The Michigan Dily-- Tuesday, November 15, 1988-- Page 5 LSA student gov't candidates offer variety BY ED KRACHMER AND DAVID SCHWARTZ LSA Student Government has gone widely unnoticed in the past, but making LSA students aware of its government's activities is high on each LSA-SG candidate's agenda in today's election. "There's a lot of people who don't know we're around, and that's a serious problem," said Students for Academic Institutional Development (SAID) presidential candidate David Boris, a sopho- more. However, similarities between parties and candidates end there. As in the past, SAID dominates the ballot, listing 12 candidates for the 15-member executive council, as well as candidates for president and vice president. SAID has been a major part of LSA-SG for the past 11 years, said Boris. He is not advocating any major change in the format of LSA-SG, and said problems with class registration are the most im- portant issues facing LSA stu- dents. SAID candidates differ from most others because they said LSA-SG should not be involved in campus politics, but should only deal with LSA students' academic concerns. "Our purpose is to work with students on an academic level," Boris said. "We leave the political stuff to (the Michigan Student Assembly)." Independent Ben Weinberger, the only other presidential candi- date, criticized the current govern- ment for not doing more. "I don't think they really made a stand on anything," he said. "They really left it up to MSA." Weinberger said issues like the new anti-harassment policy and the recent deputization of campus security officers should be major concerns of LSA-SG. In addition, Weinberger said LSA students should vote on whether the proposed mandatory class on racism should be part of the LSA curriculum. SAID members disagreed, say- ing they favor a mandatory class, although they are not sure what its format should be. "We're determining if it should be a racism class, or a cultural diversity class," Boris said. The Meadow Party, composed of three executive council candi- dates, was formed "in response to what we see as a lot of extrem- ism," said sophomore Norm Mul- lock. He said most issues can be addressed effectively by finding a middle ground, which he said other candidates are not willing to do. - Unlike SAID, the Meadow Party believes LSA-SG should ad- dress non-academic student con- cerns. "Something like the code should be addressed because it af- fects all of the LSA students," Mullock said. Six independent candidates for executive council offer an alterna- tive to SAID and the Meadow Party. Gary Weisserman, a sopho- more, said LSA-SG "should repre- sent the LSA students' concerns on all issues." Sophomore Thomas Revnew echoed Wesserman's view, saying he could better represent the students because he did not have the "skewed views" that the parties do. First-year student Alex Cherin said his prime goal is "to make student involvement more of a given." Sophomore Jason Frank said he is only running on one is- sue - getting rid of campus vio- lence. LSA-SG candidates for president and vice-president Ben Weinberger Derek Smith David Boris (SAID) Jennifer Clough (SAID) for Executive Council (pick 15) independent candidates Thomas Richard Revnew Matthew Armstrong Alex Cherin Gary Weisserman Jason Frank Michael Fried SAID Party Kimberly White Debra Wasserman Jefferson Paul Ehrlich Susan Greenspan Stacy Temares Dawn Emling Brad Meltzer Laurie Solow Debbie Walters Sheryl Stone Seth Meisler Stacia Sydney Smith Meadow Party Danny Kaufman Mike Heilbronner Norm Mullock 'Our purpose is to work with students on an academic level. We leave the political stuff to MSA.' - candidate David Boris 'I don't think (the current government) really made a stand on anything. They really left it up to MSA.' --candidate Ben Weinberger Report _. Continued from Page 1 ors. "Get me that list of correc- tions, then, if we need to, we'll =meet again," he said. "I am always willing to meet with you; I do 'very much want to work with you to move ahead our agenda of diver- sity," he added. "He's always willing to meet "With us as long as we have 50 chanting people in a stairwell," said Thomas Fujita, a member of the University of Michigan Asian Student Coalition. "We have al- ready pointed out the errors - why can't, we meet to make the correc- tions together?" The students also urged Duder- stadt to issue a public statement about the errors, but he refused, saying "the correction sheet will itself be a public statement." In order to publicize the errors to those who have already read the report, the students will hold a press conference at 3:00 p.m. Thursday, either in or outside the Michigan Union. The errors in- clude: -reference to a non-existent "Committee on Hispanic Studies"; -no mention or description of the Latino Studies program; -no mention of Native Ameri- can student programs or resources; -omission of Latino student group scholarships and events; -numerous errors in the events calendar - for example, the film Israel Continued from Page 1 form a governing coalition. Shamir has six weeks to form a 1 coalition, and he was expected to get the needed 61-seat majority by { forming a coalition with small religious and right-wing parties. 1 Two of those parties endorsed him Sunday. Herzog, however, urged Shamir to include the Labor party in a broad coaltion similar to the National Unity government that has been in power since incon- clusive elections in 1984. The president said his office had been flooded with thousands of calls urging a unity government. Many Israelis, most of whom are secular, fear the religious parties will force the passage of laws that will restrict their daily lives. Later yesterday, Shamir invited Labor leader Shimon Peres for coalition talks today, said Shamir aide Avi Pazner. Peres accepted the invitation, Pazner said. Brazil is labelled an "ethnically oriented cultural event"; and -the omission of many minority alumni associations and recruiting efforts. In addition to addressing the re- port, SALSA presented six other demands, including a request for a base budget of $5,000 for all Latino student groups, expansion of the Latino studies program fac- ulty and staff, and funding for a Latino lecture series. "There are some good ideas here," Duderstadt said. But he did not address some of the demands, and referred the students to Univer- sity departments for others. "We feel he should use his in- fluence to do these things," said Martinez. "We will go to the (University's Board of) Regents meeting this week and press him again." 4 self Service with coupon inkoo- the copy center 540 East berty Open 24 Hours 1220 S. University Open 24 Hours Michigan Union Open Ear/ - Open Late Bus Continued from Page 1 The bus symbolizes an Israeli bus that was attacked Oct. 30. An Israeli woman and her three children, two of them infants, died. Hope said the group had received complaints from Arab students who were offended by the "Stop Arab Terrorism" statement that was origi- nally painted on the bus. Hope painted over that message yesterday evening and replaced it with "Stop All Terrorism." An official complaint has already been filed in response to Tagar's first message, charging the group with "discriminatory harassment" against Arab and Arab-American students on ,campus, according to University In- terim Student Policy Administrator Cindy Straub. Rackham graduate student Hilary Shadroui, who submitted the com- plaint, said, "It is discriminatory be- cause there are millions of Arabs in the world and you can't make the generalization, as Tagar has, that all Arabs are terrorists. This kind of thing has no place at our University because it makes the campus envi- ronment hostile for Arab and Arab- Americans." Cibul said, "I think it is really unfortunate that our message came across like it did. I understand the damage it did. It was a mistake, which is why we corrected it." Straub said that regardless of Tagar's decision to remove the lan- guage, "the damage has been done." She added, however, that the new anti-discrimination policy would not cover the complaint against Tagar. CORNER OF STATE AND HILL 994-4040 '(The bus) is a statement that says terrorism will get you nowhere.' - Keith Hope, president of Tagar Rahman said Saturday that the Palestine National Council will adopt both resolutions before the four-day meeting in Algiers ends, ac- cording to the Associated Press. Hope said Tagar will keep the school bus on the Diag irrespective of decisions the P.L.O. makes in Algiers. "No, we won't take it down," he said. "It's a statement that says terrorism will get you nowhere, that it's not going to get you to the peace table." But Palestine Solidarity Com- mittee member Nuha Khoury, a Rackham graduate student, said Tagar's symbol does not promote the idea of peaceful negotiations between Jews and Arabs. "It's racist because it perpetuates the notion that Arabs are terrorists," she said. ALL YOU CAN EAT PIZZA Every TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY $3.75. 6:00p.m..to 9:00p.m. HILL STREET FORUM/GREAT WRITERS SERIES Anne RoIphe "Reflections on the StaRte of Jewry Black - Jewish Relations, Jewish Mothers and Sons, Jewish Sanity and the Pope, The Holocaust and Israeli Politics Tuesday, November 15, 8:00 pm, Green Auditorium, 1429 Hill Street Ann Roiphe's latest novel, Lovingkindness, has been on the New York Times bestseller list and is considered her best book so far. Tickets available at Hillel. Because the alleged harassment occurred on the Diag - an open fo- rum for free speech - and did not include physical violence or destruc- tion of property, she said, Tagar's statement could not be considered a violation of the policy. Tagar's Diag addition comes at the same time as Palestinian leaders around the world meet in Algiers to decide whether to accept the U.N. Security Council resolutions that would officially recognize the state of Israel and renounce all forms of ter- rorism. PLO spokesperson Ahmed Abdul- 769-0500 ii THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 JOSTENS GOLD RINGSALE IS COMING! .% MAMA Look at the birds of the air; They do not sow or reap, nor store away in barns, yet your heavenlyfatherfeeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to your life? -Matthew 6:26-27 Stand Up Comedy presents ene hilarious... TIM ROLANDS with student comedians Greg Zywicki Mike Tower Rich Eisen Stop by and see a Jostens representative, Monday, Nov. 14-thru Friday, Nov. 18, 11a.m. to 4 p.m., to celart frm n rmel.. lnt 'f nlririn II 2