WE tti One hundred three years of editorial freedom . A , I I Clinton yields on .health care plan Dole declares reforms 'introuble' Code changes to be considered by student jurors WASHINGTON (AP) - The White House offered concessions on the scope of its health plan yesterday just hours after President Clinton drew a no-exceptions line on universal cov- erage. * Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole pronounced the Clinton health plan "in trouble," but Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), asserted that Americans won't stand for a Republi- can filibuster. The president met with House Democratic leaders and key commit- tee chairs to map strategy for the struggle over the Clinton Health Se- curity Act and a half-dozen compet- ing bills. The president later canceled a speech at a local school on doctors' orders to recover his voice. Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen told business groups that Clinton was willing to let more big companies self-insure rather than being forced- into the regional alliances where most Americans would have to buy their insurance. White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers also said that while Clinton stands firm on universal coverage, the timetable for achieving it is "some- thing that has to be worked out." House Speaker Thomas Foley said, "It's possible you will have some kind of a phase-in." "His program is in trouble," Dole said on NBC-TV. Repeating his argu- ment that the current system works well for 85 percent of Americans, Dole told Fox-TV, "We don't need a triple bypass to take care of the health care delivery system or this massive overdose of government that Presi- GOP looks to answerClinton Clinton's comments Tuesday on crime and welfare have shaken the GOP's traditional hold on these popular issues with voters. See Page 3 for details dent Clinton proposes." Bentsen acknowledged that big business has problems with Clinton's proposal to force all companies with up to 5,000 employees into regional insurance-purchasing alliances. "You think the 5,000-employee threshold ... is too high," he told the National Association of Manufactur- ers and a pension group. "We hear you. We're willing to discuss this one and the other details of our plan. "We got the concept right, but the president couldn't have been more clear when he said we're open for discussion on this as well as other issues," said Bentsen. Bentsen said he was troubled by suggestions that only companies with 100 or fewer workers should be in the pools. That would be too small to spread the risks around, he argued. Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.), the Energy and Commerce Committee chair whose panel may be the first out of the gate on health reform, said the timetable for achieving universal cov- erage "is open to friendly negotiation with the president." The Clinton bill would require all Americans to be covered by Jan. 1, 1998. Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.), at a news conference where citizens from every state told a half-dozen Democratic senators their personal health care woes, said Clinton had added "some steel to our spine." MARY KOUKHAB/Daly The Ann Arbor Inn's future will be decided by the City Council in February. Labor costs could ra Inn's future By HOPE CALATI DAILY NEWS EDITOR Student organizations, such as fra- ternities and sororities, might be sub- ject to the same disciplinary actions as an individual student if proposed amendments to the code of non-aca- demic conduct are approved. The amendments - dubbed the "Alpha Proposal" by its Greek-sys- tem authors - also call for the nam- ing of an additional judicial advisor to oversee the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities. The group, which has contacted the judicial advisor's office, is taking the first step to actually amending the code by gathering 500 student signa- tures. After the signatures are gathered, the proposed amendments will be con- sidered by a panel of student jurors at a meeting at 6 p.m. tonight in the Pendleton Room in the Michigan Union. If the panel approves the proposed amendment, Maureen Hartford, vice president for student affairs, will present the amendment for final ap- proval by the University Board of Regents next month. This proposal is one of at least eight that will be presented to the panel tonight. The Michigan Student Assembly submitted the other seven proposals. It proposes: allowing students to be repre- sented by an attorney; limiting the code to campus, See CODE, Page 2 cite This is the flu in whicht specific ca students un StudentRigh By HOPE C DAILY NEWS EDI Pledges and Respon punished. ubers dfor nal of a four-part series the Daily examines ses brought against der the Statement of ts andResponsibilities. 'ALATI ITOR swooped down on a fraternity brother andtried tq bind him with duct tape. Be- fore they could whiskhim away from his dorm, a resident advisor thwarted their plans. This is haz- ing under the Statement of Student Rights sibilities and it can be See HAZING, Page By JAMES NASH DAILY STAFF REPORTER As an East Lansing developer pre- pares to transform the empty Ann Ar- bor Inn to affordable senior-citizen hous- ing, company and city leaders are wary of potential labor troubles that could dog the project. Labor union activists, protesting First Centrum Corp.'s policy of hiring non-union contractors at inferiorwages, recently picketed outside one of the company's urban renewal projects in Detroit. Picketing outside the 11-story Ann Arbor Inn would mar nearly a year of talks over the future of the building. First Centrum officials submitted a draft plan Monday to convert the vacant structure at the corner of Huron and Washington streets to 121 units of se- nior-citizen housing. Once a 202-room hotel, the Ann Arbor Inn was vacated four years ago after its owners declared bankruptcy. City Council approval of the plan - with expected revisions - would clear the way for First Centrum to begin its $4.6 million renovation project. The council will review First. Centrum's proposal Monday. Final council approval of the plan is sched- uled for Feb. 21, with construction be- ginning in June. First Centrum, which the city chose over two competing bidders, must first reach agreement with the city on labor wages and costs for parking spaces. First Centrum does not require its See LABOR, Page 2 j _ I ........... - *With future uncertain, Toy continues fight for By JUDITH KAFKA DAILY STAFF REPORTER It is now only a line on his resume, but Jim Toy's decision to publicly an- nounce his sexual orientation in Detroit's Kennedy Square during an anti-Vietnam War rally remains one of the most significant moments of *his life. Toy, co-coordinator of the Les- bian Gay Male Programs Office (LGMPO) since its inception in 1970, has been an activist for gay rights and other issues ever since. Earlier this month, the HIV/AIDS Resource Center - Washtenaw (HARC) recognized Toy for outstand- ing community work, giving him a "Volunteer Service Award." Toy has been volunteering at HARC since he helped found it as Wellness Networks Inc./Huron Val- ley in 1986, and was a board member until 1993. The center is a non-profit organi- zation that offers support groups and personal services for HIV/AIDS pa- tients, and provides outreach educa- tion and information to the Washtenaw County community. "As the numbers of people with the syndrome (AIDS) began to grow, so did the need for service," Toy said, explaining what prompted him and several others to begin the organiza- tion. He now provides counseling for people before and after they take the "anti-body" test that identifies the HIV virus, and co-facilitates support groups for people who are HIV posi- tive. In an hourlong interview, Toy dis- cussed the difficulties he encounters with his volunteer work and numer- ous other issues important to him. "At times I feel irrationally guilty working with a group of people who are infected and whose life expect- ancy is threatened," he said. "But I think about all the people who put in hour after hour of volunteer service 'gay fights and for whatever reason do not get recognized, and it is them that I re- spect. It's one of the things that keeps me going." And "keeping going," by Toy's standards, is quite a feat. Along with his volunteer work at HARC, Toy also sits on numerous committees and com- missions, actively works for lesbian, gay male and bisexual rights, and tries to find free time to play chamber music See TOY, Page 2 Toy BABY BOOM Pentagon to send Patriot missiles to South Korea WASHINGTON (AP)-- The Pentagon is planning to send Patriot air defense missiles to South Korea as "sensible, rational defense preparations" for a potential North Korean Scud rocket assault, a senior official said yesterday. The move seemed likely to raise the level of tension on the Korean peninsula, where the North Korean army stands just across the border from a South Korean force bolstered by 36,000 U.S. Army and Air Force troops. Tensions have been inflamed in recent months by a standoff between Washington and Pyongyang over international inspections of the communist nation's nuclear program, which the United States says is covertly pur- not yet given the go-ahead for the Patriots. White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers said, "The only thing we can say is it's moving in that direction, but the operational decisions have not been made." At the North Korean mission to the United Nations in New York, an aide said Ambassa- dor Ho Jong was not available to comment on the Patriot plan. Ho has been heading his government's side in nuclear inspection talks with Washington. The Patriot, originally designed as a re- placement for nuclear-tipped anti-aircraft missiles in Europe, was used in the 1991 Persian Gulf War to defend Saudi Arabia, Israel and parts of Turkey against Iraqi Scud I