} The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS CARACAS, Venezuela Measure's defeat means Chavez can't serve indefinitely President Hugo Chavez suffered a stunning defeat early today in a referendum that would have let him run for re-election indefinitely and impose a socialist system in this major U.S. oil provider. Voters defeated the sweeping measures yesterday by a vote of 51 percent to 49 percent, said Tibisay Lucena, chief of the National Elec- toral Council, with voter turnout at just 56 percent. She said that with 88 percent of the votes counted, the trend was irreversible. Opposition supporters shouted with joy as Lucena announced the results on national television early Monday, their first victory against Chavez after nine years of electoral defeats. MOSCOW Putin's party coasts to election victory Vladimir Putin's party won a crushing victory in parliamentary elections yesterday, paving the way for the authoritarian leader to remain in control even after he steps down as president.A The vote followed atense Kremlin campaign that relied on a combina- o tion of persuasion and intimidation to ensure victory for the United Rus- sia party and for Putin, who has used a flood of oil revenues to move his country into a more assertive posi- r tion on the global stage. "The vote affirmed the main idea: that Vladimir Putin is the national leader, that the people sup- port his course, and this course will continue," party leader and parlia- ment speaker Boris Gryzlov said after exit polls were announced. Severaloppositionleaders accused the Kremlin of rigging the vote, and the Bush administration called fora probe into votingirregularities. DETROIT Winter storm kills 11 across region Rain fell over much of the Mid- west yesterday, one day after a pre- winter Midwestern snow and ice storm swept through the region, slickening roads and causing crash- es that killed at least 11 people from Colorado to Indiana. Four deaths in Michigan were blamed on weather conditions. In suburban Detroit, a 54-year- old man driving with his 57-year- old wife spun out of control and crashed about 6:40 p.m. Saturday. "The truck left the roadway, struck a guardrail and rolled on its side in the median," Sterling Heights police Lt. Alan A. Byrd said Sunday in a news release. "Both husband and wife had to be extri- cated from the vehicle.... Both were dead at the scene." BALI, Indonesia U.N. kicks off global warming conference Delegates and scientists from around the world opened the big- gest-ever climate change confer- ence today, urging rapid progress in building a new international pact by 2009 to combat global warming - or risk economic and environ- mental disaster. Some 10,000 conferees, activ- ists and journalists from nearly 190 countries gathered on the resort island of Bali for two weeks of U.N.- led talks that follow a series of sci- entific reports this year concluding that the world has the technology to slow global warming, but must act immediately. The Bali meeting will be the first major climate change confer- ence since former Vice President Al Gore - due to arrive next week - and a U.N. scientific council won the Nobel Peace Prize in October for their environmental work, fuel- ing the growing sense of urgency as ice-caps melt, oceans rise and extreme weather increases. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 1 3,882 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. The Department of Defense did not report any deaths over the weekend. ELECTION From Page 1A that saw MAP member MSA Rep. Anton Vuljaj face a felony and a misdemeanor charge for allegedly tampering with the March 2006 elections and MSA President Zack Yost, one of the party's founders, come under fire for his creation of a Facebook.com group that mocked MSA Rep. Tim Hull's Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of autism. MAP-backed candidates swept their elections with only the inde- pendent MSA candidate for LSA, Alex Serwer, a sophomore, edg- ing out a MAP candidate. Last fall, MAP took all of the LSA seats, and last springthey took all but one. Similar to the election of inde- pendent candidate Hull in last spring's elections, Serwer received significantly fewer individualvotes, meaning that those votes had to be weighted heavily in his favor. Each WANT TO HELP US REDESIGN OUR WEBSITE? E-mail grossman @michigandaily.com. voter prioritizes their candidates, and a higher priority results in more points toward election. The Defend Affirmative Action Party, which is devoted to increas- ing diversity on campus, garnered three seats in the election, one fewer than in last fall's midterm election. Although the party ran a larger slate than it has in the past, it did not beat both MAP and inde- pendent candidates in any race. DAAP Party Chair Maricruz Lopez said her party's poor show- ing could have been a result of the lack of awareness of the campaign. She said this was a direct result of the controversy over whether or not the School of Public Policy would receive a seat, which pushed the election back to the latest date possible. "There are a lot of students who aren't aware of the MSA election," Lopez said. "That whole scandal in trying to disenfranchise Public Poli- cy messed up the whole election." Monday, December 3, 2007 - 3A She said that her party would be prepared for a much stronger showing in spring, because the DAAP candidates, who were most- ly running for the first time, gained valuable experience. "All of our candidates are very optimistic for the spring," she said. Notable MAP incumbents Stella Binkevich, an MSA representative and chair of the powerful Budget Priorities Committee, and Sabrina Shingwani, MSA treasurer, both won their MSA elections in LSA. Binkevich said she was glad to win her seat and was proud of her role as part of the senior MAP lead- ership. There were ties for the School of Music and School of Pharmacy seat, which will be resolved in the upcoming weeks. The tied can- didates will make a case for their seat in front of MSA at tomorrow's meeting, and the assembly will decide on who will represent the school. LSA senior Aghogho Edevbie organized a meeting yesterday to plan a carr to force Michigan Student Assembly President Zack Yost to resign. YOST From Page1A Despite the e-mail's blunt language, not everyone in atten- dance shared Edevbie's opinion that Yost should resign immedi- ately. Some students in attendance said that if Yost resigns now, he would never be held accountable for what they see as the campus- wide effects of his comments. Also, they expressed fear that students may forget the effects of such insensitivity if Yost steps down from his position. Sam Harper, president of the University's chapter of the Col- lege Democrats, said that if Yost resigns, students could miss the chance to learn from the situa- tion. LSA senior Andrew Bronstein said that whether or not Yost resigns is of secondary impor- tance to whether or not MSA makes efforts to increase "inclu- siveness" of the assembly and of the campus at large. Edevbie said changing MSA culture was a noble goal, but Yost's resignation needs to be the first priority. Aside from the flyers, Edevbie said the student body should send letters to alum- ni asking them to stop donating money to the University until Yost resigns. LSA senior Peter Borock, a for- mer MSA representative, suggest- ed that the University offer classes dealing with discrimination based on disabilities. This would do more to raise awareness about the issue than Yost's resignation, he said. Borock was the communications director for the former MSA party Students 4 Michigan, of which Yost was a member. OtherstudentssaidYostshould be given the option of reviving the defunct MSA Students with Disabilities Committee and work at increasing awareness within the assembly and on campus of discrimination against students with disabilities. If he chooses not to do this, they said, he should resign. Edevbie said he wanted the meeting to remain focused on what he saw as the primary objective - pressuring Yost to resign from MSA immediately - but several of the attending students didn't want to discuss it. Edevbie said that attempting to increase awareness on campus about discrimination against stu- dents with disabilities is impor- tant, but it could be discussed at another meeting. This meeting, he said, should have been devoted to removing Yost. Yost would not be the first MSA member to lose his position over the scandal LSA junior Kenneth Baker, a former MSA represen- tative, announced last week that he would resign his position over his membership in the Facebook group. He resigned after learning that LSA Student Government had organized a trial to recall his seat. He sent an e-mail message to LSA-SG President Keith Reis- inger and MSA on Saturday to officially confirm his resignation. When Edevbie began discuss- ing the logistics of his campaign at yesterday's meeting, all but six of the attendees left, including Harper, Borock, Bronstein and the four MSA representatives. Edevbie and the remaining students discussed distributing flyers on campus and then dis- banded. After the meeting, Edevbie said he thinks some students - including Harper and Borock - came to intentionally steer the meeting off course. He said he believes they were trying to divert the group's attention away from pressuring Yost to resign. "We're just looking for the res- ignation of Yost," Edevbie said. He said it isn't personal, but it's a way to move forward from this troubling incident. 10% Discount off your first ad on michigandaily.conm Ads receive approx. 100,000 impressions and 50 hits per week 10 percent discount if you also run an advertisement in the display or classified section I x .. . 4.C rr w. a