it Ian tti News: 76-DAILY Display Ads: 764-0554 Classified Ads: 764-0557 One hundred eight years of editorialfreedom Monday November 23, 1998 ~'7'k'..; ,'"v " "":'. , > v.,. ", yr Sxd*dyt cr at d rv xS d:4' N' xN+:f: L,-v ' k0v""':a'c ' : C: v ;yy ;.1 ....~_. ...: ., x. _, ,'J ,e-6r:.v i. . 'E. ,. x: } ~, ,.,:, m, ,r .v+ +:;.¢nnr r! -...,a .! vg t ,ika..,: a. '#A kionorary degrees awarded byregents By Erin Holmes Daily Staff Reporter With intentions of capturing the essence of diversity at the University, the Board of Regents approved President Lee Bollinger's recom- mendation that a Nobel Prize winner and a renowned composer receive honorary degrees from the On versity on Dec. 20. David DiChiera, the founder and director of the Michigan Opera Theatre and composer of works for piano, violin, orchestra and voice, will receive an honorary degree and be the main speaker at the University's winter commencement. Bollinger said DiChiera's accom- plishments - founder of the Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts and founding director of the Opera cific in Orange County, Calif. - eflect perseverance. "It's the sort of thing where you start out trying to build something and everyone thinks you're crazy," Bollinger said. This example of commitment, Bollinger said, will facilitate a com- mencement speech that demonstrates the significance of the arts at the University. "Then you stick with it, *d you become identified with what you created ... it's like the dancer and the dance." Chen Ning Yang, an Albert Einstein Professor of Physics at the State University of New York, will receive an honorary doctor of sci- ence degree. Although the regents approved only two degree recommendations at Friday's meeting, the number of 0cipients can vary from two to three r winter commencement and can include up to six recipients in the spring. Bollinger said the selection process was less elaborate than in previous years. In the past, nominators were required to submit descriptions of why the candidate should be select- SP edges DAA b By Jennifer Yachnin Daily Staff Reporter The Students' Party clipped past the Defend Affirmative Action Party by a nar- row margin of one seat in last week's Michigan Student Assembly elections. The Students' Party, which currently domi- nates the assembly, carried seven seats in the election, closely followed by the Defend Affirmative Action, which took six seats. Independent and write-in candidates captured seven seats, and trailing behind, the New Frontier Party put just one candidate in office. Terms for the assembly's representatives are staggered and the rest of the seats will be up for grabs in the spring. "I am excited, excited excited for this assembly:' MSA President Trent Thompson said. Thompson said he expects the number of "concrete projects" produced by the assembly to increase during the next year. "They're not just people who come to Tuesday night," weekly meetings, Thompson said. Only 2,512 students cast ballots in the election, slightly down from the fall 1997 election when a record 2,876 students voted. "I think voter turnout was pretty good given the election in general,' said Andrew Serowik, MSA rules and elections chair. Students' votes are tallied using a point system based on the number of open assem- Iy 1seat bly seats in each school. For example, in the LSA representative election, with eight open seats, voters select- ed eight candidates and ranked them in order of preference; the top candidate receives eight points, decreasing by one point for each consecutive candidate. Defend Affirmative Action Party Rackham Rep.-elect Jessica Curtin said the assembly will be "a totally new organization." Substantially increasing their representation. Defend Affirmative Action Party members were elected in the School of Music, the College of Engineering, Rackham Graduate School and the College of Literature, their See MSA, Page 2A students Bowled over 4'U, Buckeye offense crushes Michigan By Mark Snyder Daily Sports Editor COLUMBUS - The frustration of years and championships spoiled came spilling onto the field Saturday as the final horn sounded in Columbus. No. 7 Ohio State stomped on the demons of three straight defeats to No. 11 Michigan, winning 31-16 before 94,339 fans at Ohio Stadium to gain a share of the Big Ten championship. As the final score rang from the pub- lic address system, thousands of Buckeye faithful swarmed the Ohio State players on the field to celebrate just their second victory over Michigan in the past I1 seasons. The defeat denied the Wolverines (7- I Big Ten, 8-3 overall) a trip to the Rose Bowl and sole possession of the conference title they laid claim to last week when they defeated Wisconsin. Instead, Michigan will share the title with the Buckeyes (7-1, 10-1) and the Badgers, who defeated Penn State later Saturday afternoon. The Wolverines, who have one regular season game remaining in Hawai'i on Nov. 28, now must shift their bowl sights southward to Florida instead of the rosy prospects of Pasadena it previously anticipated. "Ohio State has a great team," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "We made too many mistakes against a great team. We have no excuses. We didn't play our best game." Dominating the line of scrimmage in pass protection and in the running game, Ohio State executed the text- book offense it has shown all season, only this time the success came against Michigan's seventh-ranked defense. The Buckeyes rolled to 462 yards of total offense and on the big-game stage, their star players lived up to the billing. Ohio State quarterback Joe Germaine passed for 330 yards on 16- of-28 attempts, and played catch with wide receiver David Boston all after- noon boosting the receiver to a career- best afternoon. The senior wideout, who was not a finalist for the Biletnikoff award as the nation's top receiver, dominated as much as a wide receiver could, catch- ing 10 passes for 217 yards, while find- See FOOTBALL, Page 7A pushfo honor code By Erin Holmes Daily Staff Reporter When Engineering junior Patrick Guffey returned from the Academic Integrity Conference on Nov. 8, he knew the University could defy the statistics. The results of research conducted by Rutgers University Prof. Donald McCabe show that on most col- lege campuses, more than 75 percent of students admit to cheating at some point - a finding Guffey said is most likely an accurate portrayal of our University. Guffey's solution was to form the Academic Integrity Group - now consisting of four core members - whose goal is to develop a unified academic misconduct policy stressing the importance of academic integrity. "We want to get some cooperation between the indi- vidual schools and colleges and set a uniform ideal," Guffey said. "We want everyone subject to the same policies, he added. While the University's Code of Student Conduct out- lines rules and regulations of the student body, it does not include a universal honor code to curb cheating. Guffey, who researched the formation of the universal policy, said all 19 colleges at the University currently have honor codes that are widely misunderstood by stu- dents and have only subtle differences from each othr., "All colleges prohibit the same behaviors, but they are completely different in how they view the behavior, how they handle it and how they implement punishments," Guffey said, adding that while an Engineering student caught cheating is subject to review by fellow students, an LSA student may only be confronted by the profes- sor. "It isn't the right thing to treat people more harshly depending on their major," he said. "This begs the necessity that we have one standard of the school." Michigan Student Assembly Vice President Sarah Chopp, a member of the AIG, said the goal is to create a "cooperative system" at the University. "Each system has a mini-system," Chopp said. "We don't want to get rid of these systems. We just want a centralized committee." The proposed campuswide honor code that would govern all students would be similar to the one already enforced by Engineering, but would not do away with the current Engineering Honor Code - a document that has remained a testimony to the trust among Engineers. "We do not see the point in creating a Universitywide system that would take over the Honor Code when the Honor Code works well now and is so well respected not just by engineers but by universities and businesses around the world," said Emily Ebert, the Engineering Honor Council president. But Ebert did admit that a central system to stress integrity is important to the University. "Rules and regulations have a time and a place, but are not the same thing as true honor," Ebert said. "And I think any code that emphasizes policies and conse- quences over the principles behind those policies is ulti- mately self-defeating." The objectives of the AIG - presented to MSA and LSA-SG - include the formation of a task force of stu- dents, faculty and administrators to explore increasing See CODE,yPage 7A 5~~% '~~*CBS' 60 [;~4~y. minues ~ yesterday ed. 0 See DEGREES, Page 2A Residence halls left with spo ts Jennifer Yachnin zily Staff Reporter Thousands of students moved into University residence halls last September and, for the first time in years, student lounges weren't used as temporary housing. In fact, there are nearly 200 open spaces not being used in residence halls this year, said Alan Levy, director of Housing public affairs. "We have vacancies during the hool year," Levy said. "This is some- what higher than the normal rate." Each year Housing loses about 2-3 percent of first-year students who vacate the residence halls during fall term for a variety of reasons, Levy said. Housing administrators decided last week to lift the ban issued last fall that prevented junior and senior students from returning to traditional residence halls. The combination of a smaller incoming first-year class and fewer *perclass students returning to the residence halls helped to eliminate overcrowding this year, Levy said. "We have not opened with unused spaces in years,' Levy said. "The over- riding goal we had for this fall was to dramatically reduce oyercrowding. "It was hard to get exactly the right number," he said. Housing charges about $5,400 for a uble room and board in the residence Wlls, Levy said. Although 200 spaces account for only a smallfraction of Housing's actu- al capacity, the extra space makes life more pleasant for students, said Residence Halls Association President Carrie Taub. Above: An OSU fan exults after Ohio State's victory over Michigan on Saturday In Columbus. WARREN ZINN/Daily Right: An Ohio State backer cheers for the home team as a Wolverine stands silent next to him. MARGARET MYERS/Daily Assisted suicide aired on TV By Sarah Lewis Daily Staff Reporter Jack Kevorkian brought the world an insider's view of his assisted suicide crusade last night when CBS aired a tape of Kevorkian giving a patient a lethal injection. The program "60 Minutes" showed a Kevorkian patient, Thomas Youk, who suffered from Lou Gehrig's disease, progress from a successful race car driver to the physically incapacitated man seen in the video. Kevorkian said Youk wanted to die so badly he would not even wait a week to think over the decision. At the time of his death - two months ago -Youk was in a wheelchair and had little movement in his arms. In the tape, he responded to Kevorkian's questions in a nearly unintelligible voice, but his signing of two documents indicated he wished to die of a lethal injection dose administered by Kevorkian. The tape showed Kevorkian first injecting Youk with a because a medical examiner labeled it a homicide. Kevorkian said he gave the tape to the police so they will be forced to arrest him. "I had to force them to act" Kevorkian said. "They must charge me." Oakland County Prosecutor David Gorcyca said yesterday he would not rush to charge Kevorkian, even if the tape clear- ly showed Kevorkian injecting Youk. "It would be irresponsible to level charges based on media accounts, whether it be print or '60 Minutes,"' he said. "I'm not going to make a decision based solely on what's aired on TV' If convicted, Kevorkian said he would starve himself to death in prison. Ronald Bishop, a retired professor from the University's Department of Internal Medicine, wouldn't say whether Kevorkian's actions were appropriate or not, but he said there is a~ fiene be htween nhvsician-assited suicide and euthanasia. aired a tape of assisted suicide advocate Jack Kevorklan giving a lethal injection to a patient. Here, he stands behind his s- i; i' v '