+ . , - The Michigan Daily -Thursday, September 14, 1995 - 5A Man claims accident in killing of police officers GRAND HAVEN, Mich. (AP) - A man ac- cused of killing a policeman after escaping from jail says he was trying to commit suicide when he accidentally shot the officer. "My intention was to shoot myself. Freedom or death. Freedom was obtainable through death," Keith Harbin testified before a packed court- room Tuesday. Closing arguments in Harbin's murder trial were heard Wednesday. The case went to the jury yesterday afternoon. Harbin faces seven counts in the Dec. 13 slaying of Grand Haven Public Safety Office Scott Flahive, including first-degree premedi- tated murder, first-degree murder of a police officer and escape. He also is charged with attempting to murder Ottawa County Jail guard Cathy Shaw by strik- ing her at least eight times with a laundry bag containing a 4-pound chunk of concrete. Harbin's getaway car was pulled over by three police officers minutes after he and fellow in- mate Freddie DeWitt escaped from the jail. Flahive was killed as he approached the car and was struck by a bullet fired from the back seat. Harbin testified he was attempting to place the barrel of the loaded rifle against his head when Ann Torres, a passenger in the car, grabbed at the rifle. He said it discharged when she pushed it away from his head and the bullet struck Flahive as he approached the car. "I heard someone screaming 'Help me,' andI looked out the door and saw the officer on the ground, "I said 'I did not mean to do it. I did no' mean to hurt anyone,"' Harbin testified. Harbin also denied boasting to Michigan State Police Trooper Ron Griffin that "I popped a white cop" and that he said he would "pop a white cop every chance I get" immediately after his arrest. "I said I didn't have a beef with nobody. I jus" wanted to be free," Harbin testified. In closing arguments Wednesday, Prosecute Ronald Frantz dismissed Harbin's suicide defense saying that taking his own life would be inconsis tent with numerous letters Harbin wrote stating fr was ready to kill or be killed to be free. "He expected others to kill him, the prosecdifo said. Torres and Yolanda Salazar, the alleged driver( the getaway car, are scheduled to be tried sepa rately in November. They are charged with aidin a jail escape and first-degree murder. DeWitt, who never made it to the escape vehidlc was convicted earlier this year of jail escape. ER~LZLABTHLIiLIPP-MAN/Daily Mr. Atlas Paulo Santos (right) and first-year student Michelle Studer carry promotional balloons during Festifall on the Diag yesterday. For 36 hours, fraternity members to sit on scaffold By Stu Berlow For the Daily As if the Diag was not cluttered enough with construction, Pi Kappa Phi fraternity will add to the chaos today and tomorrow, but for a good cause: to raise money for the house's philanthropy. "We'll construct the scaffolding and have two to three guys on top on a couch," said LSA junior Nirav Shah, chair of PUSH (People for the Under- standing of the Severely Handi- capped). "At any given time we'll have two or three guys on top and depending on how many show up, any number below soliciting donations and handing out pamphlets." The scaffold will be spruced up with colorful banners representing the house, PUSH and companies that donated equipment and supplies, Shah added. The Scaffold Sit, however, is not a typical Diag donation drive. Various Pi Kappa Phi brothers will remain on the couch, towering six feet above ground in front of the Graduate Library for 36 hours, from 8 o'clock this morning until 8 p.m. tomorrow. Though not necessary for the fund drive, the marathon style benefits the undertaking in other ways. "The length oftime isjust for ingenu- ity and creativity, for something differ- ent," Shah said. Pi Kappa Phi members work to bring compassion to the event. "Our aim is two fold - to raise awareness and to raise money for the severely handi- capped, especially children," Shah said. Pi Kappa Phi has conducted the Scaf- fold Sit for the past several years and, Shah said, last year's effort brought in approximately $1,000. Though no mon- etary amount is targeted, the fraternity hopes to exceed the 1994 figure. CARTER Continued from Page IA outreach for students who have 'stopped out' of school," Harper said. "Those students who are still active in school activities such as MSA but are no longer in classes need our attention to get back on the academic track." Harper also said the office will look into conducting exit interviews for stu- dents who are thinking of leaving the school to help them return here or go to another institution in good standing. She said there has not been much progress with this idea in the past, but she hopes Carter will be able to work on such a program. "Seventy-five percent of the new position will be in working with under- graduate students and the other 25 per- cent will be in reconfiguring the of- fice," Harper said. "We want to get as much done in this year of transition as possible." Next year, Harper said, the Univer- sity will look to hire a full-time om- budsman, but there has been no discus- Gin nn hec arlm.artor niate UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY THE 199 STFUDENT HALF-LPR1CJ SEE Cecilia Bartoli, mezzo-soprano Slide Hampton and the JazzMasters Australian Chamber Orchestra Master Musicians of Jajouka Central Ballet of China " . ,. . .tr The'Boston Symphony Orchestra for $10! Marcus Roberts or the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatrefor $8! "«" Valid Student I.!). required, limit 2 tickets per event but choose as many events as you wish. "«" Avoid Rush TPicket Sellouts. "« Limited quantity available for each event. + Visa & MasterCard preferred; checks and cash accepted. ($3 servicefee for credit (Yr/dpurc/hses.) For more information on the 1995/96 season, stop by the UMS box office in Burton Memorial Tower behind Hill Auditorium. I Paco de Lucia's Flamenco Master Guitar Sextet Bolshoi Symphony Orchestra Peter Feranec, conductor Boris Berezovsky, piano Marcus Roberts Trio and Septet The Choral Music of Arvo Part Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir Tallinn Chamber Orchestra Thnu Kaljuste, conductor Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Tafelmusik The Complete Solo Piano Music of Frederic Chopin Garrick Ohlsson, piano (Recitals, IV, V and VI) Handel's Messiah Maurice Sendak's and Carole King's Really Rosie Gil Shaham, violin Orli Shaham, piano Juilliard String Quartet Boys Choir of Harlem St. Louis Symphony Leonard Slatkin, conductor St. Petersburg Philharmonic Yuri Temirkanov, conductor Pamela Frank, violin The Guthrie Theater of Minneapolis k. (Impressions from Kafka's The Trial) Harold Pinter's Old Times Wynton Marsalis/Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra Nonet Monk, Morton, and Marsalis Feel the Spirit - An Evening of Gospel Music, with The Blind Boys of Alabama featuring Clarence Fountain, The Soul Stirrers, and Inez Andrews The King's Singers Boston Symphony Orchestra Seiji Ozawa, conductor Latin Jazz Summit, featuring Tito Puente, Arturo Sandoval, and Jerry Gonzalez and The Fort Apache Band Moscow Virtuosi Vladimir Spivakov, conductor/violin SamulNori New York City Opera National Company Verdi's La Traviata Sequentia Tokyo String Quartet with Pinchas Zukerman John Williams, guitar San Francisco Symphony Michael Tilson Thomas, conductor Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre Borodin String Quartet Ludmilla Berlinskaya, piano Guitar Summit 11 with Kenny Burrell, jazz; Manuel Barrueco, classical; Jorma Kaukonen, acoustic blues; and Stanley Jordan, modern jazz The Canadian Brass Bach's b-minor Mass Tallis Scholars Ravi Shankar, sitar Isrnal Philharmnnic Orchestra ,r .G ,1 .. . ., , _ ,. 4 , ,, U