NEWS The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 10, 2005 - 3A ON CAMPUS Presentation will focus on voter discrimination University Law students and members of the Michigan Election Law Project Voting Rights Initiative will present a lecture and report on voter discrimina- tion since 1982 today. Panel members will include officers from National Commission on the Vot- ing Rights Act and the Mexican Ameri- can Legal Defense and Education Fund. The presentation will take place from 4 to 6 p.m. at 250 Hutchins Hall in the law quad. Admission is free and there will be a reception afterward. Guest speaker to discuss culture change since 9/1 Michael Berube, a literature profes- sor at Penn State University, will present a lecture today titled, "The Left at War: Cultural Studies and Cultural Crisis Since 9/11." The lecture is being spon- sored by Ethnic Literatures Seminar in the Program in Comparative Literature. The lecture will take place from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Vandenberg Room of the Michigan League. Admission is free. Multicultural sorority to present variety show The Zeta Sigma Chi multicultural sorority will present its fifth-annual One Love show today. This year it will be called "Radiant Fusion." The show will feature performances from local dancers and other cultural groups. The perfor- mance will take place from 7 to 9:30 p.m. at the Michigan League Ballroom. Tick- ets are $8 at the door or $6 in advance. They can be purchased at the Michigan Union Ticket Office. CRIME NOTES Haven Hall staffer receives harassing phone calls A staff member in Haven Hall report- ed receiving harassing phone calls yes- terday around 3:10 p.m, according to the Department of Public Safety. The calls appear to be from the same person and started earlier this week. Many times the caller will hang up the phone when the staff member picks it up. Student's purse stolen in Union A female student reported her purse was stolen from the Michigan Union yesterday around 7 p.m., according to DPS. She said she set the purse on the floor next to her and never left the area. There are no suspects at this time. Staff member's car keyed A staff member's black Dodge ranger was keyed while in a parking lot in Wash- ington Heights yesterday. DPS estimated the damage at around $2,000 because the car will need a new paint job. THIS DAY In Daily History MSA-sponsored insurance company declares bankruptcy Nov. 10, 1976 - The chairman of the Michigan Student Assembly Insurance Committee announced last night that MSA's personal prop- erty insurance program had been cancelled by its underwriter, Wood- land Mutual Insurance, because of the firm's bankruptcy. "Because of actions by the Michi- gan State Department of Insurance, we are at this moment technically without property insurance," said committee chairman Elliot Chikofsky, But Dan Newman, GM Underwrit- FBI investiga nhdling of Detroit ballots DETROIT (AP) - The Justice Department is investigating allegations that votes were cast in the names of dead people and that the city clerk improperly helped incapacitated people to vote by absentee ballot. At the request of the FBI, Chief Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Mary Beth Kelly late Tues- day ordered the secretary of state to preserve all absentee ballots, the applications to get them and the envelopes in which they were sent. The order, which came shortly before the polls closed Tuesday, said the ballots must be held by the state after being counted. "Now we can be satisfied that the ballots will be there and that the documents will be there," Assistant U.S. Attorney Lynn Helland, who sought the order, said after the hearing. The judge also ordered preservation of records of City Clerk Jackie Currie's Proj- ect Vote program, in which ambassadors go into the community and help senior citizens and disabled people prepare absentee ballots. Records to be preserved include Project Vote telephone logs and weekly work-force reports of the project's volunteers. Steven Reifman, attorney for Currie, called the order an unnecessary intrusion into the clerk's power and said the FBI investigation is based on allegations from a disgruntled candidate who has sued Currie. "I think it is much ado about nothing," Reif- man said. Meanwhile, Currie lost her re-election Tues- day to challenger Janice Winfrey. With 99 per- cent of the precincts reporting, Winfrey had 53 percent to 47 percent for Currie. The state and Wayne County reviewed about 45,000 absentee ballot applications and determined that 1,500 to 2,000 apparently were handled by ambassadors, the state and county said. Last week, Kelly ruled that Currie had been breaking state law in how she handles absen- tee ballots. The judge ordered the secretary of state and the Wayne County clerk to oversee the absentee ballots. On Tuesday, a three-judge Michigan Court of Appeals panel denied Reifman's emergency request to return oversight of absentee ballots back to Currie. Currie's appeal accused Kelly of violating due process by "running the proceedings in an 'ambush' mode, leading to the 'kangaroo court' style proceedings and the 'witch hunt' that has ensued." The motion, filed on behalf of Currie and the City of Detroit Election Commission, said Kelly lacked jurisdiction in the matter. It also said Kelly improperly reinstated portions of an order deemed "null and void" by the appeals court and ignored violations of Federal Voting Rights statutes and the 14th and 15th Amend- ments to the U.S. Constitution. On Friday, Kelly held an emergency hearing and said there was credible testimony that Cur- rie's workers violated a previous court order to stop the ambassador program. Earlier, Kelly found Currie guilty of crimi- nal contempt of court for defying her order and mailing 132,000 absentee ballot applications to people who didn't request them. Kelly made her rulings in a lawsuit filed by Maureen Taylor, a City Council candidate who lost in the August primary but sued alleging that fraud kept her from winning or getting a recount. Stephen Wasinger, attorney for Taylor, said he could not believe that Currie's office opposed preservation of the records. "I can't understand why a public official would not want documents maintained," he said. In late October, The Detroit News reported that Currie's handling of absentee ballots was questionable. The newspaper found that people cast ballots even though they listed addresses at abandoned nursing homes or in one case, a vacant lot. The paper also said a master voter list included people who died or left Detroit. Long-time city clerk unseated DETROIT (AP) - Embroiled in a federal probe of her handling of absen- tee ballots, City Clerk Jackie L. Currie has been unseated after serving in the post since 1994. Janice Winfrey defeated Currie in Tuesday's election. With 99 percent of the precincts reporting, Winfrey had 53 percent of votes cast, to Cur- rie's 47 percent. Reached at home by telephone, Cur- rie had little to say Wednesday about the election loss or a federal investigation into her handling of absentee ballots. "I don't even want to discuss it," said the 74-year-old Currie, who has been the city clerk for three terms. She previously served as a Wayne County commission- er for 20 years. Asked about her plans, she said: "I have to rest." The victory for Winfrey, 47, comes as the Justice Department investi- gates allegations that some votes in the Detroit election were cast in the names of dead people and that Currie improp- erly helped incapacitated people vote by absentee ballot. A message seeking comment from Winfrey was left Wednesday at a tele- phone listing for her husband's work- place. There was no home listing for Winfrey and no answer at a telephone listing for her campaign. Paul Masseron, a political consultant and former United Auto Workers offi- cial, said Currie's defeat suggests that Detroit voters were sophisticated in how they made their Election Day decisions. "It does show that people are paying real close attention," Masseron said. Last month, The Detroit News report- ed that Currie's handling of absentee ballots was questionable. The newspa- per found that people cast ballots even though they listed addresses at aban- doned nursing homes or in one case, a vacant lot. The paper also said a master voter list included people who died or left Detroit. It also said that for several years, since protesters went to her home, Currie has been assigned a full-time driver from the Detroit Police Department. What will I find in a sales career at Lilly? Michgan Union (around Floor. P M8 #151 SS8 South Swoto Stret (734)769.2555 128 & UnvositV Av. (734)998.0200 ,Cx" ..5rr..F. 5?#.n... .; w. .x+.. .i:x.x },..xx., rhW .£ Answer ------------- ---------- Commitment. It sets us apart. School of Information master's students serve communities in Ann Arbor, in other states, and on other continents. More than 70 of our students participated in Alternative Spring Break in Washington, D.C., and New York City. Others have organized community information centers on Native American lands and in Africa, South America, and the Caribbean. Be part of it. Connect with SI. 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