Change allows voting raud BY MIGUEL CRUZ Unlike past elections, voters in Ann Arbor this year cast their bal- lots after checking only their birth- dates and addresses against registra- tion lists. Previously, copies of their signatures were provided to poll workers for verification. Someone knowing a registered voter's address and date of birth could conceivably beat that person to the poll and vote in their place. An unidentified election worker worried that this leaves the door open for Chicago-style "vote early, vote of- ten" ballot-box stuffing. Micki Crawford, director of elections for Washtenaw county, said she felt the potential for fraud was minimal. She said that the re- gistration lists fulfill legal require- ments. "It's unfortunate that we don't have a hard and fast rule," she added, but said it was unlikely that someone would know a person's name, birthdate, address, registration status, and whether or not they had already voted. Poll workers at two Ann Arbor sites said they hadn't heard of any unresolved complaints from voters trying to vote after records showed their names had already been used. . - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 9, 1988 - Page 5 Fans fight for blood OSU L before game Fighting the battle DAVID LUBLINER/Doily Sandy Plummer, a Music School sophomore, does her part to help Michigan win the annual Michigan-Ohio State blood battle. The battle ends on Nov. 18. and the winner will be announced at halftime of the Nov. 19 football game. BY LAURA COHN Before watching Michigan and Ohio State football players draw blood on the football field Nov. 19, students and faculty from both schools can give their own blood to boost school spirit. The annual Michigan vs. Ohio State Blood Battle - a blood drive created to assist local hospitals in the Ann Arbor and Columbus areas - began Monday and will run until Nov. 18. After almost two weeks of com- peting for pints, the winner will be announced during halftime of the football game at OSU. "The rivalry between Michigan and Ohio State is so intense that we thought it'd be a fun competition to aid the 70 hospitals in our south- eastern Michigan area," said Neal Fry, the University's Red Cross Re- gional Representative. Because there are more people in Ann Arbor than in Columbus, Ohio State has set its goal at only 5,750 pints of blood, compared to Michi- gan's 6,275. The school that comes closest to meeting its goal wins the blood battle. "If we can't beat Michigan on the field, maybe we can beat them in the Blood Battle," said Dave Estepp, the Coordinator/Consultant for the Columbus-area Red Cross. Michigan has won the Blood Battle in four out of the six previous years, but no matter who wins, this Judge rules extension in SOUTHFIELD (AP) - Last night a federal appeals judge upheld an order requested by Democrats to keep the polls in this Detroit suburb open an extra three hours. Sixth U.S. Circuit Appeals Judge Damon Keith upheld an earlier rul- ing by U.S. District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor, said Dan Weiss, press secretary to Michael Dukakis' Michigan campaign. Attorneys for the Republican party, who sought the appeal, de- unique form of the traditional Ann Arbor-Columbus rivalry will aid people who need it most. "There really are no losers," said Fry, "since the winners are the sickc and injured who really need the blood. We need 1,200 units of blood per day for our hospitals, and this competition obviously really helps us." Students in Michigan's Alpha Phi Omega, a national service fraternity, are helping with the blood drive competition - now seven years old. "I feel that (the blood drive) is the most important thing we do," said Blood Battle chair Tina Koontz, ta Michigan LSA senior in Alpha Phi Omega. "I think it's important to involve the whole campus here at Michigan, so that everyone will be aware of the seriousness and impor- tance of donating blood." At Ohio State, the entire campis Greek system is participating in some aspect of this year's battle. Blood mobiles assist the fraternities and sororities in collecting the blood. Fry said any healthy student at least 17 years old and weighing more than 110 pounds can donate blood during the battle. On campus, stu- dents and faculty can donate blood at various residence halls and the Michigan Union. Donating takes about an hour. Updated figures on pints collected will be released today at 10 a.n'i., Blood Battle workers said. for poll zSouthfield I THE LIST U' di ctionary to receive $950,000 What's happening in Ann Arbor today Speakers "Perestroika and Glasnost in Contemporary Soviet Culture" - Evgenii A. Helimsky, Vyacheslav V. Ivanov and Sergei A. Starostin, Lane Hall Commons, 12 noon, Brown Bag. Three Soviet linguists participate in Roundtable discussion. "Pulsed-Field Gel Elec- trophotesis" - Chem. Prof. Mau- reen Lanan, 1200 Chem. Bldg., 4 pm. "Hematopolesis: Differentia- tion of Complex Tissue" - S. Emerson, 1017 Dow Bldg., 4-5 pm. "Oxidative Cyclization of B- Lactam .. Antibiotic. Biosynthe- sis" - Prof. C. Townsend, Johns Hopkins University, 1300 Chem. Bldg., 4 pm. "Blocompatibility of Dental Casting Alloys" - R. Craig, 1033 Kellogg, 4 pm. "Parental Attachment Repre- sentation & Its Relationship to the Infant's Experience of Attachment" - M. Main, Rack- ham E. Conference Rm., 1:15-2:45 pm. Meetings International Students Affairs Committee - International Center, 7:30 pm. Part of MSA. Stilyagi Air Corps/Science Fiction Club - Michigan League, '8:15 pm. x Women in Communications, Inc. - 2050 Frieze Bldg., 4:10 pm. Speaker from Hudson's FYI Wardrob- ing and Interviewing Styles. Mitzvah Project - 219 Angell Hall, 6:30 pm. Biweekly meeting. "Is Food Your Drug?"/Support Group - Michigan League, Conference Rm. 4, 6 pm. Confidential. U of M Asian Student Coali- tion (UMASC) - 2439 Mason Hall, 7 pm. U of M Taekwondo Club - 2275 CCRB, 6:30-8:15 pm. "The Course: Planning and Discussion Concerning the Proposed University Wide Course About Racism" - 802 Monroe St., Guild House, 8 pm. Furthermore Beans and Rice Dinner - Guild House, 6 pm. Concerned Faculty Brown Bag Lunch - Guild House, 12 noon. Washtenaw Community Col- lege Career Week - Two job hunting films shown on second floor lounge area of Student Center Bldg. "Resume and Cover Letter Writing", 9 am-12 noon; and "Interviewing for a Job", 1-4 pm. English Peer Counseling - 4000A Michigan Union, 7-9 pm. Help with papers and other English related questions. Deciding Your Career Part II (Fr/Soph) - Career Planning and Placement Center, 4:10-6 pm. University Lutheran Chapel - "Holden Village Vespers", 9 pm. 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Film Series - "Racism at U of M", 447 Mason Hall, 4-6 pm. "Negotiating the Dissertation Process, Phase I" - Rackham E. Conference Rm., 7:30-9 pm. Panel Discussion. Study Abroad Workshop - In- ternational Center, 4-5 pm. Men's Campus Club - Social for gay & bisexual male students, E. Law Quad Cook Rm., 9-11 pm. Family Asthma Program - Domino's Farm, 30 Frank Lloyd Wright Drive, Tom Monaghan's per- sonal office, 7 pm. Performances Guest Recital - Blanche Anderson Moore Hall, School of Music, 8 pm. Werner Jacob, organ. Residence Hall Repertory The- ater - "Babes and Biceps: Is that all?", a show on sexism and gender roles. South Quad, W. Lounge, 10 pm. The BEAT Presents - "The Eels", 10:30 pm. $3 cover charge. Star Trax - Performs at Mountain Jacks, 8:30 pm-12:30 am. Record you vocals on over 400 types of songs. BY MARK MENDELIS The efforts of University re- searchers - who have attempted to compile a Middle English Dictionary (MED) since the 1930s - were fi- nally awarded last week when the University received a $950,000 grant to fund its completion. Big deal, some may say. But this is no ordinary dictionary. When completed, the MED will run some 15,000 pages and provide a compre- hensive, highly detailed record of the English language from the period 1100 A.D. to 1500 A.D. The dictionary will include a wide range of words, their varied mean- ings, and literary passages that pre- sent the words in their historical context. University English Prof. and Ex- ecutive Director of the MED Jay Robinson said the dictionary "is es- sentially a resource for scholars... a resource for those studying the his- tory of English or its texts. It's used by quite a wide variety of people right now... even those studying the history of medicine." The grant was provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation - a philanthropic organization that funds research and investigation of the hu- manities - especially at the univer- sity level. The $950,000 donation is the third Mellon Foundation grant given to the University in the last 15 years. Grants of $600,000 and $950,000 were given to the University in 1982 and 1974 respectively for the same project. The money will pay the salaries of a full and part-time team of 16 to 18 researchers and professors that are currently working on the project, Robinson said. Volumes of the dictionary are published as individual letters are completed. Many versions of the University's MED often reveal unique, multi-page entries. Consider the following entry taken from the 'P' volume published in 1983: "porringe ger. The act of packing or filling in a space. (al 398) * Trev. Barth. 249b/b: Hvrden hatte Stupa and is clensyng off all of hempe.. and men in olde tyne cleped it Stypa, as it were, stoppynge or porrynge." Chaucer couldn't have said it bet- ter, right? At present, the research team is halfway through the letter 'S', the longest letter in the alphabet. While 'S' is being finished, 10 members of the editorial team are working on letter 'T'. "We're aiming to have all prelim- inary editing done by 1994," Robin- son said, "but then it will probably take a year-and-a-half to two years to finish up the project." cided nott ther, said tary to th George Bu Taylor in Southfi p.m. beca overwhelm machinesa Mary B at South 56,000 re to pursue the case any fur- Scott Gring, press secre- e Michigan campaign for ush. ordered 16 polling places ield to stay open until 11 use crowds of voters had med the number of voting available. Bonner, a deputy city clerk field, said the city had gistered voters. Lne s Continued from Page 1 Residence Hall, who were waiting over two hours, election assistants played music and passed out cider and doughnuts. Although students were frustrated, most remained determined to wait it out. LSA Junior Jill Gurvey entered the line at East Quad knowing that she would be an hour late for work. "I have to vote,.'she said. Voting sites all over the city of Ann Arbor reported lines of at least an hour. Lori Bell, precinct one chair in the First Ward, attributed the long line at the Michigan Union to the fact that many people did not kn6w where to vote. "There are a lot .of new voters - 18-year-olds and 20- year-olds," Bell said. ILAI HEALTH &LFITNESS 14 I~li " 14 I N ; I a-A-m All items for the weekday list must be mailed or delivered to us at 420 Maynard at least three days before your upcoming event. There will be no previews of any kind, and all items for Weekend Magazine must be delivered the Friday before publication. BUSINESS LEADERS of Tomorrow... 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