One hundred eleven years ofeedtorzdIfreedom ti NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 www michigandall y. com Friday February 8, 2002 I B 8 * ! I New budget to halt further spending LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Gov. John Engler's plan to give more money to Michi- gan schools and protect spending for univer- sities and community colleges is likely to ease passage of his full state budget for fis- cal 2003, key lawmakers said yesterday. "The way we did the school budgets will actually help the other budgets," said Senate Majority Leader Dan DeGrow (R-Port Huron). "They're still going to be very tight and nobody will get more than a freeze." Some Republican legislative leaders have said they want to pass the budget for the fis- cal year that begins Oct. 1 by late March. Budget bills usually are wrapped up in June or July. Senate Appropriations Chairman Harry Gast (R-St. Joseph), who has headed the committee for 19 years, called that time frame "kind of sudden and fast." "There are some things in there that I have a question about," Gast said of the bud- get proposal. "I think it will be refined" as it goes through the Legislature. Democrats said Engler's proposal is based on questionable accounting work and would shift tough choices to the governor who suc- ceeds Engler next year. "(Even) if it works, it will explode in the next governor's face," said Sen. Christopher Dingell (D-Trenton). He said he found the administration's accounting practices very disturbing and likened them to the budget problems of two decades ago. Engler's budget proposal totals $39.4 bil- lion, including $9.2 billion in the st.ate's general fund and an $11.2 billion school aid fund. State budget director Donald Gilmer pre- sented the budget proposal a day after Engler unveiled a plan to give schools the $6,700 per student they were promised next school year and have taxpayers pay a portion of their property taxes each summer to ful- fill that pledge. State Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D-Salem Township) said the 2003 budget proposal was based on "smoke and mirrors" and accused the governor of leaving the state fewer pots of money to tap for future spend- ing. I "We need a damn good (economic) recov- ery" if spending levels are to remain as high in fiscal 2004, said Smith, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee. House Speaker Rick Johnson said he's optimistic the economy will rebound better than some lawmakers' expectations. "Is it as nice as it was three years ago? No," said Johnson (R-LeRoy). "But every- thing we're looking at shows the economy is turning up." Gilmer said the proposal holds the line on spending and doesn't pay for any new pro- grams. "We're not in a position to be able to go out and solve any new problems. We're going to have to take care of the ones we've got," he told reporters. Still, minority Democrats charged that the governor is being irresponsible with the state's spending plan. "This budget tells me that the Engler- See BUDGET, Page 9 House minonty whip shows favor to Rivers By Louie Meizlish Daily Staff Reporter A donation from Rep. Nancy Pelosi, the number two Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives, to the campaign committee of Rep. Lynn Rivers was sharply criticized this week by Rivers' likely opponent in the August 2002 Democratic congres- sional primary, Rep. John Dingell. Dingell said it was unprecedented for a member of the House Democratic leadership to favor one candidate over another in a primary. Dingell, who has represented parts of Wayne County since 1955, and Rivers, who has represented Washte- naw County and parts of Wayne County since 1995, saw both of their hometowns fused into the same new congressional district in a redistrict- ing plan approved by Gov. John Engler last year. Unless the Michi- gan Democratic Party's court chal- lenge of the plan is successful, BRENDANOON yELL/Daily Nursing senior Stephanie Thomson prepares a tanning bed at TanFastic on Main Street for a customer. The tanning salon has seen an increase in business this month as spring break approaches. TinCning lessens brn, increases cancer risk Rivers Dingell incumbents Dingell and Rivers will face off next August. Dingell's criticism, first reported in the Capitol Hill newsletter Roll Call, centered on a $10,000 donation from a political campaign committee oper- ated by Pelosi (D-Calif.), House minority whip, to Rivers' campaign. Kori Bernard, spokeswoman for House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt (D-Mo.) said the leader had not endorsed either candidate in the primary, saying "the leadership stays out of campaign elections" Dingell told the newsletter he was perplexed as to why a member of the House Democratic leadership would want to show favoritism to one Demo- cratic incumbent over another who has "been so helpful to the Democrat- ic Party." Pelosi spokesman Brendan Daly explained that the whip "gave the donation before she had seen the final (redistricting) map so she didn't know" that there would likely be a pri- mary. The donation was made Sept. 10, one day before Engler signed the redistricting bill. It had been clear for some time, however, that the Republi- can governor would sign the bill, given that it was developed by the GOP-controlled Legislature. Pelosi did not take over as minority whip until last month, having been elected to the post one month after she made the donation to Rivers' campaign. Rivers had supported Pelosi for the See RIVERS, Page 9 By April Effort Daily Staff Reporter For Nursing freshman Christine Brown, tanning before vacationing in sunny locations is necessary to prevent severe burning. "It is a big concern for me because I'm fair skinned, and skin cancer runs in my family," said Brown, who also uses sunscreen at the tanning salon. Despite medical risks, including skin cancer, tan- ning before spring break has become a tradition for many University students. "I'd like to tan ahead of time, so I won't get burned in Florida during spring break," LSA fresh- man Lauren Reed said. Though tanning may seem to lessen the risk of sun burn, a new study published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute said that people who use tanning devices are 1.5 to 2.5 times more likely to have common kinds of skin cancer than people who do not use the devices. "You will be happy about tanning now, but when See TANNING, Page 9 Lecturer Talk radio recounts hardships of poverty By Rahwa Ghebre-Ab For the Daily Twenty-nine percent of Ameri- cans suffer from poverty and eco- nomic hardships every year, forcing them to do things such as skip meals, and prohibiting them from paying their rent, according to political essayist Barbara Ehren- rich's lecture last night addressing the plight of low-wage workers in America. Ehrenreich was the featured speaker at the 10th annual Mullin- Welch lecture, sponsored by The Center for the Education of Women. "No job is unskilled," said Ehren- rich. "Every job takes intelligence, concentration and stamina." Ehrenreich based her lecture on her best-selling book, "Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America." She described her under- cover journalistic experience of liv- ing in three different cities, working a total of five low-paying jobs, including a maid, a nursing home aide and a hotel room cleaner i4 - in .an ntnm- to .nlr. Pni m t c U.N. has lost 0 t * obje etivi official said By Tyler Boersen and Andrea Pappas Daily Staff Reporters Denis Halliday, a former United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator in Iraq and nominee for the 2000 Nobel Peace Prize, said last night that the United Nations has lost its ability to act as an objective force in international politics. "As a result of the policies and resolutions, and the neglect of some resolutions ... I think the United Nations has lost its credibility, its leadership and is even perceived to have lost its independence," Halliday said. During a lecture included in the Martin Luther King, Jr. Symposium, Halliday criticized the General Assembly for submitting to American political pressure, and said the U.N. Security Council has begun to look like a G7 meeting. He expressed concern for the Bush Administration's foreign policy and the "axis of evil" Bush defined during his State of the Union address last week. He added that there is no evi- dence that Iraq had any connection to the Sept.11 attacks, and that there is no justification for creating aggression. "Out of frustration and anger, Mr. Bush feels he needs to take on the world with violence," Halliday said. "I think (the axis of evil is) counterproductive for the relations between the United States and these three countries ... (and) it undermines the advancements made in democracy in Iraq." Halliday, a career U.N. diplomat with 34 years of experi- ence, became administrator of the "Oil for Food" program in Iraq in 1997. A year later, he resigned from the position, blast- ing the United Nations for its lack of attention to humanitarian issues in Iraq. "In many parts of the world, they look at the U.N. today and LESLIE WARD/Daily Former United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator In Iraq Denis Halliday spoke yesterday as part of the Martlin Luther King, Jr. Symposium. regret that it doesn't seem to stand up for human rights, it doesn't respect its own charter," Halliday said. U.N. sanctions have strongly contributed to maintaining famine throughout Iraq, Halliday said. The sanctions have been strongly supported by the U.S. government, including the administration of former Secretary of State Madeline Albright, who made her support clear during a lecture at the University last fall. Halliday said he disagrees with Albright, and said that sanctions are not the only method the United States could employ in the region. See HALLIDAY, Page 9 BRENDAN O NmLL, Dily LSA sophomore Brian Farrar hosts "The Bottom Line," a talk and debate program on WCBN. The show will air this afternoon. Letter describes Haddad's conditions in prison By Jeremy Berkowitz Daily Staff Reporter In one of his few contacts with the outside world since detained Dec. 14, local Muslim leader Rabih Haddad sent a letter to Andrew Thayer of the Chicago Coalition Against War and Racism this week that was released to the public yesterday. In the letter, Haddad described his 54 square foot. cell inside the Chicago Metropolitan Corrections Center where he has been held for the past three mmfAtn fittings to hold straps if it should become necessary. I have a camera fixed on me right outside my door that has completely deprived me of any kind of pri- vacy," Haddad wrote. Haddad also talked about the sanitation condi- tions in the prison. "I am allowed three showers a week for which I have to be cuffed to walk 10 paces to the shower that has a door similar to my cell's door," Haddad wrote. "I forgot to mention the waves of cock- roaches that invade the cell at night and crawl all over eurvthing inclulding me." where he may be asked questions about the charity he co-founded, the Global Relief Foundation, and its possible connections to terrorism. Despite the conditions, prison has not dampened Haddad's spirit. "All of this has done nothing but harden my will and strengthened my resolve to overcome and per- severe," he said. The federal government is still, refusing to com- ment on any aspect of Haddad's case, including his incarceration. Clarence Cranford ir. nihlic information officer but did say the prison is certified. "The conditions of confinement of any inmate is not public information," he said. "Our institution is accredited by the American Correctional Associa- tion and the Joint Commission Accreditation of health care organizations." In response to Haddad's letters, Robert Verdeyne, director of standards and accreditation for the American Correctional Association, said that, while he was surprised about the issues of sanitation and telephone rights, he thought no asnect of Haddad's confinement was illegal. 4