-I Jr rn night: Mostly cloudy, low per 40d. )morrow: Cloudy, high ,our d 50'. One hundredfve years of editorialfreedom Tuesday October 31, 1995 ~ r s. y. uel rom Daily Wire Services MONTREAL -- Federalists who dvocated a united Canada celebrated a airline victory yesterday over support- rs of Quebec's independence move- ent inta dramatic secession referen- urn that will leave deep scars behind. The Canadian Broadcast Corp. re- 'orted last night that 50.6 percent of luebecers voted against the referen- um, while 49.4 voted in favor of sov- reignty. Only 50,000 votes separated be two sides, the CBC reported. The turnout, after a passionate cam- aign, was exceptionally large - 92 ercent of the roughly 5 million regis- ered voters. "To see it escape our grasp is hard to tear," said the separatists' charismatic eader, Lucien Bouchard. "Let's keep le faith, because the next time will be he right time. And the next time could ome quicker than you think." About 82 percent of Quebecers are rench-speaking, and roughly 60 per- ent of those voted for separation. As xpected, roughly 90 percent of En- ;lish-speaking and immigrant Quebec- rs voted "No." ecers say Separation might have hurt By Laura Nelson increasing econo Daily Staff Reporter This competit Quebec's close vote yesterday to stay part of Canada will provinces andc help the United States avoid some economic uncertainty, trade with the U University experts say. He added Can The "no" vote on the sovereignty proposal will likely ments away fron benefit the U.S. economy, said Bernard Yeung, an associate long run, "if C professor of international business and a Canadian. because the two, "The point is to ask what reform will take place after (the The effects of. vote)" in the relationship between the federal and provin- mental, for Can cial governments, Yeung said. "The referendum is a symp- said, because th tom of some ... stress level," which must be resolved, secession would Yeung said. "Otherwise, the system will break down." Canadian busine Yeung said the current Canadian government is unstable Robert Stern,a and needs reform to similar referendums in the future. said any negativ He predicted Canada might eventually adopt a common- short term, due, wealth system of government, which would allow the prov- trade agreemen inces to have acommon currency and one foreign policy while Agreement, wou Non' U.S. economy mic competition between them, he said. ion would increase the prosperity of all the consequently increase import and export nited States, Yeung said. adian prosperity might draw foreign invest- n the United States at first, but that in the anada does well, the U.S. will do well" economies are "intimately related." secession would have probably been detri- ida, Quebec and the United States, Yeung e bitterness and uncertainty resulting from d weaken the Canadian dollar and hurt the ess climate. a professor of economics and public policy, e effects on the economy would have been to the uncertainty as to whether existing ts, like the North American Free Trade uld have extended to a sovereign Quebec. ts ing proudly, when Bouchard congratu- lated them for improving so dramati- ho cally from a 60-40 percent defeat in a a 1980 independence referendum. 's "lWe roll up our sleeves and we try r- again," said Bouchard's partner, Que- Down the , Middle With more than 92 percent of elegibile voters going to the polls, Quebecers narrowly defeated a proposal to split from Canada. Voting Yes The difference was reported to be about 50,000 votes in the province of 7.3 million people. Source: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. Daily Graphic bec Premier Jacques Parizeau. "We won't wait 15 years this time. ... We want our country, and we will get it." Even if another referendum is not imminent, there will be immediate calls for constitutional reform. "Canada on paper may still be a coun- try - but there's something wrong with this country,"' said Louise Beaudoin, culture minister in Quebec's separatist government. "We had 9 per- cent more than we had in 1980- some- thing has to be done." Some leading backers of the federal- ist side also said the narrow result should See QUEBEC, Page 7 Federalists celebrated raucously at their headquarters, waving Canada's maple leaf flag amid a flurry of bal- loons. Not all was civil: Hundreds of "Yes" and "No" supporters taunted one another in downtown Montreal, and a dozen came to blows after the resul were announced. Other separatist campaigners - wh, came closer than many had dreamed few months ago--wept on each other shoulders. But they came to life, chee JJ$)J\ d Dearborn f lsay relations improving By Stephanie Jo Klein Daily Staff Reporter Jacqueline Lawson, an associate pro- fessor of English and chair of the fac- ulty senate on the University's Dearborn campus, yesterday reported slow progress on improving relations be. tween faculty governance and the campus's administration. At yesterday's meeting of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, Lawson described increasing tensions on the Dearborn campus in the face of recent administrative actions, such as possible violations ofgrievance procedures and the publication of a revised faculty handbook without fac- ulty senate input. "A faculty grievance was recently quashed by the provost," Lawson said. She gave further details that Dearborn's Provost Robert Simpson had denied a hearing in a recent case of an unnamed professor. According to Regents' Bylaw 5.09, faculty members with grievances on issues of tenure are entitled to a hearing by a special committee set up by SACUA. Simpson said he did not find the specific case grievable "because it was an administrative matter." He said he thought the appropriate procedurehad been followed. Upon the provost's action, Lawson said she took it upon herself to autho- rize a hearing. "I went ahead, as chair of the faculty senate, and took the case to the faculty senate grievance committee," she said. The chair of the committee, Donald Anderson, is currently reviewing the request to convene the committee. Lawrence Berkove, a professor of English and president of the Dearborn chapter ofthe American Association of University Professors, said AAUP com- pletely supports the faculty government. "We're helping them with informa- tion on faculty rights on other cam- puses across the state and country," Berkove said. "We're trying to ensure that the standards offaculty governance that are generally accepted as norms are accepted at Dearborn's campus." Lawson said the recent publication by the provost's office of a faculty handbook caused further tensions. The handbook, which was distributed on campus last week, was compiled and published without the approval of the faculty senate. "From my perspective, it did not need to go through faculty senate," Simpson said, adding that the senate was not meeting at the time of the revisions during the summer. Simpson appointed a committee of five faculty members to help draft the handbook, Lawson said. She also claimed that crucial sections from the 1981 handbook, relating to grievances and promotion, were omitted, in viola- tion of actual grievance procedures. Simpson denied that any parts were omitted from the handbook, saying that it was only a revision of the earlier version. Berkove did not comment on the omitted sections, but agreed that the procedures followed were not normal. "The senate has a right to amend its See GRIEVANCE, Page 3 LSA senior Rainey Bice, right, and Engineering senior Paul Pan, in green shirt, paint a mural on the window of the pediatric center at the University Medical Center as part of an assignment for their Drawing 101 class. It may have started as a Celtic agricultural festival. Throughout the years, fire rites and marrying games marked the start of autumn. Tonight, the witches, ghosts and goblins will be roaming about in full force. Eric Radziminsky, an LSA sophomore, tries on an Indian headress at 'Fantasy Attic' costume shop on Main St. to wear to a Halloween Phish concert in Chicago. Detroit volunteer s "m-----..... .._... fight Devil flames Court to rule about accusations of race bias DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer joined about 35,000 volunteers in patrolling the city as the pre-Halloween arson spree appeared in control early last night. By 7:30 p.m., the city had 26 fires, Detroit police Deputy Chief George Clarkson said. The city has 40 to 60 fires daily. Updated numbers were not available late last night and would not be released until tomorrow, city spokes- woman Michelle Zdrodowski said. &.11 - ....- . - -L+T -- c- m.- the most since 215 Devil's Night blazes in 1986. Many blamed Archer for the increase, saying he failed to continue the work of his predecessor, Coleman Young, in stamping out the fires. "Things didn't go very well last year. The mayor started work on this Nov. 1 last year," said Zdrodowski, who ex- pected to recruit another 5,000 volun- teers for anti-arson patrols by Hallow- een night. Clarkson said three people were ar- t-c4r; 1txinIPCPr -7v +-rn -~n- WASHINGTON (AP) - The Su- preme Court tackled a sensitive racial issue yesterday, agreeing to decide whether federal prosecutors must re- spond to accusations that they discrimi- nate against blacks in crack-cocaine cases. The justices said they will review rulings that threw out federal indict- ments against five men who had been charged with trafficking in crack in the Los Angeles area. The men said they were chosen for federal prosecution because they are black, and federal prosecutors initially The Court Also . Used a Virginia death-row inmate's case to make it harder to uphold some death sentences if errors occurred during the sentencing. Turned down a grandmother's attempt to reinstate an invalidated Georgia law that had allowed grandparents to win court-ordered visitation with their grandchildren over parents' objections. Rejected the appeal of Mexican businessman Ruben Zuno-Arce, sentenced to life in prison for his role in the 1985 kidnan. torture . __-I -- - -.- e.r-.. .s S . 11 ' - A ... . ,..!R....L IA.S.. .wi n S n i a..... I