IT D ... Michigan isn't the only school with weird college tra diti ons. See WEEKEND. 1£viriau6a WE ATW1.EN TODAY Colder, chance of rain; High: 42, Low: 28. TOMORROW Partly cloudy; High: 39, Low: 27. II -- e Q Since 1890 G t 4 a Vol. Cl, No. 122 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, March 29, 1991 TheMightgVDa1 cc takes 14 of 24 assembly .e 7Foste r seats by Julif nn SA ELEq r-: ?":}{:: i:,'f,: :sir{. :"'r,:. Total seats won (of 24 contested): Conservative Coalition 14 N Common Sense 4 SWrite-in '3 J : "1 :": f" . .. " ... j ':'t :^:':':: Emphasizing Student Power Independent 2 I Individual Winners (By School): .-LSA g Jeff Muir (CC) David Englander (CC) Melissa Saari (CC) Tom Cunningham (CC) ,Priti Marwah (CC) Joel Martinez (CC) Scott Gast (CC) nitra Nolte (CC) Jong Lim Han (CC) Engineering Bill Cosnowski (CC) Brian Johnson (CC) Natural Resources Nena Shaw (Independent) Nursing Nicole Shupe (CC) Medicine Jonathan Uy (CC) Pharmacy Ian Nordham (Write-in) Architecture Ari Blumenthal (Write-in) Law Michael David Warren (CC) uy %ARA u a and Jay Garcia Daily MSA Reporter Students took a 180-degree turn to the right during this week's Michigan Student Assembly elections. In addition to winning the assembly's executive leadership, Conservative Coalition (CC) candidates swept LSA, capturing all nine seats. The party won a total of 14 of the 24 contested seats. Combined with the 10 seats the party won in last fall's election, CC now has the largest candidate bloc on the assembly, holding exactly half of the total 48 assembly spots. The LSA votes will be recounted however, because there were only 31 points between the last CC repre- sentative who won and the leading Common Sense can- didate. Common Sense presidential candidate Angie Burks said she doesn't think CC will accomplish anything de- spite it's new majority. "CC has been on MSA for four years. They said, 'CC for a change,' but we haven't seen a change for four years, and I have little reason to see a change now," Burks said. The Common Sense party won all four Rackham seats. Emphasizing Student Power (ESP) won both Business School seats. One independent won in the School of Natural Resources. In addition, write-in can- didates won in the schools of Pharmacy, Art, and Architecture. This voting trend sharply contrasts last year's pres- idential elections in which the Coalition lost the pres- idency and a large number of seats to the Action party. Not since the fall of 1989 has CC controlled such a large portion of the assembly. Initial results of that election indicated the Coalition had captured 14 of 24 seats. However, the Central Student Judiciary invalidated the results of the LSA election - in which CC took 8 of 9 spots- after the election director destroyed sev- eral controversial ballots. When the LSA student gov- ernment appointed the school's representatives, only four CC representatives were seated from LSA. See ELECTIONS, Page 2 MSA election turnout indicates voter apathy by Jay Garcia Daily MSA Reporter Conservative Coalition candidate James Green may be the newly elected Michigan Student Assembly pres- ident, but the election's voter turnout indicates the overwhelming majority of University students proba- bly couldn't care less. Despite two days and nights of voting with polling sites spread all over campus, 87 percent of students did not vote in MSA elections. Although the 13 percent that did vote is considered typical of voter turnout most years, it is considerably less than the 20 percent which voted in last year's MSA presidential election. Some students who didn't vote shared the reasons for their apathy toward the MSA elections. See VOTERS, Page 2 Art Alen Yen (Write-in) Business Sandra Dixon (ESP) Tony Vernon (ESP) Rackham Jeff Hinte (CS) Amy Polk (CS) Rochelle Davis (CS) Sean Herlihy (CS) i .,, _ Citizens defy law, march in Moscow MOSCOW (AP) - Tens of thousands of Boris Yeltsin support- ers marched in the streets in defiance of Mikhail Gorbachev yesterday, but they stopped short of clashing "with the thousands of riot police ,-and troops he ordered to stand in their way. The march was organized to sup- port Yeltsin, the reformist presi- dent of the Russian republic. But af- ter Gorbachev banned the rally, it became a demonstration in support of recent limited moves toward democracy. Earlier in the day inside the Kremlin, Yeltsin's supporters in the Russian parliament appeared to gain the upper hand over hard-line Communists seeking his ouster. Yeltsin has been pressing Gorbachev for more reforms, in- '-cluding a faster move to a free-mar- .,,et system that many Soviets be- lieve would ease their economic woes. The two have also clashed over Yeltsin's insistence that Soviet republics control their own " economies and natural resources. Troops prevented the protesters from marching to Manezh Square next to the Kremlin. Demonstrators settled for a huge rally on 1 Tverskaya Street about a mile west w of the heart of Soviet power. The 50,000 police and soldiers deployed in the Soviet capital to en- Sforce Gorbachev's ban on rallies R; nearly rivaled the number of -protesters, but there were no re- ports of clashes or injuries. Police said they madeno arrests. The police a and troops were armed with water cannons, tear gas and truncheons. At times, the crowd surged against the human wall of troops, M but it stood firm while protest or- See SOVIETS, Page 2 ACLU director : liberties insecure Simon discusses current state of civil liberties in United States by Robert Patton Daily Staff Reporter Howard Simon, director of the Michigan chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), spoke last night to a group of about 35 people on the current state of civil liberties in the U.S., in Michigan, and at the University. The ACLU has consistently fought for the protection of consti- tutional rights from what Earl Warren called "the tides of hysteria that from time to time endanger us all," Simon said. He cited the group's defense of the rights of World War I protesters, its support of the the right to teach evolution in public schools and its fight against the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II as historical examples. Simon cited restrictions placed on the press during the Gulf War as a current example of a violation of constitutional principles. "When government officials said, 'We're not going to have an- other Vietnam,' they meant 'We're not going to lose the war by having popular support for it eroded by the press,"' Simon said. He also attacked recent tactics in combatting the drug problem, such as legislation allowing for wire- tapping and no-knock searches. "The war on drugs has largely been a war on the Bill of Rights," he said. Simon said the recent appoint- ments of U.S. Supreme Court jus- tices who are, in his view, hostile to civil liberties has caused the ACLU to refocus its efforts on state courts and legislatures. He gave the ACLU's tactics in defending abortion rights as an ex- ample, saying he believed the last three Supreme Court justices were chosen mainly for their anti-abor- tion stance despite their assertions that the president never asked them about it. See SIMON, Page 2 JOSE JUAREZ/Daiiy Concerned Students member Devlin Ponte shakes hands with Ann Arbor City Councilmember Larry Hunter (D- First Ward) at yesterday's rally on the Diag. Concerned Students rally to protest S. Quad incident by Tami Pollak and Sarah Schweitzer Daily Staff Reporters After five months of attempted meetings and negotiations, Concerned Students took to the steps of the Graduate Library yes- terday to publicly protest the University's and city's handling of the South Quad Macing incident. The rally marked a change in Concerned Students' strategy. Until yesterday, the group had by- passed provocative means of protest, such as sit-ins and building raids. Instead, they pursued a grad- ual approach which they hoped would be viewed by the adminis- tration as respectable and mature. While city officials have been receptive to the group's negotia- tion proposals and have met with the students on two occasions, University administrators have yet to sit down and discuss the issue with students. Although the immediate focus of yesterday's rally was the University's failure to investigate and resolve the Macing incident, many speakers, including Ann Arbor Council member Larry Hunter (D-First Ward), addressed the broader issue of Blacks and po- lice harassment. "This is not just 1991. We've got 1969, 1971 - this has always happened in the city of Ann Arbor," Hunter said. Hunter also emphasized the need for continued support of a re- view board that would first dis- cuss the macing incident and then continue to deal with minority concerns. The board would be com- posed solely of city council and community members. Concerned Students discussed the formation of such a board at their last meet- ing with Mayor Gerald Jernigan and city officials. Hunter warned the crowd of 80, however, that asking police to sit on such a board would be like "trying to ask the fox to go into the chicken coop and ask what's for dinner. See RALLY, Page 2 Saddam lat DOHUK, Iraq (AP) - Saddam Hussein's forces yesterday launched a massive air, rocket and artillery attack on rebel-held Kirkuk, U.S. - and rebel officials said. Iraq later claimed to have recaptured the northern oil center. Rebel fighters in Dohuk, a city of J 230,000 in the heart of Iraqi inches attack on rebel-held Kirkuk "The Iraqi army ... has started a massive air attack on Kirkuk," said Latif Rashid, a spokesperson in London for the Iraqi Kurdistan Front. He said there were reports of casualties, but had no details on the numbers. In Washington, State Department deputy spokesperson D1nkn.a rt nznkr.. nnA the Trani n There was no immediate com- ment on the latest claims from the resistance. Rashid said the Iraqi army used Soviet-made MiG and Sukhoi air- craft, as well as helicopter gunships, light airplanes, surface-to-surface missiles and artillery to try to dis- lodge the rebels from Kirkuk. The Kurdistan Democratic Party, one faction united under the Front, said Iraqi troops were massing near Saddam's hometown of Tikrit for a ground assault on Kirkuk. The official Iraqi News Agency reported earlier yesterday that loy- alist forces had recaptured Dohuk, a northern city of 230,000 25 miles 4 S~ .'. 4