*P3 SN People who lived in co-ops last year are feeling anything but secure about their security deposits these days. That's because the Inter-Cooperative Council has been anything but cooperative. "Thief of Bagdad" - a silent film with a complete musical score is running this weekend at The Michigan Theatre. Find out about the sounds of this silence. Michigan's ground game has been less than inspiring in the Wolverines' first two games this season. However, coach Gary Moeller is not very worried about the running attack. Today .: Partly cloudy, warmer; High 67, Low 46 Tomorrow Clouds and sun; High 68, Low 51 we t Y Ittrt t tY One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vol. CIL No. 131 Ann Arbor, Michigan -Thursday, September 24,1992 ©1992 The Michigan Daily Students blast proposed code at open forum by Henry Goldblatt Daily News Editor Concern about the rights of protesters and the lack of student voice into the document topped student questions yesterday at the second of two public fo- rums held to discuss the proposed Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities. About 50 students attended the administration- sponsored forum to ask questions of members of the U-M's offices of Student Affairs and General Counsel. "Students should have a voice on an annual basis. You may need to subject the code to scrutiny every year," said LSA senior and Michigan Review Editor in Chief Adam DeVore, in voicing his support for a yearly review of the document. Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hartford expressed concern over yearly scrutiny of the statement, but said she would like to see some mechanism for the document's amendment when necessary. See FORUM, Page 2 MCC sues U-M for cutting off mandatory fee Rob Van Houweling, the chair of MSA's Student Rights Commission, questions representatives of the U-M Office of Student Affairs at last night's forum on the proposed Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities. Code phone survey results Listed below are the results of a phone survey of 560 students by the Office of Student Affairs about the proposed Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities: Do you favor or oppose the concept of such a policy? favor 75.7% oppose 11.0% don't know 13.3% Do you favor or oppose this particular proposed policy (asked only of the 255 students who had read or were familiar with the policy)? favor 57.6% oppose 15.3% don't know 27.1% Phone survey indicates students 1n favor of code by Andrew Levy and Karen Sabgir Daily Staff Reporters A U-M student and a statewide student lobbying group are suing the U-M Board of Regents for its June decision to cut the group's funding. LSA junior Tobias Zimmerman and the Michigan Collegiate Coali- tion (MCC) allege that the regents violated four statutes - including the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution - in ceasing manda- tory student funding to MCC by a unanimous vote. The suit was initially filed in the Washtenaw County Circuit Court this summer, but was later moved to the U.S. District Court in Detroit. MCC and Zimmerman have also contended that the fee was canceled primarily because of a philosophical disagreement over MCC's support of an amendment to the state consti- tution limiting tuition increases at state colleges and universities to the rate of inflation. "That's not accurate," said Exec- utive Director for University Rela- tions Walter Harrison. "It was the principle of a mandatory fee." Regent Pau! Brown (D-Petoskey) said the decision to cut funding was made because MCC is not a student organization. "It is a bad idea to have a fee charged to the students that has nothing to do with the U-M - as far as MCC is concerned," Brown said. However, internal memoranda among high university officials, in- cluding two signed by U-M Presi- dent James Duderstadt, suggest otherwise. "Yet another strong reason for by Melissa Peerless Daily News Editor The results of a U-M Office of Student Affairs phone survey show a student popula- tion strongly in favor of a conduct code. The U-M planned to ask a representative sample of 560 students two questions con- cerning the proposed Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities. However, interviewers were unable to reach 79 students, reducing the total number of responses to 481 - 86 percent of the in- tended sample. Of these students, 53 percent said they had read or were familiar with the code proposal. These students were then asked if they favored a code such as the one presented. Three-quarters said they favored some sort of conduct policy, while 57.6 percent said they supported the exact code drafted by the U-M. According to the survey results, "It is im- portant to note that even for those who had read or were familiar with the Statement, nearly 30 percent volunteered a 'don't know' response when asked if they favored or opposed this particular policy." More than 15 percent of students sur- veyed told interviewers they were opposed to the proposed Statement. Data also point out that first-year students See SURVEY, Page 2 I . Students say CD scam seemed easy, but tampering with mad is felomous ceasing University-funded political activities over which we do not have absolute control (e.g., MCC), since they are quite likely to be involved in campaigns ...," Duderstadt said in a memo to U-M General Counsel Elsa Cole, Harrison, and Director of Presidential Communications Con- nie Cook. "With an IRS audit scheduled for the next two years, we would have been at great risk in continuing to fund MCC through a mandatory stu- dent fee," the memo said. Another memo in late 1991 to U M Vice President for Government Relations Richard Kennedy also contradicts the administration's public stance. "You (Kennedy), (Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs) Mary Ann (Swain), and whomever need to decide on a strategy to get us out of this," reads the second memo. "In checking with other PCSUM (Presidents Council on State Univer- sities) presidents, only a few still al- low their student governments to support MCC ... and they are con- sidering pulling out. "But as it now stands, UM is providing most of MCC's money ... and it continues to work at cross purposes with us," Duderstadt said in the memo. When asked to comment on the memos, Harrison said, "I can't comment on any matter under litiga- tion." MCC Chair Stephanie Arellano said U-M students voted to support funding of the organization in a campus referendum in 1988. It pro- posed a 35-cent increase in the See MCC, Page 2 Pro-choice leaders say vandalism must stop LANSING, Mich. (AP) - The state's largest anti-abortion group might not be to blame for a string of stinky attacks on clinics, but its leaders could do more to halt the vandalism, pro-choice officials said yesterday. Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D- Lansing) said Right to Life of Michigan's weak statements about the attacks on 14 women's clinics undercut its claim of rejecting violence. "If they are really opposed to vio- lence, if they really want to stop un- wanted pregnancies, if they really want to separate themselves from this, then they need to stand up and say so," she said. Barbara -Listing, president of Right to Life of Michigan, said the group's longstanding policy against violence speaks for itself. She said spokespeople have repeated it since the attacks began. "If anyone called us and said, Is this a good idea?' we would never advise them to do it because there are other approaches to changing the public's opinion on abortion," she said.. Even if Right to Life were to call on those responsible to stop, she by Erin Einhorn Daily Crime Reporter It was a cheap, easy way to col- lect compact discs, said Jeff, an LSA junior who preferred not to have his real name revealed. It was the perfect scam. Jeff said he and his friends col- lected as many as 200 free CDs in the mail last year. Getting caught seemed highly unlikely. A couple of friends had been do- ing it successfully for years, he said. He knows people who run the same game in other cities and other states. They invent false names, and apply to CD purchasing clubs that promise eight bonus CDs to members before requiring them to pay for several more. Pseudonyms cannot be held re- sponsible for membership obliga- tions, explained Jeff, who personally collected 32 compact discs. "But they are responsible for paying for the CDs," said U.S. Postal Inspector Fred Van de Putte. "They're just ducking that responsi- + bility by committing a fraud through the mail. ... That's mail fraud and a federal felony." 'It's a very serious crime - a felony.' - Jeff LSA junior Mail fraud violators, Van de Putte said, can face up to five years in prison for each count of fraud - and the maximum fine per count is $250,000. Jeff had his CDs mailed to South Quad, where he worked at the front desk. "I didn't think it would come out," he said. "I figured that was my last year in the dorms." But when his boss found out, Jeff quit his front desk job and released the names of other participants to the police. The U.S. Postal Department de- cided not to press charges, and the CD club - Columbia House Records - only wanted the mer- chandise returned, but Jeff and his friends could have faced a fine and felonies on their records. "We may not take a person to federal court over one CD," Van de Putte said. "But we're not going to ignore it either." The costs to the Postal Department for pressing charges are significant, he said. But mail fraud involving compact discs occurs across the country, es- pecially on university campuses, Van de Putte said. His Detroit-based office has in- vestigated several cases involving students at Michigan colleges, he said. "We get complaints on a fairly regular basis," Van de Putte said. Compact Disc clubs - like Columbia House - usually have computer data bases that search for members ordering repeatedly to the same address, he said. "When they spot a problem, they contact us," Van de Putte said. "If it's a large enough case, we'll send out an investigator." Columbia House Senior Vice President of Business and Government Affairs Ralph Colin said his company is aware that See FRAUD, Page 5 Sorority sisters Katherina Zabicki, a new Delta Gamma pledge, receives a hug from her blood sister Karina, who received a bid from Kappa Kappa Gamma. Both sisters are LSA sophomores. Public colleges may need to upgrade rape policies under new bill LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Michigan's public colleges and uni- versities would have to create cam- pus rape policies or risk losing state ni nd- "tme c'_ Rill ofma Ri 1991 on 15 of the state's public campuses, according to figures re- leased this month under the new federal Campus Security Act. Anthnrities sav thev hear from inst "Apparently universities need this kind of heavy-handed treatment to start treating people like people," said Rep. James Kosteva (D- (' ant n fore Congress. The House also approved legisla- tion yesterday that aims to break the sex barrier in Michigan's public whnnd ieQrnnm _ "Build Michigan" road and bridge plan. Lawmakers expanded Engler's program by $1 billion to sell state honds to nav for the transnnrtatinn