Now that Anne Duderstadt is part of the University team as well as the President's family, the administration has some questions to answer. Katie Webster, who plays at The Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival tonight, almost missed the big time - her folks didn't want a booze-soaked, drug-shootin' R&B star in the family. Here's the Wolverine football season in a nutshell: Michigan is good, and the Big Ten is bad. For this and other scoops, see our annual football preview. Today Partly cloudy and breezy, High 72, Low 56 Tomorrow Stay inside and watch the game. ': > ?\ ,. .. , We 4v 4v PW t Ititt 44461V 47EI 711 ztt One hundred and one years of editorial freedom Vol C I o 2 AnnAbr ihia rdySpebr11 92()19TeMcigan DaG *. ily Survey: * Students approve of code by Karen Sabgir Daily Administration Reporter The 2,900 responses to a ques- tionnaire about U-M's newly-pro- posed speech code show overwhelming support for a document like the current draft, according to a survey summary issued by the U-M Office of Student Affairs. Eighty-nine percent of the re- spondents wrote they were in favor of a policy like the draft sent to all U-M Ann Arbor students, but some claim the results of the survey are skewed. LSA sophomore Edgar Ho said he was "pretty pleased" with the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities. "The language was ambiguous enough ... I don't think it can be anything but ambiguous," Ho said. But he added that the outcome of the policy will depend on how it is enforced. But MSA Engineering Rep. Brian Kight said he questions the validity of the survey. "I think the poll itself was unscientific," said Kight. Kight said the cover letter on the proposed code, which listed exam- ples of violence on the Ann Arbor campus, was one-sided and did not explain the code. "The results may " have been different without the cover letter," Kight said. He also said the ambiguity of the survey questions may have led stu- dents to think they were being asked if they wanted a policy that would stop violence on campus, and that students might not have realized the ramifications of this specific code. "It's not a straight survey of a sample, like a telephone survey. It's whoever bothered to send in re- sponses," Kight added. Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hartford acknowl- edged that the survey was not scien- tific but said it was only fair to first send copies to all University stu- dents. Hartford said a more accurate telephone survey will be conducted in the next few weeks through the See SURVEY, Page 2 Bush unveils economic recovery plan in Detroit by Andrew Levy Daily News Editor DETROIT - With a message that might hit home to voters in a state deeply mired in recession, President Bush came here yesterday to announce a new package de- signed to jumpstart the faltering economy - a package including across-the-board tax cuts. Bush presented his "Agenda for American Renewal" to the Economic Club of Detroit in a packed Cobo Center convention room. The plan includes 13 specific proposals the president said he would enact to rescue America from the economic doldrums if elected to a second term. "For America to be safe and strong we must meet the defining challenge of the 1990s: to win the economic competition, to win the peace - and we must be a military superpower, an economic super- power, and an export superpower," Bush said. A call for caps on all mandatory spending except Social Security over the next five years - caps that the president said would save the government $294 billion during Mich. lawmakers react with skepticism to Bush plan DETROIT (AP) - President administrator Steve Ragan, who was Bush brought his gospel of tax and especially buoyed by mentions of spending cuts to Michigan yesterday, lowered taxes and fighting the saying he could heal the ills that nation's huge deficit. plague the nation's economy. But some Michigan lawmakers The Economic Club of Detroit were less enthusiastic about Bush's audience responded to Bush's new economic plan. speech, outlining what he called an U.S. Rep. David Bonior (D- "Agenda for American Renewal," by Mount Clemens) blasted Bush's em- interrupting it six times with phasis on expanding free-trade applause. agreements, saying it would cost "I thought it was a great speech," Michigan jobs. But David Littmann, said Eastern Michigan University See PLAN, Page 2 that period - is one feature of the proposal. Bush said that savings would be relayed to the taxpayer in the form of a 1 percent income tax cut for all brackets, a 5 percent cut in the tax on small businesses, and a deep cut in the capital gains tax. Other highlights included a plan for a series of strategic trade agreements with Latin American, Eastern European, and Pacific Rim countries, an overhaul of the American education system to in- clude school choice, renewed calls for a balanced budget amendment See BUSH, Page 2 Bush's 1993 economic plan would establish: Five-year caps on all entitlement spending except Social Security. 1 percent cut in income tax rate for all brackets. 5 percent cut in small business tax. Cut in capital-gains tax rate. 250 inner-city and rural enterprise zones. SHARON MUSHER/Daily President Bush explains his proposed tax cuts to the Economic Club of Detroit yesterday, during a luncheon held at Cobo Hall. Nordby retires from Student Affairs office by Jennifer Silverberg Daily Administration Reporter Associate Vice President for Student Affairs Virginia Nordby has announced her retirement effective July 1, 1993. Nordby, 63, said she is retiring because she wants to have more time for volunteer work and visiting her children around the world. Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hartford said Nordby's departure was unrelated to the restructuring of the Office of Student Affairs. "Virginia is 63 and I think she's ready to leave," Hartford said. Nordby agreed. "There was no suggestion that I had no place in the restructuring. This is something I've been planning for a long time," she said. Nordby began working full-time at the U-M in 1973. During her ten- ; ure as Associate Vice President for Student Affairs, her responsibili- ties have in- cluded: chairing the Residency Appeal Commit- tee to review in- rd by tand out-of-state tuition appeals; responding to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests; running various disciplinary processes with students, including the alcohol and drug policy; and serving as Affirmative Action director. Hartford said she was doubtful Nordby's position would be filled af- ter her departure. "I have a feeling what's going to happen is, Virginia's at a very senior level, so we're not going to create an assistant president but probably split it into two, more mid-level manage- ment positions," Hartford said. One position will be Assistant to the Vice President for Judicial Affairs and will assist in running the judicial systems that evolve out of the new Statement on Student Rights and Responsibilities. This assistant will also oversee the two parts of the policy currently at work - the amended interim policy and the Alcohol and Other Drugs policy. Hartford said the responsibilities of the other position should primar- ily consist of responding to FOIA requests. Assistant to the Vice President for Student Affairs for Finance and Personnel Rodger Wolf said the two positions are completely different from Nordby's job. "It's really a new position we're creating, not splitting Virginia's in two," Wolf said. "The new position will be doing similar things but it's a much lower-level position." Hartford said she has written a job description for the assistant po- sition and posted it in the personnel office. She said it will probably be advertised locally and she would like to see it filled before Nordby's departure. Hartford said she waited until students returned to campus before planning a search committee to in- terview candidates for the assistant position because she wanted to en- courage student input in the process. Approximately seven members mostly students, will be appointed to the committee, and the chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Student Rights Commission will probably be appointed to one of the seats, Hartford said. U. of Miami recovering after hurricane leaves extensive damage, ruin by Shelley Morrison Students and faculty at the University of Miami are pulling together this week to clean up damage done by Hurricane Andrew, which caused millions of dollars in damage and a two-week delay in the start of classes. In the early hours of Aug. 24, 3,000 faculty~ id~ members, parents and students were preparing for the Aug. 27 start of classes when the hurricane struck, uprooting trees, collapsing roofs and blowing out more than 800 windows. Sheryl Chapman, assistant director of me- dia relations, estimated that $21.5 million worth of damage was done to the university alone. Southern Florida was estimated to have suffered $20 billion in damage. Chapman said a large corps of student vol- unteers combined with university precaution- ary procedures helped the campus recover quickly. "The university began preparing for the hurricane last spring - storing food, flash- lights and water," Chapman said. "But what I think has really made the difference is the number of students who are helping with the clean up." Carrie Edmondson, Miami director of vol- unteer services, said some 250 students chose to stay and help with repairs, declining the university's offer to pay to send them home. "I felt a huge sense of relief when the first branch was picked off the ground, and I think the students share that feeling," Edmondson said. Miami's Resident Coordinator Kurt Anderson delegated volunteer duties to the Football kicks off against s. }No. 3 Irish by Albert Lin Daily Football Writer It's that time of year again. Time for the boys of summer to step aside and let the boys of autumn v take center stage. Tomorrow is a mid-September Saturday, and that > ~can only mean that the Wolverine gridders are ready to take the field. The weeks of fall practice are culminating. No more hitting your roommate. No more going easy on the quarterback. It's time to play football for real. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, their opponents have already gone through all of these \ ~..emotions. Notre Dame (1-0) opened its 1992 season last week with a trouncing of Northwestern. The team rolled up 391 yards on the ,. _ crr~nr ant C~r aa r ... of t .ta n