LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 19, 1997 - 5 Students face 4 ballot questions By Katie Pona 1ily Staff Reporter Students voting in the Michigan Student Assembly elections today and tomorrow will see more than a list of names vying for assembly seats and executive offi- - positions - they also will encounter four ballot stions. Students will be asked to either support or deny _$6.50 in fee increases - $1 that will fund community service efforts, and a two-term $5.50 increase to finance a drive to create a Untiversity student regent. . Two other proposals - concerning the formation of ;ex-officio MSA positions and student support for the removal of a 10-term teaching limit for graduate stu- -dent instructors - also will appear on the ballot. LSA Rep. Andy Schor said the two-term fee increase would go specifically toward efforts to get a stion on. the 1998 Michigan state ballot asking statewide voters if the University should have a stu- °dent on the Board of Regents. "The money would go toward hiring a firm that will collect signatures from people (in the state),' Schor said. "I hope (students) pass it for its merit, instead of voting it down for its expense." Schor, who has worked as the assembly's Student Regent Task Force Chair for the past year, said the question will need to be put on the state ballot through s port from citizens' signatures, since it would never ke it through the state senate. Currently, the University only has one ex-officio regent, University President Lee Bollinger. LSA junior Jamie Long said she is not going to vote during the MSA elections, but that she would not mind her student fee being raised by $5.50 for two semesters. "I would support that, yes," Long said. "It's not that much and, if it's going to make a difference, that's cool." Frank Dubrava, an Engineering first-year student, said the fee increase doesn't seem excessive to him, but the majority of students may not support it. 1 thin "I think a lot of (students) will vote no just because of a fee wiIIv t increase," Dubrava said. The only question put on the because ballot by student petition was sponsored by UM.Serve, a increase coalition of community service organizers who work to gain funding for community service Engineering I projects. LSA senior Valerie Press said the funds from the $1 fee increase per-student per- semester would be allocated to groups specifically for community service purposes by a committee of mostly students, along with faculty and staff involved in com- munity service. "For the most part, community service groups on campus are struggling for money," said RC junior Charlie Walker, adding that groups will have more time to work in the community if they don't have to spend so much time fundraising. "I think there's great support for community service ik :rt on this campus and I hope it does pass," said Mary Beth Damm, assistant director at the learning through community service office. While Schor said that ultimately the regents must approve any fee increases, he said they should support any fee increase first passed by students. Another MSA ballot question will ask students to vote on whether student orga- nizations with at least 400 Sa lot DUD members should have ex-offi- cio, or non-voting, seats on no jUSt the assembly. LSA first-year student of a fee Andre Grewe said he will vote to have ex-officio members on the assembly. "It would be good to get the Frank Dubrava groups' ideas out and have st-year student their voices heard on the assembly," Grewe said. If students support the fourth ballot question, MSA will lobby the LSA administration to remove the current limit placed on graduate student instructors, which does not allow them to teach for more than 10 LSA terms, or five years. Dubrava said he probably will not support this ballot question. "At a certain point, unless (GSIs are) trying to become a professor, chances are you're not going to be in grad school for ten terms," Dubrava said. "You shouldn't be a GSI anymore by that point." VOTING Continued from Page 1. therefore, I don't think voting for (MSA) would do anything," Hill said, adding that she did not know students could vote electronically. "It hasn't been advertised enough." Hill said the field is too saturated with candidates. "I think there's probably too many candidates with too many positions that students don't know who to vote for," Hill said. Blake said that although the electron- ic ballots will be utilized by some stu- dents, many will still vote with the paper ballot. "I think we'll still have a good num- ber (of paper ballot voters)," Blake said. "(But) I think more students will vote because of the -online voting option." Yoder said the MSA voting system is as secure as using Wolverine Access. "It's actually slightly better than the Wolverine Access model," Yoder said. Blake added that the candidates ulti- mately will influence how many stu- dents vote, both electronically and on paper. "No matter what we may do, the can- didates are the ones who actually encourage and influence the voting, Blake said. "In the end, it's really the candidates." She said MSA might move to have all future voting done electronically, but that change will depend on voter turnout in this election. "We're going to see how this semes- ter goes and next semester," Blake said. But Blake said MSA officials d(not want to discourage students who may not know the ins and outs of using com- puters. Friedrichs said future elections will include an official election information page that students can access to learn more about the candidates. Students with a modem in their.resi- dence hall rooms or in their homes can access the voting link by goiii'to http://mnn i:wich.edui-vote. Students can catch up on the latest candidate information by goiqg to httlp:/wwumnich.edii. 1inform. The University of Michigan Program for the Study of Complex Systems Third Annual Interdisciplinary Symposium on Complex Systems State considering vote-by-mail system March 20, 1997 Rackham Amphitheatre LANSING - Forget those long lines at the voting 0 th that eat into precious time away from work - d your patience. Michigan lawmakers are considering letting citi- zens vote by mail. If it passes, voters would fill out election ballots at their leisure, drop them in the mail- box and check one civic duty off their list. In fact, they couldn't vote at the polls. No polling places are set up in vote-by-mail elections. Three bills in the legislature - two sponsored by Democrats, one by a Republican - along with growing support for the idea and success stories ity other states are pushing the idea closer to "The time for vote-by-mail in Michigan has arrived," Ingham County Clerk Mike Bryanton told the House Local Government Committee yesterday as it considered one of the bills. "Michigan must move .boldly into the twenty-first century" Despite such support, voting-by-mail won't be available any time soon. Such a system isn't likely to be ready in time for the 1998 elections. It might be in place by 2000, but could be delayed even longer than ecretary of State Candice Miller- Michigan's top elections official - is one of those putting on the brakes. Miller spokesperson Liz Boyd said yesterday that her boss is "very supportive" of mail-in elec- tions, but doesn't foresee moving forward on the idea until a new computerized master list of voters is in place. The state's $7.6 million "qualified voter file" - a statewide database intended to virtually eliminate duplicate voter registrations - is scheduled to be ready by January 1998. But it will take at least through November 1998 to make sure it is bug-free, Boyd said. "We feel very strongly that mail-in elections at this point are really premature," Boyd said. "We don't want to move hastily in a way that's going to jeopar- dize the integrity of elections." Senate Majority Leader Dick Posthumus said he prefers the Republican bill, which would give any voter the option of asking for an absentee ballot with- out requiring clerks to mail ballots to all registered voters, as the Democratic bills would do. Eventually making the mail-in system the only way to vote "just creates more possibility for special inter- est groups to have more influence over the voting process," the Alto Republican said. Those who testified yesterday before the House panel - mostly lobbyists for townships, county clerks and municipalities - listed some of the many kinks in voting by mail that would need to be worked out. They agreed there should be no increase in vot- ing by mail until the qualified voter file is ready and duplicate names are purged from registration lists. And most believe mail-in voting should be test- ed in a few local races before being used for statewide elections like presidential and U.S. Senate races. Still, all said they would like to see the idea move forward, mainly because they hope it would reduce costs and raise voter turnout, which was just 55 per- cent in the 1996 general election. "Anything to give easier access to the citizens of this state to the voting process," said Flora McRae, vice president of the League of Women Voters in Michigan. Seventeen other states hold elections by mail, though most are for local, nonpartisan offices. But last year, Oregon captured national attention when it held a vote-by-mail election to replace Bob Packwood in the U.S. Senate. Sixty-six percent of vot- ers participated, despite an ice storm. Oregon, Nevada and North Dakota used mail-in voting for their 1996 presidential primaries. No states so far use mail-in voting for other statewide primary or general elections. 1:00 - 6:00 pm Opening Remarks Robert Savit, Director Program for the Study of Complex Systems 1:00 pm 2:15 pm 3:30 pm 4:00 pm 5:15 pm 6:00 pm Rules for the Evolution of a Genetic Switch Michael Savageau, The University of Michigan The Simplistic Roots of Complexity Harold Morowitz, Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study George Mason University BREAK Natural Selection and Complex Systems David Sloan Wilson, Binghamton University Panel Discussion on group selection and its implicatiors. Panelists from UM include John Holland, Professor of Psychology & EECS, Randolph Nesse, Professor of Psychiatry, and others. Reception - Assembly Hall The Symposium is free and registration is not required. Inquiries can be directed to Katherine Richards at 763-3301 or kjrichumich.edu 1. .1 i ; Y ,n } a. ffi Mike Nagrant MMA President Olga Savic MMA Vice President Lauren Shubow Geeta Dhatia . 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