.AL( T The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 1, 1995 - 3 MSA to update office, establish North Campus link Oakland U. students being tried for beating TROY - A circuit court judge ruled Monday that statements made to police by two suspects after an attack on an Oakland University professor is admis- sible in court. Judge Steven N. Andrews ruled that three statements Dwayne Barton, 21, of Rochester Hills made to police and three statements by Lee Than Knight, 21, also of Rochester Hills, are admissible. Both men are charged with assault with intent to commit murder. Barton and Knight are each charged in the March 2 attack on Stuart Wang with intent to rob while armed. Both men pleaded guilty Monday to charges of breaking and entering and breaking and entering a coin box. Wang, 48, interrupted two burglars in Oakland University's O'Dowd Hall. He was savagely beaten by the attackers with their fists and a bolt cutter and left to die. The attackhas left the professor brain- damaged. He remains in therapy, threat- ened by aneurysms in his brain and in a carotid artery in his neck. Andrews agreed Monday to seat sepa- rate juries for Barton and Knight after Barton's attorney, Howard S. Arnkoff of Troy, contended in a last-minute motion that the men implicated each other in statements made to police be- fore and after their arrests. Barton saidMondaythat he and Knight had entered O'Dowd Hall through a door that had been held open with an eraser. But Knight gave a different ver- sion, saying the pair had.found keys to the building the night before in an office. Kansas U looks to new fuel sources LAWRENCE, Kan. - The Univer- sity of Kansas is exploring ways to protect the environment with the aid of a donation it received last month. The National SoyDiesel Develop- ment Board gave two 55-gallon barrels of biodiesel fuel to the university. Two of the buses run by KU on Wheels, the transportation service of the University of Kansas, will use the fuel this week. The KU Environs, an environmental group on campus, urged KU on Wheels totake advantage of the donation. If the experiment goes well, the group will pursue ways to raise money for the environmentally friendly fuel, which cots twice as much as the regularly used petroleum diesel. Purdue sorority put on probation The Purdue University chapter ofthe Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority is facing social probation after members partici- pated in raids on 14 fraternity houses. Only two members of the 86-woman house did not take part in the Oct. 17 vandalism rampage, which involved the use of flour, spray paint, petroleum jelly and several dry goods. The mon- etary value of the damage has not yet been assessed. The Kappas received the sanctions after members of four of the fraternities retaliated by spray painting the sorority house, opening fire hydrants and dam- aging cars. In addition to social probation, the participating members of the sorority must perform 602 hours of community service, doing projects that will beau- tify the neighborhood. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Lisa Poris from staff and wire reports By Michelle Lee Thompson Daily Staff Reporter Striving to confront a communication problem with North Campus constituents, costs of child care at the University and the effectiveness of its own office, the Michigan Student Assembly voted unanimously at last night's regular meeting to create three new task forces. Engineering Rep. David Burden proposed the North Campus Task Force in hopes of improving communications with North Campus residents and students, and creating an MSA office on the campus. "It's ridiculous that anyone that lives up on North Campus or attends classes mostly on North Campus has to come all the way down here to do anything with MSA," Burden said. "Until we have an office on North Campus, then members of the task force can act to represent MSA there." Burden said he would run for chair of the task force at next week's meeting. Music Rep. Susan Ratcliffe said, "There's a lot of groups up on North Campus and a lot of them are uninformed as to the resources of MSA. "Hopefully, this task force will provide infor- mation as to how they can get money from MSA and any support they need." External Relations Committee Chair Fiona Rose last night proposed a Child Care Services Task Force. The resolution provides for the assembly to interact with the Center for the Education of Women, the Graduate Employee Organization and the University's Health and Human Services Department "in studying and changing (as neces- sary) the state of child care on this campus." Rose said she has been studying the University's child-care resources, which include six child-care centers, for a year. The resolution states that some graduate students spend their entire financial aid package on caring for their children. Leslie dePietro, coordinator of University's Family Care Resources Program, said, "I think the more student involvement we can get in this area, the stronger the 'U' will be in attracting a more diversified student population." Although Rose offered the resolution with a clause making herself the task force's chair, the assembly voted to elect a co-chair at next week's meeting from the University community at large, possibly someone who has a child. The Office Resources Task Force will focus on improving the assembly's facilities. Campus Gover- nance Committee Chair Probir Mehta and Vice President Sam Goodstein will co-chair the task force. Although a similar group led by former LSA Rep. Dante Stella evaluated the office's needs last year, Mehta's proposal calls for a non-partisan evaluation. The task force includes members of several parties. "If you go to other offices in the University, they're beautiful," Mehta said, adding that he hopes the task force will find inexpensive ways to make the office and chambers more useful. Mehta said he hopes the task force's findings will persuade the assembly to reallocate supplies and possibly distribute unused equipment to othergroups. Bugler plans to require welfare mothers to work Woof, woof! The Engler triplets, Madeleine (left) Margaret (center) and Hanna show off their Halloween costumes at the governor's residence in Lansing on Monday. The dalmation costumes were made by the children's grandmother, Agnes Engler. Affiance targets Sen. Levin with $1M lagprotecion cmag LANSING (AP) - Gov. John Engler's rush to put more welfare re- cipients to work collided with respect for motherhood yesterday as lawmak- ers complained about his plan to force mothers of infants into jobs. The plan unveiled by Engler for re- vamping Michigan's welfare system would require recipients to cooperate in looking for work, do community ser- vice or work 20 hours a week - or face a swift end to their benefits. Mothers would be exempt only until their infants are six weeks old, but be- fore that time could be required to at- tend parenting classes or other activi- ties. Now, mothers can wait until their babies are a year old before looking for work. Some warned that was too soon to. separate babies and new mothers. "I don't think there's any greater working role than that mother and child bond," said Rep. Bill Bobier (R- Hesperia). Bobier said forcing mothers to leave their infants could backfire on the state's efforts to strengthen families. "I am less than comfortable in insist- ing that mothers with infants six weeks old bundle them up on a February after- noon and go to their (job). I think that's way too soon," he said.. A former recipient of Aid to Families With Dependent Children agreed. "I don't see how that in the long run is going to help society as a whole," said Diane Bernard of Detroit, a na- tional board member of the National Welfare Rights Organization. "The children need their mothers at six weeks. They need her to be in a good frame of mind emotionally as well as physically. If she is on aid, she is more likely not to have a partner who can kick in for her. The children may suf- fer." Highlights of Gov. Engler's Proposal 8 Recipients will lose all benefits after 60 days if they fail to look for a job, work or community service. Recipients who cooperate for the first 60 days and later fail to do so will have their grants cut 25 percent and then dropped from rolls completely after four months of noncooperation. 3 Recipients exempted from the work requirement include grandparents raising grandchildren; individuals age 65 or older; the disabled; those caring for a disabled child and mothers of infants less than six weeks old.' 9 Minor parents will be required to live with their parents or with other adults and attend school to get benefits. Engler said people who stay home with their children should not expect taxpayers' help. "That's fine as long as you don't ask somebody else to pay yourbills," he said. Social Services Director Gerald Miller defended the six-week limit. He said many private employers give only six weeks of maternity leave and wel- fare recipients should not expect better treatment. The requirements unveiled yester- day build on efforts underway in Michi- gan since 1992 to push welfare recipi- ents into jobs. The state estimates more than 70,000 families have left welfare since October 1992 after getting jobs. Engler said the new provisions will take advantage of the new flexibility Congress is expected to give states to run their own welfare programs. He wants state lawmakers to pass his pack- age by the end of the year. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Citizens Flag Alliance is spending more than $1 million on ads targeting senators in a dozen states who are mostly undecided on how to vote on an amendment that would ban burning the American flag. The group today is unveiling its radio and TV ad campaign urging viewers to call their senators in support of the amend- ment in key states including North Dakota, Connecticut, New Hampshire and Michigan, Flag Alliance spokeswoman Susan Ridge said. Ridge said the ads are mostly aimed at undecided senators. But the alliance also is targeting senators they believe could be sympathetic, like Michigan Democratic Sen. Carl Levin, who until this week had not publicly stated how he would vote. In a letterto The Muskegon Chronicle, Levinsaid Monday he would vote against the proposed amendment, as he had in 1990. "I detest flag burning, but I also love the U.S. Constitu- tion," he wrote. "In 1990,1 voted against a proposed constitutional amend- ment authorizing each state to adopt its own definitions and penalties for flag desecration, which would have resulted in a legal quagmire and undermined First Amendment rights," he explained. Ridge said that despite Levin's letter, the Alliance would start broadcasting radio ads in Michigan. It is planning a press conference in Lansing tomorrow to unveil a30-secondTVad. Levin was chosen in part because in 1989 he voted for a statute that would have prevented flag burning. The statute passed, but in 1990 the U.S. Supreme Court overruled it. The ads are running in North Dakota, where both senators are undecided, and New Hampshire, where Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter is making his bid for the Republican presidential nomination. Both New Hampshire senators al- ready support the amendment. The TV ad shows people at a cross-burning rally, a book- burning rally and then finally protesters burning an Ameri- can flag. Poll: Two-thirds of Americans believe angels are real DETROIT (AP) - More Americans believe angels are real than believe the devil is real, and about a third of adults in a recent poll said they believed in ghosts or spirits. In the national EPIC-MRA/Mitchell telephone survey of 1,000 adults, 69 percent said they thought angels exist, compared with 58 percent who said they believed in the devil. Also, 39 percent of those questioned in late September said they believed in ghosts or spirits, said the poll released earlier this month. Nineteen percent said they believed in reincarnation. The beliefin angels was strongest, 88 percent, among people who also told pollsters their top concern was morals and family values, the survey found. It had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. Beliefin angels was strongerin people who live in the South, oppose abortion, consider themselves Republican, have not earned a college diploma and earn less than $75,000 a year. Believing in angels would appeal to younger churchgoers who are spiritu- ally curious and are heavy-hearted about the harsh realities of life in the 1990s, said the Rev. Edgar Vann, pastor of the 1,500-member Ebenezer Baptist Church in Detroit. "They're looking for a higher con- sciousness, a higher power. That's why we're seeing a real resurgence of spiri- tual core values now. People are look- ing for an anchor around which they can build their lives," said Vann, vice president of the Council of Baptist Pas- tors of Detroit and Vicinity. Angel products, such as figurines and books, are a growing business. "The number of angel products is growing every year," said Denny Dahlmann, who opened his Angel Trea- sures store in Royal Oak in 1993 and has since helped open eight others in Michigan and elsewhere. "If you look at what the movies have done over the last several months, there's been more about angels," said EPIC-MRA President and co-owner Bernie Porn, whose Lansing company did the poll with Mitchell Research & Communications of East Lansing. "I suppose it's no accident there has been an increase in movies about an- gels. ... They obviously have an ap- peal," Porn said. Many people believe they have had angel encounters, said Paul Schubert, director of Psychological Studies and Clergy Consultation Program in Oak- land County's West Bloomfield. "Experiencing encounters with an- gelic beings ... is common to a signifi- cant number ofpeople, andthese people are not necessarily high strung or people given to these kinds ofvi sions," he said. One ofthose people is Lorna Stephens Meatte, who said she saw an angel one night in 1986 as she comtemplated sui- cide. It happened shortly after herbrother died, while her marriage was falling apart. She said she believes it saved her life. "I fell back on my couch that night and said, 'God, I want to die."' Then she saw a bright light, like a star, and soon saw her brother. "It was very warm and it felt like I was being hugged, even thought I could not touch him," Meatte told the Detroit Free Press for an article published Monday; Correction Lupus is not an infectious disease. This was incorrectly reported in Monday's Daily. The cause of lupus is unknown. ~1. 174 What's happening in Ann Arbor today '_ ,.:.:: GROUP MEETINGS Q American Baptist Student Fellow- ship, free meal, meeting, 663- 9367, First Baptist Church, Cam- pus Center, 512 East Huron, 5:30- 7 p.m. Q AIESEC Michigan, general member meeting, 662-1690, Business Administration Building, Room 1276, 6 p.m. U Archery Club, 930-0189, Sports Coliseum, Hill Street, 7-9 p.m. U La Voz Mexicana, meeting, 994- 9139, Michigan League, Room D, 7 p.m. Q Ninjutsu Club, beginners wel- come, 761-8251, Intramural Q "Exploring Grad School Options: Political Science, Public Policy and International Affairs," spon- sored by Career Planning and Placement, Michigan Union, Anderson Rooms, 5:10-6:30 p.m. Q "Exploring Grad School Options: Psych, Social Work and Public Health," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, Michi- gan Union Pendleton Room, 6:10- 7:30 p.m. Q "General Mills, Inc. Open Pre-Re- cruitment Session," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, Michigan League, Michigan Room, U "Objective Law," sponsored by Stu- dents of Objectivism, Michigan League, Conference Room 6, 7 p.m. Q "Women in Politics Forum With Sen. Alma Wheeler-Smith, Rep. Liz Brater and Rep. Mary Schroer," sponsored by Women's Issues Commission and Michigan League Programming, Michigan League, Vandenberg Room, 8 p.m. STUDENT SERVICES Q Campus Information Centers, Michigan Union and North Cam- pus Commons, 763-INFO, info@umich.edu, UMoEvents on The University of Michigan BASKETBALL BAND AUDITIONS Auditions will consist of a sight-reading excerpt. Men's Basketball Band Rehearsals -Tuesdays, 7 - 8:15 pm **Women's Basketball Band Rehearsals -Tuesdays, 8:30 - 9:45 pm Positions open for: Drum Set Piccolo Clarinet