1£,, AN might: Mostly cloudy, iance of rain, low 40%. imorrow: Rain likely, high ound 55'. One hundredfve years of editorialfreedom Thursday November 9, 1995 tecnt Events ept. 20: Firefighters arrive at Daniel P. Rice's burning home and find him dead. ept. 22: A Ziwet House roorn in Baits is set on fire in apparent arson. ept. 23: Dale L. Lipke, 23, is arrested in connection2with the Baits arson. Separately, Crystal Lujan, 23, is arrested for carrying" a concealed weapon. ept. 25: Lipke and Lujan are arraigned separately. ct. 4: Lipke's preliminary hearing for the Baits fire is postponed. ct. 11 and 25: Lipke's preliminary hearing is postponed two more times. av. 7: While separately awaiting hearings and trials for their charges, Lipke and Lujan are both arraigned for the murder of Rice and Lipke for allegedly setting fire to his home. Lujan is also arraigned for the Baits fire. Student faces muder ~pjcharge By Jodi Cohen Daily Staff Reporter An LSA sophomore has been charged with the Sept. 18 murder of a local man and also with the Sept. 22 arson at the Vera Baits II residence hall. Crystal Lujan, 23, a part-time stu- dent, faces the possibility of life in prison. She is being held in the Washtenaw County Jail on charges of murder, attempted murder and arson, which stem from two incidents - the dorm fire and the brutal death of a Superior Township man. Police said Lujan, along with previ- ously arraigned suspect Dale Lipke, also 23, is accused of setting the Baits fire in an effort to kill a University student. The two have also been linked Sophomore also held for Baits arson to the Superior Township murder and arson. DPS confirmed that Lujan and Lipke were acquaintances. In her UNIX user directory description, Lujan mentions a person named Dale. Lujan is being held on three counts for the dorm fire: assault with intent to murder, a felony punishable by up to life in prison: setting off explosives, a felony punishable by up to 25 years in prison; and arson, a felony punishable by up to 20 years in prison, police said. Lujan's arrest warrant was issued Tuesday after combined efforts by the Washtenaw County Sheriffs Depart- ment and the University's Department of Public Safety. "It is a good example of collabora- tion," said DPS spokeswoman Eliza- beth Hall. Prosecutors allege Lujan and Lipke set the fire by throwing gasoline under the door of the Ziwet House room. The resident.an 18-year-old University stu- dent, was an acquaintance of Lujan, police said. The blaze, which police said began at 1:39a.m.,,caused about $20,000 in dam- age, burning parts of the carpet, desk and bed. No one was injured. DPS officers had moved the resident from her room about a week before the fire, after Lujan sent two women to threaten her, police said. The women also forced the victim to cut her hair. Lipke, a friend of Lujan, has been in custody since Sept. 23 in connection with the Baits fire. DPS confirmed yes- terday that Lujan coerced Lipke to help start the tire. Lipke has been held in Washtenaw County Jail in lieu of $500,000 bond. His preliminary hear- ing has been postponed three times. Lujan arrived in jail the same day as Lipke, but on unrelated charges. Offic- ers from the W ashtenaw County Sheriff's Department and the Ann Ar- bor Police Department arrested her for allegedly carrying a concealed weapon. As Lipke awaited a preliminary hear- ing for the Baits fire and while Lujan was in jail for the concealed weapon charge, both were arraigned Tuesday on charges that they set a Superior Township man's house on fire Sept. 20 after brutally killing him. Lujan was also charged with the Baits fire on Tuesday. Lujan and Lipke stood before District Court Judge Magistrate George Parker in separate arraignments held at the Washtenaw County Jail. "It became apparent to DPS investi- See MURDER, Page 2A 'U student keeps custody of child in appeals decision I I# STEPHANIE GRACE LIM/Daidy only have eyes for you ese huge eyes from a poster peer from the Gargoyle's windows at the Student Publications Building on Tuesday night. boweil opts out of 1996 pre sidenitial r ace WASHINGTON (AP) - After' lonths of "prayerful consideration" iat captivated the nation, Colin owell awkwardly embraced the Re- ublican Party yesterday, but said he 'ould not run for President in 1996 ecause it was "a calling that I do not et hear." Ending an extraordinary political lystery, Powell led out seeking ny elected office ext year. Instead, e_ said he would edicate himself to storing "the spiritr fLincoln" to a Re- ublican Party he aid was a lot more iverse than many onservatives Powell 'ould care to ad- lit. "I'm sorry I disappointed you," the tired general said in a poignant tribute > the thousands of everyday Ameri- ans who had urged him to run, in erson, through letters and.by joining raft Powell efforts. "We're devastated," said James ynch, a New York lawyer involved in ie draft effort. Said Tim Bush, an orga- izer in New Hampshire: "I think really ie country is the loser." Such support brought him to the brink f a candidacy, Powell said, but in the nd he stepped back from elective poli- Decision leaves 'Draft Powell' chairman without a candidate By Ronnie Qlassberg Daily Staff Reporter As a moderate Republican and state chairman of the Draft Powell for President Committee, Joseph Ditzhaiy said he hoped that Colin Powell would move his party to the center. Now, with Powell's decision to not enter the race, Ditzhazy said he does not know whom to support. Ditzhazy said many Powell supporters he talked to yesterday would like to support the Democratic ticket - but with Vice President Al Gore at the top. He said many Powell supporters are wary of President Clinton and ques- tion the integrity of the Republican front-runner, Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas. "I was a Republican up to the 'anybody-but-Bush' year and then I worked for Clinton," he said. "I think (Powell) had a clear picture of the future that this country is going into." Ditzhazy said the national organization had asked him to keep the state group together. "It's tough to keep a group together when you don't have a candidate," he said. He blamed Powell's decision on conservative Republi- cans who recently increased attacks on Powell for not representing their views. "I think Colin felt he didn't want to drag his family through that," Ditzhazy said. "The consistent message that I'm-getting is that (Powell supporters) won't support any of the remaining Republican candidates, and they'll either sit out or support Clinton-Gore. "They're scared by the Newt Gingrich Republican Party, and they're not particularly happy with Clinton," Ditzhazy said. Political science Prof.Steven Rosenstone said that Powell's decision might help Dole in the Republican primary. "It appears that Dole takes a boost here," he said. "In the general election, I suspect if Powell had been the Republi- can nominee, it would have been a more difficult situation for Clinton." Rosenstone said it would have been very difficult for Powell to win the Republican nomination. "My guess is that he calculated either winning the Republican nomination or winning as an independent was not high," Rosenstone said. "We've already seen in the last couple of weeks how the right was hammering away at him." LSA junior Tiffany Coty, who identifies herself as lib- eral, said she would have considered Powell, but will not support any other Republicans. "I think that even if he had run, he wouldn't have had any power because he's a moderate on all issues," Coty said. "I would have wanted to vote for someone who is not just conforming to the Republican ideology, and I think he kind of does by not taking a stand." N Judge originally ruled for father; appeals court disagrees By Michelle Lee Thompson Daily Staff Reporter LSA sophomore Jennifer Ireland will get custody of her 4-year-old daughter under a Michigan Court of Appeals decision handed down yes- terday, ending a two-year custody battle in which a judge had earlier awarded custody to the child's father. Macomb County Circuit Judge Raymond R. Cashen gave custody of 4-year-old Maranda Kate Ireland- Smith last year to her father, Macomb Community College student Steven Smith. However, the appeals court granted Ireland custody of the child during the appeal. The appeals court said the district court "committed clear legal error in considering the 'acceptability' of the parties' homes and child care arrange- ments." The court said Cashen's decision to award the child to Smith based on family permanence - that Smith would provide a more stable environ- ment for the child - was incorrect. The opinion mandates that Cashen not preside over the second hearing and that the trial court consider that Maranda has lived with Ireland since the trial began. Ireland said yesterday at a press conference that she felt "a little relief and a lot of joy" upon hearing the court's decision." I'm her permanence and her stability. The Court of Ap- peals saw that." Ireland's lawyer, Julie Field of the University's Women in the Law clinic, said, "The Court of Appeals found that Maranda Ireland-Smith has an established custodial home with her mother, Jennifer Ireland, and found that Steven Smith has never had the sole obligation of taking care of Maranda for any extended period of time." The appeals court said it would have reversed the lower court's decision if it could have and that it would retain jurisdiction of the case until the mat- ter is resolved. The Michigan Supreme Court has ruled that appellate courts may not decide custody cases or reverse a judge's finding of fact, but may send cases back to be re-evaluated. The court said Smith would have to Case Chronology September 1990: Jennifer Ireland, 15, and Steven Smith, 16, decide to abort the baby Ireland is carrying. The abortion never occurs. May 1991: One-month-old Maranda Kate Ireland-Smith is removed from foster care by Ireland and her mother. February 1993: Two months after Ireland files for child support, Smith files for custody, visitation rights and decreased child support for Maranda. May 13, 1994: Ireland, represented by family friend Ronald Dixon, loses custody of Maranda at the hands of Macomb County Circuit Judge Raymond R. Cashen. Two weeks later, the Michigan Court of Appeals gives Ireland a temporary stay during the appeal to come. June 27, 1994: Cashen renders opinion giving custody to Smith saying Smith's family would better care for the child because it would not use day care. Ireland files an appeal the following week. present new evidence to establish that he would provide more stability. Smith said last year all available evi- dence was presented. Alicia Aiken, a former University Law student who helped Field pre- pare for the case last year, said: "(The appellate court judges) were very clear. They disqualified (Cashen) and they limited the remand very, very narrowly and they said that they would have even remanded it if they didn't have to." Field said she was extremely hope- ful that the circuit court would give Ireland custody. "I think it will be extremely, extremely difficult for Mr. Smith to get a change to what the Court of Appeals has said." Smith could not be reached for com- ment yesterday. His lawyer, Sharon- Lee Edwards, said she had not seen the court's opinion and would not comment on the ease. At the time Ireland filed her appeal last year, Smith said: "I won my case See IRELAND, Page 2A Suspects - dtaine tics - for now anyway. To run for President, he said, would demand "a passion and commitment that, despite my every effort, I do not have for political life, because such a life requires a calling that I do not yet hear." "For me to pretend otherwise would not be honest to myself, it would not be honest to the Ameri- can people." Powell also ruled out being the GOP's vice presidential nominee, but said he might consider an appointed govern- ment position. Many Republicans, even Powell critics, said the retired general still was almost certain to be considered for the No. 2 spot on the GOP ticket. itudents' Party to run largest slate for MSA y Michelle Lee Thompson aily Staff Reporter One of the Michigan Student Assembly's o oldest parties, the Students' Party, is run- ing the largest slate in next week's elections with candidates for more schools than even LSA Rep. Olga Savic said that although the Students' Party has spoken against MSA Presi- dent Flint Wainess' health-care ideas, it does not oppose student health-care reform. "It's not so much that we are opposed to health care for students, but "Student government is not real-life politics - in Israel An Israeli border policeman checks flowers being delivered to the prime minister's m MU