12 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 15, 1996 They roll out of bed before the sun comes up to plaster campus with colore fliers that cost hun- dreds of dollars. FRIDAYFOCUS Quest for the Assembly They miss all of their classes to meet as many students as-they can before they lose their voices from shouting and their hands turn blue from hand-shak- ing. They do all of this in hopes that stu- dents will circle the No. I next to their names on the Michigan Student Assembly ballot next week. "(Running for MSA) certainly does require tons of time and getting up real- ly, really early," said Students' Party Coordinator Chad Bailey. "It is really hard work sometimes." To help them cope with the long and usually hectic hours in their quest for an MSA seat, many candidates join or form parties to centralize their efforts and pool resources. x"Parties do-provide guidelines - I lDarned a lot when I first ran with a party," said MSA Vice President Probir Mehta, a member of the Michigan Party. "Parties give people a sense of direction and purpose - but you always want to make sure candidates can make individual choices and have a say on what goals the party wants to achieve." Party idas For people who have similar ideas on student issues, candidates say parties can provide guidance and a collective home base. "Our campaign is centered around our party - we share the same inter- ests and ideas," said Nihilist Party Chair Andrew Serowik. "We are a strong collective group, which works to promote individual candidates." Kenneth Jones, spokesperson for the United People's Cgalition, said all of his party's candidates were also work- ing toward common goals. "Our campaign is a group effort," Jones said. "We have a strong group of individual candidates, but work togeth- er and are in constant contact - our message is a group one." But other party members said indi- vidual candidates were stronger than a collective party theme. "We aren't doing anything together as a party," said Crush the Purple Dinosaur Party member David Burden. "But a lack of a strong party is not going to change anybody's mind about us." A "joke" party name can also work as a ploy to garner some votes. Besides Burden's party's campaign against a fictional dinosaur, the Slumber Party also hopes that a zany campaign label will attract some extra support. Both parties are new to the MSA arena this semester, as is the Nihilist Party. "We hope that people who don't nor- mally vote, or do vote but don't know what's going on, will vote for us," said Slumber Party member Ted Chen. "I think people will notice our name first." Parties with weird and wacky names are nothing new to assembly elections. Two years ago Mike House won an LSA seat on the assembly under the Beavis and Butthead Party label. Campaign in aning One of the most important campaign issues parties face is how to pay for their many activities. Most parties said they take up a gen- eral collection from each candidate to finance party posters and advertising. "We ask each candidate to make a contribution of $15 for party posters,"' said Michigan Party Chair Dan Serota. "We use that money to produce things JOSH BIGGS/Daily In the Michigan Student Assembly's chambers in the Michigan Union, members participate in a regular meeting Tuesday. Twenty-four seats are up for grabs in next week's election. like party posters, which everyone helps to design - but each candidate can spend their own money to make their own individual posters." Most candidates reported spending between $50 and 200 just for individ- ual posters and advertising during cam- paign season. Costs for presidential election season in the spring can run into the thousands. But other parties said they would not ask their members to chip in to a gen- eral operating fund. "We prefer to find money from University groups who are willing to support our cause," Jones said. "It has- n't hurt us yet. We've been able to run a successful campaign - but if we have to stand out in 40 feet of snow with buckets to raise funds, we will do that before we will use our candidates' money." Jones said UPC gets campaign funding from members of student groups such Alianza, the Black Student Union and several engineering groups and societies on campus. Victors Party spokesperson Nicholas Kirk said his party was also relying on outside sources to finance campaign activities. "We are drawing support from out- side grassroots students organizations," Kirk said. "This is not a mommy-and- daddy-driven campaign - this is a group of students with jobs who are willing to provide funds and want to see us succeed." Kirk said the Victors Party receives money from individual stu- dents who are involved in a variety of student organizations on campus. Mehta said the high cost of fielding an MSA campaign often bars potential candidates from running because of a lack of funds. Mehta and MSA President Fiona Rose spent more than $1,000 on their presidential campaign last spring. "It is becoming very elitist because it cuts out students with great ideas because they don't have the money to get elected," Mehta said. Mehta said the assembly should look into imposing spending limits for indi- vidual campaigns. "We don't want to hinder people's ability to win an election," Mehta said. "But at the same time, mommy and daddy should not be able to buy an assembly seat for their kid." While paying for the posters that bury campus during election time monopolizes much campaign money, parties in the past have used money on more off-the-wall campaign gimmicks. "(Last year) we rented a golf cart - we drove it around the Diag and gave people a ride to their classes," Serota said. "I'm not sure how well it worked and it was very expensive - but it was fun." Serota also has turned a few heads on campus with his huge advertisements on the metal boards that line the Diag. "(The Diag boards) really aren't that expensive - they cost only $6 a week," Serota said. "But the ads means you have to get up really early before school and go wait in line - people start wait- ing at about 4 a.m." However, several of Serota's Diag boards were stolen Monday night or Tuesday morning. Besides their catchy name, the Slumber Party plans to hold a "slumber party on the Diag." "All of our supporters are going to rally on the Diag and we are planning to sleep out there," said party member Jonathan Kuo. "The weather's gotten a little more cold than we would have liked, but we are pretty dedicated." The alarm clock Unfortunately for the University cus- todial staff, MSA election season means blanketing campus with thou- sands of posters and fliers promoting both parties and individual candidates. spokesperson Martin Howrylak. "Maybe we'll be up at 7 (a.m.), at the earliest, but we aren't going to go total- ly overboard." But as candidates toil long hours to put up their fliers and posters, members of the University custodial staff work just as hard to take them down. "Those fliers shouldn't be on the wall - they are only allowed to be on bul- letin boards and designated areas," said Plant and tions B u i l d i n g rinifrAQA S e r v i c e s One of the things party members h i p s provide candi- dates is the opportunity to be part of an orga- nized group of dedicated candi- dates who work collectively to cover the campus with paper - all long before the first 8 a.m. class begins. "We just came off a national campaign and are still completely in campaign form - we are ready to work 20-hour days, seven days a week and we are ready to get up as early as it takes," said Kirk, Party Affilia UT the 1iu students running Tor MSA seats, almost 75 percent are affiliated with a campus party, The following are the numbers of candidates listed for each party. Michigan Party Liberty Party Victors Party Students' Party Crush the Purple Dinosaur Nihilist Party United People's Coalition Slumber Party Independent 14 11. 10 9 8 8' 8 5 28 M a n a g e r N a t h a n Norman. "If they aren't in the appropriate places, they should be taken down and we ao do that con- stantly." But candi- dates said they were willing to break some of the rules and put up fliers day after day to get their message out. "Getting up early is nothing new to me - we'll be up this term's elections. Burden was one of several current MSA representatives who abandone* the now-defunct Wolverine Party to become an independent before signing on with the Crush the Purple Dinosaur Party, founded this fall. "There is no reason for the party sys- tem, so I don't miss being in a strong party," Burden said. LSA Rep. Andy Schor, who ran for president under the Wolverine label in March, said his former party worked to make the assembly more non-partisan but that parties are still instrumental A running a successful campaign. "(The Wolverine Party) wanted to eliminate politics from the assembly - I think we did that. We swung the vote towards non-partisanship," Schor said. "People are more independent now - but they still need their parties to run because everybody knows the parties are election machines, that's why the Michigan Party will never fold." The Michigan Party has held MSA's gavel since the party's founding four years ago. Schor is now one of the 28 indepen- dent candidates vying for an assembly seat without party support. He said run- ning as an independent is an uphill climb. "l'm gonna do everything I can to get elected," Schor said. "But I don't think it's practical for people to run for LSA seats as independents - yet. Hopefully I can change that." Rose said parties no longer play the dominant role on the assembly that they have in the recent past. "I do think parties have declined but that's because individuals have strengthened," Rose said. "In the past, parties have divided the assembly but I think now members are not willing to get caught up in partisanship and parties' divisiveness - now mem- bers are willing to look beyond pain ties and work to move the assembly forward." Eleven incumbents are running for re- election. The following are their party affiliations on this year's ballot. The Michigan Party Crush the Purple Dinosaur Independents 5 2. 4 Elections are scheduled for Nov. 20-21. who is also president of the campus chapter of the College Republicans. "As president of the CR, I've done all kinds of campaign work and every mem- ber of my party is as focused as I am." But other parties said campaigning did not have to be an all-out blitz to the finish line. "I wouldn't call our campaign hectic - nobody's going to get up at 2 a.m. or 4 (a.m.)," said Liberty Party most mornings doing poster- ing," Serowik said. "We use posters and they are important for name recog- nition, but they will not be a main focus of our campaign - we are concerned with the amount of litter involved." Decline of MSA parties? There are eight parties running can- didates in this term's election, but one of last spring's major slates, the Wolverine Party, is not on the ballot for MSA predicts low turnout for elections Ryan Hansen is not planning to vote in next week's Michigan Student Assembly elections - and he is not alone. "I've seen posters around and know about the elections but I really don't know any of the candidates," the LSA sophomore said. "I haven't put forth the effort to get to know them and no one has come to me." Hansen is one of the roughly 88 percent of students who did not vote in last term's MSA elections. Yet assembly officials say that next week's elections, which will fill 24 assembly seats in 13 separate schools, probably won't even draw the sparse 12 percent of students who voted last term. "Winter is always higher because you do have presidential slates running," said MSA Election Director Angie Blake. "The presiden- tial elections always generate a lot of excite- MSA Vice President Probir Mehta said last term's turnout was disappointing but that it was caused by a number of factors that neither voters nor candidates could control. "A year and a half ago we had more than 20 percent of students vote - and 20 percent is a good solid number and shows a lot of interest," Mehta said. "Last semester there weren't enough polling sites open and there was a shortage of poll workers and of course it was really cold - the low turnout was contingent on a lot of fac- tors." But some candidates said the low turnout gave them a small audience on which to focus campaign efforts. "The hardest thing is trying to reach the tar- get audience - 32,000 students is a lot of peo- ple," said Liberty Party Chair Martin Howrylak. "When 92 percent of those students don't vote, it is perplexing to think of ways to oret them tvi :nte - hut it a1,o mean-, we can re-election are required to work for at least four hours either at polling sites or counting ballots. MSA Rules and Elections Committee ChaT Ryan Friedrichs said the extra help from assembly members would help alleviate the election director's workload. "This rule has always been in our constitu- tion, but in past years I don't think it has been enforced very well - the Rules and Elections Committee was really poorly run," Friedrichs said. "This year we're making sure everyone who is supposed to sign up does - their time should really help get things done faster." Blake said after the votes are all cast the real work begins. "Ballot counting isvery tiring - before any- thing is opened we have to validate all of the voters' names and ID numbers against a master list from the registrar's office," Blake said. "TI'h iiocyet problem we av is neoles , ,.{.b. f _ ' .. .'::. .r .....::.:.... - _.aY ... cr ;, , . kr?,:Ldn. .. .. .'. i'EiCiG4 erta '?'4? a , .f. ' , ..;..