IVeather Tonight: Mostly cloudy, lows in mid- 20s. Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy with scattered flurries. It I Un 1Wt One hundred four years of editorial freedom Tuesday January 31, 1995 .. a .: v e r r c{ w xu; ,. , 'S 3 wi v t r~ n r A {a y(r,., .,i 9 nd. x ...x a u +y . r c e, .r ex g a +r e..n r. r*. 1 _. .. c , <. to k' R c^ E o ,E r ,reu. ....oc a. ~, r. xp.^.,"..ra?',+ y,'"i' -00 . 4:: ., ... W #iACUA elects new committee chairs, Genetics Prof. George Brewer to chair faculty assembly, committee By Jodi Cohen Daily Staff Reporter In an uncontested election yes- terday, the nine members of the Sen- e Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs elected human genetics Prof. George Brewer and biology Prof. Thomas Moore as future SACUA chair and vice chair re- spectively. Brewer will also serve as the chair of Senate Assembly, the University's faculty governing body. "I think the group as a whole rec- nized George as the best possible ndidate," said current chair Jean Loup. Brewer, who lost to Loup in last year's divisive election, has been a member of SACUA for two years. In the election. Loup first asked each member to nominate one per- son. If a candidate receives the major- ity of nominations, the election ends and that person becomes the new chair. Oe same process is used to elect the Vice chair. In yesterday's election, both Brewer and Moore received the ma- jority of the nominations. "George has shown himself to be really interested in faculty gover- nance. He has lots of good ideas, and has earned this opportunity," Loup said. P Brewer said that he is looking for- ard to his term as chair. "I think there are challenges ahead and I am looking forward to seeing if we can meet some of these challenges," he said. Brewer also said that he must face two primary goals. He hopes to make faculty governance more ef- fective and wants to help the admin- tration be more responsive to fac- 1ty ideas. "We have to validate faculty rights both collectively such as in depart- ments, and with individual faculty," Brewer said, adding that two such issues are tenure and grievance poli- cies. Committee members agreed that yesterday's election went smoother than last year's election. q"There is no doubt the whole thing lent better this year," Loup said. Last year, SACUA members could barely agree on the best candidate - Loup won by one vote. Moreover, the controversy about the election divided the committee members. Brewer said that the outcome of the election this year was not only better for him, but that it showed ACUA as a more cohesive group. "SACUA has come together more as a unit. We do not always agree on everything, but as a whole, we are working more collectively," he said. "I am honored to have the support of my colleagues on SACUA," Brewer said. SACUA member Charles Smith said he is pleased with the results of the election. "I think that it is a fine selection and they will represent the faculty remarkably well," Smith said. Both Brewer and Moore's terms will begin on May 1 and will last one year. Panel hears code amendments MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Student panelist Michael T. Davis poses a question to the Civil Liberties Board chairman during last night's amendment hearing. Code v iolator to getrpimn By Cathy Boguslaski Daily Staff Reporter Changes may be coming for one of the University's most controversial policies -the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities, a code of non-academic conduct. Last night about 30 of the 50 students trained to hear code cases convened to review amendments proposed by numerous campus groups. The meeting, scheduled to begin at 6 p.m., started an hour late to allow enough panelists to arrive to form a quorum. Currently, the University Board of Regents must approve any changes to the code. All amendments must be reviewed by a majority of the student panelists. Three previous meet- ings had failed to attract the necessary 26 panelists. Any amendments passed by the student panel will be presented to the regents at the board's April meeting, said Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hartford. At press time, the panel had gone into a closed session to consider amendments presented during the meeting. Vince Keenanchairof the Michigan StudentAssembly's Student Rights Commission, presented several amendments proposed by MSA. "I think MSA is committed to involving students in this process and we'll do anything we can do to expand students' say in the regulations that affect them." The panelists heard amendments proposed by MSA, faculty representatives, the Office of Student Affairs and one amendment supported by a petition with the signatures of 500 students. During the meeting, anyone presenting an amendment had one minute to speak, then the moderator allowed two statements for the amendment and two against, all 30 seconds a piece. The panelists could ask anyone who origi- nally presented an amendment questions. Representatives of both MSA and the Civil Liberties Board expressed concern over the format of the meeting. MSA's amendments were not presented to the panel- ists in the format .in which they were originally written. Instead, they were incorporated into the text of the code. Keenan said MSA was not aware of the format of the amendments until he arrived at the meeting. "Ultimately, I think this made things much more confusing than it had to be," Keenan said. "I can't help but notice that this procedural avalanche worked fine for the administration's amendments." Judicial Advisor Mary Lou Antieau said the format was requested by the panelists, to allow them to follow the proposed changes as easily as possible. Antieau also said people presenting amendments could tell the panelists to consider them holistically. Proposed amendments covered such areas as student representation during hearings, whether or not crimes committed off campus fall under code jurisdiction, and what code records should be open to the public. One group of amendments concerned the amendment process itself. "The original plan (for the amendment process) came from MSA and we thought it would be appropriate for MSA to co-sponsor the change," Hartford said. "We believe that anytime you have a written procedure it should be a little difficult to change, so that no party can change it arbitrarily. But it's also obvious that (the current process) is very difficult." MSA and the Office of Student Affairs proposed that amendments be submitted to a committee, which would include two students, two administrators, and two faculty By Ronnie Glassberg Daily Staff Reporter After being found responsible for ha- rassment under the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities on Friday, American culture doctoral student Melanie Welch now will receive her penalty - a written letter of reprimand from the Univer- sity. "(Judicial Advisor Mary Lou Antieau) told me she had never written a letter of reprimand and wasn't sure what is supposed to be in it," said David Cahill, Welch's attor- ney for the internal proceedings. Cahill said that Antieau told him the letter will be Welch's sanction. Antieau would not confirm that Welch will receive a letter of reprimand. "I have never written one. That is the lowest possible sanction," Antieau said. "It would be an acknowledgment that the State- ment of Student Rights had been violated." But she said a letter of reprimand would have no impact on a student's academic record. During the first open hearing under the code, a six-member student panel found Welch guilty of harassment and not respon- sible for assault charges. "I think it shows that the student jury gave me the lowest punishment that they possibly could. I think it was because they realized this whole ordeal was ridiculous and frivolous," Welch said. But Antieau said a letter could still fulfill the educational objectives of the code. "I would hope that because these stu- dents are bright and intelligent, a letter of reprimand would cause them to find other ways to deal with the emotions that led to the behavior," Antieau said. Yaakov Lavie, who filed charges June 17, would not comment on the sanction. "I don't want to talk any more about this case,"he said. Cahill said the letter will be composed by English Prof. Peter Bauland, chair of the proceedings, in consultation with the stu- dent jurors. Welch said she will appeal the verdict internally. "Mary Lou said there have been two previous appeals. In both of the cases the appeals board listened to the tape," Cahill said. For Welch's case, the tape will include the nine hours of the hearing. Cahill said he thinks the hearing was a waste of time and that the code should be repealed. "Much of this stuff was protected speech - protecting her health, her daughter's health and her cat's health from the smok- ing," Cahill said. Besides an internal appeal of the verdict, Welch also plans to amend her lawsuit filed in Washtenaw County Circuit Court, which originally aimed at opening the hearing. "I suspect that the student panel found me guilty of harassment in order to prevent my lawsuit from becoming moot," Welch asserted. "If I had been acquitted, that would have been the end of it. This way, I still have the basis for a lawsuit." See AMENDMENTS, Page 2 Students get records via software By Matthew Smart Daily Staff Reporter Just as CRISP made its transition from Angell Hall to the phones, stu- dent information is making its way from the registrar's office to the Cam- pus Computing Sites. Wolverine Access, a free service sponsored by the University's Infor- mation Technology Division, offers an alternative to a trip to the LSA Building to obtain student informa- tion. The user-friendly program pro- vides a point-and-click system to ac- cess dozens of services, including stu- dent grades, schedules and address changes. As of last week, students can also get an academic report that acts like an unofficial transcript to provide in- formation about a student's Univer- sity coursework, degree status, previ- ous experience and concentration re- quirements. Students have welcomed the addi- tion of Wolverine Access. "The feedback from students has been incredibly positive," said Kurt Richardson, project leader for the Wolverine Access Development team. "I think it's really nice to be able to look up your schedule," said Catherine Stellin, an LSA senior. "It saves a lot of time." SNRE junior Joe Schock agreed. "It cuts down on waiting-in-line time," he said. "We've had a lot of people access the data," said Bill Wrobleski, a sys- tem developer. He added that although ITD has not publicized Wolverine Access much outside of the comput- ing sites, it is very popular. More than 175,000 accesses have been logged since the debut of the software this fall. ITD anticipates in- creased usage in the future. Wrobleski said Wolverine Access can provide two types of information - student databases and on-line ser- vices such as those found in GOpherBLUE. Student database services in- clude grades, class schedules, stu- dent account information and CRISP information. Gopher information includes weather reports and cam- pus events. Richardson said ITD will continue adding services to Wolverine Access. He also said students have made many suggestions for new services. Organizers are considering add- ing a ride board, similar to the one in the basement of the Michigan Union, and access to student financial aid information. "A Windows version of Wolver- ine Access is under development and will be available this term," Woivr., A.ccesFs r f~ , F r z~ Wolverine Access allows students to obtain records and information. Richardson said. The Computer Aided Engineer- ing Network is also looking to make Wolverine Access available on its computers. Wolverine Access is built around software written by Cornell Univer- sity and Apple Computer that was made available to a consortium of universities. Kemp bows out of1996 GOP race- Drug found to reduce pain among sickle cell aneimcs * WASHINGTON (AP) - Jack Kemp, the former congressman and housing secretary once viewed as the heir to the Reagan revolution, said yesterday he would not seek the 1996 Republican presidential nomination. field," said Ralph Reed, executive director of Pat Robertson's Christian Coalition. "There is an awful lot of money and an awful lot of grassroots support that has been waiting to see what Jack would do." efit. Gramm allies suggested the senator's economic views were clos- est to Kemp's; Alexander backers cast him as a "conservative with a heart" in the Kemp mold. Kemp said he likely would en- Newsday WASHINGTON - Medical researchers yesterday announced the first drug for pre- anemia, "the results show that for the first time we have a drug treatment that reduces the frequency of painful episodes or 'crises' in