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L..; ... .. ..... ....... ............. ..$:'.: .... ........... : ... v. ............................., ::: : ::>:c:o- ., ,. .. a:' "., OPINION 4 ARTS 5 SPORTS 10 From student to teacher: Co-captain Roberts knows defense LaGROC demands a real response from the 'U' Present Laughter to hopefully generate future laughter Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom Vol. C, No. 60 Ann Arbor, Michigan -Thursday, November 30, 1989 Csp#" TMe M~M IRAv k va4 4i'9a a e ^-orarr. .e f A Errors, goofs characterize electioi by Karen Akerlof Daily Staff Writer Fishbowl poll workers told a Board of Student Publications candi- date that he couldn't vote in the stu- dent election in which he was a can- didate. Ballots for the Rackham Stu- dent Government ran out. A Conser- vative Coalition candidate's name was left off some ballots. The first of two days of student elections suffered from a series of mishaps and errors. However, Elec- tion Director Michelle Putnam - after conferring with Michigan Stu- dent Assembly General Counselor John Coleman - said yesterday's ballots for the assembly's LSA rep- resentatives were still valid and all elections will continue today. Conservative Coalition Assistant Campaign Director Melissa Burke said she noticed that Coalition LSA candidate Kyle Dufrane's name was ;missing from her ballot as she voted early yesterday morning at the Fishbowl. By 9:15 she had notified Putnam, who attributed the error to problems Lday in the production process. Only seven people voted on the incorrect ballots before the error was detected, Putnam said. Those people will be contacted, informed of the error, and invited to recast their ballots today. As election directors scrambled to correct ballots, poll workers incor- rectly told law students they were ineligible to vote in the elections. Peter Mooney, a first year law stu- dent and candidate in the Board of Student Publications elections, said a poll worker told him he couldn't vote because there were no law stu- dents running in the elections. "I'm a candidate. I'm running," he told her, and she finally allowed him to vote. Putnam acknowledged the prob- lem, "We have all these poll workers who are not informed." Paid sorority members and volunteers from the Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity and the Engineering Council staff the voting sites and are provided with the necessary information. Putnam criticized the poll work- See ELECTIONS, Page 2 Before Michigan's 85-70 win over Grambling State, the 1989 NCAA Championship banner was displayed to the Crisler Arena crowd. Wolverine coach Steve Fisher (right) led Michigan to an 80-79 overtime victory over Seton Hall in last season's championship game in Seattle. Publication Board election mishandled Czechoslovaki a PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) that crushed reform - The Communist-run Parliament vakia and would be I swiftly ended the party's 40-year tiate the withdra monopoly on power yesterday and a troops. Politburo member said Czechoslo- It was the first si vakia's first free elections since 1948 a top-echelon officia could be held within a year. Vasil Mohorita, The move was a frantic effort to ruling Politburo, tol satisfy the demands of the growing ence that now that pro-democracy movement here. Party had agreed to Premier Ladislav Adamec said he plete control, free e intended to negotiate a reassessment held within 12 mon of the 1968 Warsaw Pact invasion Voting with the m in Czechoslo- prepared to nego- wal of Soviet uch statement by al. a member of the d a news confer- the Communist relinquish com- lections could be ths. somber, mechan- ical gestures born of decades of rub- berstamp approval of Communist measures, the 309 deputies unani- mously scrapped Article 4 of the constitution, which mandated" the leading role of the Communist Party. They also deleted a clause that bases all education on Marxism- Leninism. "The revolution is proceeding much quicker than we expected," said Jiri Dienstbier, spokesperson for the Civic Forum opposition, minutes after the vote was broadcast live on national television. The emergency parliamentary session ended late Wednesday, the Soviet news agency Tass said. The changes were among historic concessions the opposition won from the Communist government on Tuesday when Adamec also promised to form a new government, includ- ing non-Communists, by Sunday. to hold free elections - by Daniel Poux Daily Staff Writer Two problems with balloting and voting procedures in yesterday's Board for Student Publications election may jeopardize the validity of the results. One candidate's name was omitted from the ballot. The Michigan Student Assembly's election directors issued new ballots, but didn't notice the mistake until 4:00 p.m. yesterday, after hundreds of students had already voted. LSA junior Steve Susswein, the candidate left off the ballot, did not find out he had been overlooked until several hours after polls opened. Susswein said he originally ran with a partner with the "Students for a Responsible Daily" party. Before the Nov. 8 candidacy deadline, Susswein asked the election directors to drop the party title from his candidacy. Instead, Susswein's name was accidentally dropped from the ballot. Susswein said he was confused at first, because he went to the MSA office to confirm the change and found his name in the correct form on a sample ballot posted outside MSA. In fact, Susswein's name was included in an advertisement for the Board of Student Publication's candidates that ran in Wednesday's Daily. MSA Election Director Michelle Putnam said the original blue Student Publications Board ballots were removed from the polling sites and replaced with corrected yellow ballots at about 4:00. Anyone who voted in the board election before 4:00 will have to vote again today, Putnam said, because the original blue ballots will not be counted. Susswein was not satisfied with the election directors' decision. "Any way you look at it, this whole election is going to be unfair to somebody," he said. "The whole process of getting people to re-vote is a very laborious process, and it is still not fair," he said. "I still will be at a disadvantage because I was not on the ballot when people expected to vote, or when they voted the first time." However, Putnam said, "Susswein made his request at a busy time, and we made a mistake." There were other problems with the vote. In past Student Publications Board elections, See BOARD, Page 2 Guerrillas continue Salvadoran offensive SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - Rebels invaded parts of the capital's most affluent neighbor- hoods before dawn yesterday and dug in after often-fierce combat with government forces. The number of fatalities from the latest guerrilla offensive was not clear. Eleven bodies of combatants were seen lying in the streets. In Washington, Secretary of State James Baker said guerrillas "briefly overran" a U.S. Embassy officer's home and "we are taking steps to as- sure the safety of embassy person- nel." Embassy personnel were told not to report to work yesterday, and the embassy was closed for the day, White House spokesperson Roman Popadiuk said. Administration offi- cials said no Americans were injured. A State Department committee monitoring events in El Salvador re- ported that the home of the embassy employee, who was not identified, apparently was seized at random. "The family was safely evacuated by Salvadoran government forces, and the family was not actually in the hands of the guerrillas at any time," said David Denny, a depart- ment spokesperson. Heavy and sustained fire was re- ported blocks from the residence of U.S. Ambassador William Walker. Embassy spokesperson Jeff Brown had said Walker was "fine... The paries: Were they stand+ ABOLMiONIS Abolish current assembly structure and replace it with a grassroots structure. Do away with current MSA recognition policy and give all groups the right to utilize'office space in the Union. Supports absolute free speech at the University. Fight tuition hikes by soliciting funds from private sources. CHOICE Stresses experience of leadership. Opposes putting Peace & Justice Commission to student vote. Will continue to work on minority, women's, and student rights issues. CONSERVATIVE C A N Favors keeping students' money on campus and opposes Mirror, mirror on the wall Art School senior Mike Rivilis paints his self-portrait for an advanced painting class. For the past three weeks, he strived to portray his inner self on the portrait. Sme campus fraternity pets suffer from neglect by Heather Fee Daily Staff Writer Thatcher was killed by a speeding car last year during his fraternity's serenade to the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Sigma Chi's house dog for nine the few students who don't have to give up their canine companions when they move into rented hous- ing. But with all the responsibilities that go with being a college student, some have questioned the quality of care the animals receive. and she feared they would revoke her funds. No one responded to her ads. Four days later, she heard from a neighbor of the fraternity that the golden labrador retriever belonged to Delta Tau Delta.