News: 76-DAILY Advertising: 764-0554 2 t t 'Elan t i One hundred seven years of editorialfreedom Thursday November 20, 1997 I Pols hi By Jeffrey Kosseff Daily Staff Reporter State political figures hurled insults and lou ly argued their positions on affirmative action a panel discussion last night. The discussion on affirmative action featun s~ Reps. David Jaye (R-Macomb) and T ' ace (D-Detroit), state Sen. Alma Wheel Smith (D-Salem Twp.) and Tim O'Brien, cha of the Michigan Libertarian Party. As soon as the debate on affirmative actin began, the discussion became heated. Jaye, or of the legislators who encouraged students come forward as plaintiffs for the lawsuit cha lenging the University's affirmative action pr grams, made statements that angered man members in the audience of more than 400. *ffirmative action hurts minority studen by admitting incompetent and unprepared st dents and puts them in a rigorous curriculum Jaye said. "I truly believe there is not a lot racism in America." Smith and Wallace vehemently disagree with Jaye's stance. "The U of M does not admit anyone who unqualified," Wallace said. "David Jaye knov that. But he wants you to believe that unqual Regents to vote on stadium Byeather Kamins 1WStaff Reporter Today's meeting of the University Board of Regents will include a vote on the expansion of Michigan Stadium, speeches from student and faculty lead- ers and a student visit touted as a "field trip." If approved today, a proposal to add 5,000 seats to Michigan Stadium will be implemented, making the stadium thelargest outdoor sports arena in the r wn. Athletic Director Tom Goss said the additional seats will help the University accommodate a high demand for foot- ball tickets. Due to a surplus of ticket requests, first-year students received split-season ticket packages for this year's games. Goss said this will not happen again. "I think it gives us an opportunity to not-only add the 300 students that we 14to split tickets with, but it also gives us the opportunity to offer some student ticket requests that we haven't been able to meet yet," Goss said. As is customary with the November meeting, representatives from the Michigan Student Assembly and the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs will present reports to the regents. MSA President Mike Nagrant said lans to discuss MSA's ongoing pro- j~, including the new coursepack store, LSA's environmentally focused Winter theme semester and the student regent initiative. "1 am also going to lay a few ideas on the table, including a possible implementation of a fall break some- time in the future and the need to extend the hours in the graduate and law libraries," Nagrant said. fagrant added that he also is going t resent to the regents an MSA reso- lution that asks that students be allowed to rush the football field following the Michigan-Ohio State game this Saturday. Louis D'Alecy, chair of SACUA, said he will not bring any new busi- See REGENTS, Page 2A url insults at panel discussion fied minorities are being admitted. He is trying to take us back to the days of the Jim Crowe laws. "Every black person has to deal with racism from the time they are born until the time they die" said Wallace, who is black. O'Brien said affirmative action programs should not exist on the campus because the University is a public institution. By using race as a factor, he said, the government institutes a poli- cy of racial discrimination. "We hold to the hope that someday there will be no coer- cive government, O'Brien said. "It is totally wrong to discrimi- nate." Following last night's forum, about 50 students, many of them members of the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary, marched to the Fleming Administration Building for an informal gathering to demonstrate their commit- ment to a pro-affirmative action student move- ment. LSA first-year student Laura Kennedy said the march was a way for students to mobilize in defense of affirmative action. "As a young adult, this is one of the first opportunities to preserve what we believe in," Kennedy said. Wallace and Jaye, who are both University alumni, brought the debate to a personal level by questioning the other's qualifications for being accepted to the University. "David Jaye likes to say he is the best and brightest," said Wallace, a Law School alumnus. "But when he came to the University, I'm sure there were more qualified blacks who were denied admission." Jaye fired back later in the panel discussion by challenging Wallace's qualifications. "When Ted Wallace was a stu- dent, he took the place of a more qualified stu- dent," Jaye said. Smith said that in his statements about affir- mative action, Jaye makes two false assump- tions. "One of his assumptions is that any student of a minority background on this campus is inher- See SYMPOSIUM, Page 7A EMILY NATHAN/Da ly LSA senior Jerica Shields shows emotion during a symposium on affirmative active in Angel Hall yesterday, where state politicians gathered for an argumentative debate on the issue. SWEET SMELL OF SUCCESS Merchants cash in on Wolverines By Mike Spahn Daily Staff Reporter The Michigan football team's run for the roses has many local businesses hoping cus- tomers will make a run for the cash registers. As the 1997 regular season reaches a cli- max Saturday with Michigan facing off against Ohio State, truckloads of red roses and Michigan apparel are arriving into Ann Arbor. While fans scramble for memorabilia, student entrepreneurs look to profit as well - by selling their game tickets. Nielson's Flower Shop and Greenhouse more than doubled its rose order this week. Co-owner Diane Nielson said the shop is trying to boost support for the Michigan team. "We usually get 12-14 dozen roses every other week, but this week we'll get an extra 15 dozen, which will be available Saturday," Nielson said. Nielson said that after Michigan won rights to its last trip to the Rose Bowl in 1993, her daughter handed out two dozen roses to cele- brating students on South University Avenue. Along with ordering extra roses, Nielson's will cut the price of roses by more than 50 percent this weekend. "We think they can use all the support they can get," Nielson said. With booming sales in Michigan athletic wear, Ann Arbor merchants are benefiting from the football team's success. Managers at stores specializing in Michigan apparel said sales are up 30 percent compared to this time last year. "There has definitely been an upswing in sales, mostly in the last three weeks," said M Den Manager David Frick. "I don't think it hit anybody until after the Penn State game." Frick said this year's excitement is greater than in past potential Rose Bowl years. "I worked at the store the last time they went (to the Rose Bowl) and there wasn't the same effect," Frick said. "The last time it was Holocaust survivor talks on heroism By Carly Southworth Daily Staff Reporter More than 50 years after escaping his Nazi captors and liberating Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto, this year's recipient of the Wallenberg Medal hopes to show that one person can make a difference in the world. A crowd of about 250 gathered in Rackham Auditorium last night to hear Simha "Kazik" Rotem give the eighth annual University Wallenberg Lecture. The lecture and medal honor those who have made extraordinary accom- plishments toward liberty and human values. "I am here because I believe it is my duty as a survivor to tell human beings, especially the young generations, what they can do for their fellow humans," Rotem said, noting that he is "not a professional speaker" and apolo- gizing for his heavy accent. After receiving a standing ovation, Rotem spoke about his dramatic experiences in the Warsaw Ghetto during World War 11. In 1943, at age 19 Rotem and a friend not only escaped from the ghetto, but returned to rescue 60-70 members of the Jewish Fighting Force by organizing escapes through the sewer canal systems of Warsaw. "We had the question whether we had the moral right to take upon ourselves the responsibility of the thousands still living," Rotem said. While telling his story, Rotem told stories about digging underground tunnels, making weapons, posing as a Nazi soldier, crawling on his stomach through sewers and fight- ing hunger and hopelessness in order to survive. He said that there are no words that could even begin to express the horror of the Holocaust. Even though there were times when life passed before his eyes, Rotem said he somehow managed to keep his spirit. "I had begun to lose all sort of survival - my only weapon of revenge," he said. Fortunately for those 60-70 Jews and their loved ones, Rotem retained his hope and survived to tell his story. Rotem was introduced by University President Lee Bollinger, who later presented Rotem with the Wallenberg Medal and shared his thoughts about the award's meaning. "The Wallenberg Lecture raises among us, on the cam- pus and beyond, a perennial and ever-lasting question of what we would do if faced with a world of evil," Bollinger said. LSA junior Cynthia Epler said she was moved by the speech. "It is shame that there weren't more students here. There. won't always be that opportunity to hear something See LECTURE, Page 1OA EMILY NATHAN/Daily Diane Nielson, co-owner of Nielson's Flower Shop and Greenhouse, prepares a bouquet of roses. Roses will be a common sight Saturday should Michigan beat Ohio State. the fifth time in a row, so this one will be much bigger." Anything related to Michigan football has been flying off the shelves, said Steve & Barry's University Sportswear General Manager Daniel Switzer. "We've had to increase our inventory recently because anything with football has been blowing out," - Switzer said. "Everything's selling so fast, it's hard to keep things in stock." Both Switzer and Frick said the most pop- ular item has been the football jersey don- ning the number two - the number of star See ROSES, Page 10A The Showdown Countdown to The Game DAYS No.1 Michigan vs. No. 4 Ohio State Saturday, noon (ABC) Candidates make final rush for votes Students ambivalent about MSA election By Susan T. Port Daily Staff Reporter LSA sophomore Andy Coulouris hanging out at Angell Hall by 4:30 erday morning, but he did not have a class to attend. M Coulouris, who is running for an MSA seat with the Students' Party, woke up early to hang posters in the hall- ways through which thou- sands of students would walk turnout and win over voters. Students have the opportunity to elect represen- tatives of their college to the assembly twice each year. SA Coulouris said he is try- ing to be light-hearted about the whole election process. "If I can convince a hand- ful of students to vote, then it's better than nothing," Coulouris said. MSA President Mike By Jennifer Yachnin Daily Staff Reporter If the number of students who vote in the Michigan Student Assembly elec- tions yesterday and today, equals the number of posters stuck to walls across the University, it could be considered a miracle. But MSA President Mike Nagrant is hopeful that student turnout will top the 15 percent rate of last spring's election. "Unless you make it easier for stu- 'Why should I vote when I don't under- stand what (the candidates) stand for?"' To increase voter awareness, a mass e-mail announcing the MSA elections was sent to all students, Nagrant said. Dean of Students E, Royster Harper said many students do not value their right to vote until something happens with which they don't agree. "I'm not sure the students under- stand the value of making their voices heard," Harper said. "It's obvious to them w~he'ntheir voices are. heinu EMILY NATHAN/Daily LSA students vote yesterday in Angell Hall during the first day of MSA elections. The election continues today and students can vote online and around campus. "I think it gives them the opportunity right track." XT--+ -- -..+ --A --t ,Anxt I