2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 18, 2001 NATION/WORLD TRIAL Continued from Page 1A for students in the middle zone; students with high scores are usually admitted regardless of race and students with low scores are usually rejected. University lawyers contend there are a number of flaws in Larntz's study. "He did the wrong analysis and he did the wrong analysis wrong," University Deputy General Counsel Liz Barry said. Barry said the numerical value of how much race is a factor is irrelevant for applicants of similar credentials. "Race can tip the balance" for similar appli- cants but it results in either acceptance or non-acceptance, she said, thus making any numerical value meaningless. Barry also criticized Larntz's find- ings because the University has main- tained that race, LSAT scores and GPAs are only three of many factors. Factors such as essays, letters of rec- ommendation and work experience are subjective measures that cannot be put in this kind of model. This coincides with the testimony on Tuesday from Dean of Admissions Erica Munzel, who said admissions decisions are made on a highly indi- vidualized, case-by-case basis without using race as the main consideration. CIR Chief Executive Officer Terry Pell defended Larntz's findings, saying the analysis shows that "race plays an extraordinary role" in admissions deci- sions. "We made clear today in a num- ber of ways how large of a role race plays in admissions," Pell said. The intervening defendants did not have the chance to conduct their cross examination of Larntz yesterday, but lead counsel Miranda Massie said they too have problems with Larntz's find- ings. "The results he came up with should have made him realize that something was very wrong with his data, with his approach to it or with both," Massie said. "To claim that it is some 500 times easier for a black appli- cant than for a white applicant to get into the Law School is utterly discon- nected from reality" After the intervenors complete their cross examination of Larntz this morn- ing, University President Lee Bollinger will testify today as the first defense wit- ness. Bollinger was dean of the Law School the year the disputed admissions policy was drafted. --Brian H Yden contributed to this report fwr the Dail. SOLE Continued from Page 1A Collegiate Licensing Company, which are part of the agreement. They specifi- cally called attention to police attacks on the 800 striking factory workers, physical abuse and the firing of hun- dreds of protesters. "We are extremely concerned about allegations of labor violations at the Kukdong Factory in Mexico," Universi- ty spokeswoman Julie Peterson said. "We have asked, and Nike has agreed, to keep the university informed of developments on a daily basis. We will look the matter over carefully in the next several days and have expressed to Nike the importance of a timely and full accounting of the situation." Through speeches and cries, the pro- testers said they were also angry at Bollinger for signing the contract although it did not include the high level of labor standards agreed upon by the University's Advisory Committee on Labor Standards and Human Rights. "Although we don't support this con- tract, we can use it. We fully expect to hold Bollinger to the contract he signed," Bray said. Michigan Student Assembly Rep. Reza Breakstone, an LSA senior, held up large, laminated copies of the reso- lutions that MSA passed Tuesday night in support of the workers in Mexico. The assembly voted to ask the Universi- ty to apply its new labor code of con- duct in all areas where the production of logo goods is involved and to encourage Bollinger to terminate the contract with Nike if any alleged prob- lems are not resolved within 30 days. "This is common sense," Breakstone said. "We're asking the president to keep his word." After rallying for half an hour, the protesters plastered Bollinger's office with posters of opposition and "For Sale" signs to display their feeling that the University sold out to Nike. They continued their protest on the streets as they chanted their way to Moe's Sport Shop, which. sells Michigan apparel, to hand out flyers. Those who benefit from the con- tract for Michigan athletic apparel disagree with the protesters' com- plaints. The Athletic Department has been without an apparel contract since last February, when Nike dropped out of a 1999 agreement with the University. "From the coach's standpoint in most of the sports, and for sure in hockey, we think Nike is the best company right now in terms of their nrnriict their service and their ACROSS THE NATioN Ashcroft vows to uphold abortion rigls WASHINGTON - As his prospects for confirmation as attorney general improved, John Ashcroft promised yesterday not to seek Supreme Court reversal of a woman's right to abortion and pledged to defend the constitutionality of gun controls he had opposed in the Senate. Ashcroft picked up his first Democratic vote when Sen. Zell Miller of Georgia announced his support. Other Democrats on the Judiciary Committee predicted Ashcroft's confi a- tion in the evenly divided Senate. Under detailed questioning by skeptical Democrats on the committee, the for- mer Missouri senator reaffirmed his personal opposition to abortion. But he emphasized that he had no intention of attempting to get the high court to reverse the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade abortion decision, which he once called "a miserable failure." "The Supreme Court very clearly doesn't want to deal with that issue again," Ashcroft said, adding that pressing the matter w ould risk undermining the "standing and prestige" an administration has in arguments before the high court. With a long line of women's rights, civil rights and gun control groups watg to testify against Ashcroft later in the week, there were favorable signs for m during the second day of his confirmation hearings. California cuts off power to thousands SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Pushcd over the brink by its botched experi- ment with deregulation, California cut off power to hundreds of thousands of people yesterday in the first rolling blackouts imposed during its electrici- ty crisis. Lights blinked off about noon in parts of San Francisco, Sacramento and San Jose, as well as other sections of Silicon Valley. No major problems were reported, but the outages knocked out TV sta- tions, ATMs and traffic lights across the San Francisco Bay area, backing up traffic and forcing college profes- sors to hold class in dimly lit class- rooms. Police officers directed traffic and store owners turned to pocket calcula- tors. The rotating, hourlong blackouts in northern and central parts of the state were halted in the afternoon. A sec- ond wave of blackouts in the evening was averted as the power supply met demands. Los Angeles was considered safe because it has its own utility. Utilities avoided cutting power to essential services such as hospitals and airports. Citing security reasons, tcy declined to identify exactly wh areas lost power. Extra confmement OK for sex predators WASHINGTON - Harsh codi- tions or a lack of treatment behind bars do not justify releasing a sexual predator a state considers too danger- ous to society, the Supreme Chrt ruled yesterday. The court underscored its position that states can lock up sex offenders after their sentences are over, rejecting the appeal of a six-time rapist from Washington state. The 8-1 decision said Andre Brigham Young is free to complain about his treatment in court, and said the state has a duty to treat those it involuntarily holds. f: R K v ti~. 62 . + ; ;>t' lq m T1 Kabila believed dead; son controls Congo JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - As Congolese officials and foreign diplomats continued to issue conflicting statements about Congolese President Laurent Kabila's reported assassination, members of Kabila's cabinet said yes- terday that they had named his son to rule their vast war-ravaged Central African nation. Appearing on state television yester- day following an emergency meeting of Kabila's cabinet, Communications Minister Dominique Sakombi insisted Kabila had been shot and wounded Tuesday at his presidential palace in the Congolese capital of Kinshasa but had been evacuated overnight to an undis- closed location where he was receiving medical treatment. "Until President Kabila has recov- ered, and to ensure stability, the govern- ment has decided to give command of the government and military to Major General Joseph Kabila," Sakombi said. But reports from outside Congo of Kabila's death continued to mount. Cit- ing "a number of what we believerare credible reports," White House national security spokesman Daniel Cruise said, we do believe, at this stage, that he killed." Officials in Angola, an ally of Kabila's in Congo's ongoing civil war, said yesterday that Kabila had been killed. Arafat's protege slain in restaurant GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip -*e head of Palestinian TV - a protege of Yasser Arafat - was killed.,by three masked men in a seaside restau- rant yesterday, but Palestinian officials played down initial suggestions.that Israel ordered the attack. Israel also denied a role in the killing of Hisham Miki, who vas struck by more than 10 bullets fired at close range from a pistol fitted with a silencer. -- Compilediom Dail' ire rep9 Is. ~J1,r91 ILI J3~L4v 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. 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