74EI lea +s#+'M r IrmayaAM reamer lay: Mostly cloudy. igh 58. Low 35. morrow: P8rtly cloudy. igh 66. One hundred nine years ofeditoildfreedosm Nmriay November 12, 1999 v p y < ::: , ! v k _ i.: s x'tir,; .4TMTT ,. Y ...... « y A .. ,+N+ _ nwrr22,. x, ~N ... y, y . .w.., w.Y.'^:.,«n « ^ ![ _';l ' , 'w r.i + n Y . t . t S 1y C .^Ii . .. r' ..«:r . ,.N ~:.:. ,. N.x +.; ;: ': ..w ,..ti ':;'.'w.iSh Lw7.;: ?..«. t.n riti i; k ... h .. ,i: l «.w_±.,'C, f., wM." 1' 't..rrM..i +.r.... :.r S!A.: ,a rwL' 'l. w"1C ^l .l i.yu , < .r .L ..c L "..u Is ne-third of andidates Rdependent Jeannie Baumann ily Staff Reporter "It's the year of the independent," LSA senior Michael rger declared. Berger is one of 22 independent candidates hoping to win a representa- AS tive seat in next week's fall elections edhDS for the Michigan Student Assembly. A total of61 candidates are vying for 21 y available spots, including eight in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Candidates stated various reasons for running independently, but most said they did not want to be restricted party lines. "I didn't want to establish ties with any one party, and ing an independent is the best way to get my voice out ere," LSA senior Robert Aaron Rosenberg said. A Student General Counsel and Rackham fourth-year a t Josh Trapani has been an assembly member since fall 96 and campaigned as an independent each time. "I either disagree with what the parties stand for, don't iderstand what they stand for or I don't think they stand for ything," he said. About one-third of the independent candidates for seats in idergraduate colleges are first-year students. Many of them id they see MSA asa way of getting involved in University tivities. "I know the basis of the issues, but since I've only been .r two months, I'd like to get involved and know what se on," LSA first-year student David Henderson said. Engineering first-year student Ryan Gregg said he wants bring a fresh perspective to the assembly. "From what I can tell, there's been some stagnation with e people who have been running the assembly," he said. But some first-year candidates have developed specific endas. "I'd like to work on funding for out-of-state students," LSA See MSA, Page 7 r GOP candidates in dead heat Bush honors Veterans Day in Michigana By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter CLINTON TWP, Mich. - A decade after the Berlin Wall came crumbling down and the Cold War ended during his father's presidency, Texas Gov. George W. Bush yesterday asked Americans on Veterans Day to "remember the heroes who saved the century." Bush, an F-102 pilot in the Texas Air National Guard from 1968 to 1973, took a breather from his campaign rhetoric yes- terday morning to attend ceremonies at the Clinton Grove Cemetery in Macomb County, where he was welcomed by a crowd of several hundred flag-waving veterans and support- ers. "Today our nation pays tribute to those who have served in uniform and a tribute to those who didn't return," said Bush, the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination. "Let us resolve to teach, without hesitation or apology, America's story to America's children." Michigan Gov. John Engler, Bush's state campaign chair, introduced his Texas counterpart by recalling the night during his first term as governor when news from Berlin interrupted a state dinner he was attending. "Ten years ago this very week, the obscenity known as the Berlin Wall was torn down. That great symbol of the Cold War came to a close," Engler said. "The president was a man named George Bush." The younger Bush, Engler said, "is a person who I believe is going to be a great American president" After he and Engler placed a wreath in front of the ceme- tery's veterans memorial, Bush told reporters he chose to commemorate Veterans Day in Michigan due to its early pri- mary and strong state campaign. Engler has organized nearly all of Michigan's GOP leadership solidly behind Bush's cam- paign. "I'll be coming back many times to lay the groundwork for what I hope to be a successful campaign" Bush said. "Michigan's going to be a battleground state in the primary and in the election. "It's one of the states that will lead up to the day of reckon- ing on March 7," he said, referring to the 15 primaries and See BUSH, Page 2 Rogers looks at voting rights By Yael Kohen Daily Staff Reporter Wrestling through the jeers of protesters, members of the College Republicans squeezed their way through the blocked doors of the Michigan League to hear state Sen. Mike Rogers (R-Lansing) speak at the College Republicans meeting last night. CR President Rory Diamond, an LSA junior, raised his voice to overpower the calls from nearly 10 protesters who banged ot the door shouting "Let the Students Vote." Rogers sponsored a bill last spring restricting citizens from voting in an area other than the address listed on their driver's license. Although CR members had to fight to keep protesters from entering the meeting, Diamond said that being protest- ed "is a great thing. College Republicans have never been this big and College Republicans have never been protested" Protesters expressed their concern that the bill infringes on their voting capabilities and could possibly hurt student voter turnout. But by the time Rogers began to speak, the shouts of the protesters had quieted. Rogers is campaigning for the 8th dis- trict seat of the U.S. Congress in the 2000 election. He was invited to speak as part of the College Republicans' Campaign 2000 Kickoff event. Addressing about 30 students who attended the meeting, Rogers spoke of his past accom- plishments and his efforts to gather support for his upcoming run for office. An unidentified veteran (left), Texas Gov. George W. Bush (center) and Michigan Gov. John Engler place commemorative wreaths near a Veterans Memorial yesterday in Clinton Twp., Mich. Mc Cain~ gains support in N.H. NASHUA, N.H. (AP) - George W. Bush's strategy to ride a wave of inevitability to the Republican presi- dential nomination took a beating yes- terday with a new poll showing his lead evaporated in New Hampshire. Suddenly, the front-runner is on the run. "We're getting some traction here;" Arizona Sen. John McCain said after an American Research Group poll showed him in a statistical tie with Bush. It is only one poll in only one state - the Texas governor holds an over- whelming lead over all rivals in national surveys - but McCain's surge threatens to reduce the value of one of Bush's greatest assets: The per- ception that his nomination is inevitable, and he is the best bet to reclaim the White House from Democrats. For months, Republican voters like Lor Cunningham of Greenville, S.C., have been showing up at crowded Bush events, waving signs and show- ering him with praise, without know- ing much about the candidate. "He seems like a nice man. I like his family" she said at a Bush fund-raiser Wednesday. "The main thing is we need to get Democrats out of the White House, and he's the man to do it." "He looks like a winner," she said. See MCCAIN, Page 7 Puerto Rican Week set to begiOn By Jennifer Sterling Daily Staff Repoter Last year's celebration of Puerto Rican Week was a huge success and this year's 17th annual is expected to be "bigger and better," said LSA sopho- more and Puerto Rican Executive Board Member Francisco Gonzalez. A Puerto Rican lunch, dance and lec- tures are planned for next week to edu- cate students and provide "an under- standing of the Puerto Rican culture while at the same time having fun," Gonzalez said. "You learn from different people, you learn from different cultures and we're basically doing our part to edu- cate the university community of the Puerto Rican culture," said Puerto Rican Association President Juan Gaztambide, an LSA junior. With the millennium approaching, t Gaztambide said he hopes that people can learn about his culture because understanding history helps to improve the future. The association not only wants to give students information about Puerto Rican culture, but give the University a taste of it. Gonzalez said he is looking forward to the lunch on Tuesday, adding that Puerto Rican food is "one of the best foods in the world' He said he is also anticipating Tuesday's Dance Marathon Salsa and Merengue Dance Workshop and the "La Fiesta" dance on Friday. He added that all of next week's events are free of charge. In addition to the lunch and dance, a film presentation of the Puerto Rican- directed "The Disappearance of Garcia Lorca" is scheduled for Wednesday. The film will be followed by a discus- sion led by American culture Prof. Margarita De La Vega Hurtada. Other speakers include Adrian Cerezo, a consultant to the Smithsonian Institute and the Puerto See WEEK, Page 2 i I#6 PENN S VS. N i T T A #8. L .o Rogers spoke about the voting bill that has brought protest KIMITsU YOGACHI/Daily LSA senior Bram Elias and state Sen. Mike Rogers (R-Lansing) debate student See ROGERS, Page 2 voting rights outside the Vandenburg Room of the Michigan League yesterday. TAT E N Y Hillsdaleg$athers taW N Ss 12:0 mABC! fir..9111 Uii s nr t r scandal THE OPPONENT: '"1 U VII Penn State's national title hopes were (WIR(8 moDi, 1)1; 1R dashed by Minnesota last week, and losing ml iGAff DA'l o straight at home was not in Joe Pa's "-P MT IA ON T ans at the beginning of the season. =iN( U I0NA SAIu@D THE OUTLOOK: IAT M t( lh S lDIUM Two straight blow outs by Michigan will have Penn State hungary for revenge, but this would be a huge win for a Mic igan 1111f188.18 FICAtasAtf fisstaltwMn (ttIts rAll team still hoping to make the BCS. W fi J V TT G o L A sT W E K. 1 v GROUNDS Alfl Tll {Ake U Michigan looked good for the first time TAalGA AS 1At11 tA11I 1A since the Purdue ame thrashing l aouT In sat:4. ' Northwestern 37-3 at the Big House. =T Dir, it 1 I sa(T ON. *omplete football coverage in today's sports section. ; 8su DAWN 'T L DInoiIl I mllaG liITium. HILLSDALE, Mich. (AP) - Students and pro- fessors at Hillsdale College gathered to reflect and pray yesterday, the day after the college's president abruptly retired amid rumors that he had a rela- tionship with his daughter-in-law, who later com- mitted suicide. Some students said they hoped the campus-wide meeting would reveal more about the rumors sur- rounding former President George Roche III, who had served as president of the collegesince 1971. But administrators shed little new light on the situation, instead telling students to see Roche's retirement as a new beginning for the fiercely con- servative school of 1,200. Roche "helped bring a small, liberal arts college in the backwaters of Michigan to national promi- nence. But Hillsdale College isn't one man. It never was," said James Stephens, dean of the fac- ulty. "May we leave here today not with a sense of loss, but with a sense of the possibilities now open to our college." The message was a comfort to Skyla Freeman, 19, a Hillsdale sophomore from Alabama. "They were direct and clear with us. It's time to move on," she said. But Amy Farnham, 20, a Hillsdale junior said the meeting left lingering questions. "What he's done in his personal life is his own business" she said. "I personally would like to know why he left, but I'm not sure we'll ever find out." r I reaking tradition 'Dogma' stinks like a do r- ... _, rom iconoclastic disco queen to reconciling Despite earlier classics like "Clerks" merican involvement in Vietnam to the and "Mallrats," Kevin Smith's exual revolution the 1970s were ripe with "Dogma" fails to please audiences. reaks in tradition. Ngws, PAGE 12 ARTS, PAGE 8 g Duke's up The Michigan Field Hockey team I takes on Duke at Wake Forest tomorrow in an NCAA tournament game. . SPORTS, Page 9www.mchigandaily.c m mmob I