I o w- " !Et a t7 l"b AL... Today: Showers. High 48. Low 36. Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy. High 38. One hundred nine years ofeditorialfreedom Monday January 10, 2000 GOP candidates to debate in ich. By Yael Kohen Daily Staff Reporter With the presidential primaries approach- ing, Republican candidates are rigorously campaigning to secure the GOP nomination, converging in Michigan tonight for a nation- ally televised debate. The candidates hope to win the support of the Michigan public, who will vote Feb. 22 in the nation's fourth primary. Texas Gov. George W. Bush, front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination, agreed last week to attend tonight's Michigan Republican Presidential Primary Debate at Calvin College in Grand Rapids after the five other candidates had already confirmed. Susan Shafer, deputy press secretary for Gov. John Engler, who is heading up Bush's Michigan campaign, said that Bush previ- ously was unable to attend the debate because of scheduling conflicts. Since then his schedule has cleared to allow attendance at the Grand Rapids debate. But state Sen. John Schwarz (R-Battle Creek), chair of Arizona Sen. John McCain's Michigan campaign, said he believes Bush was prompted to enter the debate because of McCain's increasing campaign support. Bush's presence at the debate increases its importance by gaining national attention, said Ed Patru, a spokesperson for the Michigan Republican Party., The debate will also include Christian activist Gary Bauer, magazine editor Steve Forbes, Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch and TV com- mentator Alan Keyes. "This is an opportunity for everybody to make a name for themselves in Michigan," Patru said. "Michigan has always been one of the most coveted states in the primary." "Michigan is a battleground here," Shafer said, adding that the Michigan primary "could be the deciding factor." See DEBATE, Page 3A . Shooting tral begins following appeal y Robert Gold aily Staff Reporter The trial of Ann Arbor resident Abdul-Ghadier Elkhoja in connection with the June 5 shooting death of Bloomfield Hills resident Nicholas Seitz is set to begin today in the Washtenaw County Circuit Court. fol- lowing an Ann Arbor City appeal about the legality of conducting criminal background checks on witnesses. In a Dec. 29 decision, the Michigan Court of Appeals granted the city the right to appeal Washtenaw County Trial Court Circuit judge Donald Shelton's requirement that the city perform crim- inal background checks on witnesses in the murder trial. "It was requiring the city to perform an unlawful act so we objected to it," Assistant City Attorney Kristen Larcom said. State law prohibits infor- nation obtained through the Law W3nforcement Information Network system to be given to individuals, Larcom said. The information is restricted to criminal justice agencies. The appellate court talso allowed the city a delay in carrying out Shelton's order. The city does not have to per- form the background checks unless the appellate court upholds Shelton's deci- sion. If the appellate court overturns Shelton's decision, "it's going to be a case in appeal," Ernst said. "if he is acquitted, everything is moot." Seitz was shot outside the Eugene V Debs Co-Op, located at 909 East University Ave. The Ann Arbor Police Department arrested Elkhoja a few hours after the shooting. Witnesses at the scene identified the suspect by first name. The shooting followed a fight, which *llegedly began after someone whistled at afemale walking with one of Seitz's friends. AAPD spokesperson Sgt. Michael Logghe said in June that although Seitz was not present at the time of the alleged "catcall" he may have later become involved in the confrontation. The suspect shot once into the air, and See TRIAL, Page 2A Sweatshop prtest 'U' By Michael Grass Daily StaffReporter More than 100 student leaders of the national anti-sweat- shop movement left campus this weekend after a three-day policy and strategy conference recharged their fight to get the nation's universities to adopt a stronger stance against sweat- shop labor in the collegiate apparel industry. Sponsored nationally by United Students Against Sweatshops and locally by Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality, the group protested outside the Fleming Administration Building on Friday in an effort to push University President Lee Bollinger to endorse the Worker Rights Consortium. The WRC, a policy primarily developed by student activists, released in October by USAS and outlines a plan to monitor working conditions in the factories of collegiate apparel manufacturers. "Is this University going to side with Kathie Lee and Nike or side with the students?" asked Yale student Jess Champagne. "Is this University going to support corporate secrecy and cover-ups or embrace openness and the truth? ... We are waiting to see what President Bollinger is going to do." JOANNA PAINE/Daity The protest started at the Michigan Union on Friday after- See PROTEST, Page 2A Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality and United Students Against Sweatshops protest on the Diag yesterday. Residentil Colle proposes optional GPA By Jeannie Baumann Daily Staff Reporter Residential College students, who have no recorded grade point average, could opt for an official Grade Point Average of all classes they take for a letter grade if the LSA administration and the Registrar's Office approve an RC-prepared proposal. RC students receive written evaluations in place of letter grades, although they can request letter grades in upper-level RC classes. These letter grades and the grades they receive in courses outside the RC are not used toward a GPA. "They can proceed as RC students have always done in the past, or they can proceed inasking for a letter grade in other courses," RC Director Tom Weisskopf said. RC faculty and students created the GPA certification system to address problems many students face when outside units, including graduate schools and scholar- ship selection committees, want letter grades as markers of students' academic performance. "There were more and more requests (for GPAs), and there was no systematic way of doing that," Weisskopf said. "Now we have a very precise calculation, but based on letter grades only and completely up to the stu- dent." GPA Certification is an official document from the Registrar's Office that shows a GPA calculated from all classes a student has taken for a letter grade and a list of those courses. For a fee, the Registrar's Office can attach the certifi- cate to the student's transcript upon request. In addition to GPA Certification, the RC has formed an Academic Awards Committee so RC students can be eligible for awards generally based upon GPA, such as See GPA, Page 7A MSA simplifies funding process By Usa Koivu Daily Staff Reporter To alleviate years of confusion the Michigan Student Assembly has revamped the forms University student groups must fill out to receive funding from the assembly. "We used the first form for a long time and it was getting fairly outdated. We started changing the form for the winter of '99 semester, we changed more for this past semester and even more for this semester," said MSA Budget Priorities Commission Chair Glen Roe, an LSA junior. The applications used by both BPC and MSA's Community Service Commission were redone to make it easier for student groups to understand and use the forms. the form wasn't very clear about what MSA would and would not fund," Roe said. "Now, the itemized budget listing is simplified and we give examples on the form of what information we need," Masters said. "For example, instead of asking for operating costs, we now ask for specific costs such as office space and office supplies," he said. The new form is significantly shorter than the previous one. "Last term's form had a total of 12 questions, but the application was still fairly confusing," Roe said. "Now the form has five questions, plus an addi- tional four easy questions to answer for larger events." MSA President Bram Elias, an LSA senior, said the original form was creat- A L_ ArC A , ..- . ... .ti .,.- -A .., JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily First-year Dental students Sleow Ong (left) and Helen Yu shop for a CD at Harmony House yesterday. The store is the newest of eight campus music shops. Chain stores hurt local 11s1iC sos By Jon Zemke Daily Staff Reporter Two is company, three is a crowd, but add any more and it equals the compe- tition facing Ann Arbor's campus record stores. Another music store moved into the cerned," said Schoolkids F Records in- Exile manager Steve Bergman. "Every store that comes in slices the pie up smaller, so it's going to have an impact on you." Smaller pieces of the pie are bad news for independent stores such as IN 1 i I {