The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 10, 1981-Page 3--. Student government . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . ...\ ........" . . .. . . . . . .4' S till) striving to a lvage reputation MSA President John Feiger (left), Vice-President Amy Hartmann (right), the MSA chambers (below). ,.*. r. . r' :. .. , , ,, .'.. By DAVID MEYER The Michigan Student Assembly, the campus' student government representing students from all of the University's 17 schools and colleges, means many things to many people - lobbying organization, insurance .salesmen, supervisor 'of student groups, official voice of the students. But, then again, MSA means absolutely nothing to just as many other people. In fact, though the Assembly plays an important role on campus in providing services to students, a sizeable number of students have never heard. of MSA nor can they tell you what it is or what it does. MSA members are quick to admit that the Assembly has a significant public relations problem with students, and lack of student involvement in the Assembly is an issue that crops up every spring during the government's campaign season. MSA'S CURRENT president, Jon Feiger, like his predecessors, has sworn a commitment to attracting more students to participate in MSA's many commit- tees, which range from Minority Affairs, to the Legislative Relations to Recreational Sports. But,. with tapering student involvement in almost every extracurricular activity on campus, Feiger's prospect of. significantly bolstering student par- ticipation look bleak. MSA has two broad functions. 'One is to provide needed services to students, the other is to serve as the official representative of students to the ad- ministration and faculty. For these services, studen- ts must pay $3.90 per term in a mandatory assessment. To fulfill its first responsibility, the Assembly of- fers a number of services such as low-cost property and health insurance, low-cost legal counsel, and .twice a month the Assembly makes large allocations to gelp fund student groups and organizations. THE FULFILLMENT of its second responsibility - to provide student input into the decision-making that will affect students' educations is made more difficult by the administration's general reluctance to give students any binding position in ad- ministrative decision-making. Traditionally, the University administration, arguing that students are transient and do not have the expertise to make important decisions concer- ning the University, have given students purely an advisory role, if any role at all, in University decision-making. Students, arguing that students, deserve a serious role in the decisions that will shape their educations, have fought for a binding role - with a vote - inmany administrative committees. That longstanding ;debate over the proper student, role in decision-making has come to a head recently now that the University has embarked upon a "redirection," marked by the discontinuance or dramatic cuts in many programs and academic departments..Students, led by the MSA, have argued that now more than ever when the University is making decisions regarding the scope and direction of the University, students must have a binding role in the decision-making. Some administrators, on the other hand, have argued that these decisions are crucial and that, now more than ever, decision- making should not by muddled by student voices. MSA PRESIDENT FEIGER campaigned last spring on a promise to increase the student role in the University's redirection. Even without a binding vote in administrative decision-making, however, MSA has been effective in the past in representing students' interests at the administration building. Last fall, MSA was suc- cessful in persuading the administration to reverse its decisions to cutback the operating hours of the University buses shuttling between North campus and central campus and the hours of the Un- dergraduate Library. The MSA Security Task Force negotiated with both University and city officials in its effort to make the campus area more safe for students at night. As a result, Michigan Bell installed several telephones on campus that can be used for emergency help and it has worked persistently with the Ann Arbor Tran- sportation Authority to establish a late-night shuttle service. In its efforts to act as the official student voice, MSA has had to struggle to overcome the damage and loss of credence done by an election scandal is the spring of 1979. During that election, a number of standard procedures were ignored. As a result, polling places were closed down early, the ballots were misleading, and the election results were even- tually invalidated. The incident did great damage to MSA's ability to represent students before the administration. The administration soon stepped in to monitor new elec- tions and, worried that MSA might be equally irresponsible with its thousands of dollars of student funds, the administration moved to supervise MSA's budget. Despite the fact that the '79 election controversy came after a year of many achievements for MSA, it took a long while for the Assembly to rebuild its credibility with the administraton. And, though by now that incident is largely forgotten by students, MSA still must contend with its deep scars with some faculty members and administrators. }v* Daily Photos II MSA has also traditionally been discredited by its political infighting. MSA members usually belong to one of two major campus political parties - either the Student Alliance for Better Representation, generallly considered more conservative, or the People's Action Coalition, acknowledged as more liberal. The squabbling and feuding between SABRE and PAC members has frequently come under fire as counterproductive. Feiger, like others before him, has pledged an ef- fort to discourage the so-called "petty politics" and, largely as the result of the rise in independent can- didates and smalled, alternative parties in recent years, such politics appear to be on the decline. f ., .+ I'+ .11 r2~ V If . . Q J Aw/ r +.. ' ' - - i ,, ' --- ---T -----" }t Y J, f 'tea .h .4, .4, AL .- isi 1I r i / / , ,/,. A II iii I(.. I N , ; i i i' i 4'' Levi's fLee Calvin K Le Spori Espirit D SMerona r - - . I . ' pr! ! i f I 1 is !I I sib f / I r il Klein I Sac De Corp I M w