in t 38U -.iL... weatner Today: Cloudy. High 47. Low 32. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy. High 48. One hundred eight years of editorlaifreedom Tuesday February 9, 1999 VO#. C1Xx Na: 76r lnr, ihn al"g i t wily --------- ------- --- ----- - GEO meeting fails to yield agreement By Nick Falzone Daily Staff Reporter After three days of working without a con- tract, members of the Graduate Employees Organization met with University officials y terday in an attempt to reach an agree- at. But GEO spokesperson Chip Smith said that while his bargaining team is trying to make con- cessions, the University is not making any effort to reach a contract agreement. "What everything comes down to is this: they don't care what we say" Smith said. When GEO's contract expired Feb. 1, mem- bers agreed to extend the deadline to Feb. 4. GEO lowered its wage increase request from 27 to 9 percent at the Feb. 1 meeting, but members were unable to come to an official agreement with the University before the extended deadline expired. Chief University Negotiator Dan Gamble said the University has maintained its wage proposal despite the potential for job interrup- tions. "The possibility of a strike or walkout will not affect the wage proposal," Gamble said. Smith said GEO sent strike authorization bal- lots to its nearly 1,600 members yesterday. If the majority of the ballots - which are due back to GEO on Feb. 19 - come back with a "yes" vote, the GEO steering committee will have the power to call a strike or walkout. Smith said he believes the membership will give the steering committee this power, but he was unable to comment on specific plans GEO is making concerning graduate student instruc- tor protests. He did say his bargaining team was working on preparations for all possible situations, including "job actions." According to GEO documents, a job action can include a one- to three-day walkout or a strike. GEO is disappointed about many of its unre- solved issues, Smith said, adding that his team is especially discouraged with the University's response to CEO's request for compensated international GSI training. Gamble said his team presented a comprehen- sive program to support GEO's request last week. Included in the program, which went into effect Feb. 1, are room and board, a complete insurance policy and a $200 stipend for all inter- national GSIs who undergo the training process, Gamble said. But GEO bargaining team member Nages Shanmugalingan said she doubts the University will comply with this policy since it is not offi- cially a part of GEO's contract. Shanmugalingan said the University present- ed a similar policy to GEO three years ago, promising all international GSIs a $700 stipend for the three-week training session. But Shanmugalingan said the University reneged on the policy and severely limited who was eligible for the stipend. Gamble said he presented a letter from LSA associate Dean John Cross to GEO members yesterday to allay GEO's fears that international GSIs would not be compensated. "GEO was concerned this program wouldn't go through," Gamble said. "The memo from Cross assures that it will continue for at least five years though." See GEO, Page 7 nousands attend Hussein' s funerad The Washington Post AMMAN, Jordan - Wrapped in a simple white shroud, King Hussein was buried in Amman yesterday as leaders from across the Middle East and beyond gathered in a palace hall to honor him as a forceful and compas- sionate advocate of Arab-Israeli peace. *'ens of thousands of Jordanians, many weeping openly, lined the route of the funeral procession that bore Hussein's body to the stately grounds of Raghadan Palace, where a dazzling roster of presidents, prime ministers, princes and sheiks assembled in tribute to the fallen monarch. It was a rite that bridged the world's cultures and, for a few moments any- way, muted long- standing enmities between. rivals such as Syrian S President Hafez Assadeand Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, -both- of whom attended the funeral even Hussein though their coun- ss tries are still tech- nically at war. As they filed past Hussein's flag- draped coffin, attended at each cor- ner by Circassian guards in lamb's wool hats and black coats, the mili- tary men in the line saluted, Christians made the sign of the cross, Japanese leaders bowed deeply and Muslims raised their palms in prayer for one of their own. President Clinton and three former . presidents - George Bush, my Carter and Gerald Ford - bowed their heads in unison for a man they all respected in spite of occasional sharp differences between the United States and Jordan over the years, most recently when the monarch supported Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein during the run-up to the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Ailing Russian President Boris Yeltsin, defying medical advice, sum- *ned the strength to travel to Jordan to pay his respects, although he stum- bled on his way into the palace and had to cut his visit short. Senate start d House managers and oust White House lawyers whatl make final arguments on found two articles our( 111.),l Los Angeles Times lasts WASHINGTON - House impeach- make ment managers made a last appeal yes- while terday to a Senate expected to acquit not a President Clinton, denouncing him as a H "pernicious example of lawlessness" the c who is unfit to finish his term. youa The White House defense team fired an in back with a detailed assault on the per- prob jury and obstruction ofjustice allegations W facing Clinton - as well as the prosecu- alon tion team that has so vigorously pursued he a the president's conviction and removal. Clint The familiar arguments finished, the ing t Senate was set to begin its long-awaited pros deliberations today with advocates of bling opening the debate to the public facing dent an uphill battle. "I1 The nearly five hours of closing tives arguments marked a critical, final junc- adve ture in a political and legal controversy man that has hung heavily over the nation's belie capital --and the country - for more visio than a year. Still, there was limited sus- ther pense as the end inched nearer. need One by one, the 13 House prosecu- a vi tors urged the silent senators to take one mor last look at the facts - well aware that A there is virtually no chance they will gling win the two-thirds majority needed to to ebate Clinton. "here's no denying the fact that you decide, it will have a pro- d effect on our culture as well as on politics," said Rep. Henry Hyde (R- the lead prosecutor and the day's speaker. "A failure to convict will e a statement that lying under oath, e unpleasant and to be avoided, is ill that serious. e added pointedly as he surveyed hamber: "Wherever and whenever avert your eyes from a wrong, from njustice, you become a part of the lem." hite House Counsel Charles Ruff e provided the defense response. As nd the other lawyers representing ton have done again and again dur- he month-old trial, Ruff asserted that ecutors had overreached in assem- the case growing out of the presi- 's affair with Monica Lewinsky. respect them as elected representa- of their people and as worthy rsaries," Ruff said of the 13 House agers sitting a few feet away. "But I ve their vision to be too dark, a on too little attuned to the needs of people, too little sensitive to the Js of our democracy. I believe it to be sion more focused on retribution, e designed to achieve partisan ends." s senators prepared to start hag- g over their verdict, they appeared See TRIAL, Page 7 KELLY McKINNELL/Daiiy Participants In last night's Glow-n-the-Dark March, which kicked off LGBT Visibility Week, walk through the Diag and chant slogans in a show of support for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgenered people. Glow-in-the -ar march kiclks off week IM a star By Adam Brian Cohen and Jaimle Winkler Daily Staff Reporters Bag pipes and glow-in-the-dark headbands may seem an unlikely com- bination, but last night both were visible on South State Street. "The pipes are best out-of-doors, to lead the troops into battle," said Tom Todd, the bagpipe player lead- ing the Glow-in-the-Dark March last night. "1 guess this sort of is a bat- tle." The march kicked-off the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered Visibility Week. The week is filled with events to promote awareness and sup- port issues facing the LGBT communi- ty. "We're trying to signify the impor- tance of being visible, queer or an ally (a supporter of LGBT rights) on cam- pus and in our everyday lives," said Music sophomore Molly Bain Frounfetter, a coordinator of the march. Shortly after the Burton Memorial Tower clock struck 9 p.m., about 60 participants with glowing necklaces began to walk from the Diag to State Street. "I hope nobody falls," said LSA junior Meredith Hochman, who also helped to coordinate the march. She added that the event not only promoted visibility within the community but also support from others. "The idea of glow-in-the-dark is to show that we're visible even in the dark," Frounfetter said. "It's more than that we're visible, we're always pre- sent." Marchers achieved visibility through glow-in-the-dark jewelry and holding up neon-colored picket signs reading "Look Mom, I'm Gay," "Out" and "Celebrate Diversity." "I'm glowing and I'm gay," LSA senior Andrea Zellner shouted. Zellner added that she got "hyped" for LGBT events because she believes it is a good way to celebrate diversity and gay pride. See MARCH, Page 7 LEARNING ONLINE Websites offer free study aids for some 'U' classes KELLY MCKINNELL/Daily Members of Theta XI and Alpha Tau Omega fraternities square off last night in an intramural basketball game at the IM Building. MSA to sponsor self-defense class By Michael Chang For the Daily Students use it to register for classes. Printers are jammed because everyone needs to get their homework off it. Now, the World Wide Web is also home to an expanding service to students - lecture notes for University classes available by clicking on an icon. Versity.com, an Internet service that provides students with free lecture notes for various cours- vide students with this service and we felt that we had to take advantage of it now," said Jeff Lawson, a co-founder. Eric Hong, an Engineering first-year student, had the opportunity to look up the lecture notes on Versity.com for his EECS 100 class. "They helped a little bit," Hong said. "My friends and I have tried them out, but we don't depend on them." LSA first-year student Roger Ahn, who is enrolled in Economics 101, also looked up notes on By Jewel Gopwanl Daily Staff Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly's Campus Safety Commission is sched- uled to hold its first annual self-defense class Thursday at the Michigan Union Ballroom from 7 to 9 p.m. CSC chair Kym Stewart said the class is open to anyone and does not renhilre registratin. "We want people to take notice of thc little signs that could prevent a danger- ous situation," she said. Stewart, who took a similar class a her high school in Naperville, Ill., saic she learned a lot from the experience. "It made me learn that no matter hom safe of a town you think you are living in, you could be a victim at anytime, she said. i I