0 Page A-6- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 6, 1984 Ann Arbor Civi TheatIre cordially invites you to attend an OPEN OUSE Sunda September 23rd from Campus joins election bandwagon. By NEIL CHASE So much for student apathy. Last fall, 500 students jammed into a room at the Michigan Union to hear Gary Hart, a darkhorse presidential candidate. ANOTHER 450 students came out to listen to George McGovern and several hundred greeted Jesse Jackson. This year's presidential campaign has been one of the few events which have defied the plague of apathy on campus. Even though the number of active students on campus is still low, many students have developed an intense interest in what was once an eight-man scramble for the Democratic nomination. The strongest campus groups were those supporting Hart and Mondale, but groups also organized for McGovern, Jackson, and Sen. John Glenn. THE HART campus campaign began in the summer of 1983 when LSA students Marc Dann and Mark Blumenthal took over the responsibility of planning for their candidate's fall visit to Ann Arbor. Soon, the two found themselves running the campaign for the entire state of Michigan from the back room of a State Street law office. A number of other students who jumped on the Hart bandwagon found themselves in similarly important campaign positions just weeks after they joined up. Thirty volunteers, calling themselves "Gary's Guerillas," spent spring break wooing voters in Iowa. After Hart won the Democratic primary in Washtenaw County last March, Dann, Blumenthal, LSA senior Eric Steinberg, and several other volunteers went to other states to help run campaigns. WHILE THE Hart backers drew on the Colorado senator's momentum and appeal to young voters, the Students for Mondale were busy trying to convince. students that their candidate was better than Hart. "A lot of students were going for Hart and didn't know why," said Larry Kaplan, student coordinator of the Mondale effort. He said the 40 or 50 active student Mondale volunteers tried to convince students to examine Mondale's positions on the issues through informational leaflets and flyers. The Mondale group helped plan for Joan Mondale's visits to Southfield, Ypsilanti, and Ann Arbor and set up an elaborate telephone canvassing system with which every voter in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area was called at least three times before the March primary. KAPLAN SAID the student volunteers at the phone banks created lists of Mondale supporters arranged by polling place. If the Mondale voters did not turn out at a particular precinct in large enough numbers, Kaplan said, a volunteer would call the phone bank and other volunteers would begin calling every Mondale backer in that particular area. Mondale was expected from the start to do well in labor-dominated Michigan, but the University campus was one of the few places Hart supporters were confident they could carry. "In the rest of the state everyone looked at us as the front-runner," Kaplan said. "Here in Ann Arbor we were the underdog. We had to work." The student campaign for John Glenn, during its short life span, managed to arrange a campus visit by the candidate's daughter Lyn Glenn and rallied a small core of Glenn support among students. Jesse Jackson's supporters held several fundraisers and stressed the importance of registering to vote for Jesse. The other three former candidates - Florida Gov. Reuben Askew, California Sen. Alan Cranston, and South Carolina Sen. Ernest Hollings - drew little more than a few student supporters. On the other side of the fence, about 30 College Republicans didn't have to work very hard to see Reagan through the state's Republican caucus in January. Reagan carried the state almost unanimously. But the group's members are active nonetheless, supporting candidates for local office and distributing Reagan literature. With the November battle shaping up to be a hard fight against the popular incumbent, this month will no doubt signal the beginning of a nationwide battle -one which promises to offer numerous chances for student involvement. 2-5 338 S. 0m. MAIN (on the corner of Main & William) 5Acome a Part f Community Teaftre! For information please call 662-7282 Office provides legal help for students By DOV COHEN Got a legal problem but don't think your experience watching "People's Court" counts for much? Don't worry, there's a special student service designed to counsel you in such matters, and better yet, it's free. Student Legal Services is a law office for all currently enrolled students sponsored by the Michigan Student Assembly. Margaret Nichols, director of SLS, estimates that the office affects anywhere from six to eight thousand students a year. THE SLS caseload ranges from housing disputes, which make up 50 percent of their cases, to criminal matters. They cannot, however, take cases to court which involve the University or which involve a student vs. student conflict. About half of the cases "involve advice or advice plus letter writing and phone calling," Nichols said. And although only one case in five goes to court, the office has a success rate of over 50 percent, according to the director. SLS opened its doors to all students five years ago and now maintains a staff of four attorneys, a law school graduate, and anywhere from five to 20 though. Out of each student's $4.75 student government fee, $3.23 goes to make up the SLS budget of approximately $216,000 a year. Much of the office's advice is in the 'If you can get through the SAT, you can get through our (legal) kits.' -Margaret Nichols SLS director settlements. (The kit) is step by step. If you can get through the SAT, you can get through our kit," Nichols said. In addition, the attorneys provide complete supervision while the kit is being filled out. As for the effectiveness of SLS, just ask Tom Marx, an alumnus and local political activist who had trouble with his landlord while he was a student. He used SLS to settle with the landlord for $1500. Marx praised the service as "very helpful. They explained the whole thing to us and showed us our options." "Students really need to be aware of SLS," continued Marx. What does the average student need to use SLS? All he needs is a valid student identification and an appointment, which can be made by phone or on a walk-in basis. The appointment requirement may be waived if you have been arrested or received a summons. SLS is located on the third floor of the Michigan Union. It is open from 9 to 5 Monday through Friday. A Subscribe to The Daily Phone 764-0558 volunteers. Nichols herself must report to a nine-member supervising board, five of which are students. All this work doesn't come cheaply, form of kits for do-it-yourselfers. "We have a number of kits: a divorce kit for (parents with) children and without, name' changes, and divorce Research stirs little controversy (Continued from Page 2) Toxicology Prof. Rory Conolly said that the University's guidelines thus far have not interfered with his research. Conolly does experiments to determine the effect of chemicals on laboratory rats. "IT HASN'T gotten to the point yet where I was restricted from doing research that should be done," he said. Prof. Michael Brabec, another researcher in the School of Public Health, said that the University criteria for animal research are very stringent in regard to actual testing of chemicals. Brabec said that this does not apply to his research, which is more oriented toward the effects of chemicals on living organisms, and not to the actual properties of those chemicals. Dr. Donald Dafoe, a professor of surgery who works with animals, said that laboratory animals do not suffer needlessly at the hands of University researchers. "We could say, 'Damn the torpedoes, it's just a pig,' " he said, but they do not. Dafoe agrees that animals should be used only when necessary and that, although many groups criticize doctors for experimenting with animals, it is a small price to pay for the knowledge that is obtained. "We could never do pancreatic transplants without that experience,:.' Dafoe explained. "You can't learn surgery using complete simulation." Dafoe said that the potential help to humans that animals experiments offer far outweights the concerns of the individual animals, which he said are treated very humanely. "Right now; our obligation is to the little two-yea- old who can't get her breath and is drowning in lung water," he said. LSA commission to study (Continued from Page 1) offered by thde ommission. Another predicted decline in the future of high offeed y th comision.Anoherschool graduates. issue, recruitment of non-traditional stu- The survey, which was mailed to in- dents - those age 22 and over was dis- coming freshman, asked the student cussed. what factors were involved in making The LSA Blue Ribbon Commission the decision to attend the University. will probably also examine a report The survey also asked what the student taking into account student attitudes liked and didn't like about the Univer- toward the Unviersity in light of the sity. requirements "If a student didn't come to the University because of the weather, N e can't change that," said John Chamn- erlin, a political science professor and researcher at the Institute of Public Policy Studies. "We're searching for policy leves ...something under the control of the University." 'U' looks into high-tech industries (Continued from Page 1)research for the defense department, that the defense department is merely the community and has been the sub- he rejects the accusation. one of those interested sponsors. ject of many student demonstrations "We decide what we want to do and because of one outside sponsor, the then we go out and see if there is in- Duderstadt said that he looks for Department of Defense. Though Had- terest in it. Nobody tells us what to do. more sponsorship from the private sec- dad himself and several of his colleagues We, as faculty members, decide what is tor because of the nature of their have been accused or doing weapons important," he said. Haddad maintains research interests . 0 * 5 -f-fU