irtrt One hundred eleven years ofeditoralfreedom Unti NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 www mlchigandally. com Tuesday November 27, 2001 w.@ 199 Thousands frozen from registration O If website problems aren't fixed soon, students may have to sign up for classes in person By Jordan Schrader Daily Staff Reporter Fewer than half of the 3,000 students who were scheduled to register for winter classes on the first day of registration yesterday were able to do so because of problems with Wolverine Access, the University's recently revamped registration website. If the University is unable to resolve the slowdowns soon, officials are considering having students register for classes in person, said Associate University Registrar Kortney Briske. When attempting to log on to the Wolverine Access website yesterday, students received one of several error messages, saying that the system was busy and asking them to try again later. The problems, for which the cause had not been determined, began early in the day. Only 1,254 students of the scheduled 3,000 were able to register for classes by 6 p.m. yes- terday. Many of the students who did register for at least one class were not able to com- plete their schedules. Briske said early in the day that he was optimistic about the site being operational soon, assuming that a problem with the code in the registration program caused the slow- down, as has happened in the past. However, this was not the case and problems continued as the day went on. "We're checking our code for problems. We haven't found anything in the registration (program)," Briske said. Between 4 and 5 p.m., two students were able to register for classes per minute, Briske said. "We were expecting six to seven a minute for seniors." "I've been trying for five hours straight and never got past the front page," said LSA senior Jason Haaksma. "You would think after multiple semesters of this they would correct the problem, but obviously not." Haaksma said he had been on the phone with the registrar's office several times and that they were unhelpful. "He pretty much told me to stop trying for today because no one's going to get in," Haaksma said. Those students who were able to log on to Wolverine Access found that the problems did not stop there. LSA senior Amanda Hagedorn, an athlete allowed to register early, had several problems with the system when she attempted to sched- ule classes early in the morning. "Every time I brodght up a class there was no button to add it," Hagedorn said. See REGISTRATION, Page 7 t's Citrus Bowl all over again ~for Blue By Jeff Phillips Daily Sports Editor As expected, for the third time in four years, the Michigan football team will be spending New Year's Day in central Florida. Yesterday, the Wolverines accepted a bid to play in the 2002 Florida Citrus Bowl at 1 p.m. on Jan. 1 against a Southeastern Conference team to be named later. "I look forward to getting back into football and I look forward to playing an out- standing team from the SEC conference," Michigan coach y . Lloyd Carr said. T s sAfter Michi- ae w r $60 gan lost its C 7 4 r A * Bowl Champi- rd * e a onship Series , berth and a share of the Big Ten conference title with a loss to Ohio State last Saturday, the Citrus Bowl extended an offer to the Wolverines after a vote by the Citrus Bowl committee yesterday. "The vote was a very strong Michi- gan vote," Citrus Bowl president Bill Dymond said in a teleconference yes- terday. Ohio State and Purdue were also in the running to be the Big Ten repre- sentative. Traditionally, the Citrus Bowl has taken the highest-ranked team possible and it is no different this season. The Buckeyes will attend the Outback Bowl on Jan. 1. Michigan has played in the Citrus Bowl two of the past three seasons. Last season, Michigan defeated Auburn, 31-28 and in 1999, the Wolverines knocked off Arkansas 45- 31. The tie-ins that the Big Ten has with its bowl games produces matchups that would rarely occur dur- ing the regular season, namely Big Ten teams facing SEC teams. "The tie-ins with the bowls have been very positive in terms of the Big Ten teams against the SEC teams," Carr said. "Certainly (SEC teams) not going come up here in the cold weather and they're not going come up here unless we go down there:' The Citrus Bowl will not make a decision on the Wolverines' opponent until after this Saturday, the last game of the regular season for the SEC. In that final weekend, Florida faces Ten- nessee and Auburn faces Louisiana State to decide the SEC champi- onship game matchup for Dec. 8. Possible opponents for the Wolver- ines include Florida, Georgia, Louisiana State, South Carolina and Tennessee. Michigan is an attractive team for the Citrus Bowl as it has a strong national following as well as strong regional support in the state of Flori- da. Last season, Michigan sold out its allotted 11,000 tickets. Michigan "has terrific appeal in terms of the national television media. ABC is certainly happy with our selection of Michigan for the game," Dymond said. "They have great fans who love to come down to Florida and have traveled well in the . .t " U.S. officially in recession By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter What many economists and con- sumers alike have feared for months officially became a reality yesterday with the announcement by one of the nation's leading economic research firms that the United States has indeed entered a recession. The National Bureau of Economic Research, comprised of economics pro- fessors and experts, declared yesterday that a recession has in fact been under way since exactly 10 years of record economic growth peaked in March. Although the activity started to decrease before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, a six-member panel of the bureau, which officially determines when recessions begin and end, also said the recession could have been avoided had the attacks not occurred. "Before the attacks, it is possible that the decline in the economy would have been too mild to qualify as a recession," the panel said in its report. "The attacks clearly deepened the contraction and may have been an important factor in turning the episode into a recession." While investigating the state of the economy, the panel focuses on monthly data instead of quarterly data. The signif- icant factors the panel looks at include industrial production, employment, income, and wholesale and retail trade. This is the 10th official recession since World War II. The last recession, which began in July 1990 under George Bush's presidency, lasted only eight months but was ample reason for the American public to not re-elect Bush in the 1992 campaign. See RECESSION, Page 7 AP POOL PHOTO In this image taken from television, a U.S. Marines soldier onboard the USS Peleliu somewhere in the Arabian Sea applies camouflage paint with the help of a mirror Sunday. These Marines are part of the 500-strong force ferried In overnight by helicopter to set up a base in southern Afghanistan for attacks in Kandahar. Five Amencans wounded as Taliban nears lst stand FBI questioning9 ignites tension By Rachel Green the letter has frightened some students Daily StaffReporter who fear it unintentionally targets stu is i- MAZAR-E-SHARIF, Afghanistan (AP) - Northern alliance troops aided by U.S. special forces fought a pitched battle in a sprawling mud-walled fortress for a second day yesterday with captured loyalists of Osama bin Laden. Five Americans were wounded by a stray U.S. bomb. This morning, the rattle of machine-gun fire rang out, and billowing clouds of dust and smoke rose from inside the fortress after apparent mortar strikes. Earlier, an enormous blast shook windows in Mazar-e-Sharif, 10 miles away. Planes circled overhead. Sounds of fighting could be heard all night from the direction of the fortress. U.S. Marines went into action in southern Afghanistan, sending helicopter gunships aloft as Navy F-14 Tomcat jets attacked an armored convoy. It was the Marines' first known action since establishing a foothold yesterday near the Taliban stronghold of Kan- dahar. Fifteen vehicles in the column were destroyed, Capt. David Romley told reporters. President Bush warned Americans to be prepared for U.S. casualties. Speaking in Washington, he said the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan was "just the beginning" of the fight against terrorism, and he warned Iraq and North Korea there would be consequences for produc- ing weapons of mass destruction. In the north, prisoners captured by the alliance last weekend in the siege of Kunduz rained rocket-pro- pelled grenades and mortars on alliance troops trying to suppress the uprising. Hundreds of Pakistanis, Chechens, Arabs and other non-Afghans fighting with the Taliban were brought to the fortress here as part of the weekend surrender of Kunduz, the Islamic militia's last stronghold in the north. Once inside the fortress Sunday, the prisoners stormed the armory and were still resisting the next day despite U.S. See AFGHANISTAN, Page 7 The FBI's announcement last week that agents would be questioning more than 70 Arab Americans in the Ann Arbor area has left some Muslim stu- dents at the University fearing they might be singled out as terrorists based on their ethnicity, gender and age. Eastern Michigan U.S. Attorney Jef- frey Collins and Assistant U.S. Attor- ney Robert Cares wrote a letter last week to more than 560 Arab Ameri- cans in southeastern Michigan asking them to schedule an interview as part of the investigation into the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. While no University students have yet been identified as being on the list, dents at the University living in Ann Arbor on visas. The letter states: "Your name was brought to our attention because, among other things, you came to Michigan on a visa from a country where there are groups that support, advocate, or finance interna- tional terrorism." University officials say they are unaware of any students being includ- ed on the list. But LSA senior Kenan Mossa-Basha said several members of the Muslim Student Association have received the letter and are waiting to schedule an interview while others believe they will soon be contacted by the FBI because they fit the same pro- See FBI, Page 7 Book break Dinking viewed as accepted part of collegiate atmosphere By Lizzie Ehrle Daily StaffReporter Any student passing through four years of college inevitably will be faced with social settings centered around alcohol. For many, drinking beer and downing shots can become as much a part of their college experience as writ- ing papers and taking exams. Most students see alcohol as an inher- ent part of college life, no matter how much they chose to drink. "I don't think it's a matter of choice," said Engineering senior Matt Biersack.r "You'll be surrounded by it regardless of whether you drink or not." "There is talk almost every weekend about what party everyone is going to, and how wasted someone is going to get," said LSA junior Amy Ament. Out on lUniveritv undergraduate University's Substance Abuse Research Center in 1999. Binge drinking is defined as four or more drinks for females and five or more for males in one sitting - a measure that is widely used and nationally accepted. "Be it to the bar, to someone's house, or to your own house, I feel like alcohol is part of the culture of college. It is so ingrained in all of our social settings," Biersack said. The Harvard School of Public Health College Alcohol Study - an ongoing survev of more than 14000 college stu- Binge drinking becomes a concern because it tends to signal that alcohol- related problems are ahead. Such sec- ondary effects range from health or legal problems to missing class or doing poorly on a test. According to the Student Life Survey, as binge drinking episodes increase for students, their grades decrease. Three out of four binge drinkers reported missing a class within the past year after drinking. Fifty percent of frequent binge drinkers reported driving after drinking within the past year. Also, 15 percent of undergraduate females who drink reported being sexually harassed after drinking. While negative consequences are often an effect of alcohol, some wonder why college students continue to drink. Both students and administrators point to the stresses and freedoms of college DEBBIE MIZEL /Dlyh, I