Oe r t !WS: 76-DAILY .ASSIFIED: 764-0557 ww.michigandaily.com November E8, 2000 MIM' !findings 1how U' G re AS% e-nges resu Its durnshot y Soviets staff and wire reports Raoul Wallenberg, a 1935 Universi- alumnus and the Swedish diplomat ho disappeared after helping thou- nds of Jews escape Nazi-occupied ungary, undoubtedly was shot and lied by the Soviets, the head of a ussian presidential commission said rday. The statement by Alexander 'kovlev, chairman of the presidential mmission on rehabilitation of vic- s of political repression, indicates at Russia may be on the verge of nfirming allegations that Soviet thorities have denied for a half-cen- ry. "We do not doubt that he was shot at ubyanka," the Soviet secret police adquarters and prison in Moscow, news agency Interfax quoted kovev as saying. We must put an end to this story, hich has acquired an acute interna- onal significance and has been poi- ning the atmosphere for a long me" he said, according to the report. If Wallenberg was indeed shot, it kely would have happened before oviet leader Josef Stalin's death in akovlev could not be reached for omment, but a commission staff ember, speaking on condition of onymity, confirmed the substance of 7e report. Wallenberg graduated with honors rom the University's College of rchitecture in 1935 and in 1944 he as sent by the Swedish Foreign Min- try to Budapest, Hungary to head a S ue mission of the Jews still living The last confirmed sighting of Wal- nberg was on Jan. 17, 1945, in udapest when he was 32 years old. allenberg was a member of one of weden's wealthiest and most promi- ent industrialist families. He distributed Swedish passports to ews in deportation trains and on death arches, won diplomatic protection *whole sections of Budapest and r,anized food and medical supplies. is efforts are credited with saving at est 20,000 lives. The Soviet army occupied ludapest in January 1945 and Wal- enberg was arrested and brought to he Soviet Union. The Soviets said ie was suspected of spying, and a ormer Red Army soldier told a aussian TV channel last month that e detained Wallenberg after notic- *that he had an oddly shaped ness kit. Some observers have speculated the rrest also could have been retaliation br his family's companies having sold >all bearings and other strategic sup- >lies to the Nazi regime. In the years that followed, countless lues and claims emerged - as well s contradictory accounts from the gmlin, which Yakovlev said ;ame entangled in lies." "At first we said he was killed in a See WALLENBERG, Page 7 Bush transition team prepares for presidency MThe Associated Press AP PHOTOS FAR LEFT: Vice - President Al Gore proclaims that he will contest the certified Florida election results during a press conference from his home in Washington, yesterday. ABOVE: Attorneys for the Bush and Gore campaigns present their cases at the Leon County k Circuit courthouse LEFT: Vice presidential candidate Dick Cheney holds a news conference. Studentds dmvlded over recoutnt debacle Al Gore defended his unprecedented reach to the courts yesterday, declaring "Let the people have their say" by counting every ballot in Florida's make-or-break presidential election. George W. Bush plunged into the work of building a new government even as scattered rank-and-file Democrats warned that Gore's time may be running out. A day after Bush summoned TV cameras to press for Gore's concession, the vice president laid out his case for letting courts settle America's long-count election. "This is America," he said with a forced chuckle. "When votes are cast, we count them. We don't arbitrar- ily set them aside because it's too difficult to count them." The prime-time televised address was perhaps Gore's last, best chance to explain why the closest presidential election in 124 years didn't end Sunday night when Florida's top elections officer, a GOP partisan, certified Bush the winner by 537 votes out of 6 million cast. His support was falling as Gore went on the air. An overnight poll by CNN/USA Today/Gallup found that 56 percent of Americans said Gore should concede the election compared to 46 percent who said that last week. An ABC-Washington Post survey found similar results. Gore protested the results in a Florida state court ear- lier yesterday, becoming the first candidate in U.S. histo- ry to contest a presidential election before the judiciary. His lawyers asked for a quick hearing, but may not get one before the end of the week. And on Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear GOP argument against recounts. The stakes could hardly be higher. "If the people do not in the end choose me, so be it," Gore said standing at a presidential-style lectern before a dozen American flags in the vice presidential resi- dence. "The outcome will have been fair, and the people will have spoken." "If they choose me, so be it. I would then commit to bringing this country together. But, whatever the out- come, let the people have their say, and let us listen, Gore said, hours after Democratic leaders and President Clinton queued up to show their support. With the agonizingly close election stretching into its fourth week, neither side appeared ready to give way in a fierce struggle that has entangled the judiciary in the See ELECTION, Page 7 By Hanna LoPatin Daily Staff Reporter "Enough is enough," said LSA junior Genevieve Michaud, who supported Vice President Al Gore in his bid for the presi- dency and his early appeals in the Florida recount. "It finally reached a point where there was not a lot more to be done," Michaud said. "It's sort of relieving in a way to at least pick a president." Gore supporter Julie Hautamaki, an LSA junior; said Gore's concession would be bet- ter for the country. "I think he should con- cede for economic reasons," she said. But Ilautamaki said she remains hopeful that her candidate can still take the presiden- cy, through manipulation of the "out-of- date" Electoral College. A recent ABC News/Washington Post poll shows that after the certification of Republican presidential candidate Gov. George W. Bush's Florida on Sunday, 60 percent of Americans want the never-end- ing election to finally come to a conclu- sion. "It's hard to determine an election based on just two or three counties," Hautamaki said. "I think it undermined how the U.S. felt as a whole." Some Bush supporters are not as forgiv- ing. "I don't think this is going to stop until Gore wins. I think it's making a mockery of the political system," LSA junior Dan Maier said. LSA sophomore Sarah McGuire, who voted for Bush, said that although she accepts the Texas governor as the viable president-elect, it may be a long time -before the process is over. See GORE, Page 7 First visits home force students to readjust,; By Samantha Ganey Daily StaffReporter Engineering freshman Scott Ureel said he felt displaced and comfortable at the same time while at home in the Chicago suburb of Western Springs -- a dichotomy of feelings that many students said they encoun- Lj tered after they had returned home 1STU DE for the first time as freshmen. L E,, "I come home, and it feels like you've been there, and you haven't. You talk with your friends, and it's the same, but it's not," Ureel said. Clinical Psychologist Jim Whiteside from the Universi- ty's Counseling and Psychological Services said going home for the first time, both parents and students need to understand the evolution taking place, where students are becoming adults. "It's a time of change and transition for students and par- ents - especially for first-year students," Whiteside said. The days of students being told to clean their rooms are over when returning home, because there's hardly anything to clean in their nearly vacant rooms. LSA freshman Will Gatziolis said his room in Chicago was "pretty empty" but admitted "it still feels right.: Ureel sympathized with Gatziolis. "There's nothing there," he said. "There's still furniture, but there's nothing on the walls except one picture," he said. See HOME, Page 7 MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily Muslim students gather for prayer at the home of LSA students Nagla and Ranila Fetouh in Tower Plaza Condominiums. ® " Mlustils begin m--on]th of fastin 'Tis the season Intern et gambling illegal, popular By Gina Hamadey Daily Staff Reporter It's illegal, but Business senior Ron Gershoni said he will continue to gam- ble on line, switching from betting on college football to professional foot- ball and basketball teams. "It's just so easy to do," said Ger- shoni, "I'm on the computer anyway, and it takes me five minutes to make all my bets for the week." Photo illustration by ALEX WOLK/Daily Although illegal in the state of Michigan, online gambling is popular among college students. legal gambling is in regulated casinos, Berg admits that his department had not yet worked on many of these cases. "There is just no way to tell if some- one is placing a bet." Gershoni and most of his friends are currently making sports bets online on By Jacquelyn Nixon Daily Staff Reporter The home of LSA students Nagla and Rania Fetouh filled with the blend- ed smell of chicken, peas and light incense. The Fetouh sisters served Egyptian goulash, rice, salad, peas and carrots to the female Muslim students following an evening prayer. The small meal, prepared by the sisters and their mother, was the first meal breaking the fast of Ramadan, one of the two major Islamic holidays. The month of Ramadan, which began yesterday, is one of the five pil- lars of Islam. During Ramadan, Mus- lims fast from sunrise to sunset and are encouraged to focus on making them- selves better, said Nagla Fetouh, an LSA junior. For the next month while the sun is up, Muslims abstain from consuming food and, drink, Nagla Fetouh said. Around dinnertime, they get together to collectively break the fast. "Fasting teaches you self-restraint and you are able to better understand how the hungry feel," she said. LSA sophomore Rabia Asghar said the meal after sundown isn't large because it is easy to be content from a small meal. "By the end of the day you're not hungry because your stomach is so small," Asghar said. Nagla Fetouh said according to the prophet Mohammed, everything you do is for yourself, but fasting is for God. "Fasting is something that you can do, but God is the only one who will I I' . L i I