The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition -Thursday, September 10,1992- Page 9 Geake wins Repub. congressional primary, beats U-M prof. Tanter ~1 by Josh Dubow and Jeff Williams Daily Staff Reporters CANTON - State Sen. Robert Geake won a surprisingly convinc- ing victory in the 13th Congressional district in the beginning of August. Geake defeated five candidates for the nomination, including U-M Prof. Raymond Tanter - Geake's closest challenger. The other candidates included Burl Adkins, Glen Kassel, Herbert Scott, and. William Steele. Geake will go on to challenge in- cumbent Democrat William Ford in the November election. "We expected to win from the beginning. I had experience as an elected official and was the only one who had roots in Washtenaw and Wayne County," Geake said. Tanter refused to comment to a Daily reporter about his strategy for the fall campaign. Geake has served in state gov- ernment for 20 years and is vice chair of the Senate Appropriations committee. Members of Geake's staff said they were surprised by Geake's showing in Washtenaw County, where they expected Tanter to garner a larger portion of the vote. "We expected to win, but not as comfortably as it looks," Geake Campaign Manager John Norton said. "The one surprise is how close the race was in Ann Arbor. (Geake's) support in Washtenaw County is strong and that should help in November." Geake said he was pleased that he and the other candidates ran clean campaigns, rather than resorting to the mudslinging that occurred in other races statewide. "Unlike many other races, this campaign was remarkably free of negative campaigning," Geake said. "It was a positive campaign on the issues." One of the featured issues of Geake's campaign was the elimina- tion of General Assistance payments for able-bodied adults. Geake's campaign staff will now focus its attention on the November election against Ford. "I think the anti-incumbency feel- ing should play a part in November, but how big remains to be seen," Norton said. "Bill Ford epitomizes what's wrong with the Democratic Congress." "His involvement with the post office and checking scandals will be a factor," Norton added. Geake said he feels that a change in the makeup of Congress is neces- sary. "I believe people are tired of lib- eral Democrats running Congress and their deficit spending," Geake said. Norton said Geake does not plan to change his campaign style for the general election. "We're going to focus on the is- sues," Norton said. "He can run on a strong record. A lot of the voters know what's wrong with Ford with- out us telling them." m Y Geake Tamter i MSA uses summer meetings to learn ropes, network with organizations by Purvi Shah Daily Staff Reporter Summer vacation served as a respite for the Michigan Student Assembly, which passed a two reso- lutions and made few financial allo- cations to student groups during the spring and summer terms. The first resolution - condemning police brutality in- the wake of the Rodney King trial - passed by a 7-2 vote with two abstentions, and the other unani- mously supported students at Rutgers University protesting a 13 percent tuition increase. MSA President Ede Fox com- mented the summer break enabled her to become more adept with par- liamentary procedure, MSA work- ings, and the assembly's relations with other organizations. "What we've done this summer is consolidate our relationships with other groups like MCC (Michigan Collegiate Coalition) and USSA (United States Students Association)," Fox said. This networking will help build "a united front with students across the country on issues like tuition in- creases, student relations with ad- ministrations, race relations, and all sorts of discrimination issues," Fox added. Controversy stirred in June when members of MSA and the adminis- tration disagreed over a proposed MSA fee increase. MSA executive officers had re- quested a fee increase from $6.27 to $7.05 - including an MSA fee of $6.70 and a 35 cent MCC tax, but the U-M Board of Regents rejected this proposal and eliminated student funding of MCC altogether. MSA Vice President Hunter Van Valkenburgh argued the fee increase would have provided money to make MSA more effective. He added the failure of the fee increase proposal will freeze certain expenditures. "If we try to increase funding for AATU (Ann Arbor Tenants Union), and SLS (Student Legal Services), which were cut drastically last year, we're limited in how far we can go," he said. "It's pretty much plain to us that last year there weren't enough funds.... The amount we were ask- ing for was 50 cents, which was nothing." But U-M Vice President of Student Affairs Maureen Hartford denied that students want the MSA special projects. Among other allocations, the summer assembly paid $300 for info stops on campus and $350 to the Student Social Workers of America to produce a pamphlet on Guatemalan weavers. Van Valkenburgh said the administration has not been receptive to MSA's stance on such issues as MCC funding and raising tuition, adding that organizing students would be the best way to handle concerns. He suggested increasing the vis- 'I hope I won't have an antagonistic relationship with the regents, Duderstadt, and Maureen Hartford. I'll do everything to keep that from happening.' - Ede Fox, MSA president Grin and bear it MOLLY A group of students bounce around enthralled by the "Moonwalk," during the Michigan Union's Escapade '92 yesterday. The program is designed to welcome new students to the University. SU.N. leader accuses Bosnian forces of attacking French peacekeeping troops fee increased. Earlier in the summer Hartford said she agreed that the as- sembly needed more money, but that the student support of the March ref- erendum should be taken into account. Hartford added that the general consensus of students she talked to was that the fee should not be raised. Last March, students passed a referendum limiting MSA's ability to change the mandatory $6.27 per semester MSA fee, MSA's 1992 budget - which funds MSA, the AATU, and Student Legal Services - is $149,150. Under the new MSA amendment, only the regents can raise or lower the July 1991 fee of $6.27. Van Valkenburgh indicated that MSA would defer funding requests to the Office for Student Affairs, which also provides money for ibility of MSA in the upcoming year through information tables, classes, and paid advertisements. "It's pretty evident that the re- gents don't give a darn what we think," Van Valkenburgh said. "The best thing we could do is get more students involved in the everyday workings on committees and elections." . While Fox agreed that organizing students is the most effective way to manage student concerns, she added that she does not desire strained relations with the administration. "I don't know how the summer is going to affect the relationship with the administration. I hope I won't have an antagonistic relationship with the regents, Duderstadt, and Maureen Hartford," Fox said. "I'll do everything to keep that from happening." S A R A J E V O, Bosnia- Herzegovina (AP) - The comman- der of U.N. troops in Sarajevo ac- cused Bosnian forces yesterday of attacking a U.N. convoy and said it was part of a plan to discredit the United Nations. In New York, the Security Council scheduled a closed-door meeting for last night at France's re- quest to discuss Tuesday's attack, which killed two French soldiers and wounded five. In Paris, French Foreign Minister Roland Dumas called the assault "a veritable act of war against members of a humanitarian operation." "The light was clear enough to see the U.N. insignia," U.N. Brig. Gen. Hussein Aly Abdulrazek said. "These irresponsible elements ... have a deliberate plan to jeopardize our presence in Sarajevo." Sefer Halilovic, commanderof the Bosnian. forces, said the government was studying the attack with U.N. officials. In Geneva, U.N. officials said an airlift to the besieged capital was unlikely to resume before next week. The airport has been under attack for the past three days, and it was closed last week after an Italian aid plane crashed on approach. Investigators suspect missiles downed the plane. In Zagreb, Croatia, Lord Owen and former Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, co-chairmen of an interna- tional peace conference on former Yugoslavia, arrived for talks with U.N., Red Cross and Croatian offi- cials. Vance called the deaths of the two Frenchapeacekeepers "cold- blooded murder." 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