2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 28, 1994 OMBUDSMAN continued from page 1 don't quite fit with that philosophy ;anymore," Perigo said. "I think the division of Student Affairs feels that they have a number of people trying to fix problems for students." Royster Harper, dean of students, said she wants to align the approaches of the ombudsman's office with the priorities of her office. "What we have talked about is Jooking more closely at how we pro- vide student assistance in a general way. Almost two to three years ago we began talking about this notion of student assistance. I don't believe Michigan has to be large and cold," Harper said. Hartford said the position will be filled through the normal search pro- cess and said she will create a new student assistance office with the Dean of Students' Office. "One of the things we had talked about doing was involving emeriti faculty who know the University," Hartford said. Nowak said she could not think of any reasons for Perigo's dismissal. "I truly, seriously don't know why," she said. As interim vice president for stu- dent services, Mary Ann Swain put him on a three-year, rolling contract, Perigo said. "From my perspective, he was open to students and seemed to work effectively with other members of the campus on behalf of students," Swain said. Under this rolling contract, Perigo was reviewed each year and the Uni- versity extended the contract by one year. Newsletters Newsletters Newsletters Newsletters Big savings on newsletters for all clubs, businesses, and organizations. rfwm "Because of the nature of the work where you're neutral, you need some protection," Perigo said. "Most om- budsmen would report as high in the organization as practical." But when Hartford arrived on cam- pus that changed -Perigo's contract has not been renewed since Hartford was hired. Hartford also made other changes to Perigo's role as ombudsman. Three years ago, two people worked in the office, allowing Perigo to handle 380-400 cases a year. Now he works alone, handling 330 student cases a year. In 1993, Perigo began serving con- currently as assistant dean of students, reporting to Harper. As ombudsman, Perigo reported to Hartford. Administrators who worked with Perigo spoke highly of his tenure as ombudsman. Virginia Gordon, assistant dean of the Law School, said, "I've worked with him on solving problems that students were having in different ar- eas. He was always very helpful." Nowak, from the Office of Finan- cial Aid, said Perigo was dedicated and professional as ombudsman.- "I thought he was terrific. He was always very concerned about what students were telling him, but within the confines of the Office of Financial Aid. He was not out looking for fault or blame." Perigo earned a doctoral degree in education from the University in 1977, and a master's degree in guidance and counseling in 1963. After spending three years at Alpena Community College, Perigo returned to the University in 1971 to become director of Orientation. In 1981, he became director of Student Information Services, a posi- tion he held until 1990. In that role, Perigo oversaw the Orientation Of- fice, the Campus Information Cen- ters, International Center and student day-care services. At the same time, he took on the role of ombudsman. He has been working at the Uni- versity for almost 24 years. : Welcome Back For "94 ": 1"We Cut Hair Your Way"O :Dascola Barbers: 6 Barbers-No Waiting " For Men and Women : M-F 8:30-5:20 Sat Til 4:20 * . 615 E.Liberty Off State MSA continued from page 1 because the idea "had not occurred" to her until last night's meeting. Maurer said she did not take more aggressive action to block the budget vote because of the agreement. "We had, and continue to have, enough signatures to file a student initiative which would have forced (the assembly) to fund us fully or to not pass a budget until after the vote in November," Maurer said to the assembly. "We did not do that because we had an agreement in good faith with Julie Neenan." Maurer later said she regretted not filing the initiative, because AATU was in danger of losing its funding despite the agreement. MSA also debated changing its internal budget to fund the tenants' union. Several MSA members pro- posed giving less funding to the Bud- get Priorities Committee (BPC), which allocates funds to student groups, in order to fund AATU. How- ever, many MSA members were op- posed to this. Despite the cut, the proposal to fund AATU with this money would still increase BPC funding over last year. MSA Vice President Jacob Stern said, "Last year, student groups re- quested $120,000, and we only had $56,000 to give." Despite this, many MSA mem- bers supported AATU funding com- ing from the assembly. "It seems clear to me that stu- dents, besides the people in this room, want funding for AATU," said Josh Grossman, aRackham rep- resentative. Roger De Roo, another Rackham representative, said, "I think funding for the tenants' union is the most important thing that we do." Carpet ixn Smpson's Bronco tainted with ex-wife 's blood Newsday LOS ANGELES - Preliminary DNA tests have found blood on the carpeting of O.J. Simpson's Ford Bronco that is consistent with his ex- wife's, according to sources. The carpeting was removed from Simpson's Bronco on June 13, the day after Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Lyle Goldman were found stabbed to death outside her Brentwood condominium. Court pa- pers have disclosed that a partial bloody shoe print was found on the carpet. The news came as jury selection began in the double murder case Monday. The Los Angeles police lab ob- tained polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, test results on the Ford Bronco carpet this month, sources said Mon- day; it was not clear why it had taken so long to perform the examination. Law enforcement sources had said earlier that tests on the carpet stain were inconclusive. The stain is to undergo more de- finitive testing at the state Depart- ment of Justice Laboratory in Berke- ley, California, the sources said. Asked what the impact of such evidence could be, John Burris, a prominent California attorney, said it would indicate that the killer tracked blood from the murder scene into Simpson's Bronco. If the evidence is confirmed and admitted at Simpson's trial, Burris said, "It would be extremely damag- ing to him." Burris said the defense would have to raise questions, given the sloppi- ness of some of the investigative work, about whether the blood actually came from the carpet or whether the sample was contaminated. They could alsO question the reliability of the test it- self, he said, or offer an explanation as to how the blood got there. Such an explanation might be that Nicole Simpson had been in the car and had cut herself. "If you can't do any of those," he said, "then it could sink the ship." The state lab also is scheduled to perform tests on blood found on sock recovered from Q.J. Simpson' master bedroom, sources said. Pre- liminary police lab tests on the sock indicate there is blood on it that is consistent with Nicole Simpson's, they said. HEALTH CARE continued from page 1 impetus to reform efforts, experts said. Within hours of the announcement Monday that congressional Demo- crats were abandoning health legisla- tion this year, Gov. Mario M. Cuomo (D-N.Y.) announced plans to expand coverage to tens of thousands ofunin- sured in his state, using savings ob- tained by cuts in Medicaid. On Sept. 15, the Clinton adminis- tration authorized a statewide "dem- onstration" in Florida which, if ap- proved by the legislature, could ex- tend health care coverage to 1.1 mil- lion uninsured people with incomes well above the poverty line. Oregon, Tennessee, Hawaii, Kentucky and Rhode Island already are implement- ing, or will implement soon, programs that expand health coverage to hun- dreds of thousands of people not reached by Medicaid, the federal-state health program for certain categories of the poor. A dozen other states either have applied for federal waivers of Medic- aid law to allow such trials, or are expected to ask for them soon. All told, millions of uninsured could be given subsidized health policies through a state-based reform move- ment. While a desire to ease the problem of the uninsured partly explains the multitude of state initiatives, the ma- jor reason appears to be fiscal. Faced with limits on borrowing and strong opposition to higher taxes, many gov- ernors are turning to "managed care" to stem the growth of their health care budgets. Most state Medicaid programs ar run with questionable efficiency. B enrolling Medicaid recipients in com- mercial health plans that extract deep discounts from hospitals and doctors, state officials hope to save enough money to cover thousands more poor or near poor with the same amount of money. States' embrace of "managed care" mirrors a transition that is producing unprecedented changes throughoit the private health care marketplace. As businesses enroll more of their employees in HMOs and other man- aged care arrangements, hospitals and physician groups have been banding together to gain leverage in negotia- tions with insurers over fees. SUMMIT continued from page . or three years, Yeltsin has a lot to prove." Experts here cited a variety of motives for Yeltsin's nuclear-arms proposals, including Moscow's de- sire to appear more assertive in world affairs after a period of following Washington's lead and the Russian president's personal competition with Gorbachev for a respected place in history. Both the Pentagon and the Rus- sian Defense Ministry have argued against further deep cuts. Clinton ac- cepted the Pentagon's recommenda- tion last week. The Russian army, lacking finances to build up its con- ventional force, has developed a new military doctrine giving nuclear weap- ons a central position. "Presidents Yeltsin and Clinton will exchange loud peace initiatives this week, just as their predecessors did during the best years of "new thinking," defense commentator Pavel Felgengauer wrote yesterday. "But in the meantime, a broad interdepart- mental consensus has been reached in Moscow that everything should be frozen for a long time at the level of general declarations." But several experts said that Yeltsin's call for further nuclear cuts should not be dismissed as mere rheto- ric. Sergei Rogoff, another arms-con- trol expert here, said Yeltsin was not seeking another 800-page arms-con- trol pact, a START III, but rather was hoping to find ways to change the model of mutual nuclear fear that continues to govern U.S.-Russian re- lations. Despite pledges by both sides to retarget their missiles, that rela- tionship of mutual deterrence remains essentially unchanged from Cold War days, he said. More practically, Rogoff said Yeltsin's proposals could lead to in- formal agreements between the coun- tries to maintain arsenals smaller than those negotiated under START II. Such agreements could reduce the costs Russia would incur if it built single-warhead missiles to replace all the multiple-warhead missiles. The Dean of Students Office is hosting a Public Comments Session regarding the Interim Dance/Party Policy Tonight! 7:00pm-9:00pm in the Kuenzel Room of the Michigan Union and Thursday, October 13 7:00pm-9:00pm in the Koessler Room of the Michigan League Anyone wanting to make a public comment pertaining to this policy is invited to attend. The Interim Dance/Party Policy is available at: Michigan Union Scheduling Office, Room 1310 Michigan League Manager's Office North Campus Commons Administrative Offices Dean of Students Office, 3000 Michigan Union University of Wisconsin-Platteville "If You have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost. That is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them." -iewy David horeMau Learn Your Way Around The World Study abroad in SeviUe, Spain, or London, England, for a summer, for a semester or for a full academic year " Courses In liberal arts and international business " Fluency in a foreign language nJ required M Home-stays with meals BUDGET continued from page 1. Legislature could withdraw funding if it deems some spending too high. The amendment would require each school to provide the Legisla- ture with all revenue and spending numbers, as at present, but also any other budget information required by law - which the Legislature could change simply by passing another bill, rather than changing the constitution. The University currently receives more than $264 million from the state, which makes up almost 38 percent of its general fund, although the University's Board of Regents main- tains control of the budget. Concern about the current level of executive salaries, specifically uni- versity presidents, fueled the debate. Top executives at Michigan's 15 pub- lic universities average $139,276 per year, well above the national average of $108,000. University President James J. Duderstadt earns $206,070. But Baker appealed to market forces when setting salaries, saying Duderstadt makes only half of what presidents at peer institutions earn. State Sen. John Schwarz (R-Battle Creek) agreed. "Their pay has got to move at whatever the market dictates for a university president, and that may very well be out of whack with the inflation rate," said Schwarz, who chairs the Senate appropriations sub- committee on higher education. President's salaries at two other research campuses, Michigan State University and Wayne State Univer- sity, are also above average. But Welborn, in an effort to r strain rising tuition rates, sent a memo to the legislative services bureau ask- ing for a resolution to "require state colleges and universities to submit detailed line-item budgets to the Leg- islature in order to qualify for state appropriations." Changing criteria for funding state- supported institutions requires amend- ing the state constitution. A propos' would have to pass both houses an. then be approved by Michigan voters. VanderRoest said the amendment would hold universities to the same budgeting criteriaas cities, townships and county road commissions. Baker said applying it would be difficult. "It would be virtually im- possible to implement," she said, cit- ing the University's complex budget But complexity was not an iss with the senator's office. "There should be nothing to hide," VanderRoest said. "It's a public insti- tution using public money." Baker agreed, saying that too would be impossible. "You can't run an operation of this size without informing the pub- lic," she said. The proposal may be addressed i the session that starts after the No- vember election, which may allow it to affect next summer's budgeting process. If it has to be reintroduced in the session that begins in January, it would be at least another year before schools notice the change. - Daily Staff Reporter Scot Woods and the Associated Press contributed to this report Iijz 13 iri~jnN~ W sfrP $ Long s.eev,,Tv-shurts $10 Sweotshirts $30 3: colons available: Ash GreyaNB lue&Whit Dail'BadOfc 420 Mayfurd~2nd .floor MMMM The Michigan Daily (IbSS N045.967) is publisned Monday through Friday during the tall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $160. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 481091327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. ^ EDTRA S. AFF Jessie . 4. EitrInChe NEWS David Shepwdson, Maging Editor EDITORS: James R. Cho, Nate Hurley, Mona Oureshi, Karen Talaski. STAFF: Robin Barry, Cathy Boguslaski, Lsa Dines. Sam T. Dudek, Josh Ginsberg. Ronnie Gassberg. Jennifer Harvey.nKatie Hutchins. Michelle Joyce, Maria Kovac, Frank C. Lee, Andrea MacAdam, James M. Nash, Zachary M. Raimi, Shari Sitron, Andrew Taylor, Michelle Lee Thompson. Maggie Weyhing, Josh White, April Wood, Scot Woods. GRAPHICS: Jonathan Berndt (Editor), Andrew Taylor. Julie Tsai. EDITORIAL Sam Goodstein, Flint walness, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Julie Becker, Patrick Javid. STAFF: Eugene Bowen, Craig Greenberg, Jed Friedman, Jeff Keating, Jim Lasser, Jason Lichtstein, Walter Perkel, Allison Stevens, Jean Twenge. SPORTS Clad A. Safrusn, Ma t Editorj EDITORS: Rachel Bachman, Brett Forrest, Antoine Pitts, Michael Rosenberg. STAFF: Paul Barger, Roderick Beard, Eugene Bowen, Scott Burton, Ryan Cuskaden, Marc Diller, Jennifer Duberstein, Darren Everson, Ravi Gopal. Dan McKenzie, Rebecca Moatz, Melanie Schuman, Tom Seeley, Brian Skiar, Tim Smith. Barry Sollenberger, Doug Stevens, Michelle Lee Thompson, Ryan White, Heather Windt. ARTS Melissa Rose Bernardo, Tom Eriewine, Editors EDITORS: Matt Carlson (Fine Arts). Jason Carroll (Theater), Kirk Miller (Books), Heather Phares (Music). Liz Shaw (Weekend etc.). Alexandra Twin (Film), Ted Watts (Weekend, etc.). STAFF: Jordan Atlas. Nicole Baker. Thomas Crowley, Andy Dolan, Ben Ewy, Johanna Flies, Josh Herrington, Kristen Knudsen, Karen Lee, Scott Plagenhoef, Marni Raitt, Dirk Schulze, Sarah Stewart. I L,.. llii I