2 t t 7411 Weather Tonight: Partly cloudy, low 10-15. Tomorrow: Snow likely, high in the upper 20s. One hundred four years of editorial freedom Wednesday February 8, 1995 i Will I . ............ IN ; i 0 : GOP Dems criticize budget Newsday WASHINGTON - President Clinton's aides went up to Capitol Hill yesterday to sell the president's $1.6 trillion budget for 1996, but they found few takers even among Demo- crats. Republicans who now preside over the hearing rooms in Congress pre- dictably assailed the president's fis- cal blueprint released Monday, ac- cusing him of using rosy economic forecasts and inflated budgetary ac- counting to achieve most of the $144 billion in spending cuts the budget claims over five years. But many Democrats also ex- pressed disappointment with the President's budget, which calls for annual budget deficits of $200 billion until the turn of the century. Several took potshots at what was supposed to be the one real crowd-pleaser in the budget - a $63 billion package of tax cuts for the middle class. These Democrats said that the tax cuts were ill-advised in a period of rising federal deficits and that the president should have slashed more spending. "We favor cutting spending first, rather than borrow-and-spend, tax- and-spend, even tax-cut-and-spend," Rep. Glen Browder, of Alabama, told White House budget chief Alice Rivlin at a House Budget Committee hear- ing. Rep. Charles Stenholm, of Texas, a sponsor of the balanced budget amendment that recently passed the House, chimed in that "I don't think we can afford tax cuts at this time." Over in the Senate, the ranking Democrat on the Budget Committee, Sen. James Exon, of Nebraska, de- clared that the tax cuts were "fiscally See BUDGET, Page 2 'Pump it up Business School student Mitch Fisher works out yesterday afternoon on an inclined leg press at the Intramural Sports Building. MSA condemns suspended student, 'U' in resolution 0 Assembly criticizes University for not * using conduct code By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter In a response to the University's suspension of LSA sophomore Jake Baker, the Michigan Student Assem- bly last night adopted a statement condemning the actions of both the University and the student. After an emergency meeting of Ohe MSA Students' Rights Commis- sion, the assembly voted 18-4 with three abstentions to adopt the state- ment. "This is a make-or-break issue for MSA. It's time we take a stand for student rights and explain that free speech may not always be best," said LSA Rep. Dante Stella. Baker was suspended last Thurs- 'U' fair to highlight area Black JusineSSes By Stephanie Jo Klein Daily Staff Reporter After postponing yesterday's Busi- ness Acumen Forum, two University offices will go ahead today with the second part of their series on African American entrepreneurship. Minority Student Services and the cademic Multi-Cultural Initiatives ffice will sponsor the Ann Arbor African American Fair in the Michi- gan Union Ballroom from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Today's fair will afford students the opportunity to meet with African American student and community business leaders. "The goal is to begin ties be- tween the residential and collegiate *ommunities in the Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti areas," said Daria Young of MSS said. She related that of the fair's 28 participants, "the majority are area businesses, owned and operated by African Americans." Student entrepreneurs with busi- nesses and crafts will also be selling their goods at the fair. In addition, the Washtenaw ounty Health Services and the Sickle Cell Disease Association will pro- vide screening for hypertension, cho- lesterol and sickle cell anemia. Afri- can Americans run a higher risk than nther AmPrirann Af having ech nf day for posting a story on the Internet that described the torture and sodomization of a woman. The story included the name of a female Uni- versity student. The University has scheduled a closed hearing tomorrow at 1 p.m. in the Fleming Administration Building to decide Baker's fate. The assembly demanded that the hearing be public and open. MSA President Julie Neenan ex- pressed disgust after reading a copy of the story, which was posted on the Internet. "(Vice President for Student Af- fairs) Maureen Hartford let me read a part of what was posted on the Internet. I was absolutely appalled and dis- gusted after I read the first two pages. I had to stop reading. She warned me that it got progressively worse," Neenan said. The assembly's response empha- sized members' concern with Presi- dent James J. Duderstadt's decision to suspend Baker without a hearing under the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities, the University's code of non-academic conduct. "The University, after all its talk of code amendments, has just said that it's OK for them to unilaterally change their opinion," Stella said. "The actions of the University and the actions of the student are both dis- gusting." LSA Rep. Jonathan Freeman agreed that Baker is entitled to a hear- ing before the code's panel. "What was violated here was that the University set up a code and then they decide that they are going to amend it at will.-That is the biggest danger here," Freeman said. "We're trying to make a statement that this guy was thrown out before he even got anything." Vince Keenan, the chair of the Students' Rights Commission, agreed that the University should have fol- lowed the code. "We were told we're safer under the code then in the old days when President Duderstadt could just kick anyone out. Yet, that's exactly what just happened here," Keenan said. "What (Baker) did was gross and rep- rehensible. What the administration did was worse." Some representatives believe that the suspension was a hasty and harsh decision. "This could have been dealt with by taking away the student's ITD account, or better yet it could have been handled under normal legal pro- ceedings," said Student General Coun- sel Paul Scublinsky, an LSA junior. Resolution text "Whereas the President of the University of Michigan has acted inappropriately by single- handedly suspending Jake Baker, be it resolved the Michigan Student Assembly urges the University to abide by the principle of innocent until proven guilty and to treat all parties in the Jake Baker case with fairness. Be it further resolved that MSA demands the administration protect the welfare of the woman named in Jake Baker's posting. Be it further resolved that MSA demands that the hearing involving this case be open and. public." Republicans move to alter 1994 crime bill President plans to fight GOP efforts WASHINGTON (AP) - :Me- thodically recasting last year's crime bill, the House voted unanimously yesterday to entitle victims to restitu- tion and looked ahead to more con- tentious measures to strengthen the hand of prosecutors and curb death row appeals. President Clinton mounted an ef- fort to head off another element of the Republican "Contract With America" that would threaten plans to put 100,000 new police officers on the streets. But in the House, controlled by Republicans for the first time in four behind elements of the contract that already have cleared, including the balanced budget amendment and a measure voted Monday to strengthen a president's hand in eliminating wasteful federal spending. The strong votes for passage "raises the question of why it's im- portant to have a leadership that will actually schedule bills the American people want," he said in a slap at Democratic leaders of the past. Democratic leader Richard Gephardt said measures brought to the floor so far "are not things that affect real peoples' In the main reading room of the Clements Library, Director John Dann and Arlene Shy, head of reader services, examine one of the many rare books they are charged with preserving. A SECRET CROWN JEWEL The Clements Library holds world-famous collections of American history decades, Demo- crats conceded the GOP crime pack- age would pass in the next several days. For its part, the Senate neared its first votes on the proposed balanced budget amend- ment to the Con- stitution. Republi- cans said they had the strength to turn aside a Demo- cratic demand that they identify the spending cuts to be used to erase the federal deficit. But "(This) raifses the question of why it's important to have a leadership that will actually schedule bills the American people want. " -- Newt Gingrich Speaker of the House lives. ... We've got to get the standard of living of people up so they can have de- cent families ... and give their children a brighter future," he said. 'There is noth- ing in the contract that will accomplish that." House Republi- cans have post- poned action on the most controversial crime-related mea- sure likely to come before Congress this year. A provi- sion backed by the National Rifle As- By Megan Schimpf For the Daily Walking into the William L. Clements Library, one finds a large, wood-paneled room filled with old books in glass cases. Three chande- liers hang from the ceiling overhead, and plush armchairs wait to be sat in. "It's been known for years as one of thi niiirct nt-of-thr mwn ni rnfn century. "We're not a library that collects a lot of books by modern writers - we provide the material they need to write these books," Shy said. The library opens the main room to visitors daily from noon to 2:30 p.m. for studying or browsing through a rotating exhibit. Currently, the room feantre a nhntngranhv exhibit titled ors seminar on critical thinking have visited the library this term. Graduate students also are assigned research projects involving the collections. Prof. Maris Vinovskis, chair of the history department, teaches a his- tory seminar titled "The Social His- tory of the Civil War," and his stu- dents - primarily juniors and seniors - often turn to the Clements colen- neither side seemed certain of victory when the final vote is taken on the sociation - and subject of a veto threat by Clinton - to repeal last 7 1' I I I