r~run *rn Lather onight: Cloudy, chance of reezing drizzle, low 25%. romorrow: Freezing drizzle and sleet, high around 34-. One hundredfive years ofeditorialfreedom Friday January 1.2, 1996 jg- pr Vol. CVI, No. 62 ... Nook oliceIll eturn blood samples to 160 men y Lenny Feller DStaff Reporter e blood samples of 160 African American men, taken more than a ear ago by police in connection with he Ann Arbor serial rapist investiga- ion, were transported to the city attorney's office yesterday in prepa- ration for their return. A debate concerning the samples ensued following the conviction of Ervin D. Mitchell Jr. in June 1995. i#hell is presently serving a life sentence in prison. Police obtained the samples during the investigation from men who fit a rough description of the rapist and who were found within a certain geo- graphic radius of a crime scene. The names of some individuals who were asked to provide blood samples were phoned in to police by anonymous sources. ost of the samples were gathered v ntarily, but a few were subpoe- naed. Following Mitchell's conviction, some of the 160 men whose blood had been taken asked for the return of the samples. Meanwhile, city and county offi- cials, including Washtenaw County Prosecutor Brian Mackie, opposed the return of the blood, stating it t give Mitchell grounds to ap- "It's probably not the most compel- ling argument in the world," Assis- tant City Attorney Robert West con- ceded. Police had been holding the blood samples for nearly a year when the matter came to a head as 37-year-old Brian Shelton brought suit to have his sample returned to him. Last month,Washtenaw Circuit JIe Kurtis T. Wilder ruled that Shelton's blood was to be returned, and while the ruling applied only to Shelton, officials decided to return all 160 samples. West said he believes there was no malice involved in the police department's retention of the samples following the Mitchell conviction. He simply points to the burdens of l ;e institutions and bureacracies. "Uings don't always move as effi- ciently in a big organization," West said. Yet many have criticized the police's handling of the entire inves- tigation, arguing that the police arbi- trarily targeted African Americans and the individuals whose blood was taken. West, however, defends the police department and the manner in which *rnducted the investigation. "In ret- r pect, I don't know how to do it any differently," West said. "The police were trying to do their best in difficult circumstances - but people can also look at it in different ways," he added. Clinton optimistic for balanced budget Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - President Clinton expressed new op- timism yesterday that a balanced budget deal can be com- pleted, and proposed that negotiators finish their work by agreeing on overall numbers while putting off some thorny policy issues until after the fall elections. "We should get it done now, and I believe we will get it done in the near future," Clinton said at a news conference. "And we ought to resolve the policy issue we can resolve, and put the ones we can't to the side." Clinton spoke two days after top-level budget talks were suspended, and one day after Republican leaders' pessimistic words helped drive down sharply the stock and bond markets. His hopeful forecast was quickly contradicted by House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R.-Ga.), who accused Clinton of trying again to use the topic of Medicare budget reductions - the Democrats most potent weapon - against the GOP. Gingrich said at a news conference in Seattle that Clinton was playing a "political game" by referring to the GOP's proposals to reduce the projected growth of Medicare spend- ing as "cuts," when in fact the amounts would actually increase steadily. "I don't think the President moved the negotiations a step toward a balanced budget today," said a clearly angry Gingrich. Clinton said he received a "pretty good response" when he talked to Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole (R.-Kan.) about the negotiations earlier in the day. Dole, campaigning in South Carolina for the GOP presidential nomination, said a deal was "possible" but probably "doubtful." Gingrich also indicated that he planned to try to pass a series of temporary spending measures to keep the govern- ment open until the election, before temporary spending authority next runs out Jan. 26. And for the first time he said he believed Congress had made a mistake in shutting down the government during the budget fight. Amid these contradictory signs about the outlook for a deal, the U.S. stock and bond markets stabilized yesterday after two days of sharp declines, though analysts said nothing on the political front appeared to move investors. The Dow industrial average rose 32.16 points to 5,065.10. In a 50-minute formal news conference, his first in five months, Clinton said administration and congressional nego- tiators were "not that far apart" on dollar figures. Indeed, he said, after five hours of face-to-face talks."we are probably warring over less than 2 percent now." And he suggested that while policy issues were the major hurdle, some could be deferred in the interest of quickly producing the balanced budget that has been the heart of the year's national policy debates. GOP prepares plan to prevent next shutdown Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Facing the distinct possibility budget talks with President Clinton will collapse, Re- publicans in Congress are develop- ing a fallback strategy that would salvage some of their plans to limit the size and scope of go verment - but without forcing another govern- ment shutdown after stopgap fund- ing expires Jan. 26. The approach they are consider- ing would finance the government piece by piece, resurrecting the pro- grams they like and presenting Presi- dent Clinton with a series of nar- rowly targeted funding measures that he might find politically risky to veto. "We will start picking and choos- ing those programs which are im- portant to the American people, and we will fund them," said House Appropriations Chairman Bob Livingston (R-La.). "If it is not important, it might never be funded." Even if it passes muster in the House, however, the strategy could stall in the Senate. Leading Senate Republicans are reluctant to sidestep the traditional budget process, which funds the govern- ment through 13 multi-faceted ap- propriations bills rather than through program-by-program funding. Their reluctance to go along could reopen big divisions with more militant House Repub- licans who are bent on disman- tling the federal bureaucracy, not just trimnming it. AP PHOTO Siteseeing Serb soldiers show U.S. Army Lt. Marc Kassing their frontline territory on Bosnia's Mount Vis, 13 miles south of Tuzia yesterday. President Clinton plans to visit the area this weekend. See story, Page 2. Media pros criticize c ommunication dept changes By Jodi Cohen Daily Staff Reporter Futurejournalists, planning to gradu- ate from the University with a commu- nication degree, may want to consider choosing a different concentration, media professionals say. Robert H. Giles, editor and publisher of The Detroit News, said he disagrees with recent changes in the communica- tion department. The LSA executive committee approved a new curriculum shortly before winter break, dropping, all writing classes. "I find it very upsetting that (the University) doesn't recognize its own tradition ofteaching journalism," Giles said. "If I had.a resume froma student who took communication courses, but had no writing background, I wouldn't be interested." Curriculum eliminates writing classes But communication studies chair Vincent Price said the absence ofwrit- ing courses should not affect students who hope to pursue this type of ca- reer. "I think students who want to pursue a career in journalism will be able to do that in the program we outlined," he said. Price said the department now fo- cuses on the study ofjournalism - the context and effects ofthe media, as well as their structure and processes. Most of the classes fall into one of these four categories. Some specific areas of concentration within the new department include media economics and the interaction between media and the government. Classes also focus on topics such as information gathering and media vio- lence. Price said the department will now provide students with a liberal arts back- ground in the mass media. "There's a history of people estab- lishing strong political careers in jour- nalism without having journalism de- grees," Price said. "We will give them as good a general education in media studies as we can." Price said only 60 percent of entry- level newsroom writers have formal journalism degrees. "We have no inter- est in thwarting students' professional drive ... but that is not why we have a curriculum," he said. "We are not here to train students." Jonathan Friendly, director of the Masters Program in Journalism, said some training - such as writing - is necessary. "I do not think all of an undergradu- ate curriculum should be applied or hands-on, but some of it has to be," Friendly said. Don Kubit, a University communi- cation lecturer and professional jour- nalist of 12 years, said the way to become a journalist is to "actually do it. "If you want to be a journalist, you would not take this concentration," he said. "It is a perfect curriculum for students who want to continue to be students." Kubit said the curriculum may train concentrators to perform research for a See COMM, Page 2. Information Sessons The communication studies :department has scheduled two information sessions for next week about their new curriculum: Thursday, Jan. 18, 4-5 p.m. in Modern Languages Building Lecture, Room 1. Tuesday, Jan.s 23, noon- p.m.. in Modern Languages Building, Room 2114. Members of the communication studies department will answer questions and outline the new curriculum. Ohio State signs Nike contract worth $9.2M Buckeyes hurdle 'U7' to make largest deal Everyone's making a deal By Jeff Eldridge Daily Staff Reporter Corporate America and college ath- letics have made their biggest part- ship ever. Ohio State University has become the most recent in a series of high- profile national universities to sign a multi-year contract with athletic shoe giant Nike. Ohio State's contract, which was announced in December, will bring $9.25 million to the university's ath- letic department over five years and Provide uniforms and shoes for ath- s and staff, said Paul Krebs, Ohio State's senior associate director of athletics. In fall 1994, the University of Michigan signed a contract with Nike worth $7.1 million over a seven-year period. At the time, it was considered Ohio, the Buckeyes dominate the state of Ohio," Deitch said. "They don't have a Michigan versus Michigan State rivalry to contend with." Bob DeCarolis, the senior director of financial operations for the University's Athletic Department, said the differences in the two con- tracts could be caused by the size of the department. "They have one of the largest par- ticipation programs in the country," DeCarolis said. Ohio State has 34 intercollegiate teams and approximately 900 athletes, compared with the University's 23 teams and 600 athletes. DeCarolis said that most of the money in these contracts goes to pro- viding apparel and gear to athletes, which makes the number of athletes a crucial factor when determining the vnaluep of a(contract. Ohio State $9.25 million 5 years $1.85 million 34 900 Ohio State University, the nation's largest undergraduate institution, signed a contract with Nike, the same company the University gets its athletic equipment and uniforms. Here's a comparison of the two contracts. Value Duration Value Per Year Varsity teams Athletes Michigan $7.1 million 7 years $1.01 million 23 600 Harvard researchers find 'switch' that may aid sleep WASHINGTON (AP) - A "slum- ber switch" buried in the brain slips an alert mind into deep and restful sleep, according to Harvard researchers, who believe the discovery may lead to drugs to end insomnia. In experiments with rats, brain re- searchers found that during sleep most of the nerve cells of the brain are turned off by some signal sent out by a group of cells in the hypothalamus. By tracing the signals, the research- ers found that a neuron group called the ventrolateral preoptic area, or VLPO, acts as a "slumber switch," said Dr. Clifford Saper, chiefneurologist at Beth Israel Hospital in Boston and a profes- sor at Harvard Medical School. "This little subgroup of cells essentially turns outthe lights in the brain and lets it go to sleep," Saper said. "It's like turning a master switch. A slumber switch." A report on the sleep research was being published today in Science, the journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The discovery puts scientists on track to find the specific natural chemicals that cause the VLPO to command the brain to sleep. "To produce a natural sleep, you need to turn on these cells," Saper said. If drugs could be found to activate the VLPO, he said, then normal sleep, at last, could be prompted with pills that have no hangover effects. "Most sleeping pills produce a drugged sleep," he said. "Basically, they hit the brain with a hammer and turn everything off." The Buckeyes now have the largest university deal with Nike, pushing Michigan to No. 2. "Ohio state dominates the state of Ohio. they don't have a Michigan versus Michigan state rivalry .E. State deal and our deal are basically -Regent Laurence Deitch (D-Bloomfield Hills) letics. "I think the whole thing with Acting on the Dream M --'1 Monrbiu marks the celebration of-Mr i the same," he saidi. Nike and NVCUok anU heUotnerJ snoe~ t 1