The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 12, 2001- 7A FLORIDA BALLOT REVIEW Final tally hinges on standards In its examination of the more than 175,000 disputed ballots from Florida's presidential election, the media group analyzed data according to various "scenarios," or sets of standards. Depending on the criteria used to assess ballots, the analyses yielded different outcomes. Bush/ Cheney 2,91 2,790 Gore/ Lieberman 2,912,253 Certified count Review scenarios (defined below) Prevailing standard Least restrictive Most restrictive Supreme Court simple Supreme Court complex Two-comers Gore/four-county 2,916,397 2, 8'457 2,924,588 2,.24,895 2,915,130 2915,24& ,9142' 2,914,998 Nader/ LaDuke 97,488 97,634 97,780 97,587 97,561 97,579 97,631 97,492 Buchanan/ Foster 17,484 Margin 537 17,551 17,675 17,535 17,504 17,507 17,551 17,485 60 107 115 430 493 105 225 FEI NGOLD Continued from Page 1A terrorist network. Students, he said, had also stressed the need to force pharmaceutical com- panies to offer discounted drugs to AIDS and HIV sufferers in Africa, many of whom cannot afford the drugs at their current prices. "No place on Earth can be over- looked in the fight against terrorism," he said. But the two-term senator said domes- tic concerns that were of top priority before the attacks should not be put aside after the attacks. He spoke of the need to end racial profiling and a bill to do just that, which he sponsored along with Rep. John Conyers (D-Detroit); a bill he co-spon- sored with Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) to end the death penalty and campaign finance reform. Feingold's campaign finance reform legislation, co-sponsored with Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), was passed by the Senate earlier in the year but remains stuck in the House of Representatives. Feingold has been working to get the required 218 signatures of House mem- bers in order to force his bill to a vote in that chamber. In a meeting with reporters immedi- ately following the event, Feingold said he was seven signatures short, but was confident that he and McCain could get the necessary signatures as soon as they decided it was prudent to do so, given Congress' need to focus on other mat- ters following the terrorist attacks. "It's really just a delay game," he said. Feingold also said he did not regret being the only Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee to recommend the confirmation of Attorney General John Ashcroft. "I believe the president of the United States, whoever it is, has the right to pick his Cabinet members," unless they are unqualified or there are ethical ques- tions surrounding those individuals, he said. Ashcroft, he said, was willing to make some of the changes Feingold wanted in the anti-terrorism bill, but "the .White House put the hammer down and said no." - Christopher Johnson contributed to this report for the Daily. 2,916,324 2,91",31 2,916,066 2,913,126 Defining the scenarios Prevailing standard Based on majority of responses to a suney of Florida election officials. Minimum criteria are a single comer detached for punchcard or any affirmative mark for optical scan, such as a check mark. Least restrictive Minimum criteria are a "dimple" for punch- card or any affirmative mark for optical scan. Most restrictive Minimum criteria are a complete punch for punchcard or a completely filled oval for optical scan. Pencil marks on punchards are also accepted. Supreme Court simple On Dec. 8, the Florida Supreme Court ordered a statewide hand count of undervotes in all counties, except three counties and 139 precincts in Miami-Dade County, which had already completed hand counts. This scenario attempts to implement the count order applying a range of uniform standards. Supreme Court complex Based on the same premise as the "Supreme Court simple" scenario, but applies various standards according to how individual counties interpreted the court order.' Two- corners Minimum criteria are two corners detached for punch card or any affirmative mark for optical scan. Based on arguments made by the Bush camp in the month following the election. Gore/four county Based on hand counts in four heavil Democrati counties - Broward, Miami- Dade, Palm Beach and Volusia - which the Gore camp argued for in days following the election. - y ci DONORS Continued from Page 1A "The people receive some sort of catastrophic, irre- versible injury to the brain, but still have a few functioning cells in the brainstem," said Mark Gravel, director of Uni- versity Organ Donor Services. "Their heart will continue to beat with support, so the family and acting physician must decide to withdraw treatment. "It is not the transplant team that declares them legally dead," he added. To avoid ethical conflicts, transplant surgeons do not interact with donors' families. Advice on the decision comes from the patient's general physician. "I function as the go-between and have no knowledge of who may be waiting for those organs," Franklin said. If the family makes the decision to donate organs, the Gift of Life Program guides them through the procedure. Richard Pietroski, chief operating officer of the Gift of Life, said the new procedure offers a highly effective alter- native form of donation. "Most families don't get to experience the involvement of organ donation. But, to those families who are given the option to this form, they now have a feeling of something positive," Pietroski said. Like other non-heart beating donations, surgeons must wait until the patient is declared dead, which can potentially cause damage to the organs. "Sixty minutes is the upper criteria," said Gravel. "Once the person is removed from the ventilator, if they do not reach cardiopulmonary death within that time, we don't go forward." "In most places, they don't wait really long because of the amount of damage to the organ in that time period. The donation is sort of pointless," he added. Though University hospital has only performed a few of these transplants, doctors agree that families have been more receptive. "Consent rates have been higher for this than for normal donation," Gravel said. "People want something good to come out of a bad situation." Franklin agreed that consent rates were higher and felt the increase will continue. "Most people are very open to discussing the concept if their loved one is in that category. More myths about dona- tion need to be dispelled, and I think donation will continue to grow," he said. The treatment also gives hope to the approximately 2,500 Michigan residents waiting for organs. "These families are so grateful. Their loved ones were so severely brain injured and desperately wanted to donate, but there was no option for them," Pietroski said. "It gives them the option, and gives the people who need organs the gift that they need." REAL ESTATE Continued from Page 1A real estate finance, the proposed curricu- lum will focus less on the profit gaining aspects of the industry and more on P "designing things in a ways that make life better," said Dewar. The course of study will emphasize issues surrounding real estate develop- ment including community building, city-working and environmental preser- vation. "There is rising concern in real estate AP among professionals both inside and outside of the academic field about the ash declining quality of the built environ- 93 ment as well as the deterioration of the natural environment. There are faculty, ted student and professional frustrations h's with the inability of a single discipline ged or profession to adequately deal with these problems," he said. Kelbaugh added that as an interdisci- plinary program, it would take advan- tage of the University's strong array of existing programs in architecture, urban planning, business and law. Other poten- tial participating schools may include the School of Public Policy and the School of Natural Resources and the Environment. "I think there is more of an influence for people to go into the financial aspect of real estate, but having a program that deals with the fine arts of the industry is a good idea," said Kris Medina, an LSA freshman. Starting in January 2002, the College of Architecture and Urban Planning will offer two real estate classes, "The Struc- ture of Real Estate Deals" and "The Architecture Planner as Developer." Both will be taught by University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee architecture Prof. Harvey Rabinowitz. SOURCES: Associated Press; National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago BALLOTS Continued from Page 1A containing more than one choice. The goal of the news organizations was not to learn who really "won" Florida; the Electoral Col- lege already had determined Bush was the winner following a U.S. Supreme Court decision that ended further counting and led to Gore's conces- sion. The aim was to provide a valuable historical record by thoroughly assessing tens of thousands of ballots that no one had fully examined. Much of the legal wrangling focused on how votes were defined, and the ballot review did, too, calculating results under different standards - for example, whether to count as votes "hanging chads" on punch-card ballots or ballots marked with an "X" instead of the required filled-in oval on optical scan ballots., Completing two partial recounts that Gore unsuccessfully pursued in court showed Bu maintaining a lead ranging between 225 and 41 votes. Under any standard that tabulated all disput votes statewide, however, Gore erased Bust advantage and emerged with a tiny lead that ran from 42 to 171 votes. Strikingly, all these outcomes were closer th even the narrow 537 votes of Bush's official vic ry. With numbers that tiny, experts said it would1 impossible to interpret the survey results as defi tive. The Florida election review was developed1 the AP, CNN, The New York Times, The Pa Beach Post, The St. Petersburg Times, Tribu Publishing, The Wall Street Journal and The Was ington Post. Tribune newspapers include the Chi go Tribune, Los Angeles Times, Newsday, t Orlando Sentinel and the South Florida Sun-Se tinel inFt. Lauderdale. tan to- be ni- by lm ne sh- ca- the an- BUSH Continued from Page 1A Actor Ron Silver methodically read the names of each country that lost citizens in the Sept. 11 attacks. An honor guard carried each country's flag and planted it in stan- chions set in front of the dignitaries. Bush, his eyes watery, either by tears or the stinging smoke wafting up from the rubble, walked over to a wall listing the names of the nations. Just beneath the name of the United States, he wrote, "Good will triumph over evil. May God bless all of us. George W. Bush." It was Bush's first visit to the site since Sept. 14, when he waded into the ruins with a bullhorn in one hand and an American flag in the other. D o n ..............._t._._.._.._._....._..._._.._.._......_... .. .. . .. .. . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . .. .. . .. .. . .. . . . .. . . . . . .. . .. .. . For more details on the Florida ballot review, read the full story online at www.michigandaily.com the michigan daily MICHIGAN TELEFUND Now hiring students for flexible night and weekend schedules. Fun work atmosphere and great job experience. Earn $7/hr. plus nightly bonuses. Apply online or stop by 611 Church, Suite 4F. www.telefund.umich.edu. 998-7420. NATIONWIDE CAMPAIGN. Immediate openings. Earn $5000.00/month. Flexible hours. Email: netgo@netgo.com OVERWEIGHT WOMEN (18+) who are current taking weight-loss supplements needed for a study at UMCAM Research Center. Contact Jenna or Aileen at 998-7712. 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