It One hundred four years of editorialfreedom 1Wl Weather Tonight: Rain and snow likely, low around 30%. Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy, high in the mid-30s. Tuesday March 7, 1995 I Vl. C a,.NA.m i A n rbr, t-h0 n 1 he miigally I MSA exec. field widens to 7 tickets Jump for Mark Detsky >I N and Heather } urger enjoy the warmer weather while playing on the Moonwalk. The Moonwalk was on the Diag . yesterday to promote the Senior Pledge Drive. See story, Page 3 MOLLY STEVENS/Daily ' 'U' debuts Mcard pilot program 105 competing for 26 representative seats in upcoming election By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter Angell Hall hasn't seen anything yet. The floors and walls are already cluttered with campaign fliers, and three more tickets have annouced their in- tentions to run for Michigan Student Assembly president, bringing the field of hopefuls to seven. The Truth and Equal Action (TEA) Party will run David Valazzi for presi- dent and Micah Frankel for vice presi- dent. On one independent ticket, Vince Keenan and Angie Kelic are running for president and vice president, re- spectively, while another indepen- dent slate features Jodi Masley aim- ing for the top spot with Dorma Burnside as her running mate. ' In addition, 105 candidates compet- ing for 26 open rep- Keenan resentative seats on the assembly may also be posting slo- gans in the race. s Last spring only 80 representative can- didates ran. This term, 56 candidates will compete for nine LSA seats, while 14 students will Kelic run for two Engineering spots. The elections will be held March The Magnificent 7 MSA elections, March 22-23, wilt feature seven tickets for the executive officer postidns. Here are the presidential candidates and their running mates. Independents: Vince Keenan and Angie Kelic e Independents: Jodi Masley and Dorma Burnside 0 Maize and Blue Party: Mark Biersack and Chris Hanba 0 Michigan Party: Flint Wainess and Sam Goodstein Students' Party: Brian Elliott and Fiona Rose' Truth and Equal Action Party: David Valazzi and Micah Frankel Wolverine Party: Mike Christie and Brooke Holley 22-23. MSA Election chair Christine Young said she anticipates a higher voter turnout, due to the large number of representative candidates. "'We always have a lot of people in the spring, but this election people are really coming out and running," Young said. "There are a lot of good things about a high number of candi- dates, one of which is that they will get a lot of their friends out to vote for them, increasing voter turnout overall." Past election problems have haunted Young, including slanderous postings in the Diag and allegations of drinking while tabulating votes. During this elec- tion Young said she will be stressing the penalties for violating the election code. "I'm not allowing these things to happen anymore. I want to emphasize to people that they've got to play the game fair this time around," Young See ELECTION, Page 2 N New card adds * off-campus retailers, banking options to old services By Michelle Lee Thompson Daily Staff Reporter About 100 students cashed in on a new way to spend money yesterday as the University began distributing the new Mcard, which replaces the ent University identification card adds another magnetic strip and several new features. The first strip, BankStripe, provides access to all University services, such as libraries, campus ticket outlets, recre- ational facilities, and residence hall caf- eterias and computing centers. It also adds two new services: debit transac- tions at non-University merchants from the user's First of America checking *ount and automated teller transac- tions atFirst of America machines. Both features require a personal identifica- tion number for security. The second, narrower strip, called CashStripe, allows users to make lim- ited transactions at participating mer- chants outside the University without opening an account at First of America or paying any fees. Students can put credit directly on the CashStripe by depositing funds at CashStripe stations, similar to the copy card system at University libraries. Mcard holders may store up to $50 in CashStripe funds by depositing cash into these machines. "There's no security on that," warned Bob Russell, assistant director of financial operations and the University's Mcard officer. "When you lose the card you lose the $50." First of America has CashStripe stations in the Michigan Union and the North Campus Commons and at three First of America branch offices. Al Francone, First of America's liaison to the University, said, "I sus- pect by fall we'll probably see 20 to 25 more machines around campus." Mcard merchants can decide to carry either BankStripe, CashStripe or both. Though currently a pilot program, the University plans to begin distribut- ing the Mcard widely in spring term, so that most students have the card by September. About 1,000 students were ran- domly selected for the pilot program, and Russell said he expects about half to participate. Russell launched the pilot program yesterday. Distribution will continue today and tomorrow at the Michigan Union and North Campus Commons. To comply with federal banking regulations, the University selected the First of America bank to facilitate off-campus expenditures using both BankStripe and CashStripe. Although the University gleans a 3-percent service fee from- Entree Plus transactions at on-campus retail- ers, First of America will collect a 4- percent service fee, included in pur- chase prices. The University will take an undisclosed share of the service fee, Russell said. Russell said the higher fee was nec- essary since the University was con- tracting with a private bank. He added that the Mcard system will allow for faster settlement with retailers and pro- vide them some publicity. "I wish they had more stores the students use on a regular basis, like Borders. Kinko's and Tower (Records)," said MSA Rep. Jonathan Freeman, an LSA sophomore who is in the pilot program. Ten merchants honor CashStripe and 12 honor BankStripe. "The BankStripe ... is going to offermore off-campus merchants," said First of America representative Vicki Schneider. CashStripe merchants plugged in their new card readers today, but BankStripe merchants use standard credit-card readers for transactions. Robert Kane, assistant manager of the North Campus Commons Barnes & Noble Bookstore, said his staff found few problems with the Mcard on its first day in use. "A couple of people See MCARD, Page 2 0 New MSA party pledges 'Truth and Equal Action' Council starts searches to fill vacant attorney, administrator positions * Moderate member drops party affiliation, becomes Independent Maureen Sirhal fly Staff Reporter The Ann Arbor City Council last night addressed the city's two open positions by accepting the city administrator's resignation and start- ing the search process for a new city attorney, a position vacant for about four months. And one of the council's most un- vdictable members, Peter Nicolas m the Fourth Ward, attended his first meeting since declaring himself an Independent. Nicholas was re- elected in November as a Democrat. The city attorney search will in- clude several panels to meet with an unnamed former Ann Arbor city attor- ney, a specialist in law office adminis- tration and a municipal attorney. The resolution had been postponed *he Feb. 21 meeting. Mayor Ingrid B. Sheldon, who sponsored the resolution, said she wanted many members of council in- volved in the discussion of the search. and a good "public understanding." accepted a similar position in Scarsdale, N.Y. "We are already moving ahead with plans. I think this is just good house- keeping," Daley said. "Why did this get submitted?" Fink asked. Gatta offered an answer. "I think this is symbolic, but please don't talk about it for 45 minutes," he said. In other council news, Councilmember Nicolas announced yesterday his wishes to no longer be recognized as a Democrat, but rather an independent member of City Council. "My voting r .rrecord over the last three years reflects my willingness to work with both .'Democrats and Re- publicans," Nicolas said. Nicolas Nicolas said others reasons for the switch included the meeting length, the council's inef- ficiency and micromanaging, and a Democratic majority that "does not like to hear dissenting points of view." By Amy Klein a Daily Staff Reporter With four parties already in the running for the Michigan Student As- sembly, a new party has emerged pledg- ing to represent the average student. The Truth and Equal Action (TEA) Party has slated first-year Art student David Valazzi and first-year LSA stu- dent Micah Frankel to run for president and vice president, respectively. "The .Truth' reflects on how we're going to deal with each issue honestly and fairly and the 'Equal Action' is the way we are going to deal with minority issues," Valazzi said. Although neither candidate has any previous experience serving on MSA, both think the assembly should place a greater emphasis on the average student. "The parties that are in control now are conservative established elitists that are out of touch with the average stu- dent," Frankel said. "Watching them work their magic, it seems they're not always considering the fact that they're representing the students." "That is a misconstrued statement," countered LSA Rep. Jonathan Free- man, the political director of the Stu- dents' Party. Freeman said he feels the current parties have worked to involve more students in the assembly. "The Students' Party has worked for-outreach and for getting MSA to be a more responsible and representative student government," Freeman said. "We're not at perfection, but we're headed in the right direction." One TEA proposal suggests ex- tending the honor code system from Engineering to the other University schools. Frankel said the honor sys- y y. tem would place < more faith in the average student. - - "Students will % begivenmoretrust, -.and while some will violate it, most will benefit from it," Frankel said. Valazzi LSA Rep. Brooke Holley, the a4 n}- vice presidential can- didate of the Wol- verine Party, sup- ports the honor code with reservations. "I think the . honorcodeisagood idea, but it works in F "- the Engineering keSchool, which. is Fran kel small and has small classes. I'm not sure this policy would work on tests that require a lot of memorization," Holley said, adding that the larger LSA classes make en- forcing such a code more difficult. In addition to the honor code, the TEA Party wants to improve campus safety and to push for a student repre- sentative on the Board of Regents. "We have no radical or drastic changes, we just want to make the as- sembly more accessible," Valazzi said. MOLLY STEVENS/Daily The paper chase Cecelia Church, a Business School junior, worked on a paper at Angell Hall yesterday. The tulips were a gift from a friend taking a Botany class. I _ _ __