The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 17, 1984 - Page 5 Glenn accuses Mondale o -,-7 Sen. John Glenn, who has slipped into a second-place tie with Rev. Jesse Jackson according to a new national poll, accused Democratic presidential front-runner Walter Mondale yesterday of lying about his involvement with Alaska pipeline legislation. Mondale had been asked during an Iowa debate last Saturday about lob- bying for pipeline legislation that would allow certain construction costs to be passed on to consumers. "The pre-billing issue that you're talking about, I was always opposed to that," Mondale replied at the time. "I never did any lobbying on that. I wasn't 'Fritz can't have it both ways. He can't have been for pre-billing back then and tell the voters today that he was 'always against." -John Glenn Democratic presidential candidate f lying letting them know the former vice president was 'on board."' Mondale has denied lobbying, although he was a paid consultant to one of the companies involved in building the pipeline. And he has said assertions to the contrary come from rival candidates desperate to revive their own campaigns. Glenn also cited a 1982 interview with the Minneapolis Tribune in which Mondale is quoted as saying that he supported pre-billing. "Fritz can't have it both ways," Glenn said. "He can't have been for pre-billing back then and tell the voters today that he was 'always against."' involved on that issue because I believe in standing up for the consumer." "THAT STATEMENT by Mr. Mon- dale is untrue," Glenn declared yester- day at a Washington news conference. "In the halls of Congress, it was no secret that Fritz Mondale and others were associated with the pipeline project - an association that would. help influence members of Congress by Proposed student conduct code sparks debate o4x.Z\ b, -,. & v, rya Up and over Daily Photo by TOD WOOLF Despite his broken arm, Ann Arbor resident Adam Grahm jumps off his skate board, over the railing in front of the Graduate Library yesterday, only to land back on the board. (Continued from Page 1) sity has traditionally left to civil authorities or police. Students who violate the code could. face punishment as severe as expulsion. after being tried by an internal judicial system that would be instituted under the proposed rules. THERE IS NO need for the Univer- sity to adopt such rules to police student behavior, said West Quad Building Director Alan Levy, who spoke on the panel "Ninety to 99 percent of the incidents I deal with (in the dormitory) would never fall under this code," Levy said. "I believe (serious forms of miscon- duct) can be handled with the vehicles we have now." Yet the University has rarely enfor- ced the current rules for student con- duct. ALONG WITH Ellis and Levy, panelist Jonathan Rose who works at the University's Student Legal Services office criticized the code because it would only effect students and not faculty and staff members. Rose who has disapproved of the proposed rules since they were first drafted last Spring, said many of the of- fenses cited in the code are already prohibited under civil and criminal laws. University administrators, however, say that the code is necessary because it gives them a lever to punish students for problems such as sexual harassment. The code would also protect victims in such incidents, added Sharphorn, a policy advisor for the University's vice president for academic affairs and provost Billy Frye. But Rose said that a University policy on sexual harassment isn't necessary because students can file suit in courts. "I don't think that they need a code for sexual harassment. If so, it needs to be demonstrated," Rose said. POI ce notes Woman assaulted A thirty-nine-year-old Ann Arbor woman was sexually assaulted Mon- day, police said. Police said someone called the woman Monday night and said he had found an identification card she had lost earlier. The caller told her she could pick up the card on the 1000 block of State Street. While she was walking on State St., two men jumped out of a white car, which had been following her, threw her to the ground and assaulted her, ac- cording to police. When the woman began to scream and struggle, the two suspects fled to the car, police said. A nearby resident called the police after hearing screams. Although there are no suspects in the case, one of the men was described as being in his early twenties, 5 feet 6 in- ches tall, and having a moustache. - Nancy Gottesman Mickey Mantle says CREDIT FOR S UDENTS 3 OOp QOQQ KEY FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC KEYF TIMESA A! uCANT VISA® and MasterCard® Credit Cards Now Available to Students through TITE5RVEF's BankAction Programi No Minimum Income or Job Requirements. Savings account and fees required. Mail this coupon for complete information. Send to : Timesaver Headquarters Building / Student Dept / 12276 Wilkins Avenue / Rockville, MD 20852 Name Address Mc' City State Zip *-Phone( ) O0 School Attending Status: Fr 0 Soph D Jr L) Sr Q Grad Q E u) There's Never Been a Better Time to Get VISA® and MasterCard® Credit Cardsl Apply Today[ The 4th U.S.-Japan Automotive Industry Conference V The American Automobile Industry: Rebirth or Requiem? Public Forum March 20, 1984 Workshops March 21, 1984 Featu ring Lionel H. Olmer Under Secretary for International Trade Owen Bieber UAW President Shohei Kurihara Advisor to, MITI Public Forum $100 Workshops $125 Academic Registration Presented by' The University of Michigan Information: (313) 764-1489 The attack of the killer housepets LOS ANGELES (AP) - Cuddling a plague-infected cat proved fatal for a South Lake Tahoe woman. A Los Angeles man nearly died after being bitten by his supposedly non- venoumous pet snake. And an Oregon girl was hospitalized for a week with bubonic plague after she broke up a cat fight. These cases were outlined in today's issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, which published an ac- companying editorial headlined: "Caution: Pets May Be Hazardous to Your Health." "MOST AMERICAN households harbor one or more pets," wrote editorialist William Hubbert, a U.S. Department of Agriculture veterinarian in Hyattsville, Md. "Each may present certain infectious, physical or toxic hazards for the human residents if not maintained and handled properly." "We usually have frequent, intimate contact with these common inhabitants of our domestic environment. Therefore, we cannot afford to overlook their attendant hazards." The articles were intended "to alert physicians to things they might not encounter every day but that might happen," said Jim Stacey, a spokesman for the AMA journal in Chicago. HUBBERT'S LIST of health hazards from pets included an infection called toxoplasmosis and plague - like tularemia from cats, rabies and plague from cats and dogs, tapeworm - induced cysts from dogs, parasites from birds and frogs, poisoning by snakes, and salmonella infection from turtles. "Pets are a health hazard," said Dr. Willis Wingert, an emergency pediatrician at County-USC Medical Center in Los Angeles. a How to have class between classes. 1 I 11 : I I I ATT ENTION!!! ALL CALIFORNIA STUDENTS CAN EITHER YOU OR YOUR PARENTS STILL USE FINANCIAL AID THIS YEAR? The CLAS* loan program is now available to California students and their parents. The program which is similar to the Guaranteed Student Loan Program (GSLP) allows parents to borrow up to $3,000 per year to help with educational costs. It is also available t independent undergraduates and graduate students. This program is made avail- able through the California Student Loan Authority.--~~~~~~~~~~~~ -~ FOR MORE INFORMATION SEND THIS CO TO THE: CALIFORNIA STUDENT LOAN AUTHOR ~ ~';.-'~ I41 f rqm ofNalli Room PO o )UPON RITY Indulge yourself in a warm cup of Cafe Vienna. It's a light and cin- namony touch of class. And just one of six deliciously different flavors from General Foods"i i International Coffees.