1988-02-19; Central Michigan Life |
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FRIDAY
February 19. 1988
Presidential selection might be near
Board may ask
one candidate
to visit campus
by ROGER MORGENSTERN
UFE Ed.tor
The Board of Trustees may
announce CMITs next president
at its regular meeting March 4.
and has scheduled a special
meeting Monday to consider
inviting one candidate to campus.
Trustee Rachael Moreno said
Thursday a presidential selection
is possible when the Board meets
March 4
"Yes, that is a possibility.
There are a lot of possibilities and
that is one." said Moreno, chairwoman ofthe Board Search Committee.
The trustees have scheduled a
meeting Monday in Flint at the
Irwin L. Davis Educational Cen
ter to hear a report on the search
from Moreno and are slated to
vote whether to invite one candidate to campus. No other items
have been placed on the agenda.
Although Moreno and Board
Secretary' Russ Herron said final
details still are being worked out
for the candidate's visit, at least
one campus group has planned a
meeting March 2 to meet a presidential hopeful.
Ann AuxTinee, Student Government Association president.
said Thursday a group of students organized by James Hill,
vice president for Student
Affairs, is scheduled to meet w ith
the candidate March "2. It is not
known how many days the candidate will be on campus.
AuxTinee. St. Joseph senior, is
a member of the student group.
The group met Thursday to discuss questions to ask the candidate.
Hill said he was asked by the
Board to organize the student
group.
University officials will not
release the name ofthe candidate
until the Board decides on the
invitation. The candidate,
Moreno confirmed, is one of the
six white, male candidates the
Board received Jan. 29 from the
16-member Presidential Screening Committee. The committee,
composed of representatives of
various campus constituencies.
Please See SEARCH Page 9 MORENO: To issue report
Group proposes
condom survey
RHA members hope to determine
students' opinions about machines
Cruisin' canine
CM trtTlm Fiugvratd
Car thieves and do?, catchers probably left town the day Beverly DeLong her pickup truck while she took care ol business Thursday at the Isabella
relied down the street with Winston Appolo. her 9-year-old Brindle. riding County Courthouse. And if the message on her license plate is true, the
shotgun. DeLong. f/ount Pleasant resident. left her 150-pound canine in folks at the desk probably didn't give her any trouble.
by BRYAN G. LAVIOLETTE
lll-E SM't Wt.U-r
Residence Mall Assembly is
taking an "informal survey" to
determine residence hall students' preferences attout condom
vending machines
The survey will nut Ih- formal
and only will question students
living in residence halls. RHA
Chairman Danny Dcvito said
Thursday.
RHA representatives were
asked to go hack to their hall
councils this week. Dcvito, Kenton junior, said. They would ask
council floor representatives
question residentson theirfloors.
to get an idea of their feelings
attnut the machines
Devito said he expects RHA
representatives" reports to In-
made at HIIA's meeting Monday,
he added.
Student Government Association completed a campus-wide
survey concerning condom vending machines in January
SGA and RHA had an agreement to work together, Devito
said.
"Their survey was for all the
students on campus." Devito
said "We're just concerned with
the residence halls."
Hut SGA Vice President Frank
Ti/edes said the two groups never
discussed an informal stirvrv.
though he has no problems with
RHA doing a survey.
"They're doing something to
get feedback." Ti/edes. South-
gate senior, said
Tizedes added he would not
have supported the SGA survey
In-ing broken down into residence
halls and non-residence halls.
Ti/edes added RHA is not
using the l>est method for the
survey
"I don't know how accurate it
is." Ti/edes said "Any kind of
survey you d-> format's always
liettcr than informal."
Kd Brown, director of University Health Services, said the
more information .ilxiut the way-
student-: think, the better.
"We should have as much input
as posj-ible." said Brown, chairman of the Education.il Core
Council on AIDS "As long as our
student Ixidy is actively discussing AIDS, then I'm for it."
The SGA survey was done by
random telephone calls to 312
people Seventy percent of those
surveyed supported condom vending machines on campus.
Thi- Policy Subcommittee of
the council will review SGA's
recommendation today Pending
approval, it will forward the
recommendation to the full council
Sibling stampede
Weekend to unite hundreds of brothers and sisters
ACLU drops suit against injunction
by MARK LaROSA
L!Ff CVw I :■ ■
Better take eo\er the little
siblings an- coming to town this
weekend.
Sharon George. a»»istant
director of the OlVue ot Student
Life, said they should in- coming
by the hundred- !m the l!»*>
Little Brother Little Si-ter
Weekend.
She said the weekend has been
a great success .it CMC for at
least l.r> years Ami due to tin-
high quality ot' thi^ Weekend's
events, this year -hould be no
exception
"I think we have more major
events this year." George said
This is a very popular event.
probably the most popular event
of the year."
Highlighting the weekend will
be Detroit band Caruso, and
magician and illusionist HIGA.
The weekend. George said, is
sporwued by Program Board,
with help from Student Foundation, the Greek- and the Bovee
Cniver-ity Center
Program Board planned most
ol tin- event-. George said.' The
Greek- are -upply mg workers for
scheduled activities anil the l.'C
i- providing room- and workers
Campus Servile- Director
l.ynette Hilger -aid Student
Foundation i- putting on a I-is
Vegas casino night Saturday.
Hiiger. New Yoik ninioi. s.od
lor SI, visitors and students will
Ik- able to gamble with $I.(MHI
worth of paper money After gambling, they can buy prizes with
their winnings
Money for the weekend conies
from the Program Bo.ird budget.
The purpo-e ofthe weekend Is
to give younger kid- a glimpse of
what college and residence hall
life i- like
"It is basically to excise the
family to college life - - to see
what it's like to live in the dorms
with big bro or sis." George said.
"The only thing they don't get to
experience is homework."
The lineup for Friday includes:
■ 3 p.m.. Island Park ice skating (bring your own skate;;i No
admission.
■ .! pm to midnight, ttowlnig.
billiards, and video gann-s in the
I'C lower level games room
Bowling is SI per game and 'At
cents for shoes.
■ (> p m to 10 p.m.. open recreation and swimming in Rose
Arena No admission
■ S p m . magic and illusion by
HIGA in the UC Reservation
Admission is i'i.
Saturday's lineup includes:
■ lo am. to 5 pm, l.'C l>ook-
store will be open to purchase
souvenirs
■ 'J am. to 11 am., breakfast
special.' French toast, sniokey
links, orange juice or milk in the
Please See KIDS Page 9
Although the American Civil I.itterties I'nion
dropped its suit against the Fnd ofthe World party
injunction, the battle may not be over yet.
Isabella County Prosecutor .Joseph Barberi
announced Wednesday the suit, brought by AC 1.1'
lawyers at the request of three CMC students last
January, had l>een dropped liecause ~< ACLU I attorneys made the decision they cannot succeed on the
appeal."
However. AC1.C attorney Charles Koop of tin-
Traverse City firm Thompson. Zirnhelt. Bow run
and Rosi said Thursday, he hopes the appeals court
ruling in a similar case in Ka.-t Lansing will Ik-
favorable and broad enough to re-open the suit
against the Mount Plea-ant injunction
"We might lx- able to modify it or possibly have
the injunction set aside, depending on the court's
ruling." Koop said
"The way in which the i F.nd ofthe World I injunction was ol it.lined violated t he const i tut ional rights
to freedom of travel and freedom of assembly." Koop
said "iWe U-hevei there are sufficient criminal
statutes that could control it. but without a conscious effort to use those law-, the problem hasln-en
aggravated "
The Knd oft be World Party was a large congregation of people on Main and surrounding streets afler
-pi nig final exams'which resulted in many arrests
and damaged property
P
.. .. Sc- ACLU Page ?
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3
Televised debates attract about 40 students
by SALLY GIRARD
UFE S«JI1 Wrter
J
A light turnout of CMU students watched and contributed
to the live, televised presidential debate of five Democratic
hopefuls in Dallas Thursday.
Only about 40 people
gathered in Anspach 161, which
teats 300, to watch the debate.
Sponsors had hoped for a better
turnout.
ELECTION
lSK
See related story
Paqo 3
"I hope we have a bigger
crowd (today)," said Frank
Tizedes, Student Government
Association vice president. Students also can participate in the
Republican presidential hope
fuls' debate tonight at 9 p.m. in
the same room
SGA and Program Board
sponsored the debate in con-
|u net ion with the College Satellite Network. About 600 colleges
and universities participated.
The candidates answered
questions raised at the debate
Please See DEBATE Page 9
X'A
a
- \ i
\\\
4<
. I
•J.!
Inside
LIFE
Wanted
Freshman becomes o-.er-
n £ht se»ch;ect because cMher
Off the air
Comeback attempt
/n ~ Musical theatrical return is IW%*m*m*>. Q
/Page 3 successful /page o
Together again
CVU plans radio. TV r.e*s /D««a ft CMU. Notre Dame wrestling /B -ft
directcrsccnferencem WocreHall /rQgOO teams square off for second time /POQe 10
WEATHER BRIEFLY
Vastly cloudy with rain mned with
sno/w tod3/. highs in the mid 30s
Cloud, tonight with snow likely,
lows in the 20s. Mostly cloudy
Saturday and Sunday, highs near
30
The Bovee University Center's Friday Night at the Movies presentation Ailt be "The Assault." The
show will beginatBpm. intheUC
Auditorium. Admission is $1.50.
Object Description
| Title | 1988-02-19; Central Michigan Life |
| Date | 1988-02-19 |
| Publisher | Students of Central Michigan University |
| Description | Friday, February 19, 1988 issue of the student newspaper of Central Michigan University. Also known as CM-Life. Originally published biweekly. Later published three times a week during the academic year and once a week during the summer. Began publication in 1941. Previously known as Central State Life. Issues from 1999 to the present are available online at the CMLife website. |
| Subject/Keywords | Central Michigan University - Newspapers; Mount Pleasant (Mich.) - Newspapers; Isabella County (Mich.) - Newspapers; College student newspapers and periodicals; |
| Copyright Permission | Copyright 1988 by Central Michigan University. This material is copyrighted and any further reproduction or distribution is prohibited. |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Format | JPG/JPEG |
| Language | English |
