Page 2 -The Michigan Daily-Thursday, March 17, 1988 MSA puts code, PIRGIM to vote IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports By LISA WINER Two traditionality hot issues on campus - a proposed code of non- academic conduct and a negative chek-off funding system for the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan - may help decide the outcome of Michigan Student Assembly elections next week. The issues will be voted upon by students as three of five referenda presented this year. But the two tsues will undoubtedly also influence voters' choice between the two parties hoping to be elected. Candidates from Students First And Common Sense strongly disagree on the two issues. Two of the referenda involve PIRGIM. They state: -Whereas the existing funding contract between MSA and PIRGIM does not state the conditions under which PIRGIM receives funding, should the contract be terminated, and PIRGIM be forced to follow the same procedures in obtaining MSA money as other student organizations? -Should PIRGIM's refundable fee - reduced by the University's Board of Regents from $1.25 to 75 cents per student for1987-88, be maintained through Winter term 1989? Michael Phillips, an LSA junior and presidential candidate for Students First, said he supports PIRGIM and respects the process by which PIRGIM attained funding. But Vice presidential candidate for Common Sense Ricky Nemeroff, an LSA junior, strongly opposes both PIRGIM's presence on students' tuition bills and the signature collection process by which PIRGIM was put on the bills. He said most students signed the organization's petitions without understanding what PIRGIM does and how it spends its money. "They got students signatures but not their support," Nemeroff said. The code referenda states: -If MSA votes to approve or disapprove of any proposed code of nonacademic or racist conduct, should MSA first put the code before the students for a vote? Phillips supports the referendum regarding the code. He said he believes such a policy "should be written by four constituencies (students, faculty, administrators, and workers) and then be voted on by the constituents." Nemeroff said he supports the referendum because students should be involved in a decision regarding a code. But he said he does not support the referendum because it's too important to be decided by the only 4,000 students who vote in an MSA election. The other two referenda state: -The Michigan Collegiate Council is a student run, state association of student governments which lobbies the state legislature on student issues. Should the MSA fee be increased by 35 cents per term to fund the MCC? -Should students urge Congress to establish a holiday recognizing the plight of Vietnam veterans? PIRGIM is anc devotes its time tc and cleaning up to able to receive f MSA by collecting a majority of the year. Students voted negative check-off; in which all stud support the grou student who does r n- -n the fee may requ" STREET mOTORSC Quality Care ForYour FineImported Automobile Continued fro W OFFER process and diss Phone 663-5544J n -justification Flemin SAIG- MON.-FRI. 9AM-6PM. hFlemiroposal. If Feig's pln i MAIN STREET MOTORS the bylaw, which r 906 North Main Street - go before the coun Ann Arbor, MI 48104 theregents. Fleming has cc organization that o fighting hunger oxic waste. It was funding through g signatures from student body last d last year for a system of funding ents are billed to up, although any not want to pay 't a refund. m Page 1 olution was the ng gave in making the regents pass t would go against equires that policy cil before going to ountered that his J KGraduates: Of fto New Jobs need good tra SEE US AT ARBOR DODGE FOR GREAT PRICES & EASY FINANCING FOR GRADUATES! Rebates up to 100000 4 & + 7 m8 APR: 4eQ-ao ntaine 8. PRESENT... S. Ts *Arbor Dodge gGOTTABE A DOE 3365 WASHTENAW " ANN ARBOR * MI 48104 VISIONOFCHRYSLERMOTO Open 9:00 p.m. M, Tues,Thurs. 9-6 w, F, Sat. ins portation? . . .0 r 1 l proposal is an anti-discrimination policy, not behavioral rules, and therefore falls under the jurisdiction of by-law 14.06. That bylaw states that people shall not discriminate against others at the University. However, it does not currently have any means of enforcement. LAST WEEK'S debate among student groups for an alternativehas overshadowed the debate about Fleming's policy itself, since its re- vision from an earlier draft two weeks ago. Fleming's revised document would set up a hearing panel, con- sisting of two students and a faculty member, to review cases and admin- ister sanctions. Punishments would range from expulsion to taking a mandatory class that "addresses the type of discriminatory behavior at issue." A student would be able to appeal to the Vice President for Stu- dent Services and the President. The faculty's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs praised the policy last week, but qualified its support by requesting a similar proposal for faculty and staff. Affirmative Action Office Director Virginia Nordby said such a policy will be released this week. SACUA chair Harris McClam- roch, an aerospace engineering pro- fessor, said, "I don't see how, on the one hand, people say racist acts are intolerable, but on the other, people say they don't want procedures. I see that as a contradiction. You can't have it both ways." BUT STUDENTS have argued that the proposed procedures do not guarantee due process. Law student and anti-code activist Eric Schnaufer contends that the civil court system has been effective for two centuries, and the University is inherently incapable of duplicating it. ie said, for example, the University does not have the power to subpoena wit- nesses. However, Law Prof. Frederick Schauer said that a university must only set up a method of notifying the accused and allow the accused to speak on their own behalf to be con- sidered constitutional,. Universities have to provide methods of due process before prose- cuting, but they need not look any- thing like the requirements in a criminal trial," Schauer said. Students have also expressed con- cern that Fleming's proposed proce- dures can be rewritten even if the re- gents accept their policy. Because codes at other universities would punish crimes such as "blocking buildings," students are worried that Fleming's policy could restrict protest. But Nordby said Fleming's docu- ment would not restrict student protest, because demonstrations would occur in a public forum. "Unless there was violence, this pol- icy wouldn't be touching that," she said. Fleming's policy, states that stu- dents in public forums like the Diag,. the Daily or Regents Plaza are "entitled to engage in the most wide- ranging freedom of speech, bound only by the limitations on freedom of speech enunciated by the courts." Coup fails to unseat Noriega PANAMA CITY, Panama - Soldiers tried to overthrow Gen. Manuel Noriega yesterday but loyal troops prevailed and he emerged from army headquarters after sounds of battle, calling the gunshots "kisses." Thousands of people went into the streets to protest Noriega's continued rule. It was the largest outpouring of discontent since civilian opponents began trying last summer to oust the general as chief of the Panama Defense Forces. The Defense Forces said the coup attempt had been staged by officers apparently led by Col. Leonicas Macias, head of the national police force. President Reagan said Tuesday the United States wants Noriega "out of there." Sanctions such as freezing Panamanian accounts in U.S. banks and withholding Panama Canal fees have created a cash shortage that makes it impossible to pay public employees. President Reagan vetoes civil rights bill, receives criticism WASHINGTON - President Reagan vetoed a major civil rights bill yesterday, saying it would "vastly and unjustifiably extend the power of the federal government over the decisions and affairs of private organiza- tions." Reagan also proposed an alternative that he said would "protect civil rights and at the same time preserve the independence of state and local governments, the freedom of religion and the right of America's citizens to order their lives and businesses without extensive federal intrusion." The veto was immediately criticized by civil rights and other groups, and congressional Democrats predicted the veto would be overridden. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), chair of the Senate Labor and Human Ri..ources Committee, called the veto "a kick in the teeth of civil rights. It is the most regrettable and least justifiable of all the Reagan vetoes." Pre-paid tuition faces changes WASHINGTON - Michigan and other states may be able to restore tax-free status to trust funds that guarantee college tuition by rewriting the laws that govern the programs, a University of Indiana law professor said yesterday. The Internal Revenue Service ruled that the Michigan Education Trust would be required to pay federal taxes on its earnings, although individual investors in the trust would have no additional tax-liability, Gov. James Blanchard said Tuesday. Under the programs, payments into the fund give a child the right to enter a college or university without additional cost. The payments can be made either all at once or periodically. The amount to be paid depends upon the child's age when the payment is made and on estimates of the trust's return on its investment and the likely cost of tuition when the child reaches 18. Reagan backs peace proposal WASHINGTON - President Reagan said yesterday he will not revise or abandon an American plan for Mideast peace talks even though Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir complainedthat it was "not conducive to peace." Ending two hours of talks with Shamir in apparent deadlock, Reagan warned that opponents of the U.S. proposal face certain consequences. "They'll need to answer to themselves and their people as to why they've turned down a realistic and sensible plan to achieve negotiations," the president said. Reagan said Shamir did not specifically say "no" to an international peace conference demanded by Jordan's King Hussein with U.S. support. EXTRAS Man hiccups for 65 years, many offer bizarre remedies MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A 94-year-old man's offer of $10,000 to anyone who can end his 65 years of hiccupping has drawn some exotic nostrums - dill seed, magnesium phosphate, holy water, Indian hemp - but the man hiccups on. "Unbelievable," Lucretia Peterson of rural Aitkin said as she sifted through some of the more tan 5,000 letters, cassettes, and parcels that have poured into her home from Europe and North America since her father, Charlie Osborne, offered the reward in January. "People really care. Even though the $10,000 is a big deal to some of them, a lot say keep the money and spend it in good health," she said. Suggested remedies have ranged from homespun concoctions involving sugar and vinegar to scientific nerve-treatment regimens complete with detailed diagrams. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. Vol. XCVIII - No. 112 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: January through April - $15 in Ann Arbor, $22 outside the city. 1988 spring, summer, and fall term rates not yet available. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the National Student News Service. Editorin Chief...................REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Collins, Michael Fischer, Robert FlaggertAndrea Gacki, Managing Editor........................MARTHA SEVETSON Timothy Hutt, Juliet James. BrianJarvinen, Avra News Editor.......................................EVE BECKER Kauffman, Preeti Malani, David Peltz, Mike Rubin, Mark City Editor.....................................MELISSA BIRKS Shaiman, Features Editor..........................ELIZABETH ATKINS Todd Shanker, Lauren Shapiro, Chuck Skarsaune, Mark University Editor..........................KERY MURAKAMI Swartz, Marc S. Taras, Marie Wesaw. NEWS STAFF: Vicki Bauer, Anna BorgmanDov Cohen, Photo Editors..........................KAREN HANDELMAN Ken Dintzer, Sheala Durmnt, Steve Knopper, Theresa Lai, JOHN MUNSON Kristne LaLonde, Eric L emnt Michael Lustig, Alyssa PHOTO STAFF: Alexandra Brez, Jessica Greene, Ellen Lustigman, Dayna Lynn, Andrew Mills, Peter Mooney, Levy. Robin Lanak, David Lubliner, Danny Stiebel, Lisa Lisa Pollak, Jim Poniewozik. Aaron Robinson, Elissa Said, Wax. Micah Schmit, Elizabeth Stuppler, Marina Swain, Melissa Weekend Editors.......................STEPHEN GREGORY Rarmdell, Lawrence Rosenberg. David Schwartz. Ryan ALAN PAUL Tutak, Lisa Wier. WEEKEND STAFF: Fred Zinc. Opinion Page Editors.............JEFFREY RUTHERFORD Display Sales Manager..........................ANNE CALE SOUTHWORTH KUBEK OPINION STAFF: Con Accibal, Muzanmiil Ahmed, Sarah Assistant Display Sales Manager......KAREN BROWN Babb, Rosemary Chinnock Brian Debrox, Betsy Esch, DISPLAY SALES STAFF: David Bauman, Gail Belenson. Noah Fin~kel, Eric L. Holt. Joshua Ray Levin, Roderick Lauren Berman, Sherri Blanaky. Pam Bullock, Jeff Chen, MacNeeal, Jr., L Matthew MillerMichael Schechter, Steve Tammy Christie, Miltan Feld, LisaGeorgeMichelle Gill, Senrenuk, Sandma Steingraber, Mark Williams. Matt Lane, He~ather MacLachlan. Jodi Manchik, Eddy Meng, Sports Editor ..........................JEFF Jackie Miller, Shelly Pleva, Debbie Retzky, Jim Ryan, Lam RUSH Schlanger, Michelle Slavik, Mary Snyder, Marie Soma, Associate Sports Editors...................JULIE HOLLMAN Cassie Vogel, Bruce Weiss. 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