ather onight: Mostly cloudy, low f22%. omorrow: Partly sunny, lurries, high around 35°. C~~ t i One hundred frve years of editonalfreedom Tuesday November 21, 1995 ...: F ...I. N. rf: t'-T"' z ' ;+ !y'".. 3 -';:'« n da. .'S,'r R ,:R'r' : ate,. n ' pT xt .9.y.. . +s .. : .:. .,. .. +'+C..a ,.m: a :., . & ni V .l r 4, i r ~y"* ' a w. z m rs+: 6 ::~. .,.Tt =' i x fi hl . Rfl a v.... 'i r' 'e. t' s,'i w MTi ' a,+,, . c ,.; i ,. . 6( '.± r . .., , i '. ..,al ~sh ~r4 ., ....,e. ..,,, ,. .,,.; '4. , .,.y , ur *"u... a , ..,$ .,.r. . . x", ....: ,,. ' nr. ,... ..,.rr ... C +r -..: ' '. t. x. E'.. ", ., i °^r'x tM profs.: egents *gnored students SACUA chair says pleas for revisions to Code draft went unheeded in Friday's vote to adopt document Stephanie Jo Klein aily Staff Reporter Two members of the top faculty gov- rnance committee said yesterday they are severely disappointed that the Board of Regents decided to approve the new Code of Student Conduct. George Brewer, who chairs the Sen- ate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, called the proposal a "well- rehearsed presentation by (Vice Presi- dent for Student Affairs) Maureen Hart- ford and the students (on the Code workgroup)." The regents, Brewer said, wanted to see a code draft that students had worked on, though he said the approved draft did not have adequate student input. "I think the regents came determined to do it," Brewer said. "The administra- tion wanted this Code and used the opportunity to get it." Brewer said the regents ignored both the Michigan Student Assembly and SACUA requests that more time be granted to revise the new drafts. "My view is that MSA and faculty governance felt the code needed to be improved," Brewer said. He called MSA President Flint Wainess ambivalent, saying that Wainess tried to voice stu- dent objections to the code while say- ing he approved of most of it. English Prof. and SACUA member Leo McNamara also said the decision did not incorporate enough real student input. "It's clear that the broad range of students are not happy with (the Code)," he said. McNamara said the students on the workgroup could not accurately repre- sent the overall student opinion, be- cause groups of that type tend to be- come "agents of the administration." The eight students on the workgroup were selected and paid by the Office of Student Affairs. Presentations by other students and the Washtenaw County branch of the American Civil Liberties Union did not present favorable views of the code, McNamara said. "I thought the tenor of the afternoon was to cast considerable doubt on the document," he said. Several regents were contacted for comment but did not return phone calls. f i f. House clears way for new budget talks The Washington Post WASHINGTON - After a tumultu- ous and bitterly partisan week of bud- get brinksmanship, the House set the stage for another round of high-stakes talks between Congress and President Clinton by giving final congressional approval to key budget legislation yes- terday evening before going home for a week-long Thanksgiving recess. The House voted 421-4 to approve a short-term spending bill to keep the government at full force for 25 days while Congress continues work on the remaining fiscal 1996 spending bills and begins talks with Clinton to wipe out the federal budget deficit by 2002. "This is the beginning of the negotia- tion," House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R- Ga.) said on CNN. "We're not done yet. ... We still have several very tough weeks of negotiation before we're finished." The House action came at the end of the first work day since last yesterday for some 700,000 federal workers after Congress and Clinton ended the longest period the government has gone with- out funding. The Smithsonian Institu- tion and the Grand Canyon reopened, the State Department resumed process- ing passport applications and the Com- merce Department began tracking the economy again. The interim spending bill, which Clinton has promised to sign into law, includes a provision paying furloughed government workers for the last week. It also requires agencies to spend at a lower rate than they have been doing. Clinton visited Capitol Hill last night to thank Democrats for sticking with him. The meeting was described by those attending as a pep rally, pulling Democrats togetheras they go home for Thanksgiving. "We leave, I think, in the kind of shape that will make it possible for us to come back in a week and begin the hard negotiations of completing the kind of budget we think can broadly be ac- cepted in this country," said Rep. Vic Fazio (D-Calif.), House Democratic Caucus chairman. Two Democrats, Major R. Owens (of New York) and Pat Williams (of Mon- tana), did not support Clinton yester- day, voting against the interim spend- ing bill. Republicans Wes Cooley (of Oregon) and freshman Steven E. Stock- man (of Texas) voted against the mea- sure; Rep. Mark E. Souder (R-Ind.), a freshman, voted "present." Last night, the House also voted 235- 192 to send the GOP's massive blue- print for eliminating the federal budget deficit by 2002 to Clinton - and a promised veto. The House had approved the reconciliation legislation Friday; a second vote was necessary because of minor Senate changes. The far-reach- Public behind Clinton in budgret battle The Washington Post WASHINGTON - President Clinton has a majority of Americans on his side as federal budget negotia- tions enter a critical new phase, while his Republican opponents in Con- gress face growing disapproval over the way they have handled the bud- get impasse, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. The survey, conducted Sunday be- fore the agreement to end the partial government shutdown was an- nounced, found that seven in 10 dis- approved of the way Republicans in Congress are handling the budget dispute - including a majority of Republicans. Overall, 56 percent interviewed said Clinton's position on the bud- get issue was closer to their own, while 36 percent supported the Re- publicans. By a 2-1 ratio, those in- terviewed agreed that the Republi- can plan to balance the federal bud- get in seven years cut too deeply into domestic programs and a smaller majority said Clinton should veto it. A total of 827 randomly selected adults were interviewed. Margin of sampling error for the overall re- sults is plus or minus four percent- age points. Surveysand interviewssuggest that most Americans blamed Republicans in Congress for the budget impasse. Even a majority of Republicans in- terviewed expressed disapproval of the way their party's congressional leaders had dealt so far with the dis- pute, including six out of 10 GOP moderates and half of all self-de- scribed conservative Republicans. So far, few Americans see any- thing positive coming from the bud- get crisis. Nearly seven in 10 said the partial government shutdown was a bad thing, while one in four saw it as positive. But nearly nine in 10 reported that they had not been inconvenienced by the shutdown. ing measure would cut taxes for most families, overhaul Medicare and give the states responsiblity for Medicaid and welfare. But even as GOP lawmakers looked toward talks on those issues with Clinton, set to begin next week, they See SPENDING, Page 2 Rverside Park in Ypsilanti is home to a holiday display of thousands of lights. The festival, which can be viewed by car or on foot, is supported by donations from visitors. The display will be up until December 31st. Photos by B. DAMIAN CAP/Daily INFLUENZA WARS Shots can help people stay healthy for exams, holiday celebrations By Megan Schimpf Shot Coss Daily Staff Reporter The sneezy, aching, feverish season The costs of some vaccines offered is here again, but there is a way to keep by University Health Services. from getting the flu this winter. Cholera vaccine $8 "I get flu shots for good luck," said Flu vaccine $8 Nicole Fluhr, a graduate student in En- Measles $23 glish. "Just any way I can prevent getting Measles, mumps, rubella vaccine the flu seems worth a try, and it's so easy." Flu shots, available at University Pneumonia vaccine $16 Health Services, protect against infec- Polio vaccine $22-28 tion with influenza for about a year. Typhoid vaccine $41 "On a campus like U-M, with a lot of Yellow feve vaccine $55 people living in close contact in dorms and in classes, there's a chance that a lot more people could pick up the virus," anyone who could be exposed to a larg said Hernan Drobny, director of the amount of virus and anyone who wants allergy and immunology clinic at Uni- lessened chance of contracting the viru versity Health Services. Each shot, given on a walk-in basis cos College shoe deals become common Contracts give schools millions in scholarships and equipment From Staff and Wire Reports The black, military-style vehicle adorned with a white Nike swoosh logo has become a familiar site at some of the nation's largest college football sta- diums. Shoe and athletic wear companies long-ago realized the value of connect- ing their products to premier athletes and teams. Professional teams and play- ers have picked up big money from endorsement deals., Now many others of the nation's col- lege athletic powerhouses have entered the marketplace and found it just as prof- itable. The new form of corporate in- "Today it takes a lot of money to maintain a lifestyle on a college cam- pus," said Hansen, whose league has had to cope this fall with investigations of NCAA rules violations by UCLA and USC football players. Because of the NCAA's amateurism rules, college athletes can receive only tuition, room, board and books from a university. In addition, scholarship ath- letes cannot hold paying jobs during school. In a recent interview with The Michi- gan Daily, Athletic Director Joe Roberson defended the University's con- tract and said a number of things people point to in attacking it are not true. "The student-athletes benefit from our contract with Nike. No one gets a penny," Roberson said. "We get a couple of scholarships, a general residence pro- Dawn-Marie Naylor, LSA junior, gets a flu at University Health Services yesterday. ge a Is. Sts susceptibility, you might want to get it, so I decided to get it done," she said. Patrick said she was warned she might feel a little tired and sick when she got mained healthy. "1'mj ust the really lucky one," Patrick said. "It's a chance you take - if your immune system doesn't want to take it, i