c 17STa fi . ZCQDE Continued from Page 1 they really should have voiced their concerns." Ellison challenged the group's claims that students had signifigant input in developing the Code. She said the old Statement of Students Rights and Re- sponsibilities was a more student-based document. "The members of the group were acting as paid employees of the Univer- sity and held closed meetings through- cut," Ellison said. "For the last Code, nore than 2,000 students had input, and br this one, the group says they talked t) about 500. "I think in many ways it is actually Yorse than the last Code," Ellison said. , [n terms of student rights and due rocess issues, the old Code had a few tings over this draft." The .Michigan Student Assembly pssed a resolution Tuesday night in Which members urged the regents not to gout the current draft. MSA President Flint Wainess, who 4s worked closely with Vice President or Student Affairs Maureen A. Hart- .°rd on the draft, did not speak at the reting other than to confirm MSA's 'solution. Wainess told The Michigan Daily at he does not support having a Code, -spite his work on the current draft. "Ifthe regents were to vote tomorrow at they weren't going to have any ode, I would jump for joy," Wainess {id last night. "But that is not realistic. he regents have said there will be a ode, so trying to fight having a Code Tfutile. I have been working to im- ove the Code so that maybe it will rotect a few more students." Wainess said the proposed Code is ir better than the previous one. In a private memo to the regents, btained by the Daily yesterday, Vainess outlined four major changes e would suggest. The changes include more open process, less ambiguity in 1c violations section and removal of ower-from the resolution coordinator -position. In the letter, Wainess said the ode document "is 80 percent success- However, members of the American ivil Liberties Union attacked the new [raft. Citing specific objections, three kCLU members told the regents not to accept the new Code and to abolish the )Id one. Mary Rave, director of the Nashtenaw County ACLU, said, "All f this stress on the Code basically comes down to 'thou shalt not break the law.' ... In reality, the Code could be three sentences long." The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 17, 1995 - 7 'U' hosts events on Vietnam War, - Asia Americans AP PHOTO From the Black Lagoon Brian Williams, a student at Washington Elementary School in Midland, Texas, dressed up as the Creature from the Black Lagoon yesterday for the school's 'Book Day.' School officials asked students to dress up as their favorite characters. A2researhrfn r otein that mnay treat breast cancer By Katie Wang Daily Staff Reporter This year marks the 20th anniversary of the fall of Saigon to Communist forces and the pullout of American sol- diers in Vietnam. The first-annual Southeast Asian American Conference, scheduled to take place on campus this weekend, will explore issues relating to the American involvement in the Vietnam conflict and focus on issues relevant to the South- east Asian American experience in the: United States. "We hear so much about how we lost Vietnam - that's the American per- spective," said American culture Prof. Gail Nomura. "How about the South- east Asian perspective?" The theme of the conference,"Where is Home?" addresses how many Asian Pacific Americans - specifically Southeast Asians - are confronted daily by this question. Marie Ting, program associate for the Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives, said it is important forpeople to realize that each ethnic group has its own unique experiences of immigrat- ing to the United States. "People lump Asian Pacific Ameri- cans together as one group," Ting said. "Many forget Southeast Asians. Their experience is very different, especially because of the war." American culture graduate student Nhi Lieu said the question "Where is Home?" is valid because of the racism that many Southeast Asians face in America. Events Schedule Friday, Nov. 17 6 p.m. Opening reception, Rackham Auditorium 7 p.m. "Twenty Years after the Fail of Saigon: Where is Home?" Keynote speaker: Prof. Hien Do, Rackham Auditorium Saturday, Nov. 18 10 a.m. Language, Culture & Power: Links between i Language and Culture, Michigan Union 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m, Workshops, Michigan Union 3 p.m. Closing, Michigan Union "Home in the United States has a double-edged meaning a lot of times because a lot of times you face racism and discrimination," Lieu said. Lieu fled from South Vietnam on a boat to Malaysia when she was 5 years old. After spending two years in a refu- gee camp, Lieu came to the United States. "The Vietnam War is very much in the memory of American society to- day," she said. The conference, which is the University's first to focus solely on Southeast Asians, opens tonight with a reception and speech in Rackham Au- ditorium. The Associated Press A recently discovered protein could be a link in the development of a new treatment for breast cancer, says a re- searcher examining its effects. Paul R. Ervin Jr., president and sci- entific director of Ann Arbor-based Biotherapies Inc., is researching mammastatin, which he discovered sev- eral years ago while at the University. Ervin said early tests indicate mammastatin, which is produced by normal female breast cells, is inactive or not present in cancerous breasts. "We have found in breast cancer pa- tients that their levels (ofmammastatin) are lower and they continue to decline with the progression of the disease," Ervin said. "There is also some indication that if you use high levels of the protein in breast cancers, that it actually causes the cancer cells to die," said the 36- year-old entrepreneur. "So we may ac- tually get regression of the tumors as well, but it's too early to tell." Testing has only been done on human cancer cells in a laboratory. But in Janu- ary, animal trials are set to begin at the University, The Detroit News reported yesterday. Six months later, clinical trials on breast cancer patients could begin. "The reason we think mammastatin will have an advantage over chemo- therapy is that it only affects breast cancer cells so it shouldn't have any associated toxicity," Ervin said. If the trials are successful, Biotherapies could apply to the Food and Drug Administration for approval to test nationwide. The whole process could take three or more years and is estimated to cost around $4.1 million Know of news? Call 76-DAILY --U ------ m I Kevorkian retrieves car Don't Just Use Ifs For The PONTIAC (AP) - Dr. Jack Kevorkian paid a $38 towing fee yes- terday and picked up his Renault Alli- ance from the Oakland County Sheriff's department. The car was impounded last week after the body of Patricia Cashman, of San Marcos, Calif., was found in the car outside the county medical examiner's office. Kevorkian's attorney, Geoffrey Fieger, has said that Cashman died in Kevorkian's presence Nov. 9. Hers was the 26th death Kevorkian has acknowl- edged attending since 1990. Sheriffs Sgt. William Harvey, who is in charge of the investigation, said there was no longer any need to keep it. "It was processed, and it was his," Harveysaid. "I sincerely wish he wouldn't use it to drop dead bodies off. He paid his $38 towing fee. I also advised him the car was leaking oil like a sieve." Michael Odette, another of Kevorkian's attorneys, said the quick release ofthe car may indicate the county does not have a case against Kevorkian in Cashman's death. Crossword Puzzles! LARGE UROUP NEEj)S many U of M - OSU football tickets. Call Wess. 1/800/484/ 7994 beep-beep 4537. MY DARLING little sister and her friends could love to go to the OSU game. Help her dream become a reality! Four tickets together reeded. 764-0084. tPRING BREAK TRAVEL FREE with Sun Splash Tours. Highest commissions 'aid, lowest prices. Cam pus Reps wanted! ell Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas, Florida, PJadre. Rates & info. call 1-800/426-7710. ",fPRING BREAK Acapulco $499, Bahamas 9~509, Cancun $540. Reps Wanted. 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