W w ww w w w 0 w w JOB - The Michigan Daily - FOOTBALL SATURDAY - Friday, October 12, 2001 Many Americans eel more 3 insecure in wake of attacks M. Friday, October 12, 2001- FOOTBAI WHEN PURDUE HAS THE FOOTBALL, M' puts revenge on 1 3 Lowe RB 36 BrownRB By Jon Schwartz Daily Sports Editor University survey reveals depression, sleep loss, and lack ofaNd in future By Maria Sprow "I believe that there is both a gen- Daily Staff Reporter eralized concern and a situational . concern." . Nearly half of all Americans feel The survey showed that one cause more insecure and unsafe after last of concern is the unemployment rate; month's attacks on the World Trade the 668 people surveyed predicted Center and the Pentagon and the the rate would rise to about 6 percent country's declaration of war on ter- in the next year. rorism, according to a University University economist Richard survey released yesterday. Curtin, who directs ISR's consumer Results from "How America surveys, said consumers are usually Responds," a study conducted by the accurate when predicting future University's Institute for Social unemployment rates. Research, show that 51 percent of "On average, consumers have Americans said their sense of per- anticipated changes in the unemploy- sonal safety was shaken only a little ment rate three quarters in advance or not at all following the attacks. of the actual change," Curtin said. The 49 percent of Americans who According to the survey, other side said they felt their personal safety effects of the Sept. 11 attacks include had been threatened were also more an increase in the willingness to give pessimistic about the future econo- up some civil liberties in exchange my, the study discovered, and have for security. less favorable buying attitudes. Sixty-six percent of Americans However, overall, almost half of who responded that they were not Americans said that now is a good affected by the incidents said they time to invest in the stock market, are willing to give up some free- and only 9 percent said it would be a doms. The study also shows that the good idea to withdraw investments. majority of Americans support ran- Communications Prof. Michael dom searches of public places by fraugott, an expert on polling, said police. the split divisions between how peo- The majority of respondents also ple are feeling about the attacks reported feeling depressed, and expe- should be expected. riencing trouble with sleep loss and "There are a lot of factors that go concentration. Only 21 percent of into this, one of which has to be Americans said they felt hopeful proximity and place of reference," about the future. Traugott said. But the study also shows that Americans are uniting behind their country after the tragedy. Nine out of 10 people said they are proud to be an American. "We can only infer explanations for that," Traugott said, "but it could be that people who are now more insecure feel the need to rally around their country because they expect the government to be able to help." The study also found that people feel more favorable toward minority groups that last year, although researchers could not definitively attribute that sentiment to the attacks. There seems to be a more positive attitude towards various racial and ethnic groups," said Prof. James Jackson. "We're not saying that the event caused it, (but) one that could be is that this event that has occurred is a bringing together of people toward a common enemy. It could be a real change as to how people define what real Americans are." The study showed that people are viewing whites, blacks, Hispanics, Asian Americans and Jewish Americans more favorably. The survey also said that, in gener- al, Americans understand the com- plexity of the attacks and are not looking for one simple solution, answer, or reason. "As a nation, we are not making the mistake of seizing on a single simple answer to a very complex question," said University psycholo- gist Robert Kahn. "And that's reas- suring." 84 Morales .2 Heaggans WR 71 Butler 54 Turner 50 Moore 72 Miller 4 Hance 79 Mruczko Rufolo 70 Rufolo Owen 21 Stubblefield 5 James WR 77 Lou heed 68 Kitchel LT 82 Standeford 80 Simpson WR 89 Stratton 81 Randolph TE RT SCB 21 LeSueur 12 B. Williams RG C LG DE 92 Rumishe 13 Stevens OLB 6 Hobson 42 Spytek 'k NT 90 Heuer 57 Pearson DT 97 Lazarus 99 Frysinger CB 3 Howard 30 M. Curry RLB ILB '53mOrr ILD-:95 Kashama 37 Ka(J'i Mfm ss 26 Curry 22 Shaw FS 24 Drake 2 June DAVID ROCHKIND/Daily Campanology Prof. Margo Halsted plays the carillon in Burton Memorial Tower. Halsted teaches the nation's only graduate program in carillon. 'U' isnation'S only college With master s program in carlon PURDUE ROSTER I Good Food, Good Drinks, Good Prices.... Good Time Charley's After 11P.M. By Casey Ehrlch For the Daily Although most University students have never met campanology Prof. Margo Halsted, nearly all are quite famil- iar with her work. Halsted plays an instrument called the carillon that allows her to produce music Iusing a bell weighing 12 tons inside the Burton Memorial Tower on Central Campus. The largest of the 55 bells in the tower is the third heaviest in the world and large enough to fit a kindergarten class inside. "I have the best job at the University. It's so fun to have people come up to play and watch it," Halsted said. "The carillon is very versatile. You can place the melody anywhere you want. It's fun to play because you use your whole body." Through the University, Halsted offers the only carillon graduate program in the country. Only one student, Jeremy Chesman, has earned a master's degree in the program under the direction of Halsted, and there are currently no grad- uate students in the program Chesman is now studying the carillon in Belgium on a grant from the Belgian American Educational Foundation. Although there are no students in the car- illon program at present, students have opted to take a class on the instrument as an elective. Halsted gives private lessons to 12 stu- dents at the University and not all are music majors. "Students are auditioned on the piano and practice on the practice keyboard," Halsted said. "When they get good enough they can play in the tower." Only 500 carillons exist in the world, and the University harbors two of them - one in Burton Memorial Tower on Central Campus and another in the Ann and Robert H. Lurie Tower on North Campus. Played from a keyboard, the carillon consists of at least two octaves of carillon bells and requires simultaneous use of the musician's hands and feet. "I feel like there is so much possibility for expression with the carillon," said Ray McLellan, a former student of Halsted and current carillonnuer at Michigan State University. "Everyone is your audience. If you're loud the whole city can hear it." Eric Klein, a percussion sophomore, heard the instrument for the first time on the second day of his freshman year as he left the MLB after Italian class. "It was the first time I had ever heard a carillon being played," Klein said. "I fell in love with the instrument. I decided that my goal would be to play the carillon." Klein began taking lessons from Halsted the next semester and three weeks later had his debut in the Lurie Tower. "Playing the largest instrument in the world is so exciting," he said. There are also six people who play the University's carillons regularly who are not enrolled in classes. Many are former students living in and around Ann Arbor. "It's the original heavy-metal music," joked Julia Walton, who studied the car- illon at the University in the 1950s. Both towers on campus are open at noon every weekday for the public to observe the carillon being played. Additionally, the Lurie Tower is open for observation between 1:15 and 2 p.m. on Sundays and Burton Tower is open between 10:15 and 10:45 a.m. on Saturdays. 2 Gary Heaggans WR 3 Montrell Lowe RB 4 Brandon Hance QB 5 Chris James WR 6 Deaunte Ferrell CB 6 Kyle Smith QB 7 Ashante Woodyard CB 8 Ralph Turner SS 9 Stuart SchweigertWR 10 Carl Buergler CB 11 Scott Kurz P 12 Antwaun Rogers CB 12 Bobby Farmer QB 13 Akin Ayodele DE 14 Landon Johnson LB 16 Gilbert Gardner LB 17 Ben Smith S 18 Andy Nelson K 18 Kyle Orton QB 19 R'Kes Starling S 20 Chock McQuaid S 21 Taylor Stubblefield WR 22 Jared Curtis CB 23 Kevin Noel WR 24 Sean Morris CB 24 Lamar Crane RB 25 Joey Harris RB 26 Bobby MontgomeryWR 27 Brandon Jones RB 28 Jacques Reeves CB 29 Aaron Levin P 30 Travis Dorsch K 31 Jim Guidos WR 32 Shane Summers DB 32 Jarod Void WR 33 Brian Hickman CB 34 Niko Koutouvide LB 35 Ryan Harris RB 35 Korey Mack CB 36 Sedrick Brown RB 37 Nathan Hedrick K 38 Brady Doe S 39 Bobby Lwuchukwu LB 40 Kevin Nesfield DE 42 Patrick Schaub RB 43 Jeff Bennett DE 44 Jon Goldsberry RB 45 Jacob Rowe RB 46 LaDrelle Bryant LB 6-3 5-8 6-1 5410 5-11 6.4 6-2 6-2 6-3 6-0 6-1 6-2 6-1 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-3 6-2 6-4 5-7 5-11 6-1 5-9 6-3 5-6 5-10 5-11 5-8 5-11 6-1 5-11 6-6 6-2 6-1 6-2 6-0 6-3 6-2 5-9 6-1 5-8 6-0 6-2 6-3 6-0 6.4 6-3 5-9 6-2 6-1 203 199 204 181 188 205 209 210 209 224 206 170 206 261 210 234 209 205 208 183 208 168 164 195 162 203 205 175 216 183 207 222 180 208 181 160 233 210 162 227 160 202 217 244 224 224 243 233 218 185 48 Tim Upshur S 49 Mike Decker DT 50 Tyler Moore OL 51 Joe Odom LB 52 Jason Leimberger LB 53 Shaun Phillips DE 54 Rob Turner OL 55 Brandon Villarreal DT 56 Matt Turner OL 57 Brent Hawkins LB 58 Brent Grover DE 59 Doug Swann LB 60 Mark Reid C 61 Nick Hardwick DT 62 Vedran Dzolovic DE 63 Dave Owen OL 64 Danny May OL 65 Brandon Johnson DT 67 Jason Suic OL 68 KellyKitchel OL 69 John Shelbourne C 70 Sean Rufolo OL 71. Kelly Butler OL 72 Max Miller C 73 Mike Holle OL 74 Nicholas PilipauskiOL 75 Emmit Tyler DB 76 Willie Bach OT 77 Pete Lougheed OL 78 Josh Tomsheck OL 79 Gene MruczkowskiC 80 A T Simpson WR 81 Chris Randolph TE 82 John Standeford WR 83 Mike Rhinehart TE 84 Seth Morales WR 85 Jameson Evans WR 86 Brain Wang TE 87 Charles Davis TE 88 Jason Loerzel LB 89 Tim Stratton TE 90 Jamie Petrowski TE 92 Craig Terrill DE 93 Antwan Harris DT 94 Luke Burroughs DT 95 Jarod Ramirez DE 96 ,Mike Lawrence DT 97 Ryan Davis DE 98 Matt Mitrione DT 99 Daemeon Grier DT 6-1 6-3 6.7 6-2 6-2 6-3 6-4 62 6-3 6-2 6-4 6-5 6.1 64 6-3 6.6 62 6-0 6-2 6.6 6.6 6-2 6.8 6-3 6-2 6.2 5-9 62 6-5 6.6 6-2 6.4 6-4 6-4 6-6 5-10 6-3 67 6.6 6.3 6-4 64 63 6-0 6-4 6-4 6.5 6-4 6-3 &I 208 254 286 243 209 259 294 271 270 223 252 218 231 268 262 285 297 288 298 294 266 290 299 284 282 273 341 257 297 297 298 232 262 190 238 181 202 271 262 224 253 205 289 299 267 261 283 257 293 299 In its last two games, Michigan has gone into halftime with leads of 28- 10 and 13-0, respectively. The leads seem big and comfortable, but a glance back at last year's game against Purdue emits a reminder that final scores are based on four quar- ters of play - not two. In West Lafayette last year, Michigan led 28-10 at the break. But the second half didn't resemble the first at all, as Purdue, which couldn't catch a break in the first two quar- ters, turned around and caught every- thing. The final, 32-31, came on a last-second field goal by Travis Dorsch, a play set up by several Michigan mistakes. About three months later, the Boilermakers represented the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl, beating out Michigan and Northwestern in the Big Ten's formulaic tie-breaker. So with that in the past, how are the Wolverines heading into the rematch? "We know that no lead is safe," said wide receiver Ron Bellamy. Unlike most fans, the team claims not to be going into this weekend's game with revenge on its mind. It's looking forward, not back. "I don't think you ever gain any- thing by looking back in terms of motivation," coach Lloyd Carr said. "The fact we've played them, there is common knowledge, but from a team standpoint and a motivational stand- point, the things that should motivate you are your goals and those aren't based on what's happened in last year's game." There's one reason -why Michigan shouldn't be looking back - this year's defense has -the ability to shut teams down. The Wolverines are allowing only 52 rushing yards per game, effective- ly making their opponents one dimensional. Where last year's defense didn't have the talent and experience to keep teams down, this one does. "We definitely know that it's like night and day," said Michigan tight end Bill Seymour about what he expects from the defense this time around. "Their confidence level is so much higher and we are a lot stronger up front on the defensive line." Because of that, Purdue knows that it can't bank on a miraculous second- half surge this time around. "We need to go in there and be ready to play right away and through- out the entire game," said redshirt freshman quarterback Brandon Hance. "We definitely will have to play our best game to beat Michigan in their stadium," said tight end Tim Stratton. "As coach Tiller said, we need to bring our 'A' game to the table. We are going to have to do that this weekend." Purdue's biggest advantage is that it will show the Wolverines an offense that keeps most Michigan fans up late at night, shaking at the Drew Brees led Purdue to a last-second prospect of defending it -- th spread.Purdue and Northwester shook the young Michigan defem with their wide-open offensi schemes last year. But this year, the Wolverines clai that they're ready for it. "We've been exposed to the We Coast offense and that's going to he: us in this game," said defensive er Shawn Lazarus. "It was new, but th bottom line is we didn't do what w were coached to do. We didn't coi t~ol the line of scrimmage, and wil our experience this year, hopeful] we can do it." Y Every night from 11p.m. until close, Charley's features... Pitchers .....................$3.50 Bud Light, Molson, Killian's, or Honey Brown Margaritas ..............$2.25 Regular or Strawberry Margaritas Beer .........................$2.25 22 oz. Bud Light, Molson, Killian's, or Honey Brown Iced'Teas ....................$3.25 All of our Iced Tea varieties, 22oz. Also featured after 1 p.m. is a limited menu of appetizers, burgers, and sandwiches at special midnight hour prices. Good Time Charle/s 1140 South University at Church 668-8411 Catering Available Subs * Party Subs * Frozen I any10%tooff any Party Sub or Catering Order Not valid with any other discount. Valid at participating stores only. Please present coupon before ordering. One offer per coupon per person. Jumbos extra. Offer expires 11/3010 .5 47 Charles Edwards S a ! S. a = S S * 53* S ~ *.......a. 3S.........., a S 9SS St St*SSt~I * ** S * S S S I