it41I Unt Beather onight: Mostly cloudy, low in he mid-20s. bmorrow: Scattered flurries, igh in the upper-30s. One hundred sixyears ofeditoralfreedom Wednesday November 20, 1996 yiyx .,. r . .'. 'cr r . rv .,.5 ,. ...:.: ,., .... .:"t: . y ,: ". C { "u ,',iv } ': '.MN > =:vr } 'C' k. :SCt x Y 7RnAi y / VY t ... , . .,, ... .. ". .... .<, .:.>.. .,..:: .. :=.dt ..d .> .. s > .> ...: ,.. r ..:::. ....?N' /7 "... " >s 2 ' tk u , h '2t «12 i.. ste".. a u> di .k x s h2t . o+Ne. < , hk'.,. k t s 4Y .. stelia talks on le of art Lh society ly A"'t K.1 Thavarajah )alY Staff Reporter More than 300 students and faculty illed Rackham Amphitheatre last night o catch a glimpse of Frank Stella's Broadsides" - a look at architecture. A ella focused on the role his ideas on tecture could play in society and low art can help improve society. "I don't presume to have answers, but uggestions. I believe that there would e immediate change in the community f urban decay if there would be more iesthetic, pleasing structures" Stella aid. "If a city had a beautiful park,;I think. t would be a big part of the solution oward helping our landscape and social >lems," he said. "It's important that collaborate with everyone to try to ielp cities in trouble." Peggy Kusnerz, an assistant to the lean of the School of Art, said the vis- ting artist program will be very helpful" :o the University. "It has been really quite normal yringing artists to meet the4students for years," Kusnerz said. "We decided to give more students the opportunity to creative thinkers by inviting some f the most famous modern artists of ur time to speak to them." Stella, a world-renowned contempo- rary artist, is the third in a series of seven lecturers in the first year of the Visiting Artists and Designers Program ;ponsored by the School of Art and Design. Earlier in the day, Stella visited and critiqued graduate students. Stella cri- ti ed second-year graduate student A'usto Arbizo's art, but it wasn't the First time. "The first time I met with Stella was t little awkward. He was very critical of my work, but it was very valuable," Hopefuls stump in 1st day of MSA vote ' Parties expect creative gimmicks to inspire students to cast a ballot Independents run By Will Weissort without party support Daily Staff Reporter For most of them, class can wait. Many of the 99 candidates running for vacant Michigan Student Assembly seats will be missing some classes today to court potential voters. And that means the Diag could get crowded. "Luckily I don't have any classes on Wednesday so I and other members of my party will be handing out posters," said United People's Coalition candidate Ozell Hayes. "I plan also to be out on the Diag meeting people." But Hayes said yesterday that the elections were already affecting his school work. "I'm really excited - I have a test today and I can't really concentrate on it because I'm excited to see what happens (today) and Thursday," Hayes said. Veteran campaigner and Michigan Party Chair Dan Serota said candidates learn which classes they can afford to skip in order to campaign. "There are some classes you can miss, like lectures, where you can get notes from someone," Serota said. "But other ones, like discussion sections, you just can't miss." Serota said Michigan Party candidates would be on the Diag and "spreading out as a party to sell the party's vision to the student body." Liberty Party Chair Martin Howrylak said that even though his party also will be making appearances on the already-jammed Diag, the elections will be laid-back. "The MSA elections aren't the kind of in-your-face races you find in national elections - there shouldn't be anyone mooning anyone else out there tomorrow," Howrylak said. "But I'm sure there will be some interesting stuff going on - maybe someone will be dressed up as Barney - I don't know." Students' Party Engineering candidate Mallory Floyd said he too will be out campaigning, but said meeting North Campus voters is the key to winning an Engineering seat. "I haven't been able to get over to North Campus as much as See ELECTIONS, Page 7 By Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter They also endure all the insanity that comes with run- ning for a seat on the Michigan Student Assembly, but they do it without the support of a party. The 28 independent candidates from six separate schools are hoping that students will look for more than a familiar or cute party name when they cast their votes today-and tomorrow. "I would hope that the assembly is such that hard work- ing candidates can win a seat without a party," said LSA Rep. and current independent candidate Barry Rosenberg. "I hope students will look past a party and vote for quali- ty candidates." Rosenberg is one of four MSA incumbents running without a party label. LSA independent candidate Andrew Brunsden said par- ties help candidates cope with the huge amount of work that goes into campaigning. "I've found that it's a lot more extra work - parties poster the campus one time a week and I have been out postering every night of the campaign," Brunsden said. "But I think students see all the work I do as more honest because I get my views and my message out with out a party name to hide behind." Like their partisan colleagues, the independents said they also will be very busy today. "As an individual you're only one person and I can't campaign as much as parties because I have to go to class," Brunsden said. "I may be skipping some classes tomorrow to meet with as many students as I can but education has to be the top priority and I think students can respect that" Engineering Rep. and independent candidate Jasmine Khambatta, who used to be a Students' Party member, said she does not miss running with a party. "I don't miss it at all," Khambatta said. "The major rea- See INDEPENDENT, Page 7 JOSHBIGGS/Dvaily Frank Stella speaks to students from the School of Art and Design at Rackham Amphitheatre last night as part of the Visiting Artists and Designers Program. Arbizo said. "This time he seemed to see the evo- lution of my art. He was much more positive and I definitely got some point- ers that I can use in my future work," he said. "Some think he can be a little harsh, but they need to learn to take the positive and look at the negative but not dwell on it." Stella also compared art schools. "At U-M you seem to have more time to work on your art," Stella said. "At a school such as Princeton, the students probably produce two times as much art." "It doesn't necessarily mean it's bet- ter to produce more quantity, but it seems as if the students work more excitedly and produce more in the process. Local resident Don Powell consid- ered it an honor to be able to hear how Stella produced some of his work. "This is really a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to hear one of the greatest modern artists;" Powell said. "Many people would have been content with themselves after producing some truly great paintings in the late '5Os. But he kept on expanding his work, whether it be drawing, paintings and now architec- ture." Ouse to vote onshanges rn Open Meetings Act MSA Elections: Where to Vote Today Alice Lloyd 4:20 - 6:10 p.m EECS 8:05 a.m.3:20 p.m Pierpont 11:10 am. - 6:30 p.m. Bursley 5 - 6:45 p~m. Fishbow1 8:35 a.m. - 5:45p.m. Pub, Health 10:50 am. 1 3O p.m, Business LNG 3:25 - 8 p.m. Frieze 9:05 am.m 2:35 a.m School of Ed. 9:20 a.m. - 12:05 p.m. CC tittle 10 a.m, -1:40 p m. Grad Library 7 - 10:40 p.m. South Quad : e x pam. CCRB 2 - 9:20 p.m. Lorch m -2:45 pim Taubman 6:10- 9:50 p.m Coz4en 4 ( :5 m; Markley 4:50 - 6:40 p.rm. ; UI ; 5 . f p4 Dentistry 11:30 a.m. 1:20 p.m . iE 12:44p0m Union 8:20 a.m.- 10:10 p.m D8 . }a2 m ;4O ' Mosher-Jordan 4:35 p.m. - 6:25 p.m. , W I Q+ ad..' P: East Quad 11:40 a.m 7 p m / d 1 ii i MSA RIRE$ENTAEI1 ELCTI'ONS ARE TODAY AND TOMORROW By Laurie Mayk Daily Staff Reporter Privacy will be a priority during the next presidential search at the University if Gov. John Engler and some legis- lators in Lansing have their way. Republicans have less than six weeks left as the major- i party to vote on legislation that would modify the state's Open Meetings Act to allow public universities to keep more of their presidential search processes under wraps. The legislation, sponsored by state Sen. John Schwartz (R-Battle Creek), was already passed by the Senate. Engler said he would like state law to permit universities to release? only the names of finalists for the office. have the "I don't think the current Open Atings Act works in the best to o fr interests of Michigan universities," Engler said, commenting that some cofideI people may not apply because they don't want to risk superiors finding - out they are interested in another job. with Milliken's concerns about its effectiveness in presiden- tial searches. Although Schwartz said he has not spoken with the gov- ernor about presidential search processes in several months, the two Schwartz bills now under consideration by the House education committee would satisfy Engler's goals. Schwartz said he has asked for a House hearing before the current Legislature ends its term in January. Schwartz said he will re-introduce the bills if the House adjourns before they come to a vote. "I'm not sure they Ggotto Sability Gov. John Engler can get it all done by (the end of) the session," Palmer said. Michigan's public universities would only be required to release the names of the final three presi- dential candidates, and informa- tion about other candidates would not be attainable by the press through the Freedom of Information Act. After the names of the top three candidates are made public, there would be a 30- day cooling-off period during which information about the final- li "We've got to have the ability to offer confidentiality" Engler said Monday to university representatives attending the Michigan Association 'of Governing Boards of State Universities conference. niversity Secretary Roberta Palmer said Engler's com- ments about the Open Meetings Act were only a brief part of his address. The comments were made in support of a recently published letter by former Gov. William Milliken. Palmer, who attended the conference, said Engler agreed ists would not be available. University Regent Andrea Fischer-Newman (R-Ann Arbor) said the proposal of a cooling-off period is con- trary to the advice the board received in its recent pres- idential search. "Every search consultant told us that once the names are released, you have to move as quick as possible," Newman said. See VOTE, Page 5 For sale Cultural carvings from Bali and Java are for sale at Pierpont Commons on North Campus until tomorrow. The carvings are being sold by Asia Overland wholesalers of Hell, Mich. Union strikes hit Calif. universities ,Atthe University ofCalforniaa t LsAgels, 2,000 teaching assistants, readers and tutors went on strik~e Mona. 0At UG~an Diego yesterday, 500 TAs left work as part of a system-wid~e strik~e against the UI irsirities. UC-Berkeley teaching assistants to begin strike today By Chris Metinko Daily Staff Reporter Teaching assistants at the University of California at Berkely plan to go on strike today, joining TAs already on strike at the Los Angeles and San Diego branches of the state college sys- tem. Their 5 p.m. contract deadline yesterday lective bargaining rights. The courts gave us those rights," Prudham said. The National Labor Relations Board yesterday ruled that TAs and GSIs are legally defined as uni- versity employees under federal labor laws. The ruling came in the wake of a strike at Yale University last year, and the government is press- between our students and their academic mentors." Last March, members of the University of Michigan's Graduate Employees Organization went on strike for two days. But Tamara Joseph, GEO organizer at the University, made it clear that what's happening on the University of California's campuses is quite different. Prudham agreed with Joseph's assessment. "The difference between us and what happened at Michigan was, they already had their collective bargaining rights. We want ours recognized," he said. However, Joseph does feel the pain of her fellow union members in California. "I think- theI I nijrcithjf Clifminisheing