LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 26, 2002 - 3A Proposal to eliminate straight-ticket voting Flaming Pop Tart raises alarm A fire alarm went off in East Quad Residence Hall Tuesday afternoon when a resident burnt a Pop Tart and too much smoke spread around, according to Department of Public Safety reports. There was no fire. Woman received threatening e- mail from Indiana An employee in the School of Social Work reported Monday night she received two harassing e-mails from a subject who lives in Bloomington, Ind., DPS reports state. * Robbers clean out three computers from Kresge It was discovered Monday morning that three computers were taken from an unlocked room in the Kresge Med- ical Research Center sometime over the weekend, according to DPS reports. Bike tire and " gears stole from woman's bike A woman reported Sunday night that her bike tire and gears were stolen while parked at the bike racksin front of South Quad Residence Hall between Friday and Saturday nights, DPS reports state a Health center reports missing glucose meter A caller reported Tuesday morning that a glucose meter was either stolen or lost from the Canton Health Center over the weekend, according to DPS reports. Expensive viewer * dropped at IST An Infra-red viewer valued at $1,300 dollars was dropped yesterday by staff members of the Institute of Science and Technology, DPS reports state. Two backpacks stolen from EECS It was reported Tuesday night that two backpacks were stolen from the Electrical Engineering and Comput- er Science Building Monday between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m., accord- ing to DPS reports. Inside the back- packs were textbooks valued at $320, two Texas Instrument calcula- tors valued at $220, a Nokia cell phone, clothing and other miscella- neous items. Tools taken from Mott worksite A caller had electrical maintenance tools taken from Tuesday morning while he was working at the Mott Chil- drens Hospital, DPS reports state. He said that he did not know who might have taken them without permission. Wallet containing cash, credit stolen " from B-School A brown leather wallet was stolen Friday from the hallway of the Busi- ness School Administration Building, according to DPS reports. The wallet contained $118 in cash, three credit cards and miscellaneous identifica- tion. Simultaneous thefts in Baits DPS officers discovered Tuesday night that three fire extinguishers were missing from three separate locations at Baits Residence Hall, DPS reports state. IV tubing lost in University Hospital A caller reported Monday after- noon that IV extension tubing was missing from a crash cart in the Uni- versity Hospital, according to DPS reports. Cell phone stolen during Saturday football game A man reported Monday afternoon that his cell phone was stolen at Sat- urday's football game, DPS reports By Jordan Schrader Daily Staff Reporter If voters approve the first of four ballot propos- als on Nov. 5, that election will be the last time they can choose a party's slate of candidates with a single mark on the ballot. Proposal 02-1 would eliminate straight-ticket voting in Michi- gan, which supporters said will force more informed decisions at MICHIGAN the polls. ELECTIO The proposal is a referendum 2 on a bill passed by the state legis- lature and signed into law by Gov. John Engler. Debate over straight-ticket voting has been largely along party lines. Democrats circulated petitions to take the law to the voters, hoping they would strike it down. The bill's sponsor, state Sen. Bill Bullard, Jr. (R-Highland Twp.), said it doesn't limit voters' choices as Democrats claim. "We want to encourage our voters to become educated on all issues and all candidates," he said. "Somebody can still vote all Democrat or all Republican or all Green Party." The elimination of the practice would also mean more voters would reach the bottom of the ballot to select nonpartisan candidates such as judges, Bullard said. People often don't real- ize that a party vote doesn't include these races, he said. Critics of the bill said party affiliation is a valid way to select candidates, and doesn't necessarily imply a lack of information. Straight-ticket voting is "a way that people can signify that they believe in what a party stands for," Michigan Democratic Party spokesman Ben Kohrman said. "People have the right to vote based on what- ever criteria they want to use," he said. "There's no constitutional imperative that voters need to inform themselves about what they're voting for." The long history of straight-ticket voting in Michigan, stretching back 110 years, has made voters accustomed to the practice, he said. Kohrman said passage of the proposal will also, create longer lines at polls by making the voting process more time-consuming. That would turn off some potential voters to the whole process, he said. "This is part of a long-term'concerted effort (by Republicans) to discourage access and make it harder to participate in the democratic process." But Yvonne Carl, Ann Arbor's acting clerk, said voters likely won't see a substantial increase in the time they spend at the polls. "It may slow a few people up," she said. "On the grand scheme of things, it's not going to make everybody wait a whole lot longer." Carl said she nonetheless opposes the proposal. "I don't like to see a right people had at one time taken away from them," she said. Jason Brewer, a spokesman for the state Republicans, said the proposal doesn't infringe on voters' rights. "The notion that somebody's not going to go vote because they can't vote straight-ticket is ridiculous,"he said. The proposal's impact may be more negligible than some people think, said pollster Ed Sarpo- lus, vice-president of the Lansing-based EPIC/MRA, Inc. Most voters choose candidates individually rather than by party, he said. In Detroit, where many people cast straight Democratic ballots, the effects may be more sub- stantial, Sarpolus said. County Clerk Peggy Haines said straight-ticket voting was used by 42 percent of Washtenaw County voters in the 2000 presidential election. Patiently waiting Cool weather fails to eradicate West Nile LANSING, Mich. (AP) - The West Nile virus has claimed the lives of two more Michigan residents, raising the total number of fatal cases statewide to 15, health officials said yesterday. The latest victims of the mosquito-borne virus are an 86-year-old woman from Macomb County and a 79-year-old man from Oakland County, according to the Michigan Department of Com- munity Health. Both cases had previously been reported as West Nile infections. The department also reported 26 new cases of the disease in humans, increasing the total of probable and confirmed cases in Michigan to 296 in 14 counties. More than 94 percent of the cases have turned up in the state's four most-populated counties: Oakland (with 107 cases), Wayne (86), Macomb (48) and Kent (38). Other counties reporting West Nile cases include Bay (one), Cass (one), Eaton (one), Ing- ham (three), Lenawee (one), Muskegon (one), Otsego (one), Ottawa (five), St. Clair (two) and Van Buren (one). Health experts say it's still important for people to protect themselves from West Nile-carrying mosquitoes despite cooler temperatures, as the pests are likely to be around for another couple of months. Most people bitten by an infected mosquito never get sick, and most of the rest see only flu- like symptoms. A small percentage of people contract the deadly symptoms of encephalitis, which enlarges the brain, and meningitis, which enlarges the spinal cord and brain linings. The weak and elderly are especially vulnerable to the virus. JASON COOPER/Daily Rabbi Levi Goldstein waits to help students participate in the Jewish ritual of shaking the lulav and esrog on the holiday of Sukkot yesterday afternoon. IRAQ Continued from Page 1A rate greed. Sole described his own political views, stating, "We're in a very perilous time right now. The U.S. government has taken a tremendous turn to the right." Sole was quick to point out that U.S. sanctions against Iraq have killed more people than bombing. He cited the tens of thousands of children who die each year of simple diseases brought about by U.S. bombing of water systems in Iraq. Engineering senior Ashraf Zahr, co- chairperson of the political committee for the MSA, introduced Sole and announced plans to start a "broad- based coalition for peace on campus." LSA junior Lena Masri, co-chair- person of the MSA political commit- tee, described the MSA's purpose as "focusing on issues in the Muslim world" and raising awareness. She also said the MSA chose Sole because of his position as a renowned activist during the Vietnam conflict and his work with humani- tarian issues in Iraq. Members of the audience stayed after the lecture for a question and answer session with Sole. LSA senior Deepa Challa described Sole as "really powerful - most speakers are qui- eter," and responded to Sole's com- ment that students today seem to be ahead of students in the 1960s by stat- ing, "To me it doesn't seem like we're that far ahead of people in the '60s, but I guess we are because the war hasn't even started and at least we are talking about it." LSA freshman Emma Sacks stated that she came to the lecture because "it's always good to hear different per- spectives - I just wanted to hear about the current situation from different sources." Overall, Sole's message was one of student empowerment and the power of grassroots movements. "The situation looks bleak if you don't know how to look at it," Sole concluded his lecture. "I think the prospect for building a powerful move- ment against this war exists, but it's not going to be easy." BUSH Continued from Page 1A Congress on the situation in Iraq, or about his efforts to gain United Nations backing for military action. On a third point, these officials said there was discussion about a commitment, suggested by Democrats, that would make clear that any military action in Iraq would not come at the expense of the overall war against terrorism. The House and Senate both are expected to vote on Iraq leg- islation before adjourning for the elections. Approval is expect- ed in both houses, although House Democrats say the size of Bush's victory will depend, in part, on the administration's willingness to address Democratic concerns in the private negotiations. At the same time the White House sought to rebut Daschle's accusations, the president's national security adviser accused Saddam Hussein's government of sheltering members of the al-Qaida terrorist network in Baghdad and helping Osama bin Laden's operatives. HADDAD Continued from Page 1A Rep. John Conyers (D-Detroit) and the American Civil Lib- erties Union successfully sued the department over the past few months, resulting in orders that the hearings be opened to the media and public. Haddad has been detained since last September for over- staying a six-month visa. The government also raided the offices of the charity he co-founded, Global Relief Founda- tion, Inc., saying the organization was funding terrorism. Haddad's attorney, Ashraf Nubani of Springfield, Va., blasted the government for its action yesterday. "There's been cases that have popped up since Sept. 11 that have presented a challenge to the Justice Department's, through the executive branch, curtailing the rights of people living there and I think Pastor Haddad is a great example of how they've done that; Nubani said, citing the government's use of secret evidence and secret nature of the hearings. NURSING Continued from Page 1A like nursing. I think the requirement is only a 3.0 GPA. I don't even think they look at SAT scores. That's why so many students do this," she said. Tuttle said last year about 20 to 30 students transferred out of her fresh- man class, many transferring into LSA. Admissions now require students to finish at least a semester before transferring. "It gives us a bad name because some people are applying just to even- tually transfer out," Tuttle said. "They leave thinking nursing is easy because the first year isn't as intense. The standards might be lower to get in but the curriculum is tough," Tuttle added. Marketing and Recruiting Coordi- nator Monica Sullivan said the stan- dards were not lowered for the School of Nursing to admit more stu- dents, but there were more applicants to the school. "We think factors like more resources into direct recruiting and media attention to nurses at a national level has brought more students into the school of nursing. The message has gotten out with advertisements like Johnson's and Johnson's 'Dare to Care' campaign," Sullivan said. "We accepted more transfers into nursing then transfers out of the school," Sullivan added. Nursing senior Amy Hendriksma said there were more applicants this year because of the proposed bill to create a Michigan Nurse Scholarship which would award $3,000 to more than 1,000 students to cover tuition costs. "People know they might be able to get scholarships and they are guaran- teed jobs in nursing. If people transfer out it's probably because they didn't like their first year," Hendriksma said. But Nursing sophomore Vicky Hein, who plans to stay in nursing, said get- ting accepted in the School of Nursing is not as competitive as other schools like LSA. "I knew my GPA wasn't good enough to get in, but I went before the nursing review board and they accept- ed me," Hein said. CANTOR Continued from Page 1A To reconcile this conflict, Cantor says the university community must remain poised between these two worlds. She said universities must incorporate voices of the marketplace, but let them be aired in a monastic environment. "We need to remain a bit distanced, but connected to the pressing issues of the day," she said. Cantor discussed three collabora- tions exemplifying ways to eliminate differences and allow for discussion getting right how we talk and getting across our differences." She said it is this intellectual diversity that allows us "to further our ability to have fresh ideas." "Diversity is an essential part of excellent education," University Provost Paul Courant said. He said he recognized the timeliness of Cantor's lecture given the continuing lawsuit developments. "This is the right time and has always been the right place," he said. "Without having different points of view, we are missing a great deal of what the University can do." i