The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 16, 1987 - Page 5 FLASH party David Sternlicht for President John Villanueva for V.P. Blue party Seth Klukoff for President David Vogel for V.P. Bigfoot party David Newblatt for President Charles Heckstall for V. P. Students First Ken Weine for President Rebecca Felton for V.P. Racism hits cal Stand on is-Lie/party 1. Is there a line between campus and non-campus issues ? yes no yes no 2. Do you want MSA to handle campus issues only? yes yes yes no 3. Do you support the current ban on classified military research that has the purpose of killing or maiming human life? yes yes yes yes 4. Do you wish to extend this ban to unclassfied military research? yes no yes yes 5. Do you support a refundable fee for PIRGIM through MSA? no no yes yes 6. low many non-white candidates does your party have? 2 1 9 6 t 7. H-low many women does your party have? 9 3 5 10 8. How many candidates does your party have total? 20 15 16 24 9. I-low many candidates in your party have experience in MSA, either as elected officers or committee members? 3 6 8 10. How many years of experience does your party have in total? 7 1 6 12 11. Are there circumstances in which your party would work for a student strike to shut down the University if necessary to stop the implementation of a non-academic code of conduct? yes no yes yes 12. If it seims that the University administration is not doing much to combat racism and'the United Coalition Against Racism (UCAR) calls for a student strike this year similar to the strike in 1970 that shut down the University, would your party work for #that strike? yes maybe yes Yes 13. Do you think MSA should fund political groups, such as the College Democrats and Republicans? no yes yes yes Daily Graphic by HENRY PARK Calm marks MSA elections (Continued from Page 1) The administration denies that it' has backed down on a commitment to civil rights, with Assistant At - torney General William Bradford Reynolds saying last month: "We have had for the last six years the most active and energetic law en - forcement program in the field of civil rights in our history." SEVERAL widely publicized incidents brought the issue of campus racism to the fore. Last October at The Citadel, a military academy in Charleston, S.C., five cadets dressed as mem - bers of the Ku Klux Klan broke into a black freshman cadet's room, shouted obscenities and left a burned paper cross. Weeks later, white students at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst attacked 10 black students in a brawl following the New York Met's World Series victory over the Boston Red Sox. THIS MONTH, racial tension at the University of Michigan prompted a hearing on that cam - pus's problems. Among the inci - dents: fliers declaring "open season" on blacks, racist graffiti, and a stu - dent disc jockey who broadcast ra - cist jokes. A check of campuses across the country suggests a more extensive problem: -On Jan. 26 a cross was burned in front of Purdue University's Black Cultural Center. On Feb. 11, the words "Death Nigger" were car - ved into the office door of a coun - selor in the School of Sciences. -At Northern Illinois University, 11 students face possible suspen - sion for racial harassment, and the university is offering a $500 reward for the identification of those re - sponsible for distributing racially offensive posters and fliers. -A University of Colorado fra - ternity faces sanctions for distri - buting a poster on Martin Luther King's birthday of a black woman with the caption, "Come Play With Me." -A WELLESLEY College trustee resigned in February after students protested her remark that black employees at her firm pre - ferred selling drugs to working. -Vanderbilt University ordered its fraternities and sororities in January to make a good-faith effort to in - tegrate racially and ethnically or be shut down. sA former black student filed a discriminations charge against Pillsbury Baptist Bible College in Minnesota, alleging that the school disciplined him and other blacks more harshly than whites, and that he was forbidden by school officials to date a white woman. -University of Virginia students said in a campus poll this winter that racism is the school's biggest problem. -LAST YEAR at Penn State University, photocopied fliers with a coiled white snake and the words "Don't tread on me, blackie" ap - peared on campus, and some black students complained of receiving anonymous racist phone calls. LAz P HC.RA"'C5 o (CoF" NG U RINTING U BNDIN G FORmiS aiphlgraphios Printshops Of The Future COPIES Open 7 Days GRAND OPENING SPECIAL 663-6816 715 N. UNIVERSITY (2nd Floor) Located at: S. STATE & N. UNIVERSITY By MARTHA SEVETSON The name-calling and poster wars which drew students' attention ,to °last year's Michigan Student Assembly election have been replaced this year by two weeks of lukewarm publicity and minor procedural complaints. LSA junior Hilary Farber, chair of MSA's Women's Issues Com - mittee said the lack of controversy will probably reduce voter turnout in the elections, which begin tomorrow. "If I wasn't involved -with MSA this year, I'm not sure " "I'd know there was an election going on," she said. Farber said the controversy last -year involved more students in the election. "I don't think there is any group that's gotten to enough of the students," Farber said. "If -Anything, the PIRGIM question will get people to vote more in the election. They have gotten out posters far better than any other party. Posters linking one party to a Marxist organization and com - plaints about the use of a character from "Bloom County" to advertise the another party provoked an intense competition between the rival groups last March. Farber said postering around campus became a "crazy contest." "Everyone was tearing down everybody's posters, and fights were breaking out," Farber said. THE only complaints reported this year are accusations of early campaigning or failure to register posters with the election director. John Villanueva of the FLASH party accused the Students First party of campaigning before March 3, the first official day of campaigning, and Julie Murray of the Students First party filed the same claim against FLASH. Both parties were fined. The campaign tactics that dominated last year's election led to the establishment this year of an election court to settle candidates' disputes. The Office of Student Services handled the complaints last year. "Because of the election court, the election director has much more support," according to Bruce Belcher, chair of MSA's Rules and Elections Committee. "Mudsling - ing can be stopped before it gets out of hand." In addition, a new election rule demands that all campaign material be turned in to the election director before it is distributed. Both the Bigfoot party and the Student Committee for Reform and Progress hung posters before getting approval, but only the Bigfoot party was fined. "It seems that all the groups are making minor infractions," said Belcher. "It's pretty balanced." WOMEN AND MEN NEEDED TO FACILITATE WORKSHOPS ON SEXUAL ASSAULT *STUDENT LED WORKSHOPS * LEARN VALUABLE COMMUNICATION AND FACILITATION SKILLS * TRAINING PROVIDED Applications available at the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center 3100 Michigan Union * For more Info call: 763-5865 * App. due: 3/19 et ahead on your summer look I * ~ TANNING CENTERS I 1 f* on campus: I 216 S. State Westside: I 747-8844 Student ID required 1896 W. Stadium expires April30 1987 1 eSu 1122 South University 665-9009 FIRST OF THE WEEK SPECIALS THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Winter Term 1987 Calendar of Events WEDNESDAY, March 18. "Winter Colloquium Series on Schooling and Intel- lectual Development" - Tribute Room, 1322 School of Education Building, 4to 5 p.m. Speaker: Dr. Giyoo Hatano of Dokkyo University, Japan, on ''Bridging the Gap Between Formal and Informal Knowledge." Free: for information, contact the Center for Research on Learning and Schooling, 3112 School of Education Building, or call (313) 763-2374. WEDNESDAY, March 18. "Administrator's Update: Science from the Princi- pal's Perspective"- Ann Arbor Inn, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Speakers: Prof. Burton Voss, U-M science educator, and invited administrators and teachers in service. Cost: $15 for University of Michigan EESA Title II Science and/or Math Institute participants; $30 for others. Fee includes lunch. Intended for principals and other instructional leaders in elementary and/or middle schools. For infor- mation, contact Professional Development Office, 1225 School of Education Building, or call (313) 763-9497. FRIDAY, March 20. "Intelligence and Schooling" - Rackham Amphitheater, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Speakers: Morning session - Sandra Scarr, psychologist, University of Virginia and Rich- ard Shweder, anthropologist, University of Chicago; afternoon session - Zhang Houcan, psychologist, Beijing Normal University and Robert Sternberg, psychologist, Yale University. Free; for information, contact Prof. Scott Paris at the Center for Research on Learning and Schooling, 3112 School of Educa- tion Building, or call (313) 763-2374. WEDNESDAY, March 25. "Alumna in Residence" - School of Education Building. Speaker: Gwendolyn Calvert Baker, BA '64, MA '67, PhD '72, executive director of the YWCA of the U.S.A., and member of the New York City Board of Education. Arrangements have been made for informal contacts by Dr. Baker with School of Education students and faculty throughout the day. For details, contact the Dean's Office, 1111 SEB, or call (313) 763-4288. WEDNESDAY, April 1. "Winter Colloquium Series on Schooling and Intellec- tual Development" - Tribute Room, 1322 School of Education Building, 4to 5 p.m. Speaker: Robert Glaser, University of Pittsburgh, on "Expertise, Knowledge, and Instruction." Free: for information, contact the Center for Research on Learning and Schooling, 3112 School of Education Building, or call (313) 763-2374. WEDNESDAY, April 1. "Administrator's Update: Mathematics from the Prin- cipal's Perspective" - Ann Arbor Inn, 9a.m. - 3 p.m. Speakers: Prof. Joseph Payne, U-M mathematics educator, and administrators and teachers in service. Cost: $15 for University of Michigan EESA Title 11 Science and/or Math Institute participants; $30 for others. Fee includes lunch. Intended for principals and other instructional leaders in elementary and/or middle schools. This and the March 18 workshop on science are a series. Cost for both sessions is $25 for EESA participants and $50 for others. For information, contact Professional Development Office, 1225 School of Education Building, or call (313) 763-9497. FRIDAY, April 3. School of Education A wards Ceremony - Schorling Auditor- ium, School of Education Building, 2 p.m. Speaker: Dr. Foster B. Gibbs, Superintendent of the Saginaw Public Schools, (Topic to be announced). r_ _ _ ,., .... ,t..11 : - 7A- - a 4,.. _C.,- 11,,11 . - - - r 'i n ..r: n R :n - -- n n r ll ,i ,d_? (. MON DAY: 70C HOT DOGS AT P J.'S DOG HOUSE. TUESDAY: 70C TACOS AT TIOS SOFT OR CRISP SHELL. WE WILL DELIVER $5.00 MINIMUM. 665-7797 WEDNESDAY: .70C OFF ANY SANDWICH PLATTER AT SULLY'S SOUPS, f%\ A I A f""N " f% /" A i r"'N A IIi/""%I i r- r"