One hundred eleven years ofedtorialfreedom I'm1 NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 7640557 wwwinmichigandaly. com Monday October 1, 2001 I l '3 , I Bollinger to By Nick Bunkley York City on two separate occasions in Septem- Daily News Editor ber. I Col mb 0 a? E I HAPPY BIRTHDAY! This weekend marked the 111th anniversary of the first edition of The Michigan Daily. Free from oversight by administrators and run entirely by students, the Daily has existed as a student voice on campus for more than a century. Join us today as we celebrate our editorial freedom. - The editors University President Lee Bollinger is the top candidate for the presidency of Columbia Uni- versity and has interviewed twice in the last month with the presidential search committee at his alma mater, according to a published report today. The Columbia Daily Spectator, the university's campus newspaper, quoted unnamed sources close to the search committee who confirmed that Bollinger met with the committee in New The sources said a recommendation from the committee to the Columbia Board of Trustees could come as early as today. Bollinger, who was one of three finalists for the Harvard University presidency last spring, did not answer his telephone at home last night. University of Michigan spokeswoman Julie Peterson said she could not comment on behalf' of Bollinger. Bollinger was in New York City during the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and drove back to Ann Arbor in time for a Sept. 14 gathering at his home. Peterson said the purpose for his trip was to meet with members of the Royal Shakespeare Company about the University's relationship with the organization. Those meetings were called off after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. Bollinger also failed to show up at a Sept. 24 meeting of the University of Michigan Senate Assembly, where he was scheduled to speak. Three members of the University of Michigan Board of Regents declined comment on Bollinger's reported candidacy last night. George Van Amson, a member of Columbia's search committee and a sales trader at Morgan Stanley Inc., said he would not comment on whether Bollinger is a candidate but did tell The Michigan Daily that the search committee was not holding any meetings or taking any action last night. Several additional members of the search com- mittee, including chair Henry King, declined comment to the Spectator. "We didn't get any of this from anyone on the See BOLLINGER, Page 7A Feds may Bin aden aided monitor foreign students \ Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - A controversial plan to more closely monitor foreign students in the United States is slowly advancing inside the Immigration and Naturalization Service, with congres- sional opposition largely collapsing in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The long-beleaguered project to establish a computerized system for tracking the 500,000 foreign students in this country had faced fierce opposi- tion in Congress, where critics com- plained that it could subject foreign scholars to discriminatory treatment and saddle universities with new red tape. But the terrorist attacks have trans- formed the issue, allowing for the sys- tem to be implemented by the end of next year, if the INS is able to sur- mount the technical challenges. Bush administration officials plan to disclose further details in the coming days, including a new $95 fee that foreign students will pay to finance the $43- million effort, known as the Student and Exchange Visitor Program. "We recognize the futility of continu- ing to advocate for our position" against the project, said Victor Johnson, director of public policy for NAFSA, an associa- tion of international educators. "We just felt it was not appropriate ... in the after- math of Sept. 11." As part of the government's sweeping investigation of the attacks, federal agents asked colleges across the country this week for lists of foreign students and confidential student records that are normally protected by privacy laws. Members of Congress, meanwhile, sought to clamp down on student visas, which are one of the ways in which ter- rorists have been 4ble to enter the Unit- ed States, and demanded more thorough background checks on those who wish to study in this country. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) is proposing a six-month moratorium- on foreign student visas, to give the INS time to get an effective tracking plan up and running. In addition, she would have the INS monitoring system include fingerprint data and require the immigration jervice to conduct com- prehensive background checks on for- eign student applicants before the State Department can approve a visa. Apple of my eye by The Washington Post ISLAMABAD, P Afghanistan's sole amb outside world said y alleged terrorist Osam being sheltered in a se Afghanistan by the cc Taliban militia, which h edge and control of h more than two years. In an interview with of foreign reporters ambassador to Pakistan Zaeef, acknowledged fo a direct link between t bin Laden, who is accu minding the attacks on t Center and the Pentagon "He has been in the forces," Zaeef said, spe an interpreter. He saidl "under the security" oft that "any action that he go through the knowled ic Emirate of Afghanista Zaeef said the relati his government and b been like this for more1 now." He disputed re aliban Laden had gone missing in recent weeks. Pakistan - U.S. officials have long insisted that assador to the there were strong connections between esterday that the Taliban and bin Laden's al Qaeda a bin Laden is terrorist organization. Bin Laden, who cret location in has been stripped of his Saudi citizen- )untry's ruling ship and exiled from Sudan, provided has had knowl- thousands of fighters and tens of Vil- is actions for lions of dollars to the Taliban in exchange for a safe haven in a small group Afghanistan, according to Western , the Taliban intelligence sources. , Abdul Salam Both bin Laden and Taliban officials r the first time have denied responsibility for the he Taliban and attacks in the United States. But U.S. used of master- officials have said they have assembled he World Trade evidence - which they have not pub- 1. licly detailed - implicating bin Laden. control of our In an interview with the BBC yester- eaking through day, British Prime Minister Tony Blair bin Laden was said he has seen "absolutely powerful the Taliban and and incontrovertible evidence" linking e makes has to bin Laden to the Sept. 11 attacks. ge of the Islam- Zaeef's acknowledgment could an." assist the Bush administration in build- onship between ing international support, particularly in Laden "has among Arab countries, for a broad than two years anti-terror campaign in Afghanistan ports that bin See TERROR, Page 7A AP PHOTO Pro-Taliban protesters burn an effigy of President Bush and chant slogans during an antI-American protest Sunday in Karachi, Pakistan. The rally was in protest of the possible U.S. military strikes on neighboring Afghanistan. Peace rally encouragegs debate onl U.S. policies By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter To some students who attended the peace rally on Friday afternoon, it was clear that the majority of students at the University are not concerned with the prospects of war. "Comparing to the vigil (when) this place was full and all those people were mourning over death, this, which could prevent more death ... nobody is here," said LSA sophomore Anya Maziak, who attended the rally with about 200 other students. "It's such a contradiction." Maziak said she attended the rally because the events of Sept. 11, as well as the possible consequences of a war, scare her. "I've never been so scared in my entire life, having this be so realistic, so in your face," she said. "I really think that peace is the only, solution. War bombing makes more war bomb- ing, there's never a stop." LSA sophomore Jackie Bray, a New Jersey resident, spoke during the Alliance for Peace and Justice rally to encourage peace despite the fact that only days ago, she said she had wanted a war. "You know what I thought in my head (on Sept. 1I1)?" she asked the crowd. "When are we going to bomb them? I thought it ... I am someone who has never been this sad and this angry and this terrified at the same time before." She said she believes that although America must make a statement, peace would be a bigger statement than war. "We've gone to war before and that hasn't worked," Bray said. That was the reoccurring theme throughout the hour-long rally, which focused on alternative methods of pun- ishments and encouraged students to connect with each other. Lansing-based Lawyer Anna Deld- wier, who specializes in international law, said that war is not necessary. "We have the mechanisms to solve this crisis through the systems we have already developed," she said, adding that she believes Osama bin Laden and other suspects should go through the International Court of Justice before prosecution. The rally encouraged students to start thinking about America's policies and ways they could be changed in order to avoid future conflicts. "All the faculty who have studied this say there is a problem with the United States' foreign policy," said alum Al Haber, who attended the Uni- versity during the Vietnam War and helped start Students for a Democratic. Society. Residential College junior Monique Luse, who, along with Bray and sever- al others, founded the Alliance for Peace and Justice, said she organized the rally in part because she wanted to understand others' reactions and because she wanted others to under- stand hers. "I didn't understand how you could look at someone and say, I want to hurt them," she said. DR E1 I IYIUINJAM/i/ ly Center for individual Rights CEO Terry Pell speaks at the Sam Adams Dinner for the Libertarian Party of Washtenaw County Saturday. CIR chief ready for court dt Windsor bars lose money after attacks By C. Price Jones For the Daily By Kylene Kiang For the Daily Less than an hour from Ann Arbor, Windsor's nightclubs and bars are a popular hangout for University stu- dents, mainly because of Ontario's 19- year-old drinking age. But business owners in Windsor say their revenue has dropped significantly since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Windsor's clubs and casino attract more than 20,000 visitors per day, with about 80 percent to 90 percent hailing from the United States said Andrew Wilkie, general manager of Joker's Night Club, located in downtown Windsor. revenue decreases for Windsor's down- town businesses. Wilkie said business- es are clearly suffering. "Normally on the weekends the streets are packed. In the last few weeks, the crowd has dropped by 90 percent to about 2,000 people. It's real- ly hurting everybody here," Wilkie said. Jim Mundy, director of corporate communications at Casino Windsor, said business has decreased by 50 per- cent since Sept. 11. Wilkie claims the media is scaring customers away with reports of long lines at the borders. "The news says there's a two-to- three hour wait to get in and out Cana- Center for Individual Rights CEO Terry Pell told a crowd of local Liber- tarian Party members Saturday night that if a Cincinnati court rules in favor of the University in its affirmative action lawsuits this month, he will not let the decision stand. "In the next two to two and a half years," Pell said, "this should be before the Supreme Court, and we should have a decision." Pell, who filed suits against the Col- lege of Literature, Science and the Arts and the Law Schgol, with regard to admissions policies, did admit that a two-year time frame was optimistic. "We're trying to change the laws that in too many cases makes it difficult for individuals to have the kind of fights that we need to be having," Pell said. "CIR is a small organization: we're about 10 people. Each year we bring a handful of legal cases that reinforce CIR brought before the courts. The CIR statistician "calculated that the odds of an underrepresented minor- ity student being accepted were nearly 234 times the odds of non-minority applicant being accepted," Pell said. "Race isn't just a factor they look at in these files: it's the determining factor that makes all the difference." Pell also lauded Barbara Grutter and Jennifer Gratz, the plaintiffs in the Law School and undergraduate suits, respectively. "Jennifer and Barbara remind us that this is about the efforts of two Michi- gan citizens to get rid of one single incredibly unfair admissions system," Pell said. "But by their leadership, Jen- nifer and Barbara force the debate back to the real world of individuals whose lives are directly affected and pro- foundly changed by affirmative action." After delivering his speech, Pell responded to questions concerning the results of abolishing affirmative action and whether the question of using affir- i DDCTT ennINITAInirn iJ~ I