2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 4, 2000 NATION/WORLD Michigamua, NASA talk ends in frustration MICHIGAMUA Continued from Page 1 floor of the Union tower. Redde said the organization planned to remodel the office, but not until Michigamua's 100th anniversary. Both Delgado and Reddy said before their first encounter with the meeting space it had been referred to as a den, leading them to interpret the design of the room as a lodge instead of a wigwam. But despite the fact that the current members were not aware of the rooms offensiveness, Del- gado said that did not justify its existence or the existence of any offensive activities of Michiga- before, so when I walked in, it was framed for me as a den, a lodge. Does that mean it is not a wigwam? No. It was framed for many people and it was framed for us ... That's why we said 'let's change it,"' Delgado said. But many participants said they were also troubled by the group's use of nicknames to refer to themselves. While members of the society acknowledged the inappropriate use of nicknames by past classes of Michigamua, they said recent classes have used nicknames that are purely inoffensive and openly shared their own individual nick- names. But Native Americans members said the sim- ple act of Michigamua members naming them- selves in the "detailed" manner that Native Americans do is still offensive - even if no spe- cific references to the Native American culture are used in the names. After heated discussions over these issues per- sisted with no amends made between the groups, Joe Reilly, spokesman for the Students of Color Coalition and member of the Native American Students Association, said that allowing the meeting to go on without Michigamua changing its name would be too painful. Reilly and Adams reiterated that Michigamua's advocacy of the healing process and the changes it has made, are useless if it keeps its name. "Change it or leave the organization or live up to it - you can't sit on both sides of the fence," Reilly said before he called the meeting to an end out of frustration. ACROSS THE NATioN Judge rules Microsoft violated anti-trust WASHINGTON - Humbling a giant of the computer age, a federal judge ruled yesterday that Microsoft Corp. violated U.S. anti-trust laws by keeping "an oppres- sive thumb" on competitors during the race to link Americans to the Internet. In a sweeping verdict against the empire that Bill Gates built, U.S. Disttict Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson said Microsoft violated the Sherman Act, the same law used to crush monopolies from Standard Oil to AT&T. 1 He concluded that the company was guilty - as the federal government, -19 states and the District of Columbia had alleged in a case that began in May 1998 - of "unlawfully tying its Web browser" to its Windows operating system that dominates the computer market worldwide. "Microsoft placed an oppressive thumb on the scale of competitive fortune, thereby effectively guaranteeing its continued dominance," Jackson wrote. The verdict affirms Jackson's previous ruling in November that the software giant is a monopoly that illegally used its power to bully competitors and stifle innovation, hurting consumers in the process. The judge's ruling can be appealed, delaying its impact for years, and Gaes said the company would pursue that avenue. "We believe we have a strong case on appeal," Gates said. "... This rulO turns on its head the reality that consumers know: that our software has helped make PCs accessible and more affordable to millions of Americans." mua alumni. "Personally, I have never seen HELLO FAZ Continued from Page 1 Husain is no stranger to Indian or U.S. politics. As a youth, he often traveled with his grandfather, a sena- tor in India, to the Parliament House in New Dehli. In 1979, he was the first Islamic-Indian to be elected to a position in the United States, he said, when he served on the Ypsilanti City Council until 1981. a wigwam Husain said he felt the purpose of Clinton's trip to India was to become friends with the country before using U.S. influence to cre- ate a peace. "Saying hello to each other is the most important thing," Husain said - a thought he took to heart in naming his business "Hello, Faz's Pizza." With his picture posted on fliers around campus, Husain has become somewhat of a University celebrity. "It was the first pizza place I knew of," LSA freshman Josh Welt said. Of Clinton, Husain said, the pres- ident "is really a sweet man and everybody falls in love with him." Husain keeps the walls of his West Liberty Street store covered with pictures of himself with famous people - a tradition that started when he met the late Robert Kennedy during his first week in IM Ann Arbor. "I didn't have a camera, but I shook his hand," Husain said. "Now I always keep a camera with me." "I hope that one day I'm famous enough that Faz will come to me for a picture," LSA senior Eric Gardner said. But Faz said he takes pictures with anyone. "Some people collect stamps, others collect coins, I col- lect loving people," he said. IMAGINE Continued from Page 1 But Bollinger said the University needs to become more aware of what it is already doing to achieve these goals and work harder to more actively pur- sue them. The cultural "delegates" gathered into smaller to groups to answer specific issues, including "What does a working relationship between an urban university and neighboring community look like?" They also examined what the prod- ucts of campus-community partner- ships should be. They were given blank pages, crayons and markers to encourage both analytical and creative meth- ods of thought. After discussion, the caucus reconvened so that each group could present their reports to the larger group. The group that explored the working relationship between an urban university and a neighboring community drew a symbolic picture of a spine with intersecting verte- brae resembling circles with univer- sities on one side and communities on the other. The diagram repre- sented different levels of engage- ment between the two, with the spine at the most ideal and func- tional part of the drawing. The final group gathered the con- vention into a circle around a "cul- tural campfire." Each person placed a written word into a basket, repre- senting the fire, to maintain "cul- tural sustainability." Mary Wright, a community artist from Marquette, said she benefited from the caucus. "It's my role to bring committees together to create art that expresses their characters. And I believe that each person has the capacity to be creative and is just itching to be invited to the process. And when people come together to create in a community way, the results are powerful beyond calculating," Wright said. Ellison said she hopes yesterday's event could initiate more events through at both a state and national levels. The delegates plan to form committees and task forces based upon discussion in the convention. - Daily StaffReporter Tiffanyv Maggard contributed to this report. SMITH Continued from Page L any party to commit to. It will allow for greater accessibility to higher education." To get the free tuition proposal on the ballot, Smith must have 355,000 signatures before May 31. "We're getting up slowly," she said of the progress of her cam- paign to gather signatures. "We will know by the third week in April how things are going," she said. Smith did admit, however, that the Democratic party is not always in line with younger voters - citing environ- mental issues as an example of their differing priorities. "Our priorities didn't quite emphasize some of the things young Democrats are interested in. We heard ... that if we don't pay attention to the environment, we are going to lose a lot of them." Mass. to enforce strictest gun law BOSTON - Massachusetts put the nation's strictest gun regulations into effect yesterday, using consumer-pro- tection rules to ban cheap "Saturday night specials" and require childproof trigger locks on any gun sold in the state. The state will contact gun manu- facturers and sellers within 15 days to inform them of the regulations, which also require safety warnings with each gun, tamper-resistant serial numbers and indicators on semiautomatic handguns that tell if a bullet is in the chamber. "Massachusetts now has the most comprehensive and toughest gun laws in the nation," said John Rosenthal of Stop Handgun Vio- lence Inc. The Gun Owners' Action League said the new enforcement is unnec- essary because strict federal and state regulations are already in place. In an unprecedented legal maneu- ver, then-Attorney General Scott Harshbarger wrote the rules in 1997, bypassing the Legislature. He relied instead on the attorney general's broad powers to regulate consumer products. Those powers do not specifically men- tion guns. House seeks study of energy supply WASHINGTON - Deep under the ocean floor and the Arctic perL mafrost are ice-like deposits of frozen methane with energy poten- tial equal to more than twice that of all other fossil fuels combined. Congress is ready to spend nearly $50 million to find out if tl'd source can be developed withou. setting off a cataclysmic global warming. The House approved yesterday by voice vote a measure directing the Energy secretary, working with The secretaries of Interior, Defense and Commerce, to study the methane hydrates as an energy source and the technologies needed for sa efficient development. AROUND TH E WORLD Obuchi hospitalized; Aoki takes on post TOKYO - Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi has suffered a stroke and is hospitalized in intensive care, and Chief Cabinet Secretary Mikio Aoki has temporarily assumed his duties, Aoki announced yesterday. Aoki gave scant details about Obuchi's medical condition, except to say that the 62-year-old leader had been conscious about 7 p.m. Sunday, when he was able to speak without dif- ficulty and told Aoki to take over if he were unable to leave the hospital immediately. Aoki said that he assumed the post of acting prime minister at 9 a.m. local time yesterday when it became clear that Obuchi would not be able to return to work within the next two or three days. In a nationally televised news con- ference that provoked instant alarm, Aoki declined to say whether Obuchi had had or required surgery, what kind of treatment he was receiving or what the prognosis might be. The lack of candor led the Japanese media and some ruling Liberal Democ- ratic Party members to assume the worst. By yesterday morning, speculation was in full swing here about a possible successor to Obuchi, if the prime min- ister's illness proves prolonged. NATO troops arrest Bosnian Serb leader PARIS - French-led NATO troops arrested Momcilo Krajisnik, a k former member of the Bosnian Se leadership, and flew him to the Netherlands to stand trial for genocide at the U.N. war crimes tribunal. The charges against him offer direct links to Radovan Karadzic, the former Bosnian Serb political chief who is still wanted by the U.N.'s war crimes court for ordering the deportation and execution of thousands of Bosnian Muslims during the 1992-95 Balkans war. - Comnpiledvfom Dailv wt ire repo rts The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September. via U.S. mail are- $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. 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