ittye1r One hundred eleven years of editoirdfreedom NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 Iwww michigandaily. com Wednesday December 5, 2001 i Vol *XI N . @ I Me, .. : 20 TeMihgn al I Admissions lawsuits head back to court By Rachel Green and Elizabeth Kassab Daily Staff Reporters The last of the slew of lawsuits filed by the Center for Individual Rights challenging the use of race as a factor in admissions in higher educa- tion move to the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals tomorrow, one step below the U.S. Supreme Court, which has yet to rule on the issue. A panel of three judges on the appeals court, which has jurisdiction over Kentucky, Michi- Civilian casualty reports disputed Top bin Laden aide reportedly injured in latest U.S. airstrike Los Angeles Times gan, Ohio and Tennessee, was originally sched- uled to hear the cases in October, but the hear- ing was delayed when the court accepted a request by CIR to have kIAl! \ the cases heard by the r full court. Buses of University and high school stu- dents who planned to journey to Cincinnati to rally in support of affir- mative action also had to postpone their plans. Jessica Curtin, a member of the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action and Integration and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary, one of the most vocal opponents of the law- suits, said thousands of protesters from more than a dozen universities in the court's jurisdic- tion are expected to come together in Cincin- nati to rally and march in support of affirmative action before tomorrow's 1:30 p.m. hearing. "This is going to be a real turning-point day," Curtin said. "We've got to go all out in Cincinnati." Curtin added that a petition with 40,000 sig- natures that have been collected from around the country in support of affirmative action will be presented to the judges. Case histories CIR filed two lawsuits against the University of Michigan in 1997. It also sued against the University of Texas in 1994 and the University of Washington in 1997. The first case against Michigan, Gratz v. Bollinger, was brought before the University's College of Literature, Science and the Arts in February 1997 on behalf of two white appli- cants, Jennifer Gratz and Patrick Hamacher, who claim they were denied admission to Michigan's largest undergraduate school while less qualified minority applicants were accepted. Grutter v. Bollinger concerns the University Law School's admissions process. It argues that a white applicant, Barbara Grutter, was denied admission, yet minority applicants who did not have the same qualifications were accepted. See HEARING, Page 7 Netanyahu: Stop terror roots at By Karen Schwartz Daily Staff Reporter itS JALALABAD, Afghanistan - The long-awaited ground attack on suspect- ed terrorist hide-outs in northeastern Afghanistan got under way yesterday as the Pentagon challenged persistent reports that the effort to flush Osama bin Laden from his rumored bunker complex in the mountainous region has caused widespread civilian casualties. Afghan forces trekked into the rugged foothills of the White Mountain range, which quaked under heavy airstrikes for the fourth day in a row. U.S. bombers have relentlessly pounded the snowy mountains near the hamlets of Mawal and Tora Bora, where U.S. intelligence reports suggest that bin Laden and members of his al-Qaida net- work have taken refuge in a multistory underground bunker built during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. The airstrikes killed 15 al-Qaida members early yesterday, anti-Taliban officials said. Commanders in nearby Jalalabad also said they had received word that bin Laden's personal physi- cian and lieutenant, Ayman Zawahiri, was injured in a bombing attack in the nearby Granjli valley. But U.S. offi- cials said they could not confirm the report and privately voiced skepticism. Zawahiri, a 50-year-old Egyptian physician and founding al-Qaida member, is believed to be bin Laden's most important aide. A brilliant and forceful intellect, Zawahiri reportedly provides much of the ideological and strategic grounding to bin Laden's war against the West. As many as 2,000 al-Qaida fighters fled to the Tora Bora hide-out last month as the Taliban's grip on north- eastern Afghanistan crumbled. Many of the cornered fighters are Arabs, Uzbeks, Chechens and other foreign- ers whom Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld called "fanatical dead- enders," apparently determined to fight to the death. At the Pentagon, officials reiterated that they have been unable to confirm reports that the bombing of apparent al- See AFGHANISTAN, Page 7 SOUTHFIELD - After a weekend of appear- ing on national news networks to comment on a recent spate of violence in the Middle East, former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke yesterday at a Metro Detroit fundraiser, discussing the challenges Israel is facing. His visit to Michigan came after a series of bombings that killed 25 people this past weekend, bringing Israeli and Palestinian relations as well as terrorism to the forefront again in world news. "Nothing justifies the blowing up of children, the blowing up of a bus, the blowing up of the World Trade Center," he said. As for getting rid of terrorism, he said it's crucial to get to the roots. "If you shoot down a kamikaze pilot, there will be another kamikaze pilot," Netanyahu said. "The only way to defeat this war- fare is by sinking the aircraft carrier, and the air- craft carrier in'this case is Yasser Arafat's terrorist addiction. We must say to Arafat what the United States has said to the Taliban: Surrender terrorism or surrender power. Netanyahu also discussed the land conflict Inside: 2 Palestinians killed, 150 injured in Israeli missile attack near Arafat's headquarters. Page 2. between the Palestinians and the Israelis, comparing it also to when the Arabs occupied Spain and Spain prevailed. "Does anyone say you did a terrible injustice to the Arabs?" he said. "In both cases the original owner of the land refused to give up the claim. We have a deed that goes back way before Spain's and a good book to go along with it." "It's not their land," said Netanyahu, recounting his response in a recent interview on CNN during which he was told by an anchorwoman, "But the Palestinians say you stole their land." As far as peace in the Middle East is concerned, Netanyahu said that rights are a central issue. "Eventually we will have to make a deal with our Palestinian neighbors, but what impedes the deal is their claim that we have no rights whatsoev- er in that land." More than 250 University students traveled to Southfield to attend the event, which was held at local synagogue Congregation Shaarey Zedek. The Jewish Federation of Metro Detroit made the opportunity available to students, University Hillel See NETANYAHU, Page 7 DAVID KATZ/Daily Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks last night at a synagogue In Southfleld. More than 250 University students traveled to hear Netanyahu comment on recent violence In the Middle East. Clinton aide explains new laws By Tomislav Ladika Daily Staff Reporter National emergencies of government action, but Virginia Rezmierski said she worries that students do not understand the laws passed by the.United States in response to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Rezmierski, an associ- ate professor at the School of Public Policy, said most University stu- dents and many faculty members do not compre provisions passed in the w attacks. She has helped org lecture series called "Priva tion Age" to increase stu 1imiting national security issues. Ohio State Universi who was former Presid ften require drastic privacy counselor, expl by Congress since the speech of the lecture se yesterday. Swire said which was passed less t 11, includes numerous most notably allowing cials to use foreign it sometimes for purposes national security. "If a person might be and they might be plot Swire bust them for shopliftin hend some of the Swire said Universi eeks following the most concerned with a ganize a University allows police to search cy in the Informa- without first obtaining a dent awareness of Rezmierski said stud civil liberties use their computers without being concerned ty Prof. Peter Swire, with such surveillance measures. But she said ent Bill Clinton's chief most students don't know about the new secu- ained the laws passed rity measures created by the Patriot Act. e attacks in the third Rezmierski said newspaper polls indicatiig eries in Hutchins Hall that Americans support increased surveil- the U.S. Patriot Act, lance perpetuate the problem because they do han a week after Sept. not take into account the fact that many don't s security provisions, understand the proposals they are agreeing to law enforcement offi- support. ntelligence wiretaps, David Fitch, a business senior at the Uni- not directly related to versity's Dearborn campus, said students don't care to understand the laws the govern- an al-Qaida member, ment has passed because media coverage ting an attack, we can focuses on the war in Afghanistan instead of g,' Swire said. national politics. ty students might be Rezmierski said the U.S. government used nother provision that the sense of emergency following the terrorist through their records attacks to pass measures that it had been work- court order. ing for years to approve. She said the quick ents should be able to See SWIRE, Page 7 Senator wants to alter e IDs for those under 21 By Christopher Johnson AIl For the Daily Car talk LAURIE BRESCOLL/Daily Oxygen Media Senior Vice President Cheryl Mills moderates a women's panel titled "Choose to Lead: Powerful Choices" last night. Wo-men urged to take active role in crises By C. Price Jones Daily Staff Reporter At a panel discussion hosted by Oxygen Media last night, five successful women discussed women's reluc- tance to take leadership positions and the importance of women taking active roles in times of crisis. "It's a tremendously powerful image," Associate Publisher and Editor of Crain's Detroit Business Mary Kramer said of National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice. "She is at the epicenter of everything that is going on, and so for people to see a woman in that kind of position is like, yes, women can make decisions that have value in these types of situations." Students attending the event said they found it help- ful and inspiring but some said they did not see the issues the panel was advocating at work in the Univer- sity. "It was great to see a panel of successful women. I don't often see that at this university," said LSA junior Tiffany Buckley. ORREI UENSE a CELETY WWE "MWO~ uLAIIC0 'O 1-216 CU6TVMA&R NO T!2457 CLASS Noe UNDER21 UOMY UNOER iS U%TU A state lawmaker wants to make it harder for minors to purchase alcohol and tobacco by reconfiguring the dri- ver's licenses of those under 21 from the traditional horizontal format to a new vertical layout. The new format would make some- one instantly identifiable as being underage, and as on current licenses, the dates when the minor turns 18 and 21 would also appear in bold, red print. Sen. Loren Bennett (R-Canton) said he expects swift approval for the bill, which he plans to introduce before the Legislature suspends work for winter recess. Mike Classens, legislative aide to Bennett, said the purchase of alcohol nd tobhacco by miner has benme M -I I Anv Donn ...n roafnroa A11. 5,fnr-ahnhhv .g.innnir ke,.* tI AA i.,nu'r riink,'s 1985 Audi 5000 i