r. 2A -The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 19, 1998 MSA discusses affirmative action ACTION Continued from Page1A "Once we get education, I believe students will back affirmative action," Shultz said. "MSA should start to support protests and sit-ins. We should start to use MSA as a political vehicle." Last semester, MSA passed a resolution declaring its support of affirmative action poli- cies at the University. LSA sophomore Elizabeth Keslacy, who is run- ning for president with the New Frontier Party, said MSA should remain impartial in the debate - only going so far as educating students on the issues. "I think MSA should not put forth an opin- ion," Keslacy said. "When MSA passes these resolutions, it doesn't represent the student body. They should encourage dialogue. That -should be the scope of their efforts." Most candidates agreed on the need to accu- rately determine student sentiment on the University's admissions policies. Independent presidential candidate Ferris Hussein, an LSA junior, said MSA should vocalize the views of the student body. "We like the idea of a referendum," Hussein said. "We see MSA as a megaphone - an extension of the students' voice. The student body should decide what MSA does instead of the other way around." Earlier this semester, MSA struck down a resolution calling for a referendum asking stu- dents whether race should be used as a factor in the admissions process. LSA junior Trent Thompson, the Students' Party presidential candidate, said he voted against the measure because of its inherent bias, but said he is not against the general con- cept of having a referendum. "I voted 'no' on the referendum resolution because the question was slanted towards race," Thompson said. "If we have a referen- dum question, it should ask about gender, eth- nicity, athletics and alumni status." LSA junior Ryan Friedrichs and LSA sopho- more Albert Garcia, independent presidential and vice-president candidates, and Michigan Party representative candidate Mehul Madia, an LSA junior, have been working on conduct- ing a professional survey on various issues - including affirmative action. "The poll's results will enable the assembly to accurately reflect the feelings of the students at the University," Garcia said. "The affirma- tive action debate is yet another reason we should have direct constituency." 4ATION/WORLD MSA Continued from Page IA "I think voter education will increase," said Ryan Friedrichs, an independent candidate for MSA presi- dent. Friedrichs, an LSA junior and current MSA repre- sentative, said this year's election is his third, and he has received more positive feedback from this election than from past elections in which he ran successfully for a seat on the assembly. Friedrichs credits many of these sentiments from students to the availability of online voting, which began last year. Online voting is "very slowly starting to fundamen- tally change how the process happens," Friedrichs said. Mehul Madia, a Michigan Party representative who is running for re-election, said that although the rainy weather put a damper on the day, meeting with stu- dents attracts voters and hopefully increases voter turnout. "It's more effective than campaign posters and Diag boards," said Madia, an LSA sophomore. Also emphasizing the power of the voter-candidate connection, independent vice-presidential candidate Nick Pavlis said that giving students personal attention is key to effective campaigning. "That's definitely the best way to do it," said Pavlis, an LSA junior. "The flyers - you have to do it because everyone else does - but the word of mouth is probably one of the most important things." Some candidates said many voters' already have made up their minds. "I think by now, students have pretty much decided who they're going to vote for," said New Frontier pres- idehtial candidate Elizabeth Keslacy. Online voting can be accessed at http://www umich.edu/-vote. AROUND TH E NATION Former aide faces White House attack WASHINGTON - Three days after a former White House aide riveted the nation with her televised account of an unwel- come sexual encounter with the president, information that could challenge her version of events continued to come to light yesterday. Information also emerged indicating that President Clinton took an active role in the decision to release correspondence that might discredit Kathleen Willey's allegation that he had kissed and groped her near the Oval Office in November 1993. An affidavit released yesterday details the story of Willey's Clinton close friend, Julie Steele, who said Willey asked her to lie to back up Willey's account of her encounter with Clinton. Steele, who has known Willey for 20 years, told Newsweek magazine last year that her friend had come to her house on Nov. 29, 1993, and told her that Clinton had fondled her and that she felt "humiliated:" Subsequently, Steele told the magazine that Willey had actually first told her of the White House meeting weeks later and that Willey had not be4 upset. Judge stops Prop. 187 implementation LOS ANGELES - A federal judge issued a final ruling yesterday forbid- ; ding implementation of the core provi- sions of Proposition 187, declaring that California's 1994 ballot initiative target- ing illegal immigrants' use of public benefits was unconstitutional. The widely anticipated action slap- ping a permanent injunction on the mea- sure comes almost 3 1/2 years after California voters overwhelmingly approved it following a campaign that galvanized national attention on the issue of illegal immigrant use of health care, schools and social services. Most of the law never took effect because of court rulings that temporarily blocked enactment. The stage is now set for a round of appeals that many believe will reach the U.S. Supreme Court, possibly as soon as next year. Gov. Pete Wilson and other Proposition 187 proponents have accused U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer of dragging her feet on issuing the final ruling, thus delaying their appeals and the ultimate fate of the mea- sure. But opponents of Proposition 187 said the lengthy review was understand- able given the complexity of the case and the state's shifting strategies a sometimes contradictory arguments. Clinton team fights for troops in Bosnia WASHINGTON - The Clinton administration told a dubious Congress yesterday it had a legal right to keep thousands of American soldiers on peacekeeping duty in Bosnia without a pullout deadliq and asked for nearly $2.5 billion to finance the operation through September 1999. Within hours, the House voted 225-193 against a hotly fought reso- lution that would have forced President Clinton to withdraw U.S. troops from Bosnia or get permis- sion from Congress to leave them there. AROUND THE W :.LD Hong KonMleader discusses fure HONG KONG - The Beijing- approved leader of Hong Kong appeared to move the goal posts back this week for the territorys arrival at the full democracy outlined in its mini- constitution. Departing from the government's previous assurances that Hong Kong aims to hold direct elections in 10 years, Chief Executive Tung Chee- hwa surprised visiting American democracy monitors by saying the timetable, included in the territory's Basic Law, might not apply to legisla- tive elections. In a Tuesday meeting with a dele- gation from the Washington-based National Democratic Institute for International Affairs led by former U.S. Attorney General Richard Thornburgh, Tung reportedly said that the achievement of full democ- racy could take up to 15 years, depending on how coming elections go. "We were somewhat puzzled when he indicated it might be 10, 12 or 15 years ...," Thornburgh told reporters yesterday. "He said he was committed to the letter of the Basic Law. ... But it4 seem to contradict the widely share view that the process of full democra- cy would be completed within ,10 years." Plot a'st Mandela halte by securty JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - A cabinet official told tO Parliament yesterday that the reports of a plot against the government of President Nelson Mandela were part of a disinformation campaign by elements in the security forces who want to destabilize the country. Safety and Security Minister Sydney Mufamadi reassured Parliament that the "overwhelming majority" of South Africa's security forces would support the government in the event that dest bilization "machinations" came to pa, - Compiled from Daily wire reports. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September. via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sub- scriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. 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