One hundred four years of editorial freedom Irn Weather Today: Cloudy, snow showers, high in 30s. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy, high in 20s. Wednesday February 1., 1995 MSA recalls chair over misused funds, charges of fraud By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter In a vote of 18-9, with six abstentions, the Michigan Student Assembly last night re- called LSA Rep. Andrew Wright as the exter- nal relations chair and as the city liaison. An MSA investigative committee circum- stantially connected Wright to an anonymous *nation of $796 made to MSA on Jan. 20. The committee also found that Wright had approached Vice President for Student Af- fairs Maureen A. Hartford and Dean of Stu- dents Royster Harper for funding without assembly approval. "Approaching Hartford and Harper is speaking out of line as an MSA representative without going first to the assembly, the Steer- ing Committee or the executive officers - I dnk this is highly out of order," said Kinesi- o ogy Rep. Jeff Brown. MSA will elect a new external relations chair next Tuesday. "Seven hundred ninety-six dollars is not my money," Wright said. "I don't think there's been an ethical breach. I think that in 98.5 percent of the time I've upheld MSA's name in my representation." Brown and fellow MSA Reps. Bob Westrate and Devon Bodoh were selected last week to investigate the source of the anony- mous donation and said last night the money came from an outside source. "We looked through the Budget Priorities Committee's receipts and found no impropri- eties. This was not MSA's money," Bodoh said. The task force determined that the letter accompanying the money was not sent through the U.S. mail, Brown said. Closer examination found that both the city origin and the date were scratched off the postmark, and the letter was mailed with a 29-cent stamp after Jan.I. The anonymous donation was earmarked in the letter for a specific conference whose delegation was rescinded at last Tuesday's meeting. "I'm speculating here, but the money was ordered to be used specifically for (a confer- ence), and we rescinded the (conference)," Westrate said. "It is possible the next letter would have said that if you're not going to use it for one conference then how about using it for another, like the next conference, which is ABTS (Association of Big Ten Students)." ABTS Director Andrew Schor requested amounts adding up to $796 for the February conference at Penn State University from Hartford. "This 796 figure seems very curious to me," said Rackham Rep. Paul Check. Schor denied any connection between the donation and the amount of money requested for the next ABTS conference. "Seven hundred ninety-six is totally just a coincidence. I've never heard of that number before (the assembly) presented it to me to- day," Schor said. While looking through past records the task force also discovered what they called unusu- ally high receipts from an Association of Big Ten Students Conference last November. Schor, Wright and MSA Student General Counsel Paul Scublinsky attended the Indi- ana University conference. "Looking back to this trip in November, we found four receipts for dinners. We sent three people and we have two dinner bills for $80 and two dinner bills for $60," Bodoh said. Attempts to remove Schor and Scublinsky from their positions failed last night. MSA initially appropriated $1,500 for eight representatives to go to the conference, but five members decided not to attend. After the trip, the remaining delegation requested an additional $250 for expenses. "The receipts go down to popcorn and soda at the Indiana University football game. I guess they were pretty thorough in their records," Brown said. Bodoh agreed that these were not expenses covered in the MSA budget. "These were grotesque expenses. We preface all of this on ethics and discretion. When you're on a con- ference you should know that spending that much on dinner is inappropriate," Bodoh said. The conference exceeded the previous budget because of the last-minute cancella- tion of the five members, whose hotel bill still had to be paid, Schor said. "I'm new.here, I don't know about any silent ethics. I don't know how you can enforce those," he said. Scublinsky offered to reimburse the assembly's money. "It was never my intent to deceive or defraud the assembly, and I will have to pay them back," Scublinsky said. Speaker calls 'B eli Curve UISCIenII C C %peech begins Black History Month Clinton offers new bailout plan for peso By Christy Glass Daily Staff Reporter Georgia State University Prof. Asa G. Hilliard attacked the controversial best-seller "The Bell Curve" last night during his keynote address, kicking off Black History Month. Hilliard, a professor of urban *ucation, spoke to a packed audi- ence of about 200 at the Michigan Union Ballroom last night. He re- butted the premise of the book, which he said is that Blacks are genetically inferior. He outlined eight "cracks" in the book, saying that the authors did not take into account the most up-to-date scientific literature. "There is no sci- *ce in the 'Bell Curve' at all," he said. "The first crack in the 'Bell' is that this book does not represent the state- of the art in mental measurement in psychology," he said. "The book does not match what we know about the workings of the mind." He also argued that the book ig- nores scientifically accepted research race designation. "The book compares white people and Black people but cannot tell you what a white person is or what a Black person is," he said. "The problem of race designation has never been solved." Hilliard claimed that another sci- entific "crack" is the book's failure to deal with the psychological effects of white supremacy in the science of ental measurement. "The only reliable distinction be- tween groups is to pick the one group that you want to be on top and call them the cultural norm," he said. Hilliard further criticized the book, calling it "virtual reality," and said that one of the book's greatest flaws is its failure to evaluate the effect of teachers and schools on academic potential. "(The book) does not deal with the vast research on the power of schools and teachers to turn kids upside down, to take kids from the bottom of the bell curve and put them on the top," he said. "If you do not know this, your book is wrong." In Hilliard's final critique of the book - his eighth "crack" in "The Bell Curve" - he said it fails to consider the effects of inequality in this country. "Science means you control for all variations, including treatment, and no IQ studies do this ... whoever is doing this is wasting money and de- stroying kids," he asserted. In his conclusion, Hilliard said, a "Here we have witchcraft passing for science, advising on public policy and being accepted in mainstream society." He warned the audience of the potential inherent in the book. "There is language I have only seen in the mass public discourse from Nazi Ger- many," he said. He added, "The real deal has noth- ing to do with intelligence or IQ be- cause the eight cracks mean that there is no science in the 'Bell' - except political science.:" Some students reacted positively to Hilliard's speech, but expressed doubt that the general public would accept his views. "From an academic standpoint I think he was successful in critically looking at 'The Bell Curve,' but the general public does not look at aca- demics as relevant to their personal Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Facing insu- perable opposition in Congress, Presi- dent Clinton abandoned his $40 bil- lion program of loan guarantees for Mexico yesterday in favor of a bail- out that will cut the U.S. contribution in half while gaining assistance from other nations and international lend- ers and does not require congressional approval. The new plan, endorsed by con- gressional leaders .of both parties but greeted skeptically by some backbenchers, will give Mexico a $20 billion package of U.S. loans and loan guarantees-the federal government's assurance to private lenders that they will be repaid by the U.S. Treasury if Mexico defaults. In addition, the International Mon- etary Fund will provide $17.8 billion; the Bank for International Settlements, a European-based lending institution, another $10 billion and Canada and several Latin American nations will contribute a total of $2 billion, bring- ing the value of the package to $49.8 billion. The program was assembled hast- ily over two days, as the Mexican economic crisis worsened and con- gressional leaders told Clinton they needed at least two weeks to persuade the House and Senate, where opposi- tion appeared to be growing more fierce each day, to approve the original $40 billion loan guarantee program. At a meeting in the Oval Office at 11 p.m. Monday, Clinton decided in- stead to take advantage of a provision in U.S. law that allows him, without congressional approval, to draw from the Exchange Stabilization Fund. The fund is a government account estab- lished in 1934 during the Great Depres- sion to provide stability in currency exchange markets. The fund, which includes dollars and foreign currency, was recently valued at $37.5 billion. Clinton said he decided to act with- out awaiting congressional approval of the original plan because "the risks of inaction are greater than the risks of decisive action." "Do I know for sure that this ac- tion will solve all the problems? I do not. Do I believe it will? I do. Am I virtually certain that if we do nothing it will get much, much worse in a hurry? I am," the President said in a speech to the National Governors Association, at which he announced the new plan yesterday morning. Without action, financial experts feared Mexico would find itself in default within a week, a situation that could lead several other Latin Amen- can nations into default and precipitate a global economic crisis. The solution the President offered would allow Mexico to exchange short-term debts for loans with maturities of as much as 10 years to overcome immediate problems stem- ming from the drop in the value of the peso at a time when billions of dollars in short-term debts were coming due. DOUULA5 KANIE/Daily Georgia State University Prof. Asa G. Hillard speaks to about 200 students last night in the Michigan Union Ballroom. situation or ideologies," said LSA junior Akomea Poku-Kankam. LSA junior Eric Rice said people may remain inclined toward the book's conclusions. "I think that the speech was very convincing because I've been in- volved in this academic field, but the average person is going to be much more convinced by the au- thors of 'The Bell Curve' because the book justifies their own racist insecurities." Inside i -Iir xt, ir Black 1 -'- 1-., - History G t Month M;o Th began last night with Georgia State University Prof. Asa G. Hillard's speech in the Michigan Union. A preview of the month and calendar-of events is on Page 3. a Worst floods Iw In century r Clinton tax plan wins local support hit Europe Los Angeles Times VENLO, Netherlands - Emer- gency crews in five nations yesterday fought to control some of northern Aurope's worst flooding in this cen- ry as the Dutch government, wor- ried that the country's system of dikes might collapse, launched a mass evacuation of population centers. "The Netherlands tonight faces a total emergency," began the main Dutch national television news yes- terday evening. The pictures that fol- lowed showed worried and bewil- dered residents throughout much of *e eastern Netherlands leaving their homes and boarding police, army or military buses to be driven to safety. "About 100,000 are in the process of being evacuated today, and an- other 150,000 have been told to pre- By Zachary M. Raimi Daily Staff Reporter Rolling across America aboard his campaign bus in 1992, Bill Clinton promised to provide the middle class with tax relief. More than two years later, and with a Republican Congress, the Presi- dent delivered on his promise in De- cember by proposing the "Middle Class Bill of Rights," a $60-billion package of tax cuts. Under Clinton's proposal, any post-high school education would be deductible from a family's federal income tax up to $10,000 per year for families earning less than $120,000. This includes undergraduate, gradu- ate and vocational college as well as job retraining programs. The proposed tax cuts would be phased in over five years beginning in January 1996. The President outlined his plan before a nationally televised audi- ence Dec. 16. "Just as we make mort- gage interest tax deductible because Clinton's Tax Plan A White. House spokeswoman cited the following examples of how families would be affected under President Clinton's "Middle Class Bill of Rights": For a'family earning $50,000 per year in the 15-percent tax bracket with two children: If one or both children are in a post-high school education program, the family will receive a $1,500 tax credit. If both children are under 13 years old, the family will receive a $500 tax credit per child, for a total of $1,000. affect families. She said a four-person family earning $50,000 per year with one or both children in college would receive a $1,500 tax cut. Another part of the President's to examine how the proposal will be financed. If it takes funding away from other higher education assis- tance programs or if it leads to cuts in other important areas of the budget, Rivers said she may not support it. "Whenever a proposal has deduc- tions or tax deductions ... you have to look at the overall impact," Rivers said. Maureen McLaughlin, senior policy adviser to the assistant secre- tary of Education, said the proposal is intended to complement Pell grants, the direct loan program and other financial aid. "It's a supplement to the existing programs," she said. "It is an addition to a continued committment to need- based student aid." McLaughlin also said the President's budget for fiscal year 1996, which will be unveiled Monday, is expected to reflect this. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Southfield) gave general support to the plan. "I like the idea of making college tuition tax deductible, but we need to A man tries to grab onto a railing to steady his boat in a flooded street of Solssons, France yesterday after the Aisne River rose over its banks. are bracing for today's expected peak levels - which are expected to be several inches above previous records. "Today is the peak, but it could stay there for two or three days and the dikes are getting weaker every of Klewe, sandwiched between the Meuse and Rhine, was also said to be threatened with new flooding if dikes to the southwest of the city failed, while in the northeastern French city of Carlesville-Mezieres, conditions were :I