It's new; it's improved. But it's still unnecessary. Through its revisions of the proposed code, the administration has failed to address the existing code and the problems with the new one. The Beatles started it all years ago, but it isn't going to end any time soon. It's the British invasion, and it continues to change the face of American music today. If the Michigan football team had one position where it could not afford any injuries, it was outside linebacker. However, frosh Shawn Collins is adding needed depth to the position. Today More clouds; High 71,Low 51 Tomorrow Possible showers; High 62, Low 44 One hundred two years of editorial freedom tz Vo. II,.o.8 nnAror Mchga-Turdaectbe &192' 192Th8Mchga3Dil Bush camp tries to find silver bullet' WASHINGTON (AP) - With a cache of hard- edged television ads and high hopes for the debates, President Bush's advisers are clinging to the hope they can find a silver bullet to slay Bill Clinton's campaign. The Bush team is struggling to catch up in the cam- paign's final weeks by making Americans doubt Clinton's character and judgment and by spreading fear that the Democrat will increase everyone's taxes. But in the political community there is a growing belief - though not unanimous - that the president faces certain defeat. "I think it's too late," said Reagan White House po- litical director Lyn Nofziger. "The election's over," said Colorado College politi- cal scientist Tom Cronin, echoing sentiments of many Republicans and Democrats. "This is a referendum on economic leadership and he (Bush) has lost it." "It's time for the Hail Mary," said GOP strategist John Sears. "I don't know if there is anything he can do." Sears said the person who can elect Bush is Clinton, by making mistakes - "and he shows no sign of doing that." However, Jody Powell, press secretary to President Carter, said the combination of the forthcoming debates, television ads and Ross Perot's big-money campaign all make the outcome uncertain. "I'm not one who thinks the thing is over," Powell said. "Most people will be getting more information from paid ads than from the media, and that always takes the campaign into a different phase." Bush's advisers hope the debates, in particular, will sharpen negative impressions of Clinton. "Bush has al- ways done well in debates," said James Lake, a senior See BUSH, Page 2 Many students are apathetic of new code draft, by Jennifer Silverberg Daily Administration Reporter The U-M administration com- pleted draft 12.2 of the Students Rights and Responsibilities Policy on Monday, but numerous students say they are unconcerned and uninformed about the document. "As far as this new draft goes, they've completely failed in letting students know about it," said Rob Van Houweling, chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Student Rights Commission. "I received something in the mail but I didn't really read it," said LSA junior Erica Hartl, referring to draft 10.2. "It was overly legal and it wasn't easy to understand." LSA sophomore Andrea Stahl agreed. "I only saw the copy mailed to my home and I never heard anything else from them." In an attempt to inform students about the policy, the Office of Student Affairs distributed copies of the document to the Campus Information Center, the Dean of Students Office and all residence halls yesterday in addition to putting copies in all student organization mailboxes. But Van Houweling said most U- M students would not be informed by this method. "They've tried to put it in student organization mail- boxes and in residence halls, but that means most students aren't going to end up seeing it," he said. A copy of the policy was placed on the Michigan Terminal System's 'On paper it governs all of the university but its impact on daily life is non-existent for us.' - Bill Chung third-year graduate student UM-GOPHERBLUE network. Rory Mueller, assistant to the vice presi- dent for student affairs, said there are also plans to run copies of the policy as advertisements in the Daily and the University Record this week. Some students said the adminis- tration has publicized the policy See CODE, Page 2 HEATHER LOWMAN/Daily Chutes and ladders LSA sophomore Leslie Truett studies in the Graduate Library's Reading Room yesterday amongst equipment left by crews laboring to install more efficient lights. The work should be done within two to three weeks. President Bush praises negotiation of free trade zone SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) - President Bush participated in a high-profile ceremony in a must-win state yesterday to highlight the suc- cessful negotiation of an agreement creating the world's largest free trade zone. With Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortari looking on, Bush hailed the 2,000- page North American Free Trade Agreement that was negotiated last August. "This meeting marks a turning point in the history of our three countries," Bush told a crowd of dignitaries. "We are creating the largest, richest and most productive market in the entire world." Bush defended the pact against criticism that it will result in the loss of U.S. jobs from companies being lured across the border to lower wages in Mexico. Bush said the re- moval of trade barriers would ex- pand U.S. exports to Mexico, which is already America's third largest market. Salinas told the crowd that "we can all win with this agreement" while Mulroney called free trade "the pathway to prosperity." The nations' trade ministers ini- tialed the completed text in what was largely a symbolic ceremony. Under U.S. law, Bush cannot actually sign the agreement before Dec. 17. Calling the event "pure political theater," Sen. Max Baucus (D- Mont.) said, "If the Bush administra- tion spent as much time and energy negotiating the NAFTA as it spends holding campaign events built around it, we would have a far better NAFTA." If approved by lawmakers in all three countries, the trade agreement is scheduled to go into effect on Jan. 1, 1994, beginning a process of re- moving all tariffs and other barriers to trade, services and investment between the three countries over a 15-year period. The pact is designed to create the world's largest and richest free trade zone, covering 360 million people. American labor unions and many environmentalists strongly oppose the pact, charging that it will cost up to a half-million American jobs as more companies move their opera- tions to Mexico to take advantage of low wages and lax enforcement of environmental laws. I Scores rise for first -time in last 5 years SAT up, ACT down for incoming students by Jonathan Berndt Daily Staff Reporter Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) scores of admitted first-year students rose at the U-M Ann Arbor campus for the first time in five years. American College Test (ACT) scores, however, continued a three- year slide, dropping a tenth of a point. The median composite SAT score for admitted students rose to 1174, up from 1172 a year ago, but down from 1189 in 1988. The mean composite ACT score went down to 27.2 from 27.3 last year. "This year's class is two points smarter than last year's in the crud- est sense," said education Prof. Michael Nettles, formerly a senior research scientist at Educational Testing Service. "It's always nice when average test scores increase. Some level of celebration ought to occur around any increase. It's better than a de- cline - but an awful lot could explain it," he said. Nettles cited shifts in demograph- ics, probable major choices and changes in the pool of students as reasons for test score changes. Because of the increasing cost of higher education, the U-M could be receiving students that would oth- erwise go to colleges such as MIT and Yale, Nettles said. He said this could contribute to a score increase. "What you hope is that this is the beginning of an upward trend," Nettles said. "U-M gets 5,000 to 6,000 people every year - two points by that many people ... it is a modest gain." U-M scores remained above the national norms for both tests. The SAT score bettered the norm by al- most 200 points. The ACT score See SCORES, Page 2 The administration disputes that view, arguing that the agreement will end up creating more jobs than it loses as U.S. companies are able to boost their exports to Mexico. Democratic candidate Bill Clinton on Sunday came out in sup- port of the free trade agreement al- though he said additional steps should be taken to protect American jobs and the environment. He said his objections could be met without re-negotiating the pact. MSU student detained on bond by James Cho Russell Alan Ford sat silently in East Lansing's 54B District Court yesterday when Judge Jules Hanslovsky asked him to enter his plea on four counts of criminal sexual conduct. "Ford stood mute," Ingham County prosecutor Don Martin recalled. Ford, a 22-year-old senior at Michigan State University, was ar- raigned on charges of assaulting four Delta Upsilon (DU) fraternity members. A "not guilty" plea was entered after Ford refused to answer the judge's query. Unable to post the $30,000 bond. Ford, a Grand Rapids native, was taken to the Ingham County Jail until the preliminary hearing, set for Oct. 19., Ford's attorney David Underwood asked to no avail that HEATHER LOWMAN/Daily Say what? Members of the Saline Christian School Drama Team mimesfootball huddle for a tough crowd on the Diag yesterday. . County Commission candidates address College Republicans ,._. .. u.r+t - _L ____ _r .IL - ____-a__