The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 21, 1992- Page 7 U-M may include procedure *for students to amend code by Karen Sabgir Daily Administration Reporter Administrators and students in- volved in the redrafting process of the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities are agreeing on the need for a process that will enable the U-M community to modify the code. Rob Van Houweling, chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Student Rights Commission, made the first proposal for amendment procedures to accompany the code. The current proposition explains in four parts how MSA, the Senate Advisory Committee of University Affairs, U-M President James Duderstadt or a student with a peti- r tion of 500 signatures could pro- pose an amendment to the code. The current proposal states that the amendment must be submitted to the judicial adviser before Feb. 15 of the current school year. The judicial adviser will then present it to the panel of 50 randomly-se- lected students who will evaluate possible violations. "The panel will decide if it has validity for a student vote," Van Houweling said. The panel will have one month to hold public hearings, discuss the amendment and decide if it should go up for a student vote. If panel members approve, MSA will then put the amendment on its winter term ballot, and if MSA fails to present a referendum, the admin- istration will hold the vote. In either case, however, the re- gents have the final say. The re- gents can reject any proposal that has gone through the amendment procedure, and they can also pro- pose and enact any amendment without following the procedure. Maureen Hartford, vice presi- dent for student affairs, said she is comfortable with the idea of an amendment process as long as the students realize the regents have the final vote. Van Houweling's draft was not included in the copy of the code presented to the U-M Board of Regents last week, because of tech- nical difficulties resulting from a power failure. A proposal would allow the U-M's Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities to be modified by members of the U-M community, including any student with a 500 signature petition. It would consist of four stages: The amendment must be submitted before Feb. 15 of the current school year. The panel of 50 students that evaluates possible code violations would review the proposed amendment. If this panel decides the proposal has validity, MSA would put it on its winter term ballot as a referendum. The regents have the final say, and thus can reject or enact any amendment without following the above procedure. New restaurant 'Wings' it at Rick's Clinton won Monday's debate, analysts say by David Groves People who get hungry at Rick's American Caf6 will no longer have to fly on a wing and a prayer. Wings of Westwood, a New York-based chicken wing franchise, has expanded its operations to the kitchen of Rick's, located on Church Street, offering food for the drinking crowd. LSA seniors Jeffrey Miller and Dan Brown own and operate the business, which has become the lat- est of a long string of restaurants oc- cupying the space. Miller said this operation is unique because it has a diverse menu and it delivers. Until Wings of Westwood opened its doors in August, only Mr. Spot's delivered chicken wings to the areas surround- ing campus. The new restaurant also boasts 15 flavored wings, including such color- ful examples as the "Buffalo WOW" and the "Jamaican Jerk." Business has grown appreciably in the first few months, Miller said. He said it started with an expected lull, but has blossomed with help from football crowds and promotions targeting campus residence halls. With delivery making up 75 per- cent of business, service is con- trolled by a computer-based ordering system with more than 400 regular customers logged in memory. Handling 30 to 40 calls a night, * the system significantly reduces the confusion of working in the midst of another business. Rick's management said they were pleased with the addition. "They've done great service to our business," said part-owner Todd Johnson. In times when the kitchen was vacant, customers would leave for surrounding businesses that served food, he said. Sub-leasing the kitchen to outside operations solves this problem without the added trou- ble of hiring and managing a food staff. Some customers of the popular Ann Arbor bar said they are equally pleased with Wings of Westwood. "You've got to love the wings and beer," noted Rick's customer Mark Gedman, an-LSA senior. However, taste takes no back seat, said engineering senior Kurt Albertson. "These wings put others to shame," Albertson raved. "Teriyaki is by far the best." Aside from endorsements from sources including the New York Post and NBC, the Wings of Westwood menu displays a pledge from co-owner Dan Brown. His brother Alan suffered a spinal chord injury in 1988 while swim- ming and is now a quadriplegic. The Alan T. Brown Foundation to cure paralysis now receives 1 percent of all profits generated by the restaurant. LANSING (AP) - George Bush broke an 85-year drought of presi- dential visits to Michigan State University, but his strong perfor- mance in the year's final debate ap- parently didn't dent Bill Clinton's front-runner standing. Analysts and experts still were evaluating the debate yesterday, even as workers dismantled the spe- cial stage where Bush, Clinton and independent Ross Perot met for their third televised debate. They agreed that since Bush did- n't come up with any new ammuni- tion to fire at Clinton and the Democrat didn't stumble, then Clinton was the winner of Monday night's showdown. "George Bush clearly lost. Nothing he did last night is likely to change the minds of eight to 10 mil- lion people and that's what George Bush has to do to turn the election around," said David Rohde, a politi- cal science professor at Michigan State. William Sederburg, vice presi- dent for public policy at Public Sector Consultants Inc. in Lansing, said while it was Bush's best debate performance "he just hasn't been able to go out and articulate his case." "I've been very disappointed in the president's ability intellectually to stage a counterattack in these de- bates," said Sederburg, a former GOP state senator. Sederburg said he felt Bush al- lowed himself to be criticized for supporting the tax increase in 1990 and being in favor of more taxes. "Clinton criticizes him for saying he'd never raise taxes. Part of being Clinton has been free to have it both ways," he said. Sederburg said Perot, the billion- aire with a Texas twang and home- spun approach, seemed to improve his position the most. "I think Perot gained the imagination of the public." Before Perot abandoned his presidential bid on July 16, he had the support of about a third of Michigan's voters. He's dropped considerably since then, but if he can come close to that original figure, Perot will be a major factor in the election, Sederburg said. Quayle's bus tour rides through Michigan U U PAW PAW, Mich. (AP) - Vice President Dan Quayle rumbled through southern Michigan on a post-debate bus tour yesterday aimed at helping his lagging boss make up lost ground in the battleground state. Thousands of supporters in eight .cities cheered Quayle with chants of "Four more years" as he likened a Bill Clinton presidency to Democrat Jimmy Carter's administration. Quayle contended the high un- employment, skyrocketing interest rates and gasoline rationing that dogged Carter would follow the Arkansas governor. He urged voters to remember "what it was like the last time we had a Democratic president." "Let us not repeat that mistake," Quayle said. "We have established a strong foundation, and we're poised for a vigorous economic recovery. Quayle said, "Elect Bill Clinton - raising taxes, increasing spend- ing, increasing regulation - and we're going to have another recession." The Vice President resounded that theme yesterday in brief campaign stops in Niles, Dowagiac, Paw Paw, Kalamazoo and Battle Creek before heading to Jackson for the night. Quayle was scheduled to resume his swing through the state today with stops in Hillsdale and Monroe before moving on to Ohio, another large Midwestern swing state. President Bush soundly defeated Democratic nominee Clinton in Monday night's final debate at Michigan State University by stress- ing the differences between the two candidates, the Vice President said. "I think the president did very well," Quayle said. "One of his chief objectives was to point out the differences." But Quayle was an instant hit with Niles tax preparer Kenneth Daniel. "We're on your team," he shouted to the vice president. Bush "is probably the most ex- perienced president we've ever had," Daniel said. "Is he sexy? No, he's not sexy. But he's solid. He's squeaky clean." Bush 'is probably the most experienced president we've ever had. Is he sexy? No, he's not sexy. But he's solid.' - Kenneth Daniel Bush/Quayle Supporter Looking for experience in advertising? Stop by The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, to pick up a job description and application. Or call 764-0554. Application Deadline Extended to Wednesday, October 21 .. ..a... .wu mu E.. The Vice President, decked out in a ski jacket to battle the near-freez- ing temperatures, got some of his most enthusiastic support in front of the Van Buren County courthouse in downtown Paw Paw. Fans held signs that read, "Dan, You Are Our Hero," and chanted, "Four more years." But Quayle also ran into some strident opposition. Clinton sup- porters tried to drown out his speech with cries of "No more Bush" and "Two more weeks." "I don't think Bush has done the job right. He should step aside and give someone else a chance," Doug Howard said, a Clinton supporter who jeered Quayle at Southwestern Michigan College in Dowagiac. Quayle told voters in Kalamazoo that Clinton couldn't be trusted as jubilant supporters thronged in a main street. "Just because we won the Cold War and the Berlin Wall is down doesn't mean the world is safe enough to have a Democratic presi- dent again," Quayle said. He warned of another international crisis like the Persian Gulf War. "We don't know where it's going to happen," he said, "but when it happens, you'll want somebody you can trust." Clinton campaigned in Illinois yesterday, while Bush took a whistlestop tour of the South. _____VO l TffP? Consider This: Overseas Travel Language Training Living Expenses I w ActinSpa'tsVfa CONVERSE ALL STAR SPECIALS Medical and Dental Carex Student Loa $5400 All this. and a better world to show for it.