS Resource Cen- ter. "We'll try to make it an annual thing, and get across as much information as possible," Curry said. HARC's services include information distribution, housekeeping, a food bank and support groups. The great majority of customers seemed supportive of the store's concept. "It kind of shocked me, because where I'm from, I don't see this," said Altonya Knight, of Anderson, Ind., who added she approved of the event's purpose. Sleeping through the sunrise is in the past By Jodi Cohen Daily Staff Reporter Are you a late riser who's stuck with 8 a.m. classes? Do you push the "dream bar" on your alarm clock so many times that your roommate wants to kick you out of the Farmington Hills, Mich., said students could also benefit from the service. "I remember those late-night study sessions preparing for a final exam and really worrying about making it on- time for my 8 o'clock exam," said Rothstein, who graduated with a BBA in 1980 and an MBA in 1982. Gov: Teen-age nariuanause nearly doubled since- 1992 WASHINGTON (AP) - Marijuana use among teen-agers has nearly doubled since 1992, even as adults' use of all illegal drugs leveled off, the government announced yesterday. Some 12.2 million people used illegal drugs last year, up from 11.7 million in 1993 and 11.4 million in 1992, said the 1994 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse. The in- creases were not considered statistically significant. At the same time, 1.8 million teen-agers used illegal drugs last year - the vast majority marijuana, which the govern- ment survey says is on the rise among young people after 13 years of decline. About 7.3 percent of teens - 1.3 million ages 12 to 17 - smoked marijuana last year. That's up from 4 percent two years earlier, the survey found. Until 1992, youth marijuana use had declined every year since 1979. "Anyone who thinks we've licked the drug problem in this country is living in a fantasy land," said Health and Human room? Have you al- ready missed classes this semes- ter because you've overslept? There may be a solution - and it doesn't include mom giving you a wake-up call the day of a midterm. - r IS for people who are no staying in a hotel t e like they are sleeping in a "That would be a great service for me. I usually have friends wake me up," said Howard Sidman, an LSA junior. "Especially for exams it would help me. It would make me sleep bet- ter." :. . :.