lWaher Tonight: Cloudy, showers likely, low of 52°. Tomorrow: Showers likely, high around 58. IC ... : JWx, . 4 k _ =1 , w One hundred five years ofeditorialfreedom Thursday October 19, 1995 V. CVI, NO. 1h l Adt fAibhrmsiciglnce 7 igi held to fiht domestic violence By aI Mongkolpradit Daily Staff Reporter Laura Castellanos came to remember her best friend, who was a victim of domestic violence. "The impact that violence has upon the friends and family of battered victims is very strong," Castellanos said. Almost 300 people gathered on the Diag last night for a candlelight vigil to remember the estimated 2.5 million women who are victims of domestic violence each year. Teri Weingarden came to join the letter-writing campaign to secure more federal funding to educate people against violence. "Hopefully the political action postcards will be a large enough indicator that federal funding is a step to stopping violence against women," said Weingarden, who graduated in 1991. Participants signed postcards addressed to Senate WWHundreds i yas of abuse must come toan - Aditya Ezhuthachan Second-year LSA student Majority Leader Bob Dole and House Speaker Newt Gingrich to make them aware of the funding needed for the Violence Against Women Act that was passed as part of last year's crime bill. Representatives from different campus safety orga- nizations such as SAFEHouse, the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, the Assault and Crisis Center and the YWCA were present to offer participants' information about preventing violence. "It's hard to tackle a problem that happens behind closed doors," said second-year LSA student Aditya Ezhuthachan. "Hundreds of years of abuse must come to an end." Catherine McClaty, president of SAFE House's board of directors, spoke on the steps of the Graduate Library about the importance of preventing domestic violence. "It's nice to have these types of rallies on campus especially because this is the first time being away from home for several students and they should be educated about how to be safe," McClary said. Many students were glad to participate in the vigil and hope that it becomes an annual event. "It is important that men and women can come together and support battered and assaulted women," said Michigan Student Assembly Rep. Olga Savic. "It's only until all of us join together that this problem can come closer to a resolution. Unity is the first step." NOPPORN K'CH1A NANTH/Daily Ann Arbor resident Andrew Perry, former Body Shop employee Jeffrey Stuits, and Ann Arbor resident Patricia Rodriguez join the candlelight vigil held last night on the Diag. a U77, . rl*owlnl lie, neea FRip Bonnie White, a first-year LSA student, does flips for exercise on Palmer Field. She was a cheerleader and a gymnast in high shcool. S sschangenottcal President says he won't take sabbatical, plans to return to teaching next fall By Josh White Daily Staff Reponer With a search for his successor about to get underway, President James J. Duderstadt said yesterday he anticipates there will be a need for an interim president when he resigns in June. In an interview with The Michigan Daily, Duderstadt said he believes the Board of Regents will have to search for an interim president start- ing in January and, while he will not be involved in the search, he would help the University as much as pos- sible after he formally steps down. "lfthesearchdoesnotmove along that rapidly, and I don't' think that it will, (the board) will have to look for an in- terim," Duderstadt said. "I feel there will be an interim Duderstidt president, and I never close the door on anything. The world does not come to an end at 12 midnight on June 30. 1 am not going anywhere." Duderstadt said he does not expect the regents to look to Provost J. Beranard Machenevn hough several pisuus prcsnt b\ c com fo thc prot! ps iSt lin. We just got stability in the position of the provost, and to boost him up to interim president would not really solve anything because then we would be without a provost," Duderstadt said, adding there are several qualified people the Uni- versity could look to. Machen, who was appointed to the provost position last week, said he is definitely not in the running for interim president. "The truth is that the job I've got is more than I can handle," Machen said. "It would be foolish to take me out of a job that I have just begun to understand in order to do something else." Machen said the University would do best to focus on getting the presidential search started as quickly as possible. He said there would plenty of time in January, February or March to look for an interim president if neccessary. "After the first of the year, we will get an idea of how the search is going," Machen said. "If we then need to look toward an interim, President Duderstadt has gotten all the executive officers to President looks to.University'si next 20 years By Amy Klein D) ily Staff Reporter While President James J Duderstadt in- tends to step down from his post nextiune, the University's leader is still looking 20 years down the road. Nearing the gates of the 21st century Dudcrsfadt said h seeshe ' ,Untiversity re maiing ta4eir in ed'ucation. "We managed to take the University in 10 years to the point where we are the strongest public university in America, possibly the strongest in the world," Duderstadt said. We're positioned to lead higher education into the next century.' While Duderstadt wasreluctantto outinethe specific aspects of his vision, he did say educa- tioninthe future would bemore comprehensive, "I see a tniversity that -is less and less focused on packaging the University in. de- grees and more focused on providing .t~e opportunity to learn throughout life, Duderstadt said. "I expect the distinction be- twx een a1umni and students to blur." While the function of the U iversity changes. so will the practices within theUni yersity. Duderstadt said that in the nex t wo decades, students should expect less empha- sis placed on classrooms andlectures. 'it will be a cyberspace university that provides education and iniormation when- ever students want it, wherever students want it, and in the form they want it,' he said. A stronger focus on computers and technol- ogy will open new doors to education that em- phasizes creation ratherthan analysis, Duddrstadt said. "Space and time, physical identities like campuses will become less important.' stay on and do their jobs. It would seem that we would look to those people to do the job of interim president." Duderstadt said there are people inside and outside the University who know the University well enough to take the position of interim See DUDERSTADT, Page 2A WESTBLOOMFIELD (AP)-Colin Powell said yesterday he has adjusted his tone on key Republican issues such as abortion and the religious right because his "thinking and views" have sharpened--notto cater to conservatives. 'As if to prove his point, Powell said he believed the attention he has attracted during fis book tour shows that the Republican Party "is a broader party out there looking for lead- ership thanjust the part represented by the very ctive right wing." Powell did not deny refining his language on a number of issues prominent in Republi- can politics, from abortion to the House GOP's "Contract With America." But the retired general said the shifts came imply because he was "sharpening my own kinking and views" as he travels the country nd gets more involved in the day-to-day po- itical debate. Hisaides acknowledged that Powell, or as- ociates acting with his blessing, have con- cted several leading Republicans for advice on how to better articulate his views on abor- tion and other issues. Nonetheless, Powell said, "I'm not trying to change my message from day to day to appeal to one constituency or another." He made his comments before a book h zsigning session in subur- ban Detroit. Powell applauded the activismoftheGOPright, but took issue with those who say he would have little chance in party pri- maries because he is a "Rockefeller Republican" with moderate to liberal Powell views on social policy. "The answer I give to them is, well, find your revolutionary who gets more than 8 or9 percent ofthe vote and let me know when you get it," Powell said. He did not single out anyone by name, but the remark was an apparent reference to the poll standings of GOP presidential candidates who lag well behind Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole. Three in that group regularly compete for conservative support and have suggested they are best suited to carry out the 1994 Republican revolution: Texas Sen. Phil Gramm, former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander and com- mentator Pat Buchanan. As he delivered his modest salvo, Powell said that he will decide whether to enter the race in mid- to late November. His book tour ends this week and he wants to spend sometime discussing his future with family and friends. While Powell denied any political calculation in the recent tailoring of his language, the shifts have come on issues prominent in GOP politics. At the outset of his book tour, Powell raised several objections to the House GOP agenda and said of Republicans in general: "There is an edge to them and a harshness to them which tends to hurt those who are in a minority status." AIDS group hands out ribbons, condoms Citingw ditzt Ggrc questions debt extension ly Laura Nelson or the Daily Despite a successful first day on the Diag, members of the University's only tudent group dedicated solely to AIDS wareness said people need to become ore involved in preventing the dis- ase and educating others. Members of The Names Project/ IDS Education Is On Us were on the iagyesterday distributing red ribbons, ondoms and information. "Certain people just want a ribbon nd don't care about anything else," id Riki Mitzner, one of the group's ounders. "The ribbon has become trite nd unmeaningful." "The ribbon has become trite and neanlngfuL" - Riki Mitzner Member of The Names Project/AIDS Education Is On Us Stephen Fenwick, an Engineering sophomore. "People seem to be taking a real in- terest," said Mitzner, an RC sopho- more. WASHINGTON (AP) - House Speaker Newt Gingrich backed away yesterday from an offer to temporarily extend the government's borrowing authority. saying Clinton administra- tion warnings of a crisis by Halloween could not be trusted. In the latest exchange in a war of nerves, Gingrich said Treasury Secre- tary Robert Rubin's projections that the federal debt limit would be reached Oct. 31 could be "a Halloween trick to try to scare people." Before agreeing to raise the debt ceiling for even a short time, Republicans would insist that Rubin pro- vide details on the government's bor- rowing needs, Gingrich said. White House spokesman Mike McCurry, expressing administration an issue he would rather avoid. Theadministraton, on the otherhand, wants to see the debt limit extension separated from the budget issue, which would make it easier for Clinton to veto the G OP package. White House officials say they would like to see the debt limit extended until after the 1996 elections, or at least until his Christmas, when the year's budget may be completed. Gingrich and Rubinagreedyes- terdaycto continue discussing their differences. said Treasury spokes- -II