The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 21, 1994 - 7 *STABENOW Continued from page 1 Stabenow also reassured the group that things were starting to look up for the ticket. "As we go into the last 2-1/2 weeks, mo- mentum is moving, things are clicking," she said. "We are going to continue to point out John Engler's record of extremism." Robin Evans, co-chair of College Demo- crats, said getting the room set up was about Wthe best they could do on short notice. "We got a call from the campaign on Tuesday," she said. "We would have liked to do more." Stabenow also took time to praise the work of state Sen. Lana Pollack of Ann Arbor. Originally elected to the Senate in 1982, Pol- lack was unsuccessful in her run for the U.S. Senate this summer, losing in the Democratic primary to U.S. Rep. Bob Carr. Other Democratic candidates in attendance included Alma Wheeler Smith for state Sen- ate, Liz Brater for state House, David Stead for mayor of Ann Arbor, and 1st Ward Coun- cilwoman Tobi Hanna-Davies. Several mem- bers of Wolpe's campaign staff and the Col- lege Democrats rounded out the attendance. Clinton signs education bill at Kennedy rally From Daily Wire Services FRAMINGHAM, Mass. - The noontime rally at Nevins Municipal Hall yesterday looked like a sort of joint rescue effort, with battered President Clinton and beleaguered Sen. Edward M. Kennedy offering praise for each other's achievements, scorn for their critics and predictions that their political for- tunes were about to turn. "Until the last few days, this had the ear- marks of an unusual election where people were in danger of voting against what they're for and for what they were against because of the inordinate success of our opponents in talking things to death and confusing things," Clinton declared to the hoots and cheers of a partisan crowd that chanted, "Six more years!" Kennedy, a liberal lion and 32-year Senate veteran, got good news yesterday with publi- cation of a Boston Herald/WCVB-TV poll that showed him building a 10-point lead over Republican Mitt Romney. Clinton, too, seemed buoyed by the enthu- siastic receptions he received during a two- day swing to New York and Massachusetts after weeks of being avoided by some Demo- cratic candidates in states where his popular- ity has sagged. And he brought more than rhetoric to the Bay State: He signed a $60 billion, five-year education bill that Kennedy had been instrumental in getting enacted into law. In the John F. Kennedy Gymnasium at Framingham High School, Clinton said the measure passed Congress "in a bipartisan fashion for all the children of this country." :' .f. ,.{ , m . Environment tops local forum FORUM Continued from page 5 environment. Brater called for additional zon- 'ing regulations to limit development in environmentally sensitive areas. Birnbaum objected. "We already have land-use reform in terms of zoning," Birnbaum said. Instead, she urged the state to provide incentives to family farms. Brater attacked Gov. John Engler's reorganization of the Michigan De- partmentof Natural Resources, which was designed to reduce costs and de- 0centralize the agency. "I'm totally opposed to his dismantling of the com- missions of the DNR," Brater said. "It's not only the commissions; the staff is dwindling." Birnbaum reserved comment on Engler's reorganization of the depart- ment. "Part of the reorganization was intended to bring more of the department's services to the public. Whether that's happened, I don't know." Brater and Birnbaum both pushed for a moratorium on deep-well injec- tion facilities and hazardous-waste. incinerators in Michigan. Brater touted her environmental record as Ann Arbor mayor, bringing a sharp retort from her opponent. "When my opponent ran for mayor a second time, she was soundly de- feated, and there were strong reasons for that." Birnbaum did not elaborate. State House Acknowledging that the Michi- gan Farm Bureau has endorsed her opponent, incumbent Rep. Mary Schroer said the farm bureau has its own agenda. Schroer is opposed by Republican Martin Straub. "We need to be very serious about what kinds of pesticides are being used in our state and what their effect will be on our environment and our children," Schroer said. State Senate Democrat Alma Wheeler Smith said she-- as a legislative assistant to outgoing Sen. LanaPollack--helped draft a law that required polluters to pay for their environmental cleanups. 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