One hundred flve years of editorzal freedom ti Weather Tonight: Partly cloudy, low in the mid-30s. Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy. High in the mid-50s. Friday March 29, 1996 Rose, Mehta to lead MSA Michigan Party stays in power for 4th consecutive year , i I I Election director says voter turnout down from recent years By Laurie Mayk Daily Staff Reporter Undefeated as a presidential contender, the Michi- gan Party captured the presidency of the Michigan Student Assembly for the fourth consecutive year, according to preliminary election results. Voters elected Michigan Party candidates Fiona Rose and Probir Mehta for MSA president and vice president, respectively, in the campaign that ended yesterday. "I feel upbeat and positive because this is going to be a year of doing great work for students," Rose said after I Goalie Marty Turco and freshman defender Bubba Hynes in his drive to score. WALTER VAN DYKE/Daily Berzenweig stop Boston's John .M icers advance to NCAA finals the announcement early this morning. Mehta called the Michigan Party win a "victory for students." "This is a culmina- tion of what the Michi- gan Party's tried to do for three years." MSA Election Direc- tor Meagan Newman said this semester's election produced the lowest turnout of any presidential election in recent years. "It's the lowest presi- dential turnout I've ever seen," Newman said. Although candidates and assembly members have speculated that the cause could be anything from cold weather to poll The Resuts With 3,737 ballots tallied for presidential tickets, the team of Rose/Mehta won with 32.5 percent of the vote. Here are the other results: Rose/Mehta Michigan Party: 1,213 Freeman/Savic Students' Party: 957 Schor/Curin Wolverine Party: 525 Salas/Su UPC: 497 Tudisco/Mesh Independents: 388 Howrylak/DeWitte Liberty Party: 157 By Alan Goldenbach Daily Sports Writer CINCINNATI - The Michigan >ckey team waited a whole year for this game. And the Wolverines weren't about to let the opportunity pass them by. After failing to advance to the final in its last three semifinal appearances, Michigan (33-7-2) blasted Boston Uni- versity, 4-0, earning the Wolverines a spot in tomorrow's championship game against Colorado College. "It was really a mismatch as far as the liber ofthe way they came to play and eway we came to play," Terrier coach Jack Parker said. "Michigan had every answer for us. Every single answer. "In general, there wasn't a phase of their game they didn't come in playing at the top of their game." Greg Crozier, who was mired in a terrible scoring slump the second half of the season, scored twice to back a tremendous effort from goaltender party Turco, who stopped all 17 Ter- rier shots for Michigan's eighth shutout of the season. The Wolverines came out on fire, scoring 40 seconds apart in the first five minutes. At the 3:58 mark, Kevin Hilton slid a pass through the crease to Brendan Morrison, who tipped it past Boston Championship Game There are still tickets available for the NCAA championship game at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Cincinnati's Riverfront Coliseum. To order, call Select-A-Seat at (800)232-9900. Tickets will be held. at will call for credit card customers. netminder Tom Noble for the first of Michigan's two power-play goals. "Before the game started, I predicted that one team would come out flat," Michigan coach Red Berenson said. "And we just hoped it wouldn't be our team." Crozier put the Wolverines up 2-0 less than a minute later, scoring in front of the Terrier net off a rebound of a Warren Luhning shot. It was only Crozier's second goal in his last 16 games. And breaking out of his slump couldn't have come at a better time for Michigan. "I didn't change (my game) much (in the postseason)y" Crozier said. "I just refocused on doing the little things." The game was delayed 90 minutes by a broken pipe near one of the goals that was carrying the brine used as part of See HOCKEY, Page 11 Above: Party members campaign yesterday on the Diag during the last day of MSA elections. Right: MSA President- elect Fiona Rose smiles with running mate Probir Mehta before the election. The Michigan Party ticket of Rose Mehta took 1,213 votes - 32.5 percent of the total ballots tallied. The Students' Party ended in a close second with 957 votes - 25.6 percent. site hoursNewman said it is impossible to determine the reason for the low interest. The Michigan Party has never lost the MSA presi- dential election since its inception in 1993. "This clearly demonstrates once again that the Michigan Party has a mandate from students and that they endorse our vision," said current MSA Vice President Sam Goodstein, a Michigan Party member. Rose said the party will concentrate on "making sure that we can ride all the attention being paid to student government right now" in order to improve relations with both students and University administrators with open forums and to focus on external issues. Mehta said the Rose-Mehta MSA administration will open with a "fast and furious first couple of weeks." Rose said students heard the party's message on campus this week. "We really focused on the issues that we wanted to," Rose said. Despite lost ballots and delayed results in previous elections, Newman said this year's election went smoothly. Independent presidential candidate Geoff Tudisco said he was pleased his campaign encouraged MSA outsiders to vote. "It's networking ... we did what we're going to say - get people involved," Tudisco said. The Students' Party refused to comment. Wolverine Party presidential caridiate Andy Schor said his campaignvasplagued by the recent political scandals concerning the LSA-Student Government, M SA resources and the Truth and Equal Action Party. "Last week I think we were the team to beat - Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday we lost some- thing," Schor said. Schor's term as an LSA representative ends in the fall. Schor said he will serve out his term and remain active with the assembly. The newly formed Liberty Party will continue to lobby on campus and prepare for future elections, said presidential candidate Martin Howrylak. "The party's going to stay around and run candi- dates in the foreseeable future," Howrylak said. The United People's Coalition will also persist in its campaigning, said UPC vice presidential candidate Johnny Su. "Any time a party runs and it's an unsuccessful campaign, I think it's a learning experience," Su said. Su said he will contribute to MSA affairs if assem- bly members solicit his help on certain issues. Technology regarded as future oft' education By Jodi Cohen Daily Staff Reporter Amidst all the other advancements in undergraduate education, the explosion of technology perhaps has had the greatest influence on the way students learn. "Technology will continue to become more a part of instruction in the way we communicate, learn and study together," said David Schoem, assistant '' t dean for undergraduate education. While the confer and e-mail are commonplace to most students, homepages, online tuto- rials and video anima- tions may be the future of undergraduate educa- tion. In Und e The University's sci- Ed ence departments are well aware of technology's influence. *Monday: livingle Chemistry Prof. Paul *Tuesday: Gradual Rasmussen even holds *Wednesday: Lang call-in office hours on .Yesterday: Comn television. .Today: The influe Chemistry," in which students can watch chemical reaction experiments on video. Courses in a variety of departments have created homepages where students can get supplementary class materials, including course notes, sample tests and extra drills. In some classes, students also submit their assignments on-line. "They are in large part replacing what you would get in a coursepack," Michael McPherson, director of information tech- nology in LSA, said about the homepages. Biology Prof. Marcy Osgood, who teaches Biology 311, said students have taken advantage of the class' homepage. "It has old exams, special announce- ments like where the exams will be, links to other biochemistry homepages around the world," Osgood said. " "It makes it a lot more Inquiry Criticizes Rabms secunty JERUSALEM (AP) - Putting the internal workings of the Shin Bet under a rare spotlight, a government inquiry said yesterday that mismanagement and carelessness at the top-secret security agency exposed Yitzhak Rabin to at- tack by Jewish extremists. In a scathing report bound to fuel efforts to make Shin Bet more account- able, the inquiry found that the organi- zation was primarily to blame for fail- ing toprevent the prime minister's Nov. 4 assassination. Issuedadayafterassassin YigalAmir was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment, the report confirmed the widespread impression that the assassi- nation was the result ofa security break- down that could have been prevented. It was the harshest criticism ever leveled at the service, which in the past has sometimes dodged accountability by cloaking itself in secrecy. Some of that cover has already been removed: In January, the new Shin Bet chief, Ami Ayalon, became the first head of tIe agency to be publicly identified while in the post. The Shin Bet failed to translate abun- dant.. intal Ii cYpt*i~ .a nnntC n-fn n Cible WARREN ZINN/Daily Knshnon Sehsadri, a visiting student from Carnegie Melon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, experiences the University of Michigan's technology in Angell Hall. nce of technologv "It is like Donahue of- fice hours," said Lynda Milne, director of the Science Learning Center. "Students call their questions in. They then stay on the line and work the problem out together." Rasmussen said the office hours, which are held two hours a week on the University's television station, are busiest convenient for them to get things like old exams." McPherson added that using the web is especially practical for large classes. "If you are teaching a large introductory session with a hundred students in it, it is probably not practical to hand out copies," he said. "You can put them on a web site, animations - such as pictures of a simple harmonic oscillator - on the Internet. "Tech- nology is being used to support and expand the learning environment in ways not practical without technology," he said. In the first assignment of Biology 154, students participate in an "Internet scaven- ger hunt," an activity designed to help stu- The impact of technology has not been limited to science classes - it also has invaded the foreign language curricula. "The multitude of media will make lan- guage learning much more effective because ofthe different channels of communication," said Modern Hebrew Prof. Edna Coffin. Coffin said that in some of the upper- I 11