It f" 'AL aday: Mostly cloudy. High 64. Low 53. )morrow: Sunny. High 55. One /hundred nne years of edinr 1, freedom Wednesday November 10, 1999 igh court hears student fees case By Yael Kohen waily Staff Reporter WASHINGTON - - Public universities across h ation are paying close attention to a U.S. ' ame Court case that may alter funding proce- iures for campus student organizations. The justices heard a case brought by three stu- lents who sued the University of Wisconsin at \4adison claiming that their student fees were eing used to support student organizations with vhich they had fundamentally different ideologi- :al beliefs. But what seemed to be a state matter gained iational attention when the high court agreed to 1e the case. College students lined the entry la leading to the Supreme Court building and illed the chamber when the court was called into ession. The students' lawyer, Jordan Lorence, argued hat by using student fees to fund organizations hat have opposed ideological or political beliefs is n direct violation to the First Amendment and stu- lents' constitutional rights. "Students have a First Amendment right not to peak," he told the panel. But some justices appeared skeptical, trying to determine whether such groups provide education- al services and benefits to students and therefore supplement college education. Justice Anthony Kennedy said Lorence was "asking us to do something that is against the tra- dition ... of many centuries ... a tradition of diverse speech." Wisconsin Assistant Attorney General Susan Ullman, arguing for the university, said UW pro- vides funds to organizations that are collectively a "viewpoint neutral forum" thereby allowing for equality of ideologies on campus. Each group pro- vides a basic service to students such as volunteer work, internship programs and the ability to bring speakers to campus, she said. Justice David Souter said that an important question of the case is whether to consider the viewpoints of the individual campus grouis or to consider all the campus groups as a "pot of gold" of many other voices. But Justice Antonin Scalia grilled Ullman on the merits of the system, which refuses to fund groups advocating partisan political speech but See SCOTUS, Page 7 'U 'prepares for potential fallout from Court ruling By Jewel Gopwani Daily Staff Reporter The waiting game is on. While schools across the nation anticipate the Supreme Court's verdict in The Board ofRegents of the University of Wisconsin . Scott Southworth, which is expected to be released early next year, the University has decided to devel- op procedures that would sustain student group funding in case the Supreme Court rules against Wisconsin. The Supreme Court yesterday heard a case challenging whether universities can impose mandatory fees on students and then use the money to fund student organizations with ideological stances, including political groups. See WISCONSIN, Page 7 MIKE B LkA L1LY/ n Badger lHerald University of Wisconsin at Madison alum Scott Southworth speaks to reporters outside of the Supreme Court Building in Washington, D.C., yesterday, following the high court's hearing of his case. Free wheeling 3 candidates to visit Michigan By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter Michigan is asserting itself as a sig- nificant influence in next year's elec- tions, with three presidential hopefuls making campaign swings through the state today and tomorrow. U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) is slated to travel across the state on Interstate-96 today, speaking at a Grand Rapids charter school and Lansing Community College this morning. McCain also is expected to address the Grand Ledge Rotary Club this after- noon and the Michigan House Republican Campaign Committee in Novi, Mich., tonight. Democratic candidate Bill Bradley this afternoon plans to discuss his health care proposal at the Arcadia Senior Citizens Home in Detroit. Bradley has called for guaranteed access to affordable health care, Medicare protection for senior citizens and prescription drug benefits for Medicare recipients. Texas Gov. George W. Bush, the frontrunner for the Republican nomina- tion, has scheduled two events near Detroit tomorrow. He is slated to attend an 11 a.m. Veterans' Day ceremony at the Clinton Grove Cemetery in Macomb County's Clinton Township, followed at noon by a fundraiser at the Northfield Hilton in Troy, Mich. Michigan Gov. John Engler, Bush's state campaign chair, plans to accompa- ny the Texas governor at both events, according to Susan Shafer, Engler's deputy press secretary. But Engler will not be attending any of McCain's speeches today, Shafer said. "Gov. Engler has come out publicly to support Gov. Bush," she said. "We did not receive an invitation to McCain's event." Bush most recently visited Michigan in September for a Mexican Independence Day event in Detroit but See CANDIDATES, Page 2 Allison Canter/Daily Taking advantage of yesterday's unseasonably warm weather, a T-shirt clad bicyclist coasts across the Diag. SRAC to set Code change process Imka Schulte ) taff Reporter Almost nine months after the Jniversity Board of Regents voted to ransfer authority regarding Code of tudent Conduct amendments to Jniversity President Lee Bollinger, he committee that will advise the resident about proposed changes is et to figure out possible formats for he process. a meeting next week, the tudent Relations Advisory ommittee, a 20-member sub-group of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, will consider guidelines for presenting its opinions and recommendations to Bollinger. Because SRAC meets only during the academic year, SRAC Chair Al Burdi said progress was impeded by the summer vacation. The Code is the University's disci- plinary guidelines for student behav- ior. Students can be sanctioned for violation of the Code's policies, which include abusing alcohol to damaging University property. Career Planning and Placement Director Simone Himbeault Taylor, who provides oversight to the Office of Student Conflict Resolution, said although the University president was given power to approve changes to the Code in February, the committee's time frame is an appropriate one. Taylor said the momentum of the Code's review process, which was presented at the February regents' meeting, was not lost because of OSCR's efforts throughout the sum- mer. During the summer months, OSCR presented a budget to University Provost Nancy Cantor. The budget will allow OSCR to hire additional staff and move to a more "student-friendly location" than the Fleming Administration Building. Himbeault Taylor said Cantor made a commitment to supporting these ini- tiatives. The Michigan Student Assembly, SACUA and University administra- tors are the only parties that can pro- pose amendments to the Code. See CODE, Page 2 Code specific: ® The Code of Student Conduct is the University's internal disciplinary policy. In February, the University Board of Regents voted to give the University president authority to approve Code amendments. ® An advising committee to the University president is set to determine how it will operate. ITD t y it d j r S_ student I names the tight price By Nicole Tuttle Daily Staff Reporter Oops! Wrong Ncolor, Nke By Mark Francescutti Daily Sports Writer Students who went to pick up their 'Maize Rage' T- shirts yesterday at the Michigan Ticket Office were turned away because Nike printed the first batch of the shirts in white instead of yellow. "We called Nike during the production phase and we found out that they were using white plates," Michigan marketing director Tom Brooks said. "So we shut them down." Nike is now using the correct yellow plates, Brooks said, but the Maize-colored Maize Rage T-shirts won't be delivered until late Friday. The latest delay means students won't be able to pick them up at the marketing office - behind the Michigan Ticket Office located at 1000 S. State St. - until Monday, Nov 15. Students can also pick up their free shirt at TAn _,rvn' f - tr-mla c - n nn - c- nnc - l iad resolves e-mail problems By Charles Chen Daily Staff Reporter Students experiencing e-mail delays will be able to resume their normal routine of receiving and sending messages today after a serv- er error was discovered, causing more than 60,000 messages to back up this week. On Sunday, the University net- work experienced problems with directory services that help route e- mail messages for students using the Login Service, which processes electronic mail for anyone with a University account. "There were problems with the server because of changes in net- work configuration to improve effi- ciency in the system," said Bill Aikman, Information Technology Division director of product devel- opment and deployment. The program installed by ITD, which is designed to interpret the destinations of e-mail messages, had a long standing error, Aikman said. The server received messages from senders to University e-mail addresses but could not put them through to their destinations. Trm rnnnftntcrik-nerrith Who wants to be a millionaire? For Engineering senior Ross Hunefeld the phrase "Come on down! You're the next contestant on 'The Price is Right'!" sclose enough. WHunefeld heard "The Price is Right" announcer Rod Roddy holler these magic words early in September when he was sitting in the Bob Barker Studio in Los Angeles as an audience member for the show. A winner of more than $44,000 in SAM HOLLENSHEAD/Daily Engineering senior Ross Hunefeld cheers yesterday as he and friends watch a taped edition of CBS's "The Price Is Right" where Hunefeld was asked to "Come on down!" I ,I