--~ \ it One hundredfive years of editorialfreedom tY Weather Tonight: Unseasonably warm, low around 55. Tomorrow: Chance of showers, high around 73. Thursday October 12, 1995 Vo.C I S 0 n rbr i hga' .,n I Peace Corps marks 35th anniversary By Megan Schimpf Daily Staff Reporter In the early morning hours one day 35 years ago this week, a young senator from Massachusetts asked students to do something for their country. "How many of you are willing to work in the foreign service and spend your lives traveling around the world?" John F. Kennedy asked. "On your will- ingness to contribute part of your life to this country I think will depend the answer (to) whether a free society can compete." At 2 a.m. on Oct. 14,1960, Kennedy, on a campaign trip for the 1960 presi- dential election, stopped in Ann Arbor and presented the idea for the Peace Corps to an audience of 10,000 in front of the Michigan Union. To commemorate the anniversary, 18 University Peace Corps Fellows will polish the plaque on the Union steps that marks where Kennedy stood to announce the initiative. The ceremony takes place at 5:30 p.m. today. In 1960, the large crowd had been waiting since 11 p.m. the day before - 27 hours - for Kennedy to arrive from New York, where he had been in a televised debate with Vice President Richard Nixon. "He couldn't possibly just go to sleep - he had to address them," said Lora Parisien, public affairs officer for the Peace Corps. "They were there for him - waiting for him." Kennedy's short speech was peppered with humor and serious intentions. "I want to express my thanks to you as a graduate of the Michigan of the East - Harvard University," Kennedy said. "And therefore I'm delighted to come to Michigan, this University... I come here tonight to go to bed. But I also come here tonight to ask you tojoin in the effort." Kennedy signed the Peace Corps into action March 1, 1961, by executive order. Congress later passed a bill mak- ing the corps a government agency. "Wherever we can, we're going to celebrate this year," Parisien said. "It's a major event for us all year long." The celebration kicks off with today's ceremony. "The United States Peace Corps wanted us to do something to recognize See CORPS, Page 7A JONATHAN BERNDT/Daily Bosnia cease-fire set after 2-day delay SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP)-After a48-hour delay, Bosnia's warring parties agreed yesterday to halt their desperate last-minute battles for land and begin what many hope is Bosnia's final cease-ire. The 60-day truce, part of a U.S.-led effort to bring peace to the Balkans, was put off for two days while engi- neers tried to restore utilities to Sarajevo and armies battled for territory. "I hope that this is the last day of this war," said one Bosnian minister, Hasan Muratovic. The Muslim-led government and its Croat allies seized two Serb-held towns in northwest Bosnia before setting a time for the truce to begin: one minute aftermidnightThursday (7:01 p.m. Ann Arbor time yesterday). Still, Bosnian Prime Minister Haris Silajdzic said the army would continue fighting until then. In the waning hours before the truce, the government was reportedly still advancing toward athird town, Prijedor, in northwest Bosnia and Serbs were rushing to expel up to 20,000 non-Serbs remaining in northern Bosnia. In contrast to dozens of cease-fires that have failed since, 1992, all sides appeared serious about making this one work. The truce is to lead to negotia- tions in the United States at the end of the month. If they are successful, a peace conference will be held in Paris. "All conditions have been met, and we have the security that tonight we will have a cease-fire," said Antonio Pedauye, the United Nations' chief ci- vilian official for Bosnia. The Bosnian government and rebel Serbs said they would go along. Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic said his army "will cease all military activities except defensive ones as of midnight tonight." His enemy, Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, said his side had met all conditions for the cease-fire but reserved the right to retaliate against "vulnerable enemy targets" for any cease-fire violations. That meant Serbs could respond by shelling cities. Former'U prof. wins NobelRize NATIONAL COMINGI OUT WEEK As a part of National Coming Out Week, a "Coming Out of the Closet Ceremony" was conducted on the ss r~h HthrGa1atLiay yesterday as students rallied ont the Diag in support of the celebration. The event, sponsored by the Queer Unity Project, featured keynote speaker Jim Sears, an author who described advances in gay awareness. Sears, a University of Southern California professor, has written six books and more than 100 articles about gay men and lesbians. Story, Page 7A. Martin L. Peri receives award for 1975 physics discovery By Cathy Boguslaski - and Michelle Lee Thompson Daily Staff Reporters A former University physics profes- sor was one of two people awarded the Nobel Prize in physics yesterday. Martin L. Perl, who taught at the University from 1955-63, received the Nobel Prize for his discovery in 1975 of the tau lepton, a super-heavy cousin of the electron. PerI is currently a professor at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. He shares the discovery and $1 mil- lion award with Frederick Reives of the University of California at Irvine. Vice President for Research Homer A. Neal commended Perl for his ac- complishments. "I'm delighted that he won it," said Neal, who did graduate research under Perl, while the two were here. "He fully deserves it. The discovery of the tau lepton was a major breakthrough in the field of high-energy physics." Keith Riles, a University assistant physics professor, said, "His discovery came as a complete surprise to most of us, even though he'd been looking for it for a long time." Perl was Riles' Ph.D. adviser at Stanford. The tau lepton is one of a third gen- eration of particles, the elementary building blocks ofmatter. Before Perl's discovery, only two generations of par- ticles were known to exist. Each gen- eration contains two leptons and two quarks. The tau lepton led to the discovery of the bottom quark in 1976 at Fermi Na- tional Accelerator Laboratory. The top quark, the third member of the quark- lepton family, was discovered there AP PHOTO Nobel Prize winner Martin L. Perl works in his Stanford lab. earlier this year. "It's in the same family as the elec- tron, so that shows you how important the study is," Neal said. Perl is scheduled to attend the dedi- cation of the new University Physics Research Laboratory, which begins to- day at 4 p.m. Although he had planned to make an address at 10:30 a.m. tomor- row, University officials are now un- certain if he will be able to attend. "He's under extreme pressure from Stanford to be there to attend all of the press conferences and events they have planned for him," Neal said. "It will be hard for him to get away." In 1989, on the day before Goudsmit visiting Prof. Norman Ramsey was scheduled to come to the University, he won the Nobel Prize in physics, but came anyway. Perl has also served as a Goudsmit professor, making many trips to the See NOBEL, Page 7A Photos by NOPPORN KICHANANTHA/Daily Computer glitches delay 'U' paychecks Simpson case spurs discussion about race By Stu Berlow Daily Staff Reporter About 40 reseachers in the College of Engineering and possibly hundreds more graduate students did not receive their monthly paychecks for September after a problem with a new software program. "We have a new system and it's be- ing debugged on-line," said student fi- nancial operations manager Alex Ma karewich. "Our goal is to have everything corrected by the end ofthis week." D e s p i t e Makarewich' s pledge, some re- searchers say they've heard it before. assistance to students who are having problems with the new system," said Margaret Rodriguez, associate director of financial aid. "We have short-term funds to aid them with their financial obligations." Besides the office of financial aid, the College of Engineering is involved in coordinating an effort to ensure stu- dents are not adversely affected by this situation. "As a depart- ment, we've been trying to aid the id jstudents as much as we can, but lug ed there are limited options," said stu- dent services asso- ciate Robin X Makarewich Rennie. By Courtney Stamm For the Daily Students and community members used the recent O.J. Simpson double- murder case as a springboard for a dis- cussion of race relations in America last night. About 50 students and local residents participated in an open forum on the case - called "A Campus Divided" - held in the South Quad cafeteria. "I really hope we will begin to open up and understand each other better. That (understanding) is the major thing beyond the O.J. trial," said Veronica Smith, president of United Students for Christ, which co-sponsored the forum with Housing Special Programs and University Housing. "It's important to clear the air with each other about our differences, not just because of O.J., but because we live together. On a campus, we should learn about each other, beyond the ste- reotypes," Smith said. Charles Hawthorne, pastor of Labor of Love Ministries and founder of USC, discussed how the reaction to the ver- dict has been divided along racial lines. He cited a recent Detroit Free Press poll of Michigan voters, which found 72 See SIMPSON, Page 2A "Whaw system ain being debi --Alex AP PHOTO Protesters argue outside the Rockefeller Center prior to O.J. Simpson's scheduled interview with NBC last night. He did not grant the interview. Story, Page 2A. Candidates answer safety concerns in race for 3rd Ward By Maureen Sirhal Daily Staff Reporter supervisor, supports taking a more personal interest in crime- Arbor would not be what it is without the University." "It is a power struggle," Grobbel explained. "Of nn~c th 1T,,.it, g, rt lfto AnnArhnrhint I