What's the deal with sorority rush? It's too early and too long. The Panhellenic Council should take measures to make rush easier on new students. A. A play within a play about Columbus 'discovering' America? Yup. It's the Performance Network's latest presentation, entitled Isabella, Three Ships, and a Shyster. The injured Elvis is out and Todd Collins is in at starting quarterback - or so it seems, as the Wolverines prepare for this Saturday's game against Oklahoma State University. Today Warm, TStorms possible; High 84, Low 64 Tomorrow More of same; High 86, Low 66 Jr 40v 46V tfT titt 7 Yz One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vo.II No 2 AnnAbo, icia -edesay epemer16192©92Thichigan Daily I U-M cleaning up .small chemical spill in Med Sci I by David Rheingold Daily News Editor U-M officials expect to finish cleanup today of the Medical Science Research Building I, where Wa small amount of a radioactive ma- terial was spilled last weekend and unknowingly tracked all over the seventh floor. Officials stressed that the few drops of phosphorous-32 that have been spread around do not pose a health hazard because of the small amount involved and its short halflife. "I would characterize it as a low- level spill," said Jan Strasma, a spokesperson for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission in Glen Ellyn, Ill. "Certainly it is not a health hazard. I guess it would be best characterized as a nuisance that needs to be cleaned up in the area outside the laboratory." P-32 is commonly used in labora- tories as a biomedical tracer. It is ! classified as a beta-emitter, leaving it unable to penetrate shoes, wood or skin. It also has a relatively short ra- dioactive half-life of slightly more than 14 days - meaning that every 14 days, half its mass is depleted. It only poses a danger if it's been ingested at higher levels, Strasma said. "It can cause cancer or cell-dam- age over a period of time, but at the levels we're seeing (at the U-M), that's not a concern," he said. Joe Owslcy, director of News and Information Services, estimated that five or six drops of P-32 had been spilled - not enough to pose a health hazard, but enough to constitute a regulatory concern. "It's not much of a biological hazard on shoes," said Jim Carey, chair of the U-M's Radiation Policy Committee. Carey said the material has spread all over the seventh floor, re- quiring a more extensive cleanup. The U-M may extend its decon- tamination search to cars and homes where the substance might have been tracked, as an added precaution. Owsley said he suspects some- body was using P-32 "and inadver- tently spilled a little bit of it and did not do the check that you're sup- posed to do when you're finished See SPILL, page 2 SHARON MUSHER/Daily Dia9g ammin' Dean Angermeier, a former trombone major in the School of Music, sings and jams with LSA junior Jeff Gordon as their band "Dig" performs on the Diag yesterday. MSA passes resolution to oppose new conduct poliy U-M to fill vice provost post by Karen Sabgir Daily Administration Reporter U-M is embarking on a nation- wide search to fill the vice provost for academic and multicultural af= fairs position, which will be vacated by Charles Moody at the end of the calendar year. Moody - who has served in the post for five years - is leaving the office to become director of South African Initiative -,a program de- signed to create better ties with South African higher education institutions. Provost Gilbert Whitaker ap- pointed a Search Advisory Committee - which will meet for the first time today - to establish criteria and solicit and review nomi- nations and applications for the position. Howard Johnson, dean of the School of Social Work will chair the committee, composed of three stu- dents and eight faculty members. Assistant to the Provost Kay Dawson will serve asa non-voting member and as the liaison to Whitaker. "We would like to finish our work this fall. We say in our ads that we'll continue to look, but we will tart looking at applications in early October," Johnson said. The Search Committee is solicit- ing applications through advertise- ments in higher education magazines including "The Chronicle of Higher Education," "Black Issues in Higher Education," and "The Hispanic Outlook in Higher Education." The advertisements will stress qualifica tions such as distinguished scholarly research and extensive administra- tion experience in higher education. Moody's reappointment approved this summer by the U- M Board of Regents - ends July1, however, the position will be available Jan. 1, 1993. Moody, accompanied by other See MOODY, Page 2 Negative ads hurt Ferraro c by Andrew Levy Daily News Editor Geraldine Ferraro's political comeback in the New York Democratic Senate primary was in serious jeopardy last night, eight years after she made history as her party's vice presidential candidate. Lawmakers from Massachusetts to Minnesota fought for fresh terms de- spite the taint of the House bank scandal. Ferraro, Walter F. Mondale's running mate in 1984 and the only andidacy woman to run on a national ticket, trailed New York State Attorney General Robert Abrams by one per- centage point with 96 percent of the precincts counted at press time last night. In a speech last night, Abrams declared himself the "unofficial winner." Rhode Island and Washington picked candidates for governors as seven states and the District of Columbia held primaries seven weeks before Election Day. See FERRARO, Page 2 by Purvi Shah Daily Staff Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly's power to influence the U-M administration will be tested by two student rights resolutions passed at yesterday's meeting. The first resolution, which was approved unanimously, opposed the implementation of the U-M's pro- posed Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities. The second resolution, which passed 27-3, ex- pressed concern over the U-M's de- cision to select Debra Cain as the new coordinator for the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC). The U-M recently drafted a Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities to take the place of the Interim Policy on Discriminatory Conduct, ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court because of its application of hate speech regula- tions. LSA Rep. Rob Van Houweling, Students Rights Commission (SRC). chair and a co-sponsor of the resolu- tion, argued the proposed statement was a new non-academic code of conduct. "It's a bad idea," he said. "It's not student-run as the university likes to claim it will be. ... It pro- vides us with no due process rights." Van Houweling argued that the new proposal uses the same process as the previous code, in which all the cases were settled out of court by U- M administrators. Under the resolution, the pro- posed statement is condemned as "thoroughly unacceptable to the stu- dent community," with the assembly prepared "to oppose the proposed 'Statement' by all legal means within its powers." Additionally, an SRC task force will be established to investigate other solutions to the problems ad- See MSA, Page 2 Hg ih Highlights of MSA's anti-code resolution include: Calls the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities a code of non-academic conduct. N Criticizes administration survey as biased and "unscientific." States that MSA will take "all legal means within its powers" to contest the code. ® Condemns the implementation of the code. Directs MSA's Student Rights Commission to develop a task force to investigate alternate solutions to problems that the code intends to address. Bosnian activist requests U.S. help by Mona Qureshi Daily Minority Issues Reporter In a familiar scene Tuesday, residents of the former Yugoslavian republic of Bosnia- Herzigovina cowered in doorways or scurried from one protective wall to the other, traumatized by the snipers and shellings surround- ing them. The five-month siege of Sarajevo by rebel Serbs opposed to Bosnia-Herzigovina's secession from Serb-dominated Yugoslavia has resulted in the deaths of more than 8,000 throughout the repub- lic. Higher education bill increases eligibility for student financial aid : by Hope Calati Daily Government Reporter Many students will be eligible for financial aid for the 1993-94 school year for the first time as a result of a bill passed this summer which will eliminate home and farm equity from the determination of financial need. "The major change is that it. opens up the possibility for aid for thousands of families," said Office of Financial Aid Director Harvey Grotrian. "Middle income students will now be eligible for loan pro- grams." The Higher Education Reauthorization Act increases the amount of money available for Stafford Loans - loans with gov- ernment subsidized interest rates - by allowing students to borrow money from the government directly through their colleges and universi- ties instead of through local banks. This change will save the govern- ment an estimated $4.5 billion, ac- aid to students with the greatest amount of financial need. r The current maximum Pell Grant is $2,400. However, Pronita Gupta, United States Student Association legislative director, said despite the increase in the number of people eli- gible for the grants, the $100 reduc- tion in the maximum allocation could have a severe impact on many college students. "In many cases, simply additional loan funds are not what the student needs," Grotrian said. Students previously eligible for the Stafford Loan program will now be able to borrow additional funds. A second-year student who was eli- gible to borrow up to $2,625 will now be eligible to borrow $3,500. Third- and fourth- year students will be able to borrow $5,500 up from $4,000. Five-hundred schools would par- ticipate in the direct loan program. The selected schools will be an- nounced in November. Grotrian said In an effort to shed light on the events occurring in the former Yugoslavian republic of Bosnia- Herzigovina, Bosnian Red Crescent leader Dr. Izzet A family of refugees cries about the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina last month. Westerners, Africans, and Middle Easterners. We lived in harmony," knows about the atrocities," he said. become prisoners of Serbs, Iganovich said. I