One hundred four years of editorial freedom t1 MSA reps question quorum for budget CSJ rules budget will not go into effect without approval of meeting minutes By CATHY BOGUSLASKI Daily Staff Reporter As the fall term heads into its second month, the Michigan Student Assembly is still working on its first order of business - passing a budget. A group of MSA representatives filed a complaint with the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) after last Tuesday's meeting alleging that the vote on the external budget was im- proper. They claim that less than the nec- essary 23 members were present when A vote was taken. "At best, according to their own records, they had 21 people (in the room)," asserted Rackham Rep. Josh Grossman, a plaintiff in the case. The judiciary ruled Friday night that the fate of the vote rests with the assembly. If MSA approves the min- utes of last Tuesday's meeting, in- cluding a list of names of assembly nmembers who were in the room but abstained from the vote, the budget stands as passed. If the minutes are not passed, MSA will be forced to reconsider the exter- nal budget again, perhaps as early as tomorrow night's meeting. The unapproved minutes currently show a vote of 15-4 in favor of the budget. No abstentions are recorded. Assembly members who sup- ported funding for the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union (AATU) left the meet- ing just before the vote in an attempt to break quorum. They were protest- ing the budget, which includes a frac- tion of the funds once allocated for AATU. Student General Counsel Paul Scublinsky said, "At no time was there See BUDGET, Page 2 RETIRING A PRESIDENT'S NUMBER Tj Comm chair urges 'caution' Letter to faculty warns of changes for newer students By RONNIE GLASSBERG Daily Staff Reporter In preparation for an overhaul or possible elimination of the Depart- ment of Communication, interim chair John Chamberlin has told department faculty to use "caution" in advising lower division students this term. "It is likely that some changes in course offerings and degree require- ments will occur in response to the recommendations of the Advisory Committee, and these changes will affect students differently depending on how far they have progressed through their undergraduate educa- tion," Chamberlin wrote in an Oct. 4 letter to communication faculty. In June, LSA Dean Edie N. Goldenberg appointed the committee to decide the fate of the troubled com- munication department. The commit- tee has been given a Dec. I deadline to make recommendations on the or- ganization of the academic program, faculty appointment and governance and degree requirements. Juniors and seniors who have declared a concentration in the de- partment will not be affected by the decisions in response to the committee's recommendations, Chamberlin said. But students in the lower division or perspective students may not be able to complete the concentration. "I think it is wise to use caution in advising such students during the cur- rent term. The implications of the recommendations for these students should become clearer in winter term and advisers will be in a better posi- tion to provide sound advice to stu- dents at that point," Chamberlin said in the letter. The committee plans to improve the future of the department by for- mulating a new curriculum to im- prove communication education. See COMM, Page 2 OOUGLAS KANTER/Daily During halftime at Saturday's game, the University retired former President Gerald Ford's football jersey. Ford was a member on the 1933 and 1934 Michigan national championship teams. An offensive lineman, he captured the squad's Most Valuable Player award in 1935, his senior year. See Q & A with Ford in SPORTSMonday, Page 3. 36,000 U.S. troops to head for Persian Gulf The Washington Post WASHINGTON - The Penta- gon announced yesterday night that a total of 36,000 troops are being sent to the Persian Gulf region this week in response to Iraq's massing of army divisions'near its border with Kuwait. A isenior Pentagon official also said yesterday night that the United States has "preliminary indications" that Iraq is moving a third division of its Republican Guards south to join the two other divisions that started shifting toward the border with Ku- wait last week. All told, more than 8Q,000 Iraqi troops are near or mov- ing toward the Kuwaiti border area, Pentagon officials said. The Pentagon announcement came shortly after a top Clinton administra- tion official described the Iraqi troop movements as a "hostile" act that could be met with a U.S. military response even if those troops do not invade Kuwait, as they did in 1990. United Nations Ambassador Madeleine K. Albright described the troop movements as "disrupting the stability in the region. ... We consider this hostile." The United States began sending troops and ships to the Persian Gulf on Friday. Early Sunday, Secretary of Defense William J. Perry announced that a new contingent of Air Force and Navy attack aircraft had been dispatched yesterday. "This is a for- midable military force," Perry said in describing the new deployments. Last night, the Pentagon said 18,000 Marines from Camp Pendleton in California and 12,000 soldiers from the 24th Mechanized Infantry Divi- sion at Fort Stewart, Ga., would be sent to Kuwait. About 4,000 24th Infantry troops were ordered there Saturday; 2,000 Marines are in the Persian Gulf. An additional 10000 to 15,000 soldiers have been put on alert. In Iraq, Foreign Minister Mohammad Saeed al-Sahaf said in a statement carried by the Iraqi News Agency that his country was seeking a diplomatic solution but wanted United Nations guarantees of an end to international sanctions that grew out of the 1991 gulf war, in which a U.N. force led by the United States ousted Iraqi forces from Kuwait. The United States and its allies have main- tained that Iraq must meet the terms it agreed to end the war, including rec- ognizing Kuwait's sovereignty, be- fore the sanctions can be lifted. Albright's tough line came in re- marks on CNN's "Late Edition" after she left a White House session on Iraq. She sternly warned Saddam not to "miscalculate" and doubt U.S. re- solve and said the invasion of Kuwait by Iraqi forces moving across the border as they did four years ago would be an "obvious" reason for a U.S. military response. But she added that the United States is now discussing internally and with its allies "under what cir- cumstances the regional instability" caused by the Iraqi troop movements, See IRAQ, Page 2 The Rc ngler says W Olan lacks spec By JONATHAN BERNDT state public school. Daily Staff Reporter "The last audit in SOUTHFIELD -- The econom- was sound, but it i cs of education continued to domi- viable to open new ate the gubernatorial campaign, as it state treasurer Dou as Michigan politics for the last 15 chairs the board th . onths, during last night's televised MET. ebate between Democratic chal- Roberts cited con enger Howard Wolpe and Republi- est rates as the main an incumbent would not be able to lohn Engler. r 9 rates and federal irn W o 1 p e thus should not take romised to res- tracts. rrect the Michi- When Engler clo an Education he did promise to h Frust, a program contracts, said John 1 hat guaranteed [ spokesman. Tition at any in- Wolpe began th gate school. discouraging news f ngler closed He trails Engler by e program be- age points in polls 1 ause of finan- organizations last w ial uncertain- While the numb ies. Engler's deficit four. "(Engler) took public education he came back to de ax money and diverted it to private bent Jim Blanchard cademies. I will reopen MET so you margin, the governo an send your kids to college," Wolpe confident. aid in his opening statement. "Right now, no By buying into the fund, either in back and it's a pretty lump sum or installments and amount Engler said. "Then ased on the amount of time before agenda." he child would enter college, parents ould pay for four years at any in- See D gad to Lansing Ape ndicated the fund s not financially contracts," said g Roberts, who at could reopen ntinued low inter- reason the fund pay future tuition ncome taxes and on any new con- sed the program, onor all existing Truscott, Engler's e day with some rom recent polls. 15 to 25 percent- taken by various eek. ers are similar to years ago, when feat then-incum- by a very slim r continued to be body's pushing y easy campaign, re is no Wolpe EBATE, Page 5 ov. Cedras to resign today, sources say Los Angeles Times PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - In- creased U.S. pressure paid off yester- day as diplomatic sources said that Haitian army commander Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras and the army chief of staff, Brig. Gen. Philippe Biamby, will resign today, clearing the way for exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to return without distraction. Cedras and Biamby are required by an agreement signed-last month to give up their posts no later than Satur- day, the expected date of Aristide's return. But U.S. officials pressed the two relentlessly to give up power immediately and to accept exile even though the agreement does not re- quire either man to leave Haiti. To make sure the message was clear, Cedras was told during a meet- ing yesterday afternoon with Lt. Gen. Hugh Shelton, the commander of U.S. troops here, that he and Biamby should retire before the Saturday deadline and get out of the country. "Monday would be good, but no later than Wednesday," is the way one U.S. military source described the gist of Shelton's remarks to Cedras. In addition to Cedras and Biamby, U.S. officials said they want nearly all of the Haitian military high com- mand to leave office. The only excep- tion is Gen. Jean-Claude Duperval, who will be given temporary com- mand of the army. The new high command, which will also serve on an interim basis,' will be composed of lower-ranking rnlnnnal nA l lantannnt cnlanalewhn Cedras and were not directly involved in the Sept. 30, 1991, coup that drove Aristide from office. Confusion reigned yesterday about when Cedras and Biamby were ex- pected to leave. Some sources said the two men would step down this morning; oth- ers said they would submit resigna- tions tomorrow to be effective Wednesday. Earlier on NBC-TV's "Meet the Press," White House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said he could not con- firm reports that Cedras would resign today. "I can't confirm that at this point, but, clearly, we have this mis- sion on track right now," he said. Ak ir 0vnert to nive u n nffi Democratic challenger Howard Wolpe, trailing 15- 25 points behind C Engler in recent polls, talks after last night's debate in Southfield. It 7 0Z