2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 27, 1995 MSA Continued from page 1. Wainess said. Newly elected Rep. Tracy Gallinari, from the Michigan Party, said she is excited to take her seat on the assembly. "As a female Engineering student, I have a lot of concerns with North Campus safety, which I plan to work on," Gallinari said. The Students' Party won five new seats on the assembly this term, and LSA Rep. Dante Stella said the party's showing fell below expectations. "This was not as good as we would have liked," Stella said. "We're mak- ing progress in the small schools - SNRE, Nursing and Law - which is good, because these are seats we haven't traditionally had." Elected Rep. Probir Mehta, from the Students' Party, garnered the sec- ond-highest number of votes in LSA. The candidates' concern over as- sembly infighting was brought to the forefrontduring the campaign, and the New Representatives Robert H. Clenova - Architecture Laura J. DeFouw - Art Randall Hardin - Business Seth Katzenstein - Business Bryan Theis - Engineering Tracy Gallinari - Engineering Sean Byrne - Law Doug Kligman - LSA Probir Mehta - LSA Missy LaForge - LSAT Scott Sandler -- LSA Jenna Levinson - LSA Olga Savic - LSA Jonathan Winick - LSA Jennifer Kosky - LSA Brooke Slavik - LSA Bryant Wu - Medicine Gerald Castanada - Nursing Karie Morgan - SNRE two prominent MSA parties have pledged to improve relations. "This new administration looks like it's going to be more flexible and receptive," Stella said. "The partisan bickering will probably go down." LSA-SG Continued from page 1 keep LSA-SG non- political and ser- vice-oriented. ' Kovacs said he Y might run again in ' nextyear'selection. President-elect Bernstein said he wanted a smooth transition of power to get LSA-SG in Bernstein action as soon as possible. "We have a tremendous amount of energy and enthusiasm. We're going to dive right in and get to work,"he said. Current President Ryan Boeskool and Vice President Sherry Martens will step down the day following the LSA- SG Judiciary certi- fication hearing. Bernstein said -~one of his first pri- orities when in of- fice is the upcom- ing voteon thepro- posal to withdraw the pass/fail option for the fourth se- mester of a foreign Madhavan language. "I encourage all students who are concerned to e-mail LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg and voice their concerns. Her office should know how students feel on the vote," he said. . .ATIONAL REPOR. 1 0 1 Pete Wilson accused of breaking faith SAN DIEGO-As California Gov. Pete Wilson tested his infant presiden- tial campaign in the East yesterday, he was roundly berated at home by conservative activists who accused him of putting personal political-ambition ahead of the interests of the Republican Party and his state. " Delegates to the annual convention of the conserva- tive California Republican Assembly unanimously adopted a resolution accusing Wilson of breaking faith with voters after pledging last fall to serve a full four-year term in Sacramento. Jon Fleischman of Irvine, Calif., the new president of the volunteer group that claims up to 10,000 members, Wilson said, "This organization is dead opposed to the idea that the sitting Republican governor of California abandon the governorship to run for president." Should Wilson win national office, he would automatically be succeeded by a Democrat, Lt. Gov. Gray Davis, as state chief executive for the final two years of his second term. Don't PaniIC! If you think you're pregnant... Call us--we listen, we care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 769-7283 Any time, any day, 24 hours. Fully confidential. Serving Students since 1970. BAKER Continued from page ± what we areprosecuting. The story was neverapartof the charge againsthim." Following his arraignment, Baker returned to his mother's home in Boardman, Ohio, in compliance with his conditional release. The FBI arrested Baker Feb. 9. He spent a month in prison after two federal judges deemed him too dan- gerous for society. FederalJudge Avern Cohn released Baker on March 10 after a psycho- logical evaluation said Baker was not a "man who would act out the sexual violence he wrote about." The condi- tions of his $10,000 bond require him to live with his mother in Ohio and restrict him from entering Ann Arbor. except to see his attorney. The trial most likely will not begin April 3, as scheduled, due to both the new arraignment and other circum- stances, Cahill said. "(Defense attorney) Douglas Mullkoff is planning to file amotion to dismiss the case," Cahill said Friday. "If Judge Cohn decides there should be a trial, it may not be heard until August or September. Judge Cohn has another case this summer, so it may be a while before this one gets started. "There is less urgency now that Jake is out ofjail," Cahill said Baker faces up to five years in prison and $250,000 in fines for each of the five charges. The FBI and Canadian authorities are continuing their search for Gonda. Gonda is named as a co-defendant in three of the five charges. : Free MicroWwv vn: U -for New Tenants We will provide a brand new microwave oven FREE to the first 50 leases signed. * U * U SUtStop by to view our o models. Apartments shown daily 10-8 M Sat/Sun 12-5 536 S. Forest Ave. : 761-2680 "oer toqulify. S* Some restrictions may apply. E........E..E..,EEE.E.EE.MM MM MM MM M ISRAEL FOR SUMMER VACATION! NTEERS Fm ISRAEL OW t WTV" " PEui ft00 epplk*ion tee Spend three weeks as a volunteer working and living with Israelis at army bases or hospitals. Panetta: Clinton prepared to use veto WASHINGTON - President Clinton is prepared to veto a variety of House Republican initiatives, in- cluding welfare reform, a capital gains tax cut and a repeal of the crime bill, unless the Senate eliminates certain provisions in each measure, White House Chief of Staff Leon E. Panetta said yesterday. "We are not going to let them cut school lunches in order to pro- vide tax cuts to the wealthiest in this country. "We're not going to let them cut 100,000 cops off the president's crime bill. We are not going to let them move backward with regards to education cuts," Panetta said. "Those are areas where we clearly have drawn some lines," he said. Panetta's comments went fur- ther than the President's own re- marks. SAR OUND THEW Authorities believe cult made nerve gas TOKYO - Raids resumed today on facilities of the secretive religious sect Aum Supreme Truth as Japanese news media reported that police be- lieve the deadly nerve gas sarin was manufactured at a sect laboratory in the village of Kamikuishiki. Police are searching for evidence thatcould link the sect with last week's poison gas attack in Tokyo's subways that killed 10 people and injured more than 5,000. Yesterday, police carrying blow- torches and chain saws searched three buildings at the Aum compound in snowy Kamikuishiki, 65 miles south- west of Tokyo near the foot of Mt. Fuji. They discovered achemical pro- duction plant hidden behind a wall in one of the buildings, NHK Television reported. An underground bunker targeted in the raid was being used as a ware- house, and a building with pipes com- ing out of its side "is some kind of laboratory," a police officer told re- porters at the scene. Specialists are investigating whether the setup and the substances found can be used to produce sarin, the gas used in the Tokyo attack. Saturday in his weekly radio ad- dress, in which he repeated his objec- tions to certain provisions of the wel- fare reform bill passed Friday by the House but did not threaten to veto it. To date, Clinton has not vetoed one piece of legislation. Hawaii opening door.* to same-sex marriages A Hawaii court case has pitched same-sex marriages into the realm of possibility, opening the door for Ha- waii to become the first state to legal- ize such relationships. The mere prospect of such a funda- mental change in the concept ofmarriage is already sending tremors across the Pa- cific, spawning legislation and talk of constitutional amendments to block rec- ognition of gay matrimony. If gay men and lesbians gain the right to marry, they will not only attain access to a host of privileges --- from tax deductions to inheritance rights - now beyond their reach, they will win a hugely symbolic stamp of mainstream legitimacy as well. (ORL "Police now believe the lethal gas was produced at the Kamikuishiki compound," the Yomiuri Daily re- ported today. Hillary Clinton calls for women's rights ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - The venue yesterday was Prime Minis- ter Benazir Bhutto's sprawling hill- top mansion, the guest of honor first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, the topic the position of women in the world. "I know that much remains to be done in every society, in both of our countries, to ensure that women assume their rightful place and are given the opportunities to exercise their rights, but I am very optimistic by what I see happen- ing in the world," Clinton said at the luncheon. On the first full day of her five- nation trip across the subcontinent a 12-day voyage that will focus on the status of women and children in the vast, largely impoverished region - Clinton met with some of the female movers and shakers in Pakistani soci- ety: politicians, doctors, entrepreneurs and judges. - From Daily wire services CAM YOMW triw" 6tP M2 7 PROGRAM INCLUDES roundtrip airfare, room & board, kosher meals, ticket valid for 180 days, tours & lectures. Frequent departures throughout the summer VOLUNTEERS FOR ISRAEL 330 W. 42ND ST. SUITE 16186 NY. NY 10036 This program -past, prsent, sod /bureo- iaPtialysebeoidiwdbyVn Yand S.- EL great scores.... r Kaplan helps you focus your test prep study where you need it most. We'll show you'the proven skills and test- taking techniques that help you get a higher score. great skills... Kaplan has the most complete arsenal of test prep tools available. From videos to software to virtual reality practice tests with computerized analysis to great teachers who really care, nobody offers you more ways to practice. CALL: 1-800-KAP-TEST get a higher score KAPLAN March Madness at Chancy'S Charley's knows how hectic student life can get at this time of year, so from March 18-30, we'd like to encourage you to take a study break and take 25% off any menu item from 10p.m. to midnight. -. . . e - ea- - - - - - n D __ 3f st. j TeMichigan Da~ilISSN 0745%7) is ~v p ublihedITMondy through!rida~y durintheUtall d lO UWwier rmshby students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year4ong (September through April) is $160. Oncampus subscrip- tions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. 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