I Page 10 -The Michigan Daily, Thursday, September 10, 1987 MSA: the mouthpiece for 'U' students By MARTHA SEVETSON Imagine 50 students sitting around an extended oval table. Three of the students ardently support military research at the University, and four other students have organized a sit-in against it. The rest of the students don't know the pros and cons of the particular issue, but they will before the night is over. Every Tuesday night, the representatives of the Michigan Student Assembly meet to tackle both the national and local issues that confront them. Although the assembly often passes resolutions to endorse a position, they rarely do so without dissent. "As an organization, MSA is really unique at the University," said MSA President Ken Weine, an LSA senior. "You have a College Republican sitting across the table from a Marxist. You're bound to have interesting and drawn-out discussions and arguments." WEINE was drawn to MSA in his first year by his concern over the debate on the code of non- academic conduct although he had never participated in high school student government. "MSA gives students who are concerned about an issue an avenue to express their interests," Weine said. "In high school, there didn't seem to be any salient issues." Opposition to the code, Weine's primary interest, has been one of the assembly's primary issues for nearly 20 years. Under a Univer - sity's Board of Regents' bylaw, the students are given the right to veto any proposed code. The assembly has vetoed all University proposals and staunchly oppose any code proposal that includes academic sanctions such as suspension or expulsion. ALTHOUGH a code drafted by the administration seems imminent, continued opposition has success - fully postponed the issue, and MSA representatives hope the University will eventually write a code excluding unacceptable sanctions. In addition to the code, assembly members have worked on removing a residence hall party policy, installing emergency phones, and improving lighting on campus. Vice President Becca Felton, an LSA senior, joined the assembly her first year when the assembly's Women's Issues committee spon - sored a sit-in at the Fleming Building for better lighting. "I think it's great if people start out with one issue, like I did with women's issues," Felton said. "Students who have been involved with student advocacy in high school definitely have a place here." ACCORDING to Weine, sit- ins, protests, and letter-writing campaigns comprise most of the assembly's power. In addition, student appointees to administration committees can participate in University decision-making. "We don't have any wielding power, any leverage," Felton said, adding, "We don't have any monetary power unless we put all of our funds into protest." The MSA constitution has never been approved by the regents, but the board bi-annually approves assembly funding through the Student Verification Form. Ac - cording to Associate Vice President for Student Services Thomas Easthope, MSA is considered a legitimate voice of the students. "The University funds (MSA) to be the student governance on this campus," Easthope said. "They carry weight because they have been elected by their constituency. How the students view them is much more important than how the administration views them." A TURNOUT of over 6,000 students to vote in the MSA election last March, the highest in over ten years, indicates that many students do view the assembly as their mouthpiece to the administration. Last March, a petition from the Involved in Michigan Political Action Committee asking assembly members to restrict themselves to working on campus issues was another indication that students consider MSA important. IMPAC member Sandy Hauser, LSA senior, said group members thought that resolutions on international issues did not represent students' viewpoints. . "We hope we've sent a message to the members of MSA that they should either not vote on international issues at all or get some feedback before voting," Hauser said. IN ADDITION to passing resolutions and advocating student concerns, MSA has a bureaucratic and administrative side. The assembly has six external com - missions such as Women's Issues and Student Rights, and six internal committees such as Rules and Elections which handle the administrative affairs of the assembly. "There are two assemblies," Weine explained. "One deals with lobbying the administration on campus issues. The other assembly is a facility for student organ - izations. We do everything from providing space for donut sales and coffee to allocating funds to student groups." Last year MSA was responsible for bring Rev. Jesse Jackson to campus and provided funding for Rape Awareness Days. According to LSA senior Hilary Farber, former chair of the Women's Issues Committee, the assembly does not take enough credit for the events it sponsors. "I DON'T think people know enough about the student govern - ment," Farber said. "We operate behind the scenes and do all these good things, but there's not an increase in voting in the elections. People don't even know who's on (MSA)." Farber attributed MSA's increa - sed visibility on campus last March to the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan campaign (PIRGIM). The PIRGIM funding controversy centered around whether the interest group should be funded through MSA or not. More students voted either for or against funding PIRGIM than voted for the president. The PIRGIM controversy also divided assembly, members for much of last year. Former MSA president Kurt Muenchow wanted PIRGIM to return to the regents for funding, but the majority of representatives agreed that the environmental group would only survive with MSA funding. The regents approved funding for PIRGIM through the MSA fee in June. The debates and political ploys over the issue often lasted late Tuesday nights and, according to Felton, tied up many of the assembly's "key players." "I think most representatives are political, and that's why they're here," Felton said. "It's not a bunch of people who want to be senator or president of the United States, but they're people who really care about an issue." :aq z> ' 6k ; y4 Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON MSA President Ken Weine and Vice President Becca Felton listen to University Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson offer the University's Board of Regents a proposal for funding the assembly. The Diag 'U's main hang out offers it all Daily Photo by DANA MENDELSSOHN Amy Markowitz dressed as penguin--the symbol of the Alternative Career Fair sponsored by East Quad-hands out stickers on the Diag advertising the fair. REM NANTSI By ARLIN WASSERMAN In 1841, the University decided to put paved walk ways in a grassy, tree-coverd portion of the then fledgling campus. The walk ways started at different ends of the campus and met smack in the center - the birth of the Diag. Now, 146 years later, fraternity and sorority members jump in jello, people speak about the second coming, recent alumni build ten- foot tall skate board ramps, and students just hang out when they probably should be doing some - thing else. 74 percent of all doors in the University, excluding bathroom and dorm room doors, open onto the Diag, so if you're lost you're probably on the Diag which is all right since there's usually a lot going on. Some people may be trying to sell airplane lessons or little green and red tags. The airplane lesson cost more. Greeks dribble basketballs and ride on seesaws for days on end trying to set records and raise money for charity. Students build shanties in protest of Apartheid. People from Dyanetics hand out personality quizzes, and giant penguins walk around handing out little stickers. Between the hours of noon and 1 p.m., students can exercise their Constitutional right of free speech. bo Thrift ho Gently Used Merchandise in Exceptional Condition *Vintage clothes eClassic accessories *A variety of books eHousehold items 1149 BROADWAY (across from Kroger 's) Mon.-Fri. 10-4 Sat. 10-1 High noon at the Diag has seen many heated rallies. BAM III started the rally there last year that would eventually prompt a face-to-face discussion with University president Harold Shapiro about racism on campus. In 1953 the graduating class donated a three hundred-pound"brass 'M' to place right in the middle the Diag. Years later the 'M' took on an aura of its own and a legend which warns that first-year students will fail their first blue book exam if they step on it. Upperclass students often flaunt their imperviousness to the curse by sitting on the 'M'. Some even take pleasure in tormenting first- year students. According to one large senior, "It's real fun. We make them jump on the 'M' and then they squeal real loud. I can't wait for the fall." But if incoming students can make it through those first couple of months on the Diag and still pass their first exam, then they're well on their way to becoming Diag veterans and ready for more of the campus' main hang out. And there is much more. Come spring the Diag is the scene of a big bash - a Hash Bash to be more exact. The Hash Bash, celebrated every April 1, is one of Ann Arbor's rites of spring as students and Ann Arbor residents get together to celebrate the city's $5 fine for possession of marijuana. Although the popularity of the bash took a dive in the '80s, recent years have witnessed a8revival of enthusiasm for the 18 year-old tradition. Another Diag party that was held for the first time last spring and hopes to become an annual tradition as well is Spring Thaw. Put on to raise money for the Ronald McDonald House, Spring Thaw brings together local bands and puts them on the steps of the Graduate Library for an afternoon of live music and - if last year's is any indication - a lot of partying. So whether you want to jump for joy, jump into a protest, or jump in jello, you can do it at the Diag. Come on down, experience it, but be careful not to let the older students make you walk on the 'M'. ALWAYS A GREAT SELECTION OF CARPET REMNANTS 40% -50% OFF GREAT FOR YOUR: Dorm Rooms Apartments Homes Daily Photo by DANA MENDELSSOHN Earle Restaurant chef Mike Bush skateboards on a ramp placed on the Free Ireland Solidarity Committee shanty on the Diag on St. Patrick's Day. State ignores 'U' $ request L Carpet Installation OPEN: TWTh 8-6 Tools & Supplies F 8-8 Closed Sun. & Mon. The Remnant Room (Continued from Page3 Concern about the growing number of out-of-state students accepted on this basis prompted an amendment to the Senate's higher education bill in June. If the bill passes, the University would be forced to give priority to "qualified Michigan students" over out-of- state applicants. "We're sending a message to the University of Michigan and any other University that does not hold our Michigan students in highest esteem a message," Hood said. "I've had a number of complaints about the high number of in-state students who've graduated from high school and can't be admitted because of out-of-staters." But University Regent Paul Brown (D-Petoskey) said that the benefits of admitting out-of-state students outweigh the problem of limited space for in-staters. "It's not as if all in-state students stay here forever, and all out-of-state students run off home," Brown said. According to Duderstadt, the University needs a minimal budget of $24 million. He told the University Board of Regents in June that an additional $21 million will be necessary to meet financial obligations which include a $1 million initiative to improve undergraduate life, a new contract for University teaching assistants, and improved laboratory equipment. Although Duderstadt denied that the tuition hike could reach ten percent, he indicated that peer insti- tutions were facing increases of up to 12 percent and that large in- creases would probably not adversely affect the growing pool of applicants. 4,, ,,. 4- 'C, C, 6885 Jackson Rd. * 668-7030 . 112 miles west of Zeeb Road W NOW PLAYING ON B ROADWAY -1151 Broadway- I First order of checks FREE for new student accounts opened at our two campus locations. ,,,