LOCAL/STATE students 'get 'weightless' The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 19, 1998 - 5A f Joshua Rosenbatt ily Staff Reporter Four students from the College of igineering will leave the chilly climate of n Arbor tomorrow for two weeks of high- ing fun in sunny Houston. e NASA-sponsored program that the u ents are taking part in - the reduced avity student flight opportunity program gives 48 groups from colleges across e nation an opportunity to experience icrogravity first-hand as they soar rough the sky in the experimental KC- 5 aircraft. In addition to feeling the effects of the ultra- o gravity force, the groups also will perform rious experiments while they are floating ugh the air. 's more fun for us because this way, we get float around," said Engineering junior Aaron cobovits, one of the team's members. In addition to "floating around," the four- me will test "microgravity pipe flow induced "It's more fun for us ... we get to float around.E" -- Aaron Jacobovits Engineering junior through asymetrical oscillation," which means they will attempt to determine whether it is possible to move water upward through a pipe, shaking it in a reduced-gravity situation. In putting together their experiment, which they call "Flow Blue," they had to utilize the resources and knowledge of several depart- ments. Mechanical Engineering Prof. William Schultz gave the students design suggestions, in addition to providing theoretical calcula- tions, while aerospace Engineering Prof. Luis Bernal helped with the specifics of the experi- ment. Shultz said the team received assistance from various departments and people, but the bulk of their experiment was in the students' hands. "This is really a student project," he said. The team had to learn everything from how to secure a laptop in an almost gravity-free envi- ronment to how to drill holes in a sheet of metal. "We had to change our plan a dozen times along the way," Engineering sophomore Erica Pendergrass said. While the group, which also includes Engineering senior and team leader Stuart Feldman, as well as Engineering first-year student Alejandra Salinas, has worked together since November, they urge inter- ested undergraduates to "get started signif- icantly earlier." Those interested in learning more or partici- pating in the program next year can contact the group at KC-135-pipe@umich.edu. Engineering sophomore Erica Pendragrass, Engineering senior Stuart Feldman and Engineering junior Aaron Jacobovits display their technology yesterday. Students protest in defense of affirmative action Speech on time travel delights 'U' CONNERLY Continued from Page :A California did not save affirmative action in 1996. "There were groups in California saying 'We're mobilizing.' They did not do that much," he said. In recent months, the affirmative action debate has heated up on campus as a result of the two lawsuits filed *gainst the University that target its use of race as a factor in its admissions policies. Connerly said the court will eventually strike down the University's use of race in admissions. "It points to the fact that there are people who feel they are being dis- criminated against by the University," Connerly said. "Ultimately, it will be the court that will have to resolve the issue. The courts are going to say, ou cannot use race, even if it is used to achieve diversity."' Taking a broader step than the law- suits, state Rep. Deborah Whyman (R-Canton) recently annouced plans to collect signatures to put an initia- tive on the November ballot to elimi- nate "racial preferences." Whyman, who attended the speech, said she plans to start collecting the required 310,000 signatures next week. * "If it goes on the ballot, it will pass," Whyman said. Connerly, who helped pass Prop. 209, which banned the use of affir- mative action in the state of California in 1996, said Whyman has a strong case for a similar initiative in Michigan. State Sen. David Jaye (R-Macomb) said he was disappointed that the crowd did not allow Connerly to >eak, adding that the structure of the event created additional difficulties. Jaye said audience members who do not support affirmative action should have been allowed to speak. Amid shouts of, "How come you're so two-faced" and "Let him speak," students told Connerly that they are part of a national movement to halt the resegregation of the United States. "Let's embrace our differences," shouted LSA first-year student Boyd White, who asked all University stu- dents to fight for equality. "United we stand, divided we fall." But others heralded Connerly's message. "Affirmative action is demeaning to minorities, and it should be done away with out of respect for equality," said RC sophomore William Wetmore. Hours before Connerly's speech began, more than 100 picketers held signs and waited in front of the League, chanting, "Back to segrega- tion, we won'L go; Ward Connerly's plan, hell no!" RC first-year student Daniel Kahn said he joined the protest to show Connerly how University students felt about his visit. "I think it's an interesting stop for him to make because he should know that he has a lot of enemies here, and we're going to let him know that," Kahn said. LSA junior Dan Keebler criticized the picketers, saying their demonstra- tion lacked substance. "It's a lot of noise, weak arguments and a lot of show," Keebler said. One protester said Connerly is being manipulated by the anti-affir- mative action movement. "He's more like a puppet -- a per- son who can't think for himself. He's conditioned," said LSA senior Larthell Hasan. "He's sitting on his little high chair and doing whatever he has to do to keep that position. He's like a slave obeying his master." - Daily Staff reporter Eliana Raik contributed to this report. By Sam Stavis Daily Staff Reporter In the classic movie "Back to the Future," Marty McFly travels back in time, and his teenage mother takes a rather unmotherly liking to him. To secure his own future, McFly has to make sure his mother falls in love with his hopelessly uncool father. Does this violate the laws of time travel? Is time travel even possible? Physics Prof. Yukio Tomozawa dis- cussed brain-teasers such as these at last night's public lecture on time travel, pre- sented by the Student Astronomical Society. The presentation caused an audience overflow at the Kuenzel Room in the Michigan Union, attracting a variety of curious University students. The ques- tion on nearly everyone's mind was whether time travel is possible. "Time travel is a subject which may be science or may be fiction," Tomozawa said. Tomozawa addressed many different topics of time travel, ranging from wormholes to black clouds to multiple universes. The material was presented with minimal mathematics, and ques- tions were encouraged during the show. Traveling to the future is easy to explain and "scientifically correct," Tomozawa said. According to Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity, if a person travels away from and back to the Earth at almost the speed of light, less time will have elapsed for the traveler than for the people staying still. In essence, the traveler will have gone to the future. "The only' problem is, going close to the speed of light is difficult,"Tomozawa said. "It requires a lot of energy." Another problem is that this process is irreversible. Once in the future, the traveler can't return to the past by means of a similar process. Although traveling back in time is a more complicated topic, it is still possi- ble, Tomozawa said. It requires entering and exiting a black hole, which is accepted by most of the scientific com- munity as impossible. "One has to change the concept that nothing can come out from a black hole," Tomozawa said. In order to do this, the time traveler would have to enter a special kind of black hole, Tomozawa said. The small size and incredible density of an ordinary black hole causes "tidal" effects on objects near it, where the force of gravity differs across the object. Only objects on the atomic level will survive these brutal shearing forces. In a human body, this can cause the "spaghettification" process, ripping the body apart. In order to safely enter a black hole, it would have to be huge - similar to the size of a quasar. It would also have to be environmentally friendly. Once inside this black hole, a person conceivably could travel to the past in either the same or alternate dimensions. Despite the complicated nature of the subject, Tomozawa made his points clearly and concisely, some audience members said. "We try to gear our presentations to the general public," said LSA junior Dale Kocevski, a member of the Student Astronomical Society and an organizer of the event. "We try to stay away from any mathematics." But what about McFly? Tomozawa did not fail to include in his presentation that, thanks to a Chuck Berry guitar riff and a lightning-pow- ered DeLorean, Marty McFly managed to get his parents together, and go back ... to the future. EMILY NATHAN/Daily University students and Ann Arbor residents protest Ward Connerly's speech against racial preferences in front of the Michigan League. LAN SING Continued from Page 1A a person's skills. The anti-affirmative action move- ment has taken off in California, where voters in 1996 approved a pro- posal forbidding state and local gov- ernments from discriminating against or granting preferential treatment to any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity or nation- al origin. California Gov. Pete Wilson pushed the issue even further last week by formally ending enforcement of a California law giving preferences in state contracting to firms owned by minorities and women. Connerly said he doesn't know if Michigan residents are as receptive to ending affirmative action as California voters have been. If the response he got yesterday was any indication, the answer is no. The heavily black audience taunt- ed Connerly, who also is black. Connerly decried the "tactics of intimidation." "Programs that treat people differ- ently are hanging on by a thread," he. said. U U111111111 lit 1 .4k A Learn skills to improve both yourself and * your organization. This conference is free to all U of M students. Registration deadline is Wednesday, March 25th. Registration forms are available at SAL, 2209 Union. 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