It x *rnt Weather Tonighrt: Partly cloudy, low around 31°. Tomorrow: Partly sunny, high around 50%. One hundredfive years of editonalfreedom Friday February 9, 1996 If .yqyy..( . 1 y,/My t f // gon Daily "nrR ;IF.i{ . No # lk Y B v Y rr "' }illl ? a "k Y S ?3 4: M1 f m Y jxi { Nk F T '!Snow I U student ~clrecircltes By Laura Nelson Daily Staff Reporter Hundreds of University students found their e- mail "inboxes" inundated with copies of a racist message yesterday morning, accompanied by the enraged responses of other students. The offensive message, titled "Nigger Jokes," Gov. proposes $8.6B budget for FY 97 Racist E-mail Resurfaces -A racist e-mail message sent out in 1994 was recirculated to hundreds of students yesterday. was forwarded to at least 30 student groups on cam- pus and to several admin- istrators, including Presi- dent James Duderstadt. University officials said the message was originally sent out in 1994. Julie Peterson, the di- rector of News and Infor- mation Services, said her department received nu- merous complaints about the message yesterday. Most of the people who forward the message do so in protest of its racist content, she said. "The reality is that they are perpetuating the mes- sage," Peterson said. "It's around only because they forward it. "The only way to stop this is to stop passing it und." Originally, the racist message was attached to Roll th the name ofa University student and posted in 1994 to about 30 Usenet news groups worldwide. Upon bones investigation, it was discovered that the password X% Above: LSA sen of the student, Vincent Krause, had been stolen and Kate Wong cle that he was in no way responsible for the message. bones for the The true author of the message was never discov- Museum of Na ered. History's Hand Since 1994, the message has been circulated by feature in the h ndreds of people who were outraged by its con- K K Exhibition and unaware that the University had already Preparation La investigated the message's origin. Left: An owl's Laurie Burns, an assistant director of the Infor- will be one of mation Technology Division, said this is the fourth pieces include time the message has circulated at the University. sthe exhibit, wg Students who receive the e-mail message in the scheduled to g future should delete the message and respond to the of the semest sender individually, asking them not to continue circulating the message, Burns said. "There is absolutely nothing to gain by sending Photos by STEPHANI n," she added. See E-MAIL, Page 2 Collins fails to file PAC confutions e nior ans tural s-on b. skull many d in hich is go on end er. E GRACE AIM/Daily LANSING (AP)-Gov. John Engler yesterday proposed a modest increase in school aid dollars for the next fiscal year, but some Republican and Demo- cratic lawmakers said school children deserve better. A bigger share of the $8.6 billion general fund budget that Engler pro- posed for the fiscal year that begins Oct. I may have to be shifted to schools, lawmakers said. Engler's proposed budget is 4.4 per- cent higher than spending in the current fiscal year. It includes a 5-percent in- crease for universities and community colleges - their biggest hike in a de- cade - and a 3.7-percent increase in corrections to pay for four new prisons and more parole officers. Management and Budget Director Mark Murray took pointed questions yesterday from Democratic lawmakers unhappy about cuts in adult education and Engler's proposal to keep more minor offenders in county jails rather than expensive prisons. But lawmakers from both parties were unhappy with his school allocations. While Engler is putting 4.5 percent more into the school foundation grant that funds education, most schools will see only a 2.5-percent increase in their per- pupil dollars - or less, critics say. Rep. Maxine Berman of Southfield, the ranking Democrat on the House Appropriations School Aid Subcom- mittee, said Engler's education budget worries her for several reasons, the big- gest being lack of money. Many of the districts that spend $5,200 or more on students will get per- pupil increases of only 1 percent, she said. "If we can't even meet inflation in a good economic year for a great major- ity of our students, it's really frighten- ing what will happen in a bad year," Berman said. Murray said the per-pupil figure would be higher if the number of public school students wasn't increasing so fast. The state will have about 25,000 more students in public schools next year. Murray estimates about 5,000 of them are' former private-school students at- tending state-funded charter schools. He said he didn't know why other stu- dent numbers are rising so much. Mike Boulus of the Middle Cities Education Association, which repre- sents mainly urban school districts, said the governor's budget gives most schools only $113 more per pupil, or about $5,266. 4.4-percent hike largest in recent years for U By Josh White Daily News Editor Gov. John Engler's proposed $8.6 billion budget for the upcoming fiscal year slates a 4.4-percent increase for the Univeristy, 1.4percenthigherthan last year. Cynthia Wilbanks, associate vice president for University relations, said the University is pleased with the pro- posed allocation, which gives a 5- percent average increase to the state's colleges and universities. "This is quitea significant increase," Wilbanks said last night. "It is the largest increase across the board in recent years that the state has given to education." Wilbanks said the University's ad- ministration has been pushing for the increase since last year's allocation came in at an increase of only 3 per- cent. "We are quite pleased that the rec- ommendation is coming in at this level," Wilbanks said. "It is what we had hoped for and something that we have been making an effort to push for all year." The state appropriation to the Uni- versity accounts for anywhere from 38-40 percent ofthe University's gen- eral fund expenditures for a given year, Wilbanks said. The $301.5 mil- lion allocation, the largest budgeted for any university in the state, will be used foracademic programming here, Wilbanks said. "The state funding is important be- cause it funds academic programs," Wilbanks said. It goes to the libraries and services to students. It goes to the very essence of the University. These, dollars support our programs." Michigan State University, which gets the state's second-largest appro- priation, is scheduled to receive $267.3 million in Engler's proposed budget, an increase of 4.5 percent over last year. The budget proposes a $213.7 See BUDGET, Page 2 "This is not a 2.5-percent increase. It's closer to 2.2 percent," he said. "It's the second year of increases less than inflation. At some point, something has to give." WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Barbara-Rose Collins failed to report at least $7,900 in political action committee contributions last year, the Capitol W 1 newspaper Roll Call reported yesterday. he U.S. Justice Department and the House ethics committee initiated preliminary investigations last year into allegations the Detroit Democrat has mis- used her office, campaign and scholarship funds. Roll Call compared what PACs told the Federal Election Commission they had given Collins to what the congresswoman told the commission she had received in her financial campaign reports. The reports are required by law. Collins' financial forms underreported PAC con- utions despite the filing of two amended reports to the FEC at its request, in part because ofmore than $14,000 in American Express bills that were unitemized. FEC law requires itemizing expendi- tures greater than $200. 6..You see there's some things that haven't been reported." - Meredith Cooper Rep. Collins' chief of staff Among the donations missing from the report are: $2,500 from the Transportation Political Education League; $1,000 from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees; and $500 contribu- tions from the Chrysler Corp. PAC and the Brother- hood of Railroad Signalmen, Roll Call said. In her second amended report for last year that was filed last week, Collins documented another $15,500 in PAC contributions in the first six months of 1995 that she had originally failed to reveal. That amount is separate from the $7,900 that Roll Call found. Collins' campaign officials did not return phone calls seeking comment on whether the PAC checks had been deposited into the campaign account. Collins' chief of staff., Meredith Cooper, said amendments to reports are filed when errors are discovered. "That's why you send an amendment, when you see there's some things that haven't been reported," Coo- per said. The Federal Election Commission assesses penalties for any such reporting mistakes on a case-by-case basis. There was further evidence of sloppy bookkeeping in the reports. For example, a $2,400 contribution from the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union PAC was instead labeled last May as a indi- vidual in-kind contribution from the union's lobbyist, Robert Juliano. Fliers protest Law School- publication CI111C 0 1 Clinton signs new communications bill Signs accuse Rae Gestae of being offensive to minorities, women, gays By Carrie Keller For the Daily An unknown group of students have posted signs accusingthe Law School's student publication of printing offensive col- umns and editorials. The signs appeared in the Law Quad early, Wednesday morning, and the Law students involved have not yet identified themselves. The sarcastic signs al- lege that the publication, the Rae Gestae, has run articles offensive to mi- norities, women and gays interesting, but also well written," Frank said. In the Feb. 5 issue, Frank used Law Prof. Catherine MacKinnon as a char- acter in his column, titled "A Blow For Equality." The fictional short story por- trayed MacKinnon as a feminist who suggests men should experience the symptoms of women's premenstrual syndrome to achieve sexual equality. Responding to the criticism this column and his previous column "75 Bucks a Shot" have received, Frank said, "If people look at it again, they will see that the tongue is firmly in the n cheek and they may not understand what is be- ing said." He said the attention his columns have re- ceived will not influence Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - President Clinton yesterday signed into law a bill to revolutionize the U.S. communica- tions industry, but demonstrations and a lawsuit served notice that its new curbs on online computer speech will be hotly disputed. In a ceremony at the Library of Con- gress, Clinton declared "our laws will catch up with our future" as the mea- sure overhauls industry rules that have prevailed for 62 years. The law - one of the most far-reaching enacted in Clinton's term - removes monopoly protections so that telephone compa- na rahl -anel nihpr nrn rn [ nm- Sen. Larry Pressler (R-S.D.), the chief Senate sponsor of the measure, pre- dicted the signing would set off an explosion of new devices, and new in- vestment that would be "like the gun going off in the Oklahoma land rush." Critics have contended that the bill's deregulation could raise phone and cable TV rates, and not just in the short term. And some experts have argued that instead of bringing competition among many firms, the bill might instead allow industry dominance by a small number ofhuge companies, keeping prices rela- tively high. Reaction was also divided on the law's ornn-hreakin nroviscion to in recent issues. The publication's editor, Jonathan Brennan, refused to comment on the recent criticisms. "We are not willing to resnond unless future writings. Although the signs are presumed to have been posted by a relatively small group of students, Frank said, other students exnressed concern about the I x. . . I I I