One hundred ten years ofeditoriadfreedom till NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 wiwwmichigandaily com Friday March 23, 2001 I :;;y ......._...,. I California rocked 2nd school shooting From wire reports SANTEE, Calif. - There had been time for tears to dry, no time yet for wounds to heal. Santee Mayor Randy Voepel had returned to work yesterday for his first full day since the shooting at Santana A two weeks ago. It was early after- when he got the telephone call. Another shooting. In neighboring El Cajon. At Granite Hills High School, only seven miles away from Santana. "All I could do is turn on the radio and try not to cry," said Voepel, calling himself a small-town, part-time mayor. "It's almost like getting robbed and two weeks later you get robbed again. We've been robbed of two children and here we are almost robbed again." ot so far away, at least two families e students wounded at Santana High School watched in horror as details of the shooting yesterday after- noon unfolded on their television sets. If the faces were different, the scene was too familiar and too close to home: a high school seven miles away cor- doned in yellow police tape, sobbing parents with cell phones, hundreds of shaken students evacuating under police e* rt, the injured - almost all of them young - being wheeled away, and a student in handcuffs. Again. "It's terrible, I just got cold chills," said one mother, Betty Jo Leyva, her voice shaking an hour after learning of the El Cajon incident. Leyva's older daughter, Karla, 16, had been wounded in the Santana shooting. Leyva said she was watching television with her younger daughter Genevieve w she decided to flip channels to see vtht else was on. "I couldn't believe what I was seeing," she said. "I know what they are going through." At Santana High, a memorial to the students killed in the March 5 shooting is still in place, but the air has sighed from the commemorative balloons and the flowers have faded. The prayer can- dies have burned to stumps. See SHOOTING, Page 7 Bollinger criticizes ABBY ROSENBAUM/D ily Prof. Susan Neuman hopes to move from her office at the School of Education to the U.S. Department of Education in Washington. President Bush plans to nominate Neuman to work under Education Secretary Rod Paige. jeb i M University president says Florida program limits campus diversity GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Uni- versity President Lee Bollinger, a stal- wart booster of affirmative action, criticized Gov. Jeb- Bush for limiting diversity to Flori- da's universities. Alternatives to' affirmative action - including Flori- " da's Talented 20 program - "mean that a UF or ay UCLA will no longer have a Bush diversified campus," Bollinger said dur- ing a speech at the University of Florida on Wednesday. Bollinger was the keynote speaker at the second annual "Greening UF" sus- tainability conference, which concluded yesterday. Talented 20, which guarantees admission to all high school students lush who graduate in the top 20 percent of their classes to one of the state's 10 public universities, has a "fatal flaw," Bollinger said. The program's flaw is that students aren't guaranteed admission to a specif- ic university. Many students admitted under Talented 20, he said, still won't qualify for admission to the University of Florida, the state's flagship universi- ty. But Elizabeth Hirst, spokeswoman for Gov. Jeb Bush, says that's not what has happened in Florida so far. "This year we've seen more minority students in our system than in past years and that includes our flagship uni- versity, UF," Hirst said in a telephone interview after the speech. "We expect that trend to continue" Bollinger also criticized Talented 20 - because it attracts some students who are ill-prepared for the demands of col- lege life. "If I have to admit the top 5 percent of every high school class in Michigan, we are going to have many students who are not ready for the quality of education at Michigan," Bollinger said. ' prof. picked to fill nation's top K-12 post By Hama LoPatin Daily Staff Reporter President Bush plans to nominate University Prof. Susan Neuman for assistant secretary of education for elementary and secondary education - the nation's top post for K-12 education. "It's thrilling," said Neuman, who currently serves as director of the University's Center for the Improvement of Early Reading Achievement. When asked about her objectives for the role, Neuman laughed as she said, "I hope to leave no child behind" - the oft-repeated mantra of the Bush education plan. "I really mean it!" she exclaimed. "I want to do just something to assure that all children have a better oppor- tunity for education." The White House announced Wednesday that Bush intends to nominate Neuman, an early childhood and early literacy specialist. "Susan Neuman will be an important addition to a team that will be working to implement President Bush's bold education reform plan," Education Secretary Rod Paige she is someone who has been a leader in secondary and elementary education." - Scott Stanzel White House spokesman said in a written statement. "He has given the Department of Education a prominent role in his administration and an important charge for our public elementary and sec- ondary schools." Neuman said she is excited to work with Paige, who served as superintendent of the Houston Independent School District during Bush's tenure as Texas governor. : "He strikes me as a wonderful, ethical, really commit- ted leader" she said, adding that she is eager to see "if he can translate what he's done in Houston for the nation" See NEUMAN, Page 7 Football players charged in fight By Ryan C. Moloney Daily Sports Writer Pot legalization drive to start at Hash Bash By Kelly Trahan Daily Staff Reporter Greg Schmid, the Saginaw attorney behind the Personal Responsibility Amendment drive aimed at decriminalizing the use of marijuana in Michi- gan, hopes to gain enough signatures to put the amendment on the 2002 Michigan ballot after a similar drive failed last year. The six-month campaign to compile the 302,711 necessary signatures will begin here in Ann Arbor at the Michigan Theater on April 6 - the eve of the 30th annual Hash Bash. This is not the first time Ann Arbor has been at the center of controversy regarding the decrimi- nalization of marijuana. Last August, the City Council nullified a petition to put a medicinal marijuana referendum before Ann Arbor voters. Although last year's drive failed, Keith Strout, the executive director and founder of the National Organization -for Reform of Marijuana Laws, believes that if Schmid and his petitioners can put the amendment on the ballot it has a good chance to pass. "The real issue is whether you have the resources to get it on the ballot," said Strout, who will be speaking at the April 6 National Sympo- sium on Cannabis Prohibition Reform. "The only initiatives that make it are those with strong financial backing, the ability to hire companies to get signatures and buy media time. When we have gotten the amendments on the ballot we have been successful eight out of eight times since 1995." Schmid is hopeful this year's effort will be more successful than last year. "Last year, we got half of the signatures we needed in the six-month period that the law allows, but that was in the winter," Schmid said. "Also, this year we have more experienced peti- tioners and over 3,000 volunteers - a number See MARIJUANA, Page 7 Two members of the Michigan foot- ball team have been charged with disor- derly conduct for their roles in a fight that broke out early Sunday morning at Cava Java on South University Avenue. Junior free safety Cato June is charged with failure to comply with the orders of a police officer, while sopho- more linebacker Larry Stevens faces a charge for fighting. Both misdemeanors are punishable by up to 90 days in jail, a $100 fine and possible probation. Both players will receive a letter from the city attor- ney's office in the next couple of days, requesting June them to turn them- selves in for arraignment. "They don't arrest you on this - you get a letter to make plans to arrange for an arraignment," Assistant City Attor- ney Robert West said. Both June and Stevens were taken into police custody at the coffee shop, then released later Sunday morning. Patrolling police were originally hailed by a man claiming he organized the private party at Cava Java. The man requested an ambulance, saying that a woman in the basement needed imme- diate medical attention. The officers checked on the intoxicated woman, but she declined medical attention. As the officers walked back up the steps to the main floor, a brawl of "about 30 or 40 people" broke out, said Ann Arbor Police Officer Ed Dreslinski. The cause of the fight is still unknown. The two officers tried to stop the fight by physical means, but when that option failed, Mace was used to scatter the crowd. Dreslinski arrested Stevens after wit- nessing the 19- year-old punch another man in the face. Stevens later claimed that he was assaulted first. June allegedly shoved a police officer who was Stevens trying to make the 22-year-old leave the building. June said he was searching for a lost championship ring and didn't want to leave without finding it. Both June and Stevens obeyed the police after being taken into custody. "They were both fairly cooperative, after the fact - they might have real- ized the situation they were in," Dreslin- ski said. "Nothing outrageous (happened), everybody was upset, it was a fight and emotions ran pretty high." Coach Lloyd Carr could not be reached for comment, but football See FIGHT, Page 7 FILE PHOTO Advocates of legalizing marijuana plan to begin a petition drive beginning the weekend of Hash Bash next month. Yoting ends; results released Sunday Soaking it in By CarieThorson Daily StaffReporter By the time the polls closed last night for the student government elections, 7,300 valid votes had been cast, including 6,781 in the Michigan Student Assembly election. The latter number is down from 7,840 votes la year, when Hideki Tsutsumi won the MSA pidency in a landslide. Whether Tsutsumi won re-election this year is yet to be known. Final results of the presi- dential and representative elections will be released Sunday at the MSA Steering Commit- tee meeting. The website where voting takes place Id anpw arnetino vntP atiijnipht All of the MSA~ectiops winter 2001 Norfolk then receives tallies from webmas- ter Kevin McGowan of the actual voter turnout as well as the number of invalid votes cast. Invalid votes are those made by non-students who may have recently graduated and still have unignames or votes for seats in a college other than the one to which a student belongs. If there are no complications with the elec- tion, the Election Board certifies the results and presents them Sunday. Any potential voter fraud is reviewed by the Central Student Judi- ciary 'which can delav the official resuzlts of the smooth election," Norfolk said. Minor violations such as covering other can- didate's posters or campaigning within 50 feet of a polling site can earn candidates demerits but not necessarily removal from the election. Since all voting is now done online, a polling site is defined as any computer logged into the voting website. Candidates agree that in past elections vote, turnout has been their biggest obstacle. Many of them spent yesterday on the Diag trying to get students to the polls. "Our main goal over the next nine hours is to have fun and gather as many votes as possi- ble," said LSA sophomore Ben Conway, a can- didate running with the Blue Party. Havirnayfiun wasnt a nroblem for the candi- W Y' AW i