The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 24, 1992- Page 7 Detroiters blame city for restricted voting accessibility DETROIT (AP) - Would-be voters and frustrated election work- ers told a congressional hearing yes- terday that mismanagement and an outdated registration system pre- vented people from voting on Election Day. But James Bradley, the city's clerk and chair of its Election Commission, said the blame belongs to Mayor Coleman Young and the City Council. Bradley said the city has refused him adequate money to computerize registration records as he sees fit. U.S. Rep. John Conyers (D- Detroit) and chair of the U.S. House Committee on Government Operations, called for federal and state investigations of Bradley's of- fice. Numerous registered voters said they were unable to vote be- cause of organizational snafus. "It doesn't matter whether one person or 1 million people can't vote, because every vote is important regardless of whose it is," Conyers said. Detroit's Election Day problems included: -Names of registered voters disappearing from the rolls. -Voters being sent to the wrong polling places, and -Poll workers missing their list of precincts. The Election Commission said it received 1,120 calls to confirm registered voters and 1,160 calls to confirm polling places. Numerous elections workers and citizens com- plained it was virtually impossible to reach the commission on Election Day. That prevented them from solv- ing problems in time for people to vote. Bradley blamed the problems on clerical errors caused by the city's archaic manual registration system. "The manual handling of votet registration records during normal processing is cumbersome, at best. In a redistricting year it is monumen- tal," Bradley said in a statement pre- pared for the hearing. Detroit has almost 600,000 regis- tered voters, about 346,000 of whom voted Nov. 3. Bradley's statement and mayoral spokesperson Bob Berg placed the blame with each other. Behind the cue ball LSA junior Shantanu Naik spends his lunch hour playing pool in the Michigan Union pool room. Clinton campaigns for Georgia senator MACON, Ga. (AP) - President- elect Clinton put his political capital on the line yesterday against a caval- cade of Republican heavyweights in Georgia's Senate runoff, saying he needs Democrat Wyche Fowler "to break this gridlock in Washington." "You know what they're saying about this race?" Clinton said. "If you beat Wyche Fowler it will be easier for us to block everything President-elect Clinton wants to do." A victory by Fowler would likely give the Democrats a net gain of one seat in the next Senate, for a 58-42 advantage. GOP challenger Paul Coverdell, a former director of the Peace Corps, brought in big-name Republicans on his side, including Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas, Texas Sen. Phil Gramm, Education Secretary Lamar Alexander, Labor Secretary Lynn Martin and others. More than 2,000 people turned out for Fowler and Clinton at a city hall rally in Macon. In his speech, Clinton resurrected his familiar campaign pledges for health insurance, campaign reform, and an end to "trickle-down eco- nomics." "There are better things for him to be doing today," Fowler said. He pledged that if he wins a second term, "I will be at his side whenever he needs me." On election eve, both sides said the race was about dead even. Clinton's strategists acknowledged the risk of putting his prestige on the line for a candidate who might lose. Clinton press secretary Dee Dee Myers said, "He risked a lot throughout the campaign and he didn't stop on Election Day. He's going to continue to take chances to promote his agenda. Change requires risk." Arriving in Albany for a second rally, Clinton told reporters at the airport, "I think he (Fowler) is going to win but ... I will go on regardless. But if he wins, it'll be easier and better for us to bring about the kinds of changes I was elected to make." Asked if it wouldn't be a setback for him if Fowler lost, Clinton said, "No, and I won't deserve the credit if he wins, either. I'm just one more person trying to help bring this thing about." Clinton told the rally audi- ence, "I know Wyche Fowler will vote to break the stranglehold of special interests." Myers said Clinton would meet Ronald Reagan in the former presi- dent's Los Angeles office on Friday. "He's moving into the White House and he thinks it would be a benefit to talk to someone who's been there," Myers said. Clinton re- quested the meeting, she said. Clinton portrayed Fowler as an essential ally in winning congres- sional approval of an economic- stimulus program, health insurance changes and campaign-finance re- form. "I want to end trickle-down economics. I want to make sure we don't go back to tax and spend eco- nomics," Clinton said. "We have got to break this grid- lock in Washington," he said. "I need someone I know believes in positive government and tough solu- tions." President-elect Bill Clinton, center, holds up the hand of Democratic senatorial candidate Wyche Fowler at a Fowler re-election rally. U.N. to escort food envoys to Bosnian cities F I Display Advertising Early Deadlines SARAJEVO, Bosnia- Herzegovina (AP) - U.N. officials said yesterday they will send ar- mored vehicles to escort food con- voys to two of the most food-starved cities in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Fighting at Sarajevo's airport forced U.N. officials to suspend op- erations yesterday afternoon and cancel the day's last two relief flights. "Every week we are attacked, shelled, turned back, diverted," said Jose Maria Mendiluce, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees' (UNHCR) special envoy to Bosnia. "We have assumed a very important responsibility. We will do it." Western warships enforcing a naval blockade of Serbia and Montenegro stopped and searched two ships in the Adriatic yesterday, following a U.N. Security Council vote last week to tighten the sanctions. Both vessels - one from Ecuador, one from Syria - were al- lowed to continue when no contra- band was found. The Security Council imposed the embargo in May to punish Serbia for fomenting the Bosnian war. U.N. spokesperson Fred Eckhard said in Geneva that Yugoslav Premier Milan Panic will go to Geneva tomorrow to meet with Cyrus Vance and Lord Owen, co- chairs of the peace talks sponsored jointly by the United Nations and the European Community. Eckhard said the talks were likely to be general. U.N. officials said relief convoys will leave tomorrow for Gorazde and Srebrenica. They said the convoys would test new commitments by commanders on all sides to let U.N. relief workers go where needed and the control the commanders exert over their forces. Only two earlier convoys reached the 100,000 people still in Gorazde, and Srebrenica has not been reached at all. The 80,000 people in Srebrenica "are at the very limit of their sur- vival capacity," Mendiluce told re- porters. Earlier this month, a relief convoy headed for Srebrenica was turned back by Serb militia commanders. Mendiluce said his agency was intent on getting through this time and would seek world denunciation if Serb leaders reneged on a new promise to allow access. Ham radio operators in Croatia said Hajrudin Avdic - chief of the Srebrenica defense staff - radioed an appeal to the Bosnian govern- ment, army, the United Nations and humanitarian agencies to evacuate 17,000 civilians from the town. The convoy for Gorazde, 30 miles southeast of Sarajevo, includes eight trucks carrying 80 tons of food. French peacekeepers in seven ar- mored vehicles will escort it. The convoy for Srebenica, 45 miles northeast of Sarajevo, will in- clude 17 trucks and 130 tons of food. Ukrainian peacekeepers in eight ar- mored vehicles will guard it. Thanksgiving Publication Date: Monday, Nov. 30 Tuesday, Dec. 1 Wednesday, Dec. 2 .- - .*.*... - .- . .* -- - - . :: Deadline: Monday, Nov 23, 2:00pm Tuesday, Nov. 24, 2:00 pm Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2:00 pm We will not print on Nov. 26 & 27. Our offices will close at 3:00 pm on Wednesday, Nov. 25 Group urges investigation of sexual harassment WASHINGTON (AP) - Women's groups urged the Senate yesterday to investigate allegations by 10 women that they were targets of unwelcome sexual advances from Sen. Bob Packwood. Several ac- tivists on women's issues said Packwood should resign, but an aide said he would noty "There's no way he can regain our trust," said Mary Nolan, an abor- tion rights activist in Oregon who called for his resignation. Two Oregon members of Congress, both Democrats, said the Senate Ethics Committee should re- view the allegations. So did leaders of women's groups, several of whom said the allegations caught them by surprise given Packwood's reputa- tion as an advocate of women's T0 charges against senator he would not respond to the specific The Post quoted former st allegations, which first appeared in members and lobbyists, some The Washington Post. them by name, in an article that s "There are some partisan "since Packwood's earliest days Democrats who-would love him to Capitol Hill, he has made uninvi resign, but he is not considering sexual advances to women who h. that," said Josie Martin, his top aide worked for him or with him." on the Senate Finance Committee. Several of the women s Indeed, Oregon Democrats were Packwood grabbed and forceft speculating that Rep. Les AuCoin kissed them. might have unseated Packwood had One of them, Mary Heffern the story broken before the election. executive director of the Woma Packwood outspent AuCoin $8 mil- Foundation of Oregon, s. lion to $2 million and won 52 per- Packwood grabbed her arms cent of the vote. kissed her during a visit to his ofi Rep. Peter DeFazio and Rep.- while she as orkis o elect Elizabeth Furse of Oregon said National Abortion Rights Act a Senate ethics investigation was League in the early 1980s.c needed. Lau nteery18s The Post said that when it first She said during a news coni confronted Packwood he denied the ence in Portland on Sunday t taff of aid on ted lave aid ully an, n' aid Tice the ion fer- hat NEW COURSE ANNOUNCEMENT STATISTICS 290: THE HISTORY OF CHANCE WINTER TERM, 1993 T TH 4:00PM - 5:30PM Prerequisites: None Credit Hours: 3 Approved for Natural Science distribution Professor Sandor Csorgo This course is aimed at students who have an interest in the history of scientific thought, the study of randomness, and the measurement of uncertainty. Students electing the course will learn about: " the evolution of some of the main ideas of probability and statistics in an historical context, from the earliest evidences of chance in ancient cultures * problems appearing in the Renaissance that prompted leading mathematical