The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 21, 1986 -Page 5 Muenchow puts the stress on campus issues Independents put stock in their own enthusiasm (Continued from Page 1) issues as an aversion to controversy. Daniel Melendez-Alvira, a representative of Rackham Student Government, said Muenchow tries "to please everybody" which often causes him to oscillate from "progressive to regressive" stances on different issues. Melendez-Alvira also noted that Muenchow often abstains from voting on controversial national issues. But while Muenchow may seem in- decisive on national issues, he has played an active role on others. This year he vehemently opposed the student computer fee, and discussed the issue in front of the Board of Regents. -Muenchow has been an MSA representative and chairman of the assembly's Budget Priorities Com- mittee (BPC) for the last two years. He said he has been involved with "practically every issue that MSA has dealt with" during that time. 'Thompson, the Meadow party's vice presidential candidate, has been an LSA representative for one year. Thompson is a communications con- centrator from Detroit, and also a BPC member. Thompson has been active as an Evan Scholar and Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity member. Muenchow and Thompson are the only presidential and vice presiden- tial candidates who have held elected positions on the assembly. The Meadow Party makes no apologies for taking its name from the ' Bloom County comic strip and using Opus on its campaign posters. "It's definitely fair. There's nothing wrong with drawing more attention to yourself," Thompson said. Muenchow said the name may draw more students to the elections, and reflects the party's "fun" attitude toward the election. But his year's election has not been all fun for the Meadow Party, whose 31 candidates for assembly seats make, it second largest behind the Student Rights party. Last month, Muenchow faced allegations of disregarding BPC guidelines in order to avoid funding some student groups - particularly liberal groups - and of being unhelp- ful and unavailable to groups when they attempted to collect the funding they had been granted. BPC members said some groups may have had problems with the committee because Muenchow did not keep up with his duties as BPC chair- man at the beginning of this semester, when the committee was facing several crucial decisions. The assembly is currently in- vestigating the BPC in response to the charges. The results of the in- vestigation will probably not by available until after the election. The Meadow party has also faced controversy over its use of Opus as a campaign symbol. Last week MSA election officials ordered the party to halt its use of Opus because the party had not received permission from the Washington Post Writers Group, which distributes the comic. Later the party received permission to use Opus, providing it followed copyright guidelines. But a Meadow Party candidate was fined earlier this week after he broke the guidelines by putting his own picture next to Opus' on a poster. Muenchow said the Bloom County issue and the investigation of the BPC were initiated by his political op- ponents on the assembly, and that the investigation of the BPC is irrelevant to his campaign. He added that the term "evaluation" is more accurate than "investigation," the term used by the assembly. Muenchow is determined that the controversy will not hinder the Meadow party's campaign, and he continues to place priority on campus issues. Muenchow said he views the job of next year's leaders as concluding a transition to a more effective student government, which has been taking place over the last several years, and will by realized by the full institution of the Compiled Code, a new set of in- ternal changes which changes MSA's Thompson ... wants to pollstudents election process and requires assem- bly representatives to make regular contact with constituents. Muenchow said accomplishing this long-term goal would make it easier for the assembly to concentrate on more issues of immediate student concern. Muenchow and Thompson said they currently oppose a code of non- academic conduct, but will consider the code proposal expected to come from the University Council this year. Other issues Muenchow said are at the top of the Meadow agenda include centralizing services for minority students on campus, a suggestion made by MSA Minority Affairs Researcher Roderick Linzie this year; instituting a campus-wide escort service for women; and examining the relationship between campus security forces and the Ann Arbor Police Department. Muenchow and Thompson also put priority on enforcing a new MSA guideline requiring assembly representatives to keep in close con- tact with their constituents. Though some assembly represen- tatives say it would be impossible to keep tabs on all of the represen- tatives, Thompson said that as vice president he would contact leaders of other student organizations to make sure the representatives have been reporting back to their respective college government or organization. Thompson said the assembly this year has taken some significant steps in reaching out to students, but more needs to be done. He said that polling students each semester about the job MSA is doing would make MSA more responsive to student concerns. Thompson said that he and Muen- chow's strong friendship outside of MSA helps them work well together. (Continued from Page 1) "People in MSA are already so used to what MSA does that it will be hard for them to see what needs to be changed," VarnHagen said. VarnHagen, who is from Brighton, Mich., has not decided on a major. In high school he participated in the National Honor Society and helped other students in their campaigns for student office. SAVOY is from Bloomfield Hills. He is currently a member of Bursley Residence Hall government. The candidates hope to get more students involved by inviting frater- nity and sorority members to attend meetings and by making meetings more accesible to students by publishing the agenda in the Daily. "After you get student involvement and respect, everything else will fall Tinto place," VarnHagen said. Both VarnHagen and Savoy said all military research, including classified research, should be allowed on campus. "IT KEEPS students up to date on what's happening with the latest technology," Savoy said. But they also say that there is too much stress on research at the University and not enough on teaching. VarnHagen said more faculty and resources are needed to make the University a teaching in- stitution. Though VarnHagen and Savoy op- pose a code of non-academic conduct, they would read and consider a code from the University Council. VarnHagen -and Savoy say that MSA needs to be more vocal about its services to students, such as the Tenants' Union and Student Legal Services. "We need to get the things they do for students to be bigger news than things they do for political issues," Savoy said. Savoy ... wants military research Faigel plans t obring the assembly out of obseurity Indi pensable 's Soble rro oses his own code (Continued fromPage 1) credit," Soble said. Soble earned his B.A. in economics at Stanford University, where he was o . . . extensively involved in student We found a paranoia in MSA agains government. This year he is serving having any code. That's not giving the as the student representative to the University's Residency Appeals administration enough credit.' committee, which determines - Indispensable candidate Mark Soble *hether a student pays in-state or out- if-state tuition. Soble's running mate, Marc Strecker, is also a first-year law student. Strecker earned a B.A. in d p history from the University of most recent coe proposal. views of their constituents Chicago, where he served on several Attorney Jonathon Rose, the former voting on resolutions without hay university committees. director of Student Legal Services, time to contact students beforeha SOBLE IS also running as a saidSoble'scodecontainsmanyofthe To remedy this, they prop representative for the Law School, but same provisions which students have requiring all resolutions to be the party has no other candidates for objected to in administration code nounced several days before representative seats. drafts. These include a lack of a meeting to give assembly repre The name "Indispensable Party" is unanimous verdict for conviction - tatives time to prepare. a legal term that Soble refers to as an as in civil court cases - and allowing SOBLE ALSO said MSA need; inside joke. He said that the party had punishment for civil disobedience, communicate more effectiv no "moralistic" reason for using it. which is expected to be ruled out by especially with graduate stude Soble admits that his pro-code stan- the University Council. through an "improved" MSA Cam ce is politically dangerous, but he siad Soble agreed that others may find Report. if the code did not receive support on a flaws in his code, and he wants to "fix The party is against all classi student referendum, he would not try weak links before asking students to research, but not overall weap to push it through. approve it through a vote next fall. research. - SOBLE BELIEVES opposition to HE SAID he did not wait for the Though Soble and Strecker ac the code is not as great as it appears. council to come up with a code before that seeking the two top MSA pos "I've talked to a lot of students who making his own proposal because he ambitious for their first year at don't know about the issue and don't fears that if the council takes too long, University, both agree that t care about it," he said. Soble said the administration will try to impose would not be content being assen many universities, including Stan- its own code. representatives. ford, have managed well with similar Like its competitors, the Indispen- "If I was elected as a repre codes. sable party sees MSA s biggest tative, I might just wind Soble has presented his code problem as a bad image with studen- disagreeing with where MSA is go jfroposal to the University Council, a ts, and blames this on its politically and I might not be able to chang group of faculty, students, and ad- charged resolutions. But as an assembly president I m ministrators currently composing an Soble and Strecker said represen- be able to have a substantial pus alternative to the administrations tatives can't accurately reflect the the right direction," Soble s (Continued from Page 1) to put more effort into diagnosing student concerns through postering, polling students about problems they see with housing and other campus issues, and informing freshmen about MSA activities at orientation. Faigel wants to revive the 76- GRIPE line, a phone line for students to call in and comment or ask for MSA help in dealing with the University bureaucracy. The line was set up this year, but discontinued when it attrac- ted little response. Faigel said the phone line would work with more publicity and a change in the hours of operation from evening to daytime, when MSA members have more time to answer the phones. FAIGEL SAID she wants students to be aware of the "why" rather than just the "what" of MSA decisions. "People don't understand the issues, but they don't hestitate to have an opinion. Even with the code, not that many students really know what it is." The party also sees a com- munication problem within the assembly, and Faigel blames much ofj this on the assembly's current president, Paul Josephson. and vice president Phil Cole. She cited their failure to discuss the possible resignation of Cherie Bullard, MSA's former adminstrative coordinator before Bullard resigned. Faigel said that if more discussion had occurred before Bullard quit, the issue could have been resolved more fairly. Believing that MSA's officers are not approachable, which has made working on the assembly "frustrating," the party hopes that with a better spirit in MSA, more students will want to devote time to assembly mattters. FAIGEL SAID the infighting and cliquishness of this year's assembly prohibits it from getting anything done, preventing it from effectively lobbying the University ad- ministration and the state and national governments. She also hopes to extend MSA lob- bying to the city of Ann Arbor, so that students have more input into decisions concerning parking and housing. Faigel, a political science concen- trator from New Haven, Conn., has become known as dedicated to her role in the assembly. During her two years of assembly work, she has ne- ver held an elected office in MSA, but has served as the appointed Women's Issues Committee chair and co-edited the MSA News. -Faigel has also worked on MSA as a work-study student. THE STUDENT Rights party, with 41 candidates, is the largest this year, and boasts some of the most active members of the current MSA. Faigel said the party's members would be a key tool in helping to get other studen- ts to participatein the assembly. Mark Weisbrot, a Rackham student and teaching assistant for Economics 201, is the Student Rights party's vice presidential candidate. During his four years at the University, Weisbrot has been involved with the Latin American Solidarity Committe and the Rackham Student Government. Some students express concern that the Faigel-Weisbrot ticket is too liberal to represent students, and that it would press national issues, such as American aid to Nicaragua, rather than addressing campus concerns. Both Faigel and Weisbrot agree that the assembly's controversial resolution opposing Vice President George Bush's appearance on campus last fall was a good idea, even though some students expressed anger that MSA had chosen to make a political statement. FAIGEL SAID that while national issues are important - particularly if they involve financial aid to students - students often complain that MSA is "too political" without understan- Weisb rot ... protested CIA ding MSA's position on an issue. "The main reason the Bush resolution was passed ... was to say. 'We don't approve of your being here.' If Bush had been president in 1960, there never would have been a Peace Corps," she said. Faigel and Weisbrot say their ideologies, while on the liberal side, are not far from the mainstream, par- ticularly in their vehement opposition to the proposed code of non-academic conduct. Faigel said Weisbrot's reputation as extremely liberal would not hurt the campaign. "He's shown that he can organize students, and he understan- ds the issues and the campus. He's also willing to take a stand on things that are important." Weisbrot, who was arrested last fall at a protest of CIA recruitment on campus, opposes military research on campus. Opposition to Strategic Defense Initiative research and overall Pentagon funding to the cam- pus forms a major part of the party's platform. Ultimately Faigel said, the party is about giving students a voice, par- ticularly though gaining a student seat on the Board of Regents. "Who's against student rights? That's what we are going to work on." t m vhen ving nd. ose an- the sen- s to ely, nts, npus fied pons dmit ts is the hey n bly sen- up ing, e it. ight h in aid. I 0" World Traveler Pack - Convertible from luggage t HARD TO FIND TRAVEL ITEMS: -Electrical Adapters & Converters -Passport Carriers/Money Belts -Light Weight Raingear 9Be9ts/ Bill rejected by small margin ,, v r to backpack O 1; t Aft (Continued from Page 1) into that fight," O'Neill warned. But Rep. Dick Cheney, (R. Wyo.), said he could not "find a single vote that we lost" because of the sharp at- tacks on opponents from White House communications director Patrick ..« ..4r. - - ,m~ proponents argued was needed to halt sive" anti-aircraft weapons, training the spread of communism in Central and logistics for the first 90 days while America. pressing for a negotiated settlement. Trying to secure undecided votes, Reagan, however, could drop those Reagan offered Wednesday to restrictions after 90 days if diplomatic restrict use of the money to "defen- progress is not made. J UEEEEUUUUUUEUUUEUUUUUEUo