C*'Elan Unl News: 76-DAILY Display Ads: 764-0554 Classified Ads: 764-0557 One hundred eight years of editorfiltfeedom Thursday November 19, 1998 Students hit polls for elections WARREN ZINN/Daily Top: Owner Jim Paron, head waitress Melissa Matich and floor manager Mike Wing stand near the restaurant. Bottom: Sam Sword holds the Little Brown Jug after this year's victory over Minnesota. Left: Patrons dine at the Jug. LOOKING' BACK ON 60 YEARS Jug to throw birthday bash By Kelly O'Connor Daily Staff Reporter The Br wn Jug restaurant, a cornerstone of the c ipus area since 1938, will cele- brate its 60-year anniversary tonight. The Jug, as it is called by many, is no stranger to celebration. The last six decades have been filled with historical University events, and for many, The Brown Jug is a large part of the Michigan tradition. Even the name itself is closely tied to a strong element of the University community Michigan football. The Little Brown Jug game, the name given to the yearly match between the Michigan Wolverines and the Minnesota Golden Gophers, has a story that dates back to 1903. The Michigan football team went into the Minnesota game that season undefeated and had a 28-game winning streak. The Gophers .also were strong, with a 10-0 record. With doubts'that Minnesota would provide acceptable drinking water, Michigan Coach Fielding Yost sent a team manager into town to buy a water jug for the players to use. The game tied, and in their haste to catch the train home, the Michigan players left the jug in Minnesota. Yost wrote a letter to Minnesota Athletic Director L.J. Cooke ask- ing for the jug back. Cooke wrote, "If you want it, you'll have to come up and win it back." The Little Brown Jug has since become a tradition in Michigan football, and when Harold House and James Moore opened the restaurant in 1938, its name opened the door for it to become an important site for Michigan sports fans. But it's not just football that has kept The See JUG, Page 7A By Jennifer Yachnin Daily StaffReporter The first day of voting in the fall Michigan Student Assembly clec- tions produced an online voter turnout of 990 students. "I think it's decent so far. I' m expecting more tomorrow, but not much more," said MSA election director Alex Hovan. Final election results should be counted by Sunday afternoon, he added. Hovan said he expects the final vote tallies to be just slightly lower than the fall 1997 results. Last fall's MSA election set a record for fall voter turnout. Twvelve percent of the student body hit the polls, v ith a total of 2,876 students casting bal- lots. MSA representatives said few students visited paper ballots sites yesterday. Although candidates handed out fliers throughout yesterday on the Diag reminding students to vote. both candidates and assembly mem- bers said campaigns have been sur- prisingly low-key. "It's a little slower than I'd like it to be" said MSA external relations committee vice chair Ellen Friedman, who helped monitor a paper ballot voting. site in the Michigan Union yesterday. Friedman said several students were surprised the elections twere tak- ing place. "It's surprising too many peo- ple," Friedman said. Students' Party candidate for the School of Music Shaila Guthikonda said the decline in "hard-core cam- Casting Ballots Fall elections U 990 students cast ballots in the first day of Michigan Student Assembly elections yesterday r I Students can vote online at http://www.urnich.edu/~vote until 11:59 tonight 0 Students can vote today at paper ballot sites until 4 p.m. in 4 I the Michigan Union and Angell Hall Fishbowl and until 3 p.m. at Pierpont Commons L----------.---------------J paigning" is due to the lack of party rivalries in the election. "The Michigan Party died." Friedman said. "The big rivalry is dead." New Frontier Party organizer Jacob Oslick said despite Students' Party claims. other parties are formi- dable opponents. "The Students' Party shares a lot of our ideas." Oslick said. "But they don't have a plan on how to get there." LSA junior Melissa Steinmetz. like many other students. said she knew about the elections, but chose not to vote. Steinmetz said she voted in the pre- vious MSA election as an Engineering student. but did not vote yesterday because she does not know enough about the LSA candidates. [SA senior Janet Maki said she did not v ote because she is not con- cerned with the functions MSA per- forms besides funding student orga- nizations, including her favorite, the See MSA, Page 7A GOP to *ote oon more subpoenas WASHINGTON (AP) - As *louse impeachment investigators awaited prosecutor Kenneth Starr's testimony, Republicans moved to expand ithe inquiry by summoning President Clinton's private lawyer and closest confidant and showing a belated new interest in campaign fund-raising. Judiciary Committee Chair Henry Hyde said majority epuLblicans probably would vote oyo subpoenas for White House deputy counsel Bruce Lindsey, the president's most trusted adviser, and for attorney Robert Bennett, who represented Clinton in the Paula Jones lawsuit. The committee also plans to question Daniel Gecker, the lawyer for Clinton accuser Kathleen Willey, and Nathan Landow, a Maryland Democrat who had contacts with Willey. She has accused the presi- ent of making a sexual advance inside the White House. Hyde also informed the White House that attorney-client privilege would not be recognized in the impeachment proceedings, a claim that could be made by Bennett and Lindsey as lawyers for Clinton. But Hyde added that the committee "intends to seek information regard- *ng only the personal actions of these individuals and not communi- cations with their clients." The White House scoffed at plans for calling the additional wit- nesses and ignoring attorney-client privilege. "In an effort to pick a par- tisan food fight, they are reduced to far for the Roses Students planning tnps to OSU By Adam Cohen Daily StafReponer The Michigan Daily s and The Ohio Lantem's What are you doing columnists sound off about this weekend's game. Check out the Daily's sports section - and this weekend. tomorrow's special section - for extra coverage. As Saturday nears Nor? 21, 1998* Noon @ Ohio Stadium and the excitement builds, students are packing their lucky hats, scraping up money for tickets and heading south to witness an age-old rivalry: Michigan vs. Ohio State. A win Saturday would send the Wolverines to the Rose Bowl for: the second straight year. LSA junior Matt Siegel plans to leave for Columbus, Ohio tomor- row, accompanied by his maize-and-blue knit cap, which he only wears to special games. "I'm wearing my lucky hat to the game,' Siegel said. "I'm putting its 6-0 record on the line:' University President Lee Bollinger, who is traveling to Columbus and attending the game with former Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler, said he plans to watch the Wolverines battle the Buckeyes in Ohio Stadium. "I would like to see peacefulness and a courageous showing," Bollinger said. In April, the Michigan ticket department put 527 tickets on sale for this Saturday's game. "They went on sale April 1," said Lisa Wiltse, office assistant at the University's ticket department. "They were sold out April 1." LSA sophomore Jordan Litwin and some of his fellow Tau Epsilon Phi fraternity brothers were among the lucky students, faculty and staff members to get tickets though the University. Due to the overwhelming demand for OSU tickets, not all ticket requests were fulfilled. Not having tickets is not stopping many loyal fans from trekking to Columbus this weekend. About 20 Steve & Barry's University Sportswear employees and some of their friends recently made reservations at a Columbus hotel but have not yet purchased tickets. "The closest hotel we could find was 15 miles from the stadium' LSA sophomore Gina Le Claire said. "We're gonna drive around their main street with Michigan flags and try to have some fun, tormenting the OSU fans," Le Claire and her friends also have plans to cheer loudly, paint their faces maize and blue and wear identical clothing to promote Wolveririe spirit. Other students also hope to get football tickets. "We're going to root on our squad, celebrateour victory and get some decently priced tickets by the stadium." Engineering sophomore Aaron Gill said. Engineering fifth-year senior Mike Khomutin said he will be trav- eling to the game wx ith the original Superfan Jeff Holzhausen, the new Superfan Reza Breakstone and theall-time Michigan rushing leader Jaime Morris, who currently is working in marketing for the Michigan Athletic Department. 'A fter aninoying him arid chanting his name at games in the past. we met Mr. Morris at a basketball game and he asked us to go to the game with him, after we asked him it he knew of any tickets for the OSU game:' Khomutin said. See OSU, Page 2A Wage concerns rie Walking the line GEO ebr By Paul Berg Daily Staff Reporter As a graduate employee contract bargaining session began last night, more than 60 Graduate Employee Organization members greeted University negotiators, who offered their first proposals of the negotia- tions. Fueled by frustration and disap- pointment after receiving the University's counterproposal offering no change in wages, the GEO mem- bers sat in support of their negotiat- ing team. GEO Bargaining Committee spokesperson Chip Smith said mem- bers came from 24 different depart- ments. "Wages are still the issue, and we are organized behind this," Smith said. "We don't think our position will break the University, and we share the goal of wanting to improve the posals to the table until Dec. 2, when bargaining sessions will resume. The University bargaining team offered three proposals last night, their first of these negotiations. "Three years ago they didn't offer any proposals at all," said GEO President Eric Dirnbach, who was heavily involved with the last contract negotiation process in 1996. Two of the University's proposals dealt with amending contract language concerning the union dues and repre- sentation fee graduate employees pay to the GEO. Associate Academic Human Resources Director Dan Gamble, the University's chief negotiator, said the proposals must correct the contract language so it agrees with recent changes in tax law. The third University proposal would alter the graduate employee grievance procedure for graduate student Suspect s car found out of state By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter Murder suspect Milton Castillo con- tinued to evade authorities yesterday. but Maryland police found the car investigators believe Castillo used to flee Ann Arbor. Police in Prince George's County. Md., have picked up thi, blue Ford Probe the Ann Arbor Police Department believes Castillo was last driving. Castillo's whereabouts are still unknown, although this discovery confirms that he is no longer in Michigan. "We were able to recover the vehicle but not the suspect associated with the vehicle," Prince George's County Police Department Corp. Tim Estes said. Authorities found and imponded