One hundred ten years ofeditoriaifreedom *ril NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 wwwmichigandally.com Friday April 6, 2001 ,. . - i :.i 1 . Court By Jon Fish Daily StaffReporter The 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati yesterday granted the Universi- s motion to stay tie injunction issued March 27 by U.S. IMODsi Jg District Judge - Bernard Friedman ON TRIAL that forbade the con- , sideration of race in the Law School's admissions process. The stay will I ay the injunction until the entire appeals cess in the case is exhausted and allow the University to continue admitting stu- dents to the Law School under its current admissions system. Yesterday's ruling over- turned a decision handed down Tuesday by r of Friedman denying the Univ for a stay. University Deputy Gener Barry called the court of "welcomed news." "Today's decision simpl where we were a week ago,I pursue our goal of enrolling and diverse student body," B In its opinion, the thre wrote that Friedman's un Regents of the Universityc Bakke "diverges from other of the case, including th Bollinger, now pending befo appeal." The court of appeals also the University to comply w injunction would cause irrel the Law School because it i of the admissions season. app eals versity's motion But Center for Individual Rights Director of Legal and Public Affairs Curt Levey said al Counsel Liz the 6th Circuit's decision "didn't consider appeals ruling the harm to the applicants" to the Law School rejected under the contested policy. y puts us back The decision "continues the violation of the which is able to constitutional rights of the applicants." an outstanding The University had argued that it is "like- arry said. ly to prevail on the merits," of its case, and e-judge panel the court of appeals did say in its opinion derstanding of that "there can be no dispute that this of California v. appeal presents serious questions on the interpretations merits." at in Gratz v. Wayne State University law Prof. Robert re this court on Sedler said he thinks "the stay is clearly proper but warned that this decision agreed that for should not be taken as a sign that the Uni- vith Friedman's versity is likely to prevail in the higher parable harm to court. s in the middle In defense of its policies, the University has argued that U.S. Supreme Court Justice grants stay "Today's decision simply puts us back where we were a week ago, which is able to pursue our goal of enrolling an outstanding and diverse student body," - Liz Barry University deputy general counsel Lewis Powell's opinion endorsing diversity as a compelling state interest is the control- ling law in Bakke, which Friedman dis- missed in his opinion last week. Friedman also ruled that even if diversity were a compelling state interest, the Uni- versity's consideration of race was not nar- rowly tailored to meet constitutional standards. Friedman's opinion stands in direct oppo- sition to the decision issued in December by U.S. District Judge Patrick Duggan in the undergraduate case. Duggan ruled that diversity is a compelling government inter- est and that the current system of admis- sions used in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts is legal, although the system used from 1995-1998 was not. e BLUE COME UP EMPTY Sexual assault survivors to speak at rally ,. ,. ... ,k { : h. By Kristen Beaumont Daily Staff Reporter The 22nd annual Take Back the Night march and rally tonight comes at a time of heightened awareness on the issue of rape after an alleged sex- ual assault in West Quad Residence Hall earlier this week. Take Back the Night, - jointly spon- sored by the Ann Arbor Coalition Against Rape and University Women Against Rape, provides a forum for hundreds of survivors, activists and supporters from the community to demand an end to sexualized violence. The rally begins on the Diag at 7 p.m. "Our emphasis this year is that 80 percent of all rapes that occur are date rapes," said Anne Marie Lock, an LSA junior and publicity chair for University Women Against Rape. Lock said the group is aware of the incident that occurred Tuesday in West Quad, when one of two men who entered a female student's room reportedly assaulted the student, but the original program for the rally will proceed with no modifications and the incident would not be inten- tionally discussed. Lock said two survivors of sexual assault will speak at the rally. The keynote speaker will be Denise Diggs-Taylor, education director at the University's School of Social Work. "I am going to be talking about the history of women of color and what it is like to be a survivor," said Diggs-Taylor, who attended her first Take Back the Night in 1989. She said she also plans to address See NIGHT, Page 7 AP PHOTO Freshman defenseman Mike Komisarek expresses his frustration after the Wolverines were unable to recover from a three-goal deficit in the national semifinal yesterday. Championship dreams end with 4-2 loss By Ryan C. Moloney aiy Sports Writer ALBANY, N.Y. - After a season of triumph and trial, the question surrounding the Michigan hockey team last night was not whether they would play with the passion of a championship team, but if it would be enough. ~BOSTON COLLEGE 4 On this night, it wasn't. {'MICHIGAN 2 Boston College ended the Wolverines' More coverage of hopes of a national last night's game title last night, by the in Sports, Page 12. score of 4-2, in the NCAA Frozen Four semifinal at Pepsi Arena. The Eagles out-shot, out-hit, out-hustled and finally, out-played Michigan in the opening 20 min- utes of the game. The Wolverines fought back to within a goal, but as senior captain Geoff Koch said afterward, "It was too little, too late." In the game's first five minutes, Boston College leashed a ferocious attack upon the Wolverines, characterized by a number of golden, in-close opportunities and bone-jarring checks by the Eagles. Boston College's offensive fervor culminated just after the halfway point of the first period. At the 10:06 mark, Tony Voce streaked down the far-side boards on another Boston College rush and cen- tered the puck to freshman Chuck Kobasew, who slid the puck underneath Michigan netminder Josh Blackburn for a 1-0 lead. The first goal failed to wake Michigan up out of its first period slumber, and the Eagles capitalized again less than five minutes later. With Mike Komisarek in the penalty box for roughing, Boston College's Bobby Allen let go a wrister from the far-side point that deflected off teammate Ben Eaves in front of the net, beating a screened Blackburn over his glove hand. The pow- erplay goal gave the Eagles a convincing two-goal lead. "It was the pressure of being in the Frozen Four - I don't know if we were focused," senior forward Josh Langfeld said. "You can't do that against a potent offense like Boston College." At the first period's halfway point, the Eagles had outshot the Wolverines 7-3. Boston College went on to claim a 14-10 advantage after the first period. Blackburn faced 12 shots in the opening period, while Boston College goalie Scott Clemmensen steered away all 10 that he saw. But while Clem- mensen was stopping futile, long-distance shots from the wing, the Eagles set up in front of Black- burn at least half a dozen times for doorstep chances. The junior netminder continued to carry his team in the second but simply couldn't plug all the holes on Michigan's penalty kill, as the Eagles again capi- talized with the extra man, this time courtesy of none other than Kobasew. ° Much like his first goal, Kobasew snuck in behind the Michigan defense and slid the puck under Blackburn for what looked like a 3-0, slam- the-door lead at the 11:38 mark of the second peri- od. The Wolverines quickly responded with a goal from John Shouneyia at the 12:24 mark, trimming the lead back to two goals. The sophomore placed a See HOCKEY, Page 7 RACHEL FEIERMAN/Daily Vine Deloria Jr., author of "Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto," lectures at the Rackham School of Graduate Studies yesterday. American " Inias view aspresvme,'nt Mideast tension spreads to Diag By Elizabeth Kassab Daily Staff Reporter palestinian supporters, some bearing Palestin- ian flags, formed a silent human chain across the Diag yesterday to symbolize conditions in Israel that they said are preventing Palestinians from going about their daily lives. The chain was meant to symbolize the closure of Birzeit University, a Palestinian institution schooling and work," said LSA junior Nadim Hallal. "It's something that we as university st dents can identify with," said LS senior Ahmad Nas- sar. It passively posed the estion, "What =if the road to Angell Hall were bI cked?" Nassar said. About 50 people made .p the human chain, and several Palestinian sup 'orters stepped up to a megaphone to speak duri * the protest., Israeli supporters carryi flags and signs and xani "I1 c'fi th ~ is n4P]c" ninr~c' rnerc'id story it's not effective," said LSA junior Shoshanna Cohen. "You need to have both sides of the story out there so that people can make up their own minds." Department of Public Safety officers were on hand to diffuse any possible confrontations, although they did not step into the situation. "It is my understanding that we received a complaint about who was using the Diag space," DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said. "We were called to trir to facilita~te the matter 2and>1it was~1 By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter A boy was walking down the road one day and he sees an old American Indian with his ear to the ground. He runs over to the old man and asks him what he's doing. The man answers, "1994 Pontiac station wagon, old woman, two kids and a dog." This really impressed the boy, who then asked the man if he could really tell all that from listening to the ground. The man answered, "No, I just got run ove~r" Health and Human Rights, held yes- terday at the Rackham School of Graduate Studies. The University invited Deloria to talk about life on American Indian reservations has changed since the 1930s, when he was born on a Sioux reservation in Yates, N.D. "In those days it was a very small town. There was one telephone and if someone got a long distance call, everybody in town would know about it," he said. "In those days, a tele- phone call really meant bad news." Mentioninir timesiwuhen America2n i