One hundred eleven years f ed iriailfreedom NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 wwwmichigandaily.com Tuesday January 29, 2002 A.,CiN,6 , ,, An Abo, ihia .020 Te ihia Bush to focus on defense, economy By Louis Mezish Daily Staff Reporter. President Bush will deliver his first State of the Union address tonight while riding one of the biggest waves of popular approval ever attained by an American head of state - and a top advis- er hinted that he will now try to spend some of this newfound political capital to push his domestic agenda forward. Bush's three goals, White House officials said, are defeating terrorism, reviving the economy and protecting American soil. The president will Top 'U' positions change in transition By Shannon Pettyplece Daily Staff Reporter advocate longer unemployment benefits for the newly jobless, more tax cuts, prescription-drug coverage for Medicare patients, as well as an industry-friendly energy policy and new limits on lawsuit damages. "We want to be a strong and vibrant country, full of opportunity for all our citizens, while we also want to end this threat to our freedom," said Counselor to the President Karen Hughes. "The president will set out three great goals, and we expect that we can succeed at all of them." Political science Prof. Ken Kollman compared Bush's situation with that of a head of a success- ful corporation. "A lot of investors like what you're doing and you have a couple of projects you want to float and the investors say, 'Sure,"' he said. "It's very typical for presidents, in times when their approval ratings are high, to take a little more risk and try to promote spending items or pro- jects that they wouldn't otherwise do." But many portions of Bush's agenda face a divided Congress with the Republican-controlled House seemingly eager to move much of his agenda along and the more reluctant Democrat- ic-controlled Senate. The president, Kollman said, may try to use his bully pulpit to nudge the Senate along, therefore making Bush's oppo- nents "more afraid to take him on." Prof. Ronald Inglehart, who teaches compara- tive politics in the political science department, said he expects Bush to focus a good portion of his address on the slowing economy, wishing to avoid the fate of his father, whose popularity surged into the 90s following victory in the Gulf War but dropped below 45 percent as the eco- nomic recession continued. The first President George Bush, he noted, "won a war and got kicked out." But Inglehart also warned that, although the president virtually wiped out support for Osama bin Laden - noting that t-shirts bearing the al Qaida leader's face were sold on the streets in some countries where they have now virtually disappeared - he has yet to address the reasons why America is not exactly seen as the "leader of the free world." "It's quite clear there's a long, term problem of our relations with Islamic countries," he said. "The U.S. is seen, quite correctly I think, as not taking their sensibilities into account." See BUSH, Page 7 If history repeats itself, those at the Fleming Administration Building could see a number of new faces and say farewell to old ones, following the appointment of a permanent Universi- ty president. "It is not uncommon for when new leadership comes in for the senior members of the administration to change," said Vice President for Stu- dent Affairs E. Royster Harper, who was appointed to her current position by former University President Lee Bollinger. Bollinger appointed Harper and many other top University officials during his reign as president - replacing executives who had worked under his predecessor, James Duderstadt. "No one who was here under Dud- erstadt is still around. You can make what you want out of that," said Nancy Asin, assistant to the University secre- tary and vice president. While several positions were already vacant when Bollinger arrived in 1997, some officials were asked to resign, including General Counsel Elsa Cole. Many administrators who left the University during past transitional periods returned to academics or administrative positions at other uni- versities, said history Prof. Rudi Lin- der. A young Afghan girl waits In line for cooking oil at a United Nations refugee camp in Chaman, Pakistan. More Editors Note: This is the second of a three-part series concluding tomorrow by Waj Syed, a the senior at the University and Daily columnist who traveled to Pakistan and Afghanistan earlier cent this month, Syed was born in Pakistan and lived there until 1997. was hi T ar "A number of people who held high th administrative offices were offered presidencies elsewhere," Linder said. southwe "Many will go back to the positions a they had, others will be chosen or recruited by other institutions." the loca Several University administratorswh ar have already stepped down or changed nm wialradththe p p ast monthe of who are positions within the past month, origin a including Vice President for Develop- t t ment Susan Feagin, Vice President for Pakistan an the frcnt Medical Affairs Gil Omenn and Scott lines of a gbbal crisis Warring is a Emr, who was scheduledsto head the firearms, but th Life Sciences Initiative. By W aJ Syed In the last 20 Although Feagin and Emr both like Chaman h sighted Bollinger's absence from the MONDAY: Home again million Afgba University as a factor for terminating TODAY: Lfe on the border alredy a iofen their relationships with the University, WEDNESDAY: The shadow of war violent Harper said she does not see a connec- trade that susta tion between the University's 'transi- Mujahideen, as tional phases and the recent loss of ly boarding sch See PRESIDENT, Page 7 Film viewing kicks off fis Hae-rieWe s dusty town of ound 200,000 is on e Afghan border in .stern Pakistan. It has history because of Li tribal populace, primarily of Pushtun nd share ties with cross the border. tradition here. Men walk around with ere are no licensed gun shops inthe city. years, the social fabric of border towns as been torn by the exodus of around 3 n refugees into Pakistan. Added to the tribal culture was the guns and drug ined the anti-Soviet, U.S-backed s well as the use of madrassahs, (typical- hools meant to sustain an education of Bible edition uses By Shabina S. Khatri and Mica Doctoroff Daily Staff Reporters The voices of South Asian Americans, who experience the highest incidence of hate crimes within the Asian American community, were heard in a documentary last night that candidly depicts the backlash after Sept. 11. A diverse crowd of nearly 60 students, faculty and staff members gathered for the sneak pre- view and discussion of the documentary titled "Raising our Voices: South Asians Respond to Hate Crimes." Sponsored by the Indian American Students Association, the event kicked off the University's first annual Hate Crime Week, a new addition to the University's ongoing Martin Luther King organizer, said this week's events commemorate the death of Vincent Chin who was murdered 20 years ago as a result of prejudice against Asian Americans. The Hate Crime Symposium is designed to simultaneously raise awareness and facilitate dialogues amongst students to reduce the ignorance that leads to hate crimes, he said. The documentary's co-producer, Debasish Mishra, a University alum, said Asian Americans are subject to hate crimes partly because of igno- rance and because of the false perception that all Asian Americans are the same. "It's time to put a human face on the problem," Mishra said. Because hate crimes are most prevalent when people feel threatened or fearful, Mishra said the events of Sept. 11 only worsened the incidences of prejudice against Asian Americans. dA he .,.hnof "AA m an R arlrc " a ender n By Kara Wenzel Daily Staff Reporter The New International Version of' the Bible will be given a makeover later this year that will incorporate. gender-neutral wording in the New Testament, in an edition titled "Today's New International Ver- sion." Published by the Grand Rapids- based Christian communications group Zondervan, the NIV is cur- rently the most widely read transla- tion of the Bible in the world. The TNIV will debut the revised New Testament in April, but the full Bible is not expected until 2005. Campus Chapel Rev. Tom Watts said he is "glad to hear" a new gen- eutrality "A lot of translations in the past have made scriptures seem more 'male' than they were originally," Watts said. For years, many conservatives have argued against changing the wording to make it politically cor- rect. According to a Zondervan press release, generic language is trans- lated in the TNIV, where the mean- ing of the text intended the inclusion of both men and women. When translators find places in the original text that make any specific gender references, like "sons of God" or "brothers," the passages will be changed to "children of God" and "brothers and sisters," respectively. 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