onight: Partly cloudy, low 8% omorrow: Partly sunny, igh 50*. I i~rrn Unt One hundred five years of editoriailfreedom Tuesday March 12, 1996 / y{ yy 'i x p Q M' fit It, RI'll 9.x n.. R F . ' .s., " X'.: Six tickets ed for SA pres. election ure Mayk Staff Reporter Students voting for Michigan Stu- ent Assembly candidates this month will have a choice of six presidential tickets. Along with the three major par- ties on campus, the United People's Coalition, the Liberty Party and an in- dependent team filed MSA presidential and vice presidential candidates right before break. PC named RC junior Nora Salas a 'Medicine first-year student Johnny Su as MSA presidential and vice presi- dential candidates, respectively. The newlyformed Liberty Party named LSA unior Martin Howrylak and LSA first- year student Conrad DeWitt as presi- dential and vice presidential candidates, respectively. LSA juniors Jeff Tadisco and Adam Mesh filed as presidential and vice presidential candidates inde- pendently. he Maize and Blue Party and the Tea Party, which ran presidential tick- etslast win- ter, did not Who's Who file candi- dates for The following is a list t h i s of MSA presidential semester's and vice presidential election. candidates, M S A respectively. Rules and Elections ependents: Jeff Dire e t or Tadisco and Adam Me aga n Mesh' LbertParty: Martin Ne wm a n Howrylak and Conrad said there DeWitt are fewer Michigan Party: Fiona candidates Rose and Probir running in Mehta this year's Students' Party: e l e c t i o n Jonathan Freeman than in re- Olga Savic cent years. nited People's "This num- Coalition: Nora Salas ber isreally and Johnny Su extremely Wolverine Party: Andy low," she Schor and Matt Curin said. ( W e want to) in- fuse new blood into MSA and get rid of the constant bickering I hear about," said Su, UPC vice presidential candi- 4. Su said the influence of UPC on the assembly could help MSA become "truly representative of the University population." "The United People's Coalition is a compilation of people who care deeply about students of color issues and stu- dent issues," said Salas, UPC presiden- tial candidate. Salas said she hopes the party's pres- ee in the race will encourage discus- ofissues surrounding studentrights, open presidential searches and the Code. Howrylak, Liberty Party presidential candidate, said the party will concen- trate on bringing two main issues to the forefront. The Liberty ticket is con- cerned with restructuring the MSA stu- dent fee and the lighting and security on North Campus, Howrylak said. Changing the student fee structure from Ma ndatory line on student tuition bills to a oluntary fee would "change the focus from 'which groupsgethowmuch money' to'whatcanMSAdo forthe studentbody in general,"' he said. "The Liberty Party's going to bring some really important issues to the race," Howrylak said. The independent ticket may "bring in voters that usually aren't involved," said Mesh, independent vice presiden- sl candidate. By running independently, we're open to everybody," he said. Tadisco, Mesh's running mate, said conversations with frustrated MSA members prompted the duo to make a bid for the offices. "The three major parties - the Stu- dents' Party, the Wolverine Party and the Michigan Party - seem to be block parties where they never agree with WIh other and nothing gets done," he . "By being independent ... at the top of the chain we want to scare them more than anything into saying 'look, let's get something done."' Re-expanding the Law Quad's hours until 2 a.m. and reducing student cost for Internet services are two of the Dole expected to win big in'Tuesday' formality The Baltimore Sun MIAMI -Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole is poised to take another giant step toward the Re- publican presidential nomination on a "Super Tuesday" that has become a pale copy of the original as a political exercise. Republicans will vote in seven states with 362 delegates, and Dole is expected to win at least 300 of them. It would bring his total to 700 or more in the quest for 996 needed to take the last bit of uncertainty out of the campaign. "I know the sun is shining on the Dole campaign," the front-running Kansas Republican said in Texas. "(Today) the sun will be out in every one of the states where we have primaries and if I'm not mistaken, we're going to win every one of the seven." The delegate prize is the largest that will be at stake on any single primary day in this campaign. \\ -7 >7 And only one of Dole's rivals, Patrick Buchanan, is being given any chance of picking off a few del- egates in particularly conservative congressional districts of Louisiana, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Mis- sissippi and the western panhandle of Florida. But the designation of Super Tuesday had a hollow ring with only seven states - the six in the South, plus Oregon - involved. The first such exercise, in 1988, included primaries in 14 South- ern and border states, and six elsewhere. The regional primary was originally promul- gated by relatively conservative Democratic state legislators across the South after the 1984 election defeat of Walter Mondale. Their theory was that such a huge prize of delegates would mean candi- dates and the media would pay more attention to the region and that the candidates who succeeded would be less liberal than Mondale. One prime mover in the regional primary plan was, for example, a state senator from Texas, John Traeger, who was angered in 1984 because he supported Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio) only to see him eliminated before the campaign reached Texas. "It was a big legislative initiative," said Colleen Cousineau, executive director of the Southern Legislative Conference in Atlanta. "They just wanted the South to be recognized and to be a major player." But the scheme backfired when two liberals, then-Gov. Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts and civil rights leader Jesse Jackson, concentrated their efforts in areas with large liberal and minor- ity voting populations. Dukakis campaigned most intensely in southeast Florida, where there is a large liberal and Jewish population, and the Rio Grande Valley in Texas, where his fluent Spanish made him attractive to Mexican-American vot- ers. Jackson concentrated on districts with large black populations. The turnout in these heretofore overlooked states rose sharply - it doubled in Texas -- but the campaign was largely airport rallies as candi- dates raced from state to state. And it failed to produce a ticket more welcome in the South. I China readies for war games with Taiwan A new look at Aphrodite Above: Nursing first-year student Michael Anayas peeks into-one of the exhibits at "Caught Looking: Exhibiting the Kelsey" on display at the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology yesterday. The exhibit is the museum's first student-curated show and it runs through April 16. Exhibit organizers said the display works to show that while every person should have their own view of art, no single view can give the complete picture. To this end, the curators took objects from the cases where they normally reside in a museum setting and put them into another surrounding. Left: One part of the exhibit addresses the relationship of sexuality to art by juxtaposing sexual, art historical and religious views of the goddess Aphrodite. This poster welcomes people into the gallery and challenges visitors to consider the role of display in an exhibition. Photos by SARA STILLMAN/Daily The Baltimore Sun TAIPEI, Taiwan - The confidence and bravado of many Taiwanese began to vanish yesterday in the face of an intensifying crisis over their future. With massive Chinese naval and air forces exercises due to start today, Chi- nese missiles still threatening to fall outside two main harbors and yet a powerful U.S. Navy group steaming toward the fray, Taiwanese were hesi- tantly coming to the conclusion that an armed clash with China might be in the making. Many people still believe that war will be avoided, but the jitters started to spread yesterday beyond the chroni- cally nervous monied class. The stock market plunged again and those with cash to spare bought dollars, but even sober Taiwanese began to consider in- creasingly pessimistic scenarios. "It's very hard for China to give way on this now and it's also very hard for Taiwan. In the coming weeks we'll see more exercises and very possibly they'll take an island or islet of ours," said Andrew Yang, head of the Chinese Council of Advanced Policy Studies. "And that will lead to retaliation." Others were more sanguine. "We're all Chinese," said betel-nut vendor Hui Hsie-ting. "They're clever strategists, those mainlanders are, but they're not going to launch an inva- sion." Perhaps not, but the exercises sched- uled to start today would block off a huge section of the Taiwan Strait and take place just 50 miles from the Tai- wanese-controlled islands of Quemoy and the Pescadores. Internatisnal concern was reflected in a fresh round of criticism; Japan's Foreign Ministry yesterday summoned China's envoy in Tokyo for the second time in a week to urge Beijing to show restraint toward Taiwan, and Vietnam, Australia and Canada also issued wan- ings. The hope universally expressed was that the confrontation would deflate. As U.S. State Department spokesper- son Nicholas Burns put it yesterday: "We are not interested, frankly, in do- ing anything that would exacerbate the tensions. We want our actions to help calm the situation." But a worrying escalation was under way. China is expected to deploy its most modem submarines, ships and airplanes in an effort to demonstrate to Taiwan China warns U.S. on policy The Washington Post BEIJING-China's foreign min- ister warned the United States yes- terday against intervening in Beijing's escalating dispute with Taipei and blamed Taiwan's leaders for heightened tensions in the area. "It is ridiculous for some people ... to call openly for interference by the (U.S.) 7th Fleet or even for pro- tecting Taiwan," Foreign Minister Qian Qichen said at a news confer- ence. "These people must have for- gotten that Taiwan is a part of China and not a protectorate of the United States." Qian issued his message a day after the Clinton administration said it was sending extra warships, in- cluding two aircraft carriers, to the region in response to intimidating military exercises China is carrying out this week off the coast of Taiwan. On Friday China fired three unarmed M-9 missiles into the sea near Taiwan's two biggest ports, and Tues- day it is scheduled to begin a round of naval and air force exercises in a zone that stretches halfway across the Taiwan Strait, further obstructing already-disrupted shipping and air traffic. In Taiwan, government spokes- person Jason Hu welcomed the U.S. ships as good for Asian peace and said Taipei does not want war, the Reuter news agency reported. "We hope that the Chinese Com- munists can stop their military exer- cises, and only in this way can they avoid hurting the interests ofthe Asian region," he said after a top-level gov- ernment meeting on the crisis. that it has the wherewithal to capturn the island, which it considers to be , breakaway province that must bE brought to heel before it formally de- clares independence. "The exercises are aimed at dem onstrating China's determination an( capability to defend its sovereignt. and territorial integrity," Chines Foreign Minister Qian Qichen said a a news conference in Beijing yester day. L 1_,t Month recognizes Asian Americans By Katie Wang Daily Staff Reporter This month the University community will have an opportunity to celebrate the culture and achievements of Asian Pacific Americans. "Generation APA," a cultural show scheduled for Saturday at the Power Center, will kick off a series of events that are part of the Univer- sity-designated Asian Pacific American Heri- tage month. "We want the community to know we are 11-n" xro raofn " ni Ma-Tna n light contributions Asian Americans have made to this country," said Tait Sye, the Asian Pacific American coordinator for Minority Student Services. Gail Nomura, director of the Asian Pacific American studies program, said the month is significant in the context of an increasingly hostile political climate for ethnic minorities. "Too many politicians today talk about 'tak- ing back our country for ourselves' -but who is 'our?"' she asked. Nnymi'r. cnM ithat he r ti e ountry is given by Dennis Hayashi, director of the Office for Civil Rights in Washington, D.C., reflects the growing importance of both campus and nationwide Asian Pacific American activism. "If we don't speak up against anti-immigra- tion (legislation), hate crimes and other forms of racism as Asian Pacific Americans, then who would represent our voice?" asked LSA junior Ziehyun Huh. Huh is the chair of the United Asian Ameri- can Organizations, the umbrella organization for Acian American camnus aroun CALLNIDL K. ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN HERITAGE MONTH March 16: Generation APA: Cultural Showcase of Asian Pacific America. Power Center, 8 p.m. March 22: Asian American Association 25th Birthday Bash Spring Dance. Michigan League Ballroom, 10 p.m. March 22: Korean Campus Crusade for Christ: Follow the Yellow Brick Road. Angell Hall Auditorium B, 7 p.m. March 23: Korean Cultural Arts Festival. Michigan League Ballroom, 1 p.m. March 28: Comedians of Color: Christy Medran. i I