_a Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 5, 1987 PIRGIM condemns MSA ballot By MARTHA SEVETSON The Public Interest Research Group in Michigan yesterday condemned a question on the Michigan Student Assembly's March ballot asking students to choose either a positive checkoff or refundable system for PIRGIM funding. According to PIRGIM Chair and LSA senior Andrew Swensen, "It (the question) claims to give WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 students a choice that doesn't really exist. Students voting for a donation system will think they're voting to save PIRGIM - when actually they're voting to kill it." The PIRGIM Board of Directors passed a resolution last Sunday stating the group's intention to leave the University campus if a positive checkoff system is adopted. The University's Board of Regents offered the group a positive checkoff system last fall but they turned it down to pursue the refundable system. EARLIER this week, the assembly was sharply divided over a proposal to rescind the question addressing the positive checkoff system. "MSA has perpetrated a fraud on students," said MSA representative and LSA sophomore Michael Phillips. 'We're asking them to vote 'yes' or 'no', but we're not telling them that 'yes' means 'no."' MSA President Kurt Muenchow, whose vote as moderator broke a tie on the proposal, is in favor of the positive checkoff system. "It seems to be the most straightforward and fair mechanism possible," Muenchow said. The Assembly passed a resolution last month to add the funding question to the campus- wide election ballot. The assembly also endorsed a PIRGIM-sponsored ballot referendum which asked students to approve a refundable fee system earlier in February. Students will vote on both of question the ballot referenda in March. The funding system that receives the greatest majority of student support will be adopted by MSA. In addition, students will vote on an adjusted MSA fee, an adjusted fee for school and college governments, and the right to vote on any proposed code of non- academic conduct. A referendum question regarding MSA's role in non-campus issues, sponsored by a petition from the Involved in Michigan Political Action Committee, may also be on the ballot. The referendum could be removed by the Central Student Judiciary later this week because the assembly approved a resolution to limit itself in this regard last month. CAR PAGE, VCR AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE rOYTA ___ F~iT * Special Discount to Student, Faculty, and Staff at U of M " Complete Body Repair " Foreign Car Specialists " Laser Unibody and Frame Straightening * Customer Pick-up and Delivery OPEN M-F 8-6, Sat.- Sun., by Appt. Only 971-8362/ 2231 Platt Rd. 2 BLKS. South of Washtenaw Ave.-3 miles from U-M Campus Coalition confronts 'U (Continued from Page 1) past demands." "Racists are being shelved by this University," said Anthony Henderson, a graduate student in political science. "The problems are substantive and we are going to make movements to the seat of government on this campus. We are not going to be swept under administration rugs." m-ein * 0 : STREET." :1mOTORS : *e Quality Care " for your fine " * imported " automobile * S Duderstadt said racist incidents are "not appropriate for this campus and their not appropriate for this nation." "Particularly on the University campus wherehwe have to respect the minority," he added. "We have got to take actions and educate the majority in particular about the importance of respecting pluralism and diversity on campus." "We did not come to hear this," Henderson said to Duderstadt. "We made our statement here, we don't want to hear anymore of this administrative jibberish. Either act now or you are going to see us in a different form." According to LSA senior Aubrey Scott, "If the upsurge of direct action settles, institutionalized racism will continue to seep through the weak loopholes of complacency." "Unless they (the administration) meet our demands another Black Action Movement may be necessary," she added, referring to a student, faculty, and staff strike on the University in 1970. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Detroit plane crash kills nine., ROMULUS, Mich. - A commuter airliner carrying 19 people crashed and caught fire upon landing yesterday at Detroit Metropolitatr Airport and smashed into a catering truck, killing nine people on the plane and injuring 20, including 10 on the ground, officials said. Those hurt on the ground, catering service employees and other workers, were caught as the burning plane slid along after plunging int6 the pavement off the runway and bursting afire shortly after 2:30 p.m. The twin-engine Fischer Brothers Aviation aircraft, operating as Northwest Airlink Flight 2268, smashed into the catering truck atr: pushed it into another catering truck before coming to rest near a terminal, officials and witnesses said. The dead included the pilot, first officer and seven passengers, said Jim Vollman, director of the Wayne County Office of Public Services. Convicted spy gets life in jail, WASHINGTON - Former civilian Navy intelligence analyst Jonathan Pollard was sentenced yesterday to life in prison for selling Israel hundreds of secret U.S. military documents in what prosecutois' termed one of the nation's worst spy cases. "No, no," screamed his wife, Anne Henderson-Pollard, and she collapsed to the floor after U.S. District Judge Aubrey Robinson announced the life term for her husband. His wife received a five-year prison term for conspiring to receivd embezzled government property and being an accessory after the fact to possession of defense secrets. Federal prosecutors said Pollard gave Israel thousands of pages of classified documents, which could fill a room the size of a large closet:' State to step up war on drugs DETROIT - Michigan will use an additional $20 million in federal drug-fighting money to increase efforts in education, enforcement and treatment, Gov. James Blanchard said yesterday. "Drug education is the single most effective way to cut down on the demand for drugs, and demand is the major reason for crime," the governor said at a news conference at a Detroit elementary school. "The most important thing is teaching kids - and their parents, but primarily kids - that no single element threatens young people and their families more, destroys more lives, ruins more careers than drugs, unless it's ignorance of drugs," Blanchard said. The $20 million resulting from the Federal Drug Omnibus Act of 1986 will be added to the $70 million the state annually spends on such- efforts. Farm animal drugs can spread germs to food, study concludes BOSTON - Use of antibiotics to keep farm animals healthy cdan also make people sick by promoting the spread of drug-resistant germs from the barnyard to the dinner table, a study concludes. The study "documents that farms are a major source of antimicrobiql- resistant salmonella infections in humans," said Dr. John Spika. "M!e can say that antimicrobial use on farms has a direct impact on human health." In their research, doctors traced germ-laden hamburger from people who got food poisoning through the food chain to worn-out dairy cows that were slaughtered for meat. EXTRAS Local police to hold auction Bicycles, televisions, stereos, clothing, jewelry, and even a wheelchair will be auctioned off this Saturday at the Ann Arbor Polico department's annual public auction. The items were either found, stolen, or unclaimed, and cannot be returned to an owner. Good bikes have gone in the past for as low as $15, according to Sargent Jan Suomala. The auction will begin at 9 a.m., and held in the police~ garage at City Hall on 4th street and Huron Streets. Payment must be in the form of cash or a check drawn from a local bank. by Steve Blonde+ Not anyone can be a ski bun Not everyone who skis can be a ski bum or deserves the title, say., self-proclaimed ski bum Dick Mero, who has been diligently. practicing the profession of sorts since 1972. "There are some who will say they are ski bums, too, but they've always got a credit card somewhere," he said. This winter, Mero is working the front desk at Boyne Mounta in Lodge, a job he keeps to stay close to his first love - skiing. Met gets meals, lodging, $4 an hour, and makes 17 downhill runs a day. "The main thing is to get your pass and boogie until you drop, until you literally drop." " " " " S . factory recommended maintenance 906 North Main Street 663-5544 0"490"000660690 a.n~...sJc p an ciyi Tech Centar SPECIALIZING IN THE MAINTENANCE & REPAIR.OF TOYOTA - HONDA - MAZDA - SABARU - DATSUN - MITSUBUSHI - ISUZU MAINTENANCE - " We can tailor make a maintenance inspection to meet your individual needs. " 7,500-15,000 and 30,000 mile inspection, oil changes, tune-ups, valve adjustments, brakes & shocks. PRICE - " Our regular everyday prices are often lower than our competitor's specials. " All work is guaranteed. " Our prices are inclusive - No hidden costs or surprises! 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OWES PRICES IN THE AREA ed with 4 speed assist PS, PB, uspension, radial phts, remote fuel , reclining front steering column, w defroster child MATS, !CH MORE. n66O* Michigan Ensian Spring Photography Staff Mass Meeting SUNDAY March 8 1 p.m. Editor in Chief..............................ROB EARLE Managing Editor .............AMYMINDELL News Editor......................PHILIP 1. LEVY Features Editor...................MELISSA BIRKS NEWS STAFF: Elizabeth Atkins, Eve Becker, Steve Blonder, Rebecca Blumenstein, Jim Bray, Brian Bonet, Scott Bowles, Paul Henry Cho, Dov Cohen, Rebecca Cox, Hampton Dellinger, Leslie Eringaard, Martin Frank, Pam Franklin, Stephen Gregory. Edward Kleine, Steve Knopper, Vibeke Laroi, Carrie Loranger. Michael Lustig, Jerry Markon, Edwin McKean, Andy Mills, Tim Omarzu, Eugene Pak, Melissa Ramsdell, Martha Sevetson, Wendy Sharp, Louis Stancato, Steven Tuch;David Webster, Jennifer Weiss, Rose Mary Wummnel Opinion Page Editors.........PETER MOONEY HENRY PARK OPINION PAGE STAFF: Muzammii Ahmed, Tim Bennett, Peter Ephross, Paul Honsinger. Tim Huet. Lisa Jordan, Jeffrey Rutherford, Caleb Southworth Arlin Wasserman, Mark Williams. Arts Editors...................REBECCA CHUNG SETH FLICKER Books.......... .SUZANNE MISENCIK Features ........................ALAN PAUL Film .........................KURT SERBUS Music ..................BETH FERTIG Theatre......................LAUREN SCHREIBER .ARSSTA F- 1V I fR.---. I: n ,..:.. -pr-s nu- - ..-.-....... ...... LVt . .M LL i Associate Sports Editors .DARREN JASEY RICK KAPLAN GREG MOLZON ADAM OCI [IlSt JEFF RUSH SPORTS STAFF: Jim Downey, Liarn Flaherty, Allen Gelderloos, Kenneth Goldberg, Chris Gordillo, Shelly Haselhuhn, Julie Ilolnan, Walter Kopf, Rob Levin, Jill Marchiano, Ian Ratner, Adam Schefter, Adam Schrager, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Volan, Peter Zelle, Bill Zolla. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and sub -; scribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. worts Editor ...................... . SCOT C, Mrt t r..R ,. I Photo Editors.......................SCOTT LITUCHY ANDI SCI IREIBER PHOTO STAFF: Leslie Boorstein, Karen Handelman, Dana Mendelssohn, John Munson, Darrian Smith, Grace Tsai. 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