uJLLfrTJ+LcI.L€I-l*- In This Issue... Page 2 Smoking policy changes proposed... Page 4 Jevon Clarke one of 5 basketball players to win awards... Forum Editor Alice Sharp responds to mooning at vigil... It's Official: McKissick Ticket to Lead Senate in 'O3-'O4 Adam Lerner Staff Writer . Floyd McKissick's ticket became the official winner of the Community Senate election when the elections committee announced early this week that it had rejected the Zach Smith ticket's appeal. . Following the decision, McKissick voiced optimism about the year ahead. "With the relationship I have with many administrators," McKissick said, "I feel like I can build a bridge be tween students and the administra tion." Smith complained to the com mittee after the polls closed last Tues day He alleged that McKissick's ticket had engaged in campaigning in Founders Hall and had distributed mass e-mails. The first allegation was ruled to be unfounded because, according to senate election rules, no candidate may campaign "in the vicinity of Founders Hall" while voting is taking place. The elections committee re- War on Iraq Katie Elliott Staff Writer POW Rescued Nineteen-year-old Pfc. Jessica Lynch was rescued from the Saddam Hospital compound in Nasiriya, Iraq, late Tuesday night. She and 14 other members of the 507 th Ordnance Maintenance Company were seized on March 23, when their convoy took a wrong turn and were ambushed by an Iraqi force. Five members of the team are classified as prisoners, two confirmed dead, and eight (including Private UMUMUM .fruA Lkrj+t ci.l ci H. .COTM. jected the charge because it could not determine where "in the vicinity of Founders Hall" referred to. The allegation pertaining to the mass e-mail distribution was "a slight violation" in the eyes of the commit tee, according to an e-mail sent by elections committee chair Steven Wheeler to all candidates on the rival tickets. Though still a violation, the e mail was hardly massive, being dis tributed to approximately six students, and was not significant enough, in the committee's judgement, to under mine the McKissick ticket's 13- vote lead. Three neutral community mem bers (students Doug Watts and Katie Abney and Career Development Cen ter Director Irene Harrington) joined the elections committee to determine what actions to take. Previously, the election had been overseen by Steven Wheeler, the current chair of the In ter-Club Council. This is not the first year in which Senate elections have come under scrutiny. "I've been here since the fall of Persists Despite International Concerns Lynch) were classified as missing in action. During the raid, the American forces found 11 bodies, some of whom officials say might be U.S. servicemen. Critics Denounced as Undermining Iraqi War Effort Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Gen. Richard B. Myers, the nation's highest-ranking military officer as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, rejected criticism last Tues wl H wn gH B * 1 vb^ I *jJJ2jjß 1 Courtesy of Flovd McKissick 1991 and I don't remember an un contested election," Harrington said. "It seems to me that there's some controversy every year. All of it doesn't reach the appeals process, but there are always innuendos that something improper was done or somebody didn't follow some rule, or what have day of the war against Iraq, calling such complaints misinformed and harmful to the troops. Myers attacked the partly anony mous critics, saying the criticisms are "absolutely wrong, they bear no re semblance to the truth, and it's just harmful to our troops that are out there fighting very bravely, very cou- April 4, 2003 Volume 89, Issue 20 you." Both sides exhibited a concilia tory tone following the appeal hear ing. . "We think we can still do what we wanted to do - we can still inform stu dents," said Savannah Turner, vice presidential candidate of the Smith ticket. rageously." One critic is retired General Barry McCaffrey, who led a mechanized in fantry division during the 1991 Per sian Gulf war. He said of Rumsfeld that he re sented "the See More War, page 3 S