* 1 Assembly passes budget MSA representatives continue to protest decrease in tenants' union funding By CATHY BOGUSLASKI Daily Staff Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly, after more than a month of trying, has finally passed its budget. Last night, the assembly ratified external budget, which includes 6,750 designated for lobbying and no additional funds for the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union (AATU). The surplus budget already allo- cates $2,000 for AATU. This amount, however, is a fraction of what was allocated to the tenants' union last year. Debate over the funding for AATU has divided the assembly and delayed budget for most of the last month. fore the budget was passed last night, LSA Rep. Brooke Holley in- formed the assembly that she would move to reopen the surplus budget at next week's meeting in order to des- ignate funds for AATU. "It shouldn't be a fight between lobbying and the AATU," Holley said, adding that both lobbying and AATU important and should receive Pattrice Maurer, AATU coordina- tor, said she was "tentatively hope- ful" about the outcome of the meet- ing. AATU had requested $6,500 to $8,000 in interim funding for their services. "I think there is still a possibility that we will be able to get operating funds from the surplus budget. Just as SA has basic bills it needs to pay, . have basic bills that must be paid to continue to offer our services to students," she said. "As long as we See BUDGET, Page 2 U' anel grievance By LISA DINES Daily Staff Reporter When faculty members feel that the University has wronged them, they often file a grievance to solve their problems. Some faculty members who have One this route say the process needs revision. Yesterday, a panel of fac- ulty members and administrators dis- cussed the current University griev- ance policy and suggested changes to insure uniformity and fairness in de- cisions. "In order to have faculty gribv- ance procedures work well, we need have the word, 'goodwill,' in- ded," said Jean Loup, chair of the Senate Advisory Committee on Uni- versity Affairs (SACUA). James E. Perley, president of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), said the number of faculty grievances nationwide has increased in recent years. In Ohio, Pst qmrnm One hundred four years of editorial freedom 5r -x -t ,-r- P "" S '- A + I Clinton woos Ford workers in Dearborn By SCOT WOODS Daily Staff Reporter DEARBORN - President Clinton's visit to southeast Michigan yesterday was as much an attempt to repair his image as it was to rally support for the state's Democratic congressional candidates. In a speech to autoworkers at the Mustang As- sembly Plant,' Clinton said ' Democrats should be cred-; ited with "putting our economic house in order." Assembly lines running at capacity building the 1994 Motor Trend Car of the Year ground to a halt for four hours, as 1,100 Ford workers left their sta- tions to attend the address. Because it was held on Ford Motor Company property, the event was not open to the public. The embattled president used the trip into union country to underscore the revival of the auto industry and to claim credit for creating jobs and cut- ting most people's taxes. "We've had nine months now of growth in manufacturing jobs in a row for the first time in ten years," Clinton said. "America was voted the most productive country in the world by the Annual Panel of International Economists for the first time in nine years. And we have 4.6 million new jobs in America in the last 20 months." Clinton also took credit for higher exports to Mexico and for cutting the federal bureaucracy by 252,000 em- ployees. After reviewing his own record, the president accused Republicans of stalling significant legislation in Con- gress for political, not ideological rea- sons. He charged Republicans with killing popular legislation intended to cut the amount of money lawyers were receiving from the Superfund environmental clean-up program. "It's the only time in history chemi- cal companies and the Sierra Club have agreed on anything," Clinton said. "There was nobody in America against Superfund, except the Repub- See CLINTON, Page 2 0 News Analysis Clinton asks: Where have Dems gone? By SCOT WOODS Daily Staff Reporter There were two marching bands present 'yesterday - two. Hundreds of members of the print and electronic media, a crowd of thousands, colorful welcome banners, two U.S. senators and President Clinton were also there. It sure looked a lot like a cam- paign speech. But conspicuously missing from the podium at Ford's Dearborn Assembly Plant were any state Democratic candidates for public office. Yes, Bob Carr, the Democratic nominee for Michigan's open U.S. Senate seat was there, but he was just one of the spectators. See DEMS, Page 2 Clinton addresses workers at the Ford Mustang Assembly Plant yesterday. U.N. debates ending sanctions against Iraq The Washington Post UNITED NATIONS - Iraq's military deployments near Kuwait have soured its chances of a sympa- thetic hearing anytime soon on lifting the oil and general trade embargo imposed on it four years ago, diplo- mats said yesterday. But the U.N. Security Council re- mains divided over whether to ease the sanctions in the more distant fu- ture. reviews Sprocess where Perley teaches, grievance-re- lated inquiries to AAUP have risen from 4 in 1973 to 383 in 1992. The University also is a part of this trend -grievances have doubled in frequency since 1987. SACUA member Tom Moore has studied the grievance.procedure for several years. With the rise in the faculty use of grievance procedures, he said, the University needs to make sure that it correctly administers the policy. Moore has compiled statistics on the history of grievances at the Uni- versity. Of the 76 grievances be- tween 1983 and 1993 that Moore has identified; however, he could only obtain records on 20 cases. He urged the University to keep better records of the grievances and their results. Kaplan agreed. "If that was done in every case, we'd have a list of mistakes to avoid." From studying the policy and See GRIEVANCE, Page 2 One of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's purposes in moving troops toward Kuwait apparently was to ex- press his frustration with the sanc- tions and display Iraq's military ca- pabilities if the embargo is not eased. But the 15 council nations rejected the move. "Iraq blew it," U.S. Ambassador Madeleine K. Albright said, arguing that Baghdad had destroyed its cred- ibility. The United States contended that, by moving its troops toward the Ku- waiti border, Iraq has committed a new violation of the cease-fire agree- ment that ended the 1990 Persian Gulf War. Iraq's troop movements also seem to have wrecked its prospects for reap- ing immediate gains from the one area of the U.N. program in which it has shown goodwill: the destruction of its most lethal weapons. One catalyst to the current crisis was a regularly scheduled six-month report, issued yesterday, by the U.N. commission overseeing dismantling of the weapons. Commission chair- man Rolf Ekeus reported that a sys- tem for long-term monitoring of Iraq's weapons industry "provisionally op- erational" and the U.N. team has be- gun testing it. Baghdad expected Ekeus to set a deadline for telling the Security Coun- cil that Iraq had met all its obliga- tions, Arab diplomats said. Ekeus said Iraqi leaders vented their dismay when he met with them last week in Baghdad. "They gave me a message of despair, depression and skepti- cism," he said. Yesterday it was Ekeus's turn to be pessimistic, based on his reading of the reaction in New York to Iraq's military threats. "My honest assess- See IRAQ, Page 2 Woman who hid Frank tells 1,000: Help those in need By AGNES MAZUR For the Daily Miep Gies, the woman who helped hide Anne Frank, told a standing- room-only crowd of more than 1,000 at Rackham Auditorium that people have no choice but to help those in need in any circumstance. "We should tell children that most victims of poverty and discrimination are innocent. Therefore, we should help them," Gies said in receiving the Raoul Wallenberg Medal. Many students were turned away and others listened to the speech in the lobby of a jam-packed Rackam Auditorium. For more than two years, Gies risked danger daily to bring the Frank family food, news, and comfort in Amsterdam - until an informer dis- closed their location to the Nazis. "I'm not a hero," Gies said, speak- ing humbly of her efforts. "My story is a story of very ordinary people in extraordinary times." In intoducing Gies, Public Health Prof. Irene H. Butter said Gies was the ideal choice for the medal. "She acted at great personal risk to do what was right, decent and just." After the Gestapo had taken the Frank family and their friends away, Gies discovered Anne's diary and kept it safe for Otto Frank, the only one of the family to return from the Nazi death camps. She began by explaining that she saw no choice but to help the Frank family - even though many of her friends and neighbors believed the Jews deserved to be persecuted. "If you ever decide to help people See GIES, Page 2 JONATHAN LURIE/Daily Miep Gies speaks to a full audience at Rackham Auditorium last night. She received the Raoul. Wallenberg Medal for her courage in helping hide Anne Frank and her family during WWII. U Middle Eas right direct Los Angeles Times DAMASCUS, Syria - Using some of the most upbeat language he has ever applied to the knotty nego- tiations between Syria and Israel, U.S. cretary of State Warren Christo- er said yesterday he is increasingly hopeful the bitter enemies are closing in on a comprehensive peace agree- ment. "We are moving in the right direc- tion," Christopher told reporters after . .. <.:, om mmk t peace is 'moving in the ion,' Christopher says zA9':a:4 tion Council of U.S. determination to prevent Iraq from renewing ag- gression against Kuwait, Christopher returns to Jerusalem tonight to report to Rabin. The secretary of state will meet again with Assad tomorrow before heading home Friday. Despite Christopher's optimistic account, Israel and Syria havenot be- gun the sort of face-to-face negotia- tions that U.S. officials believe will points of disagreement. Neither the official nor Christopher would dis- cuss any of the details, The senior official said both Rabin and Assad are now asking detailed questions about the position of the other, a sharp change from an earlier stage of the talks in which each side stated and restated its own position."They have begun to look at issues to find where there might be a basis for common ground," the offi- INSIDE NEWS 3 LSA sophomore Jennifer Ireland was in court yesterday testifying against the father of her 3-year-old daughter, Maranda, who is charged with assault. ARTS 5 Noisy pop group Spell does not want to be considered "grange." They will be opening for the MWest PNoets atSt. U.S. troops prepare for Aristide's return Newsday PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - U.S. infantrymen yesterday swept through the Presidential Palace and surrounding government buildings, telling employees of the old regime to pack their bags and leave. The forced house-cleaning was one of the final moves before the scheduled Saturday return of exiled President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. the arrival of the Aristide govern- ment," Sullivan added. Yesterday's development ap- peared to end the five-month reign of military-installed de facto President Emile Jonassaint, a former Supreme Court judge and a devotee of voo- doo, the local religion that combines aspects of Catholicism and African polytheism. There had been a string of other de facto presidents and prime