trrrngt One hundred eleven years ofeditorialfreedom "It NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 7640557 www michlgandall y. com Wednesday March 27, 2002 Vo.CI, o 0 An t r ihgi.,:020 hrMcia TI Students First unofficially edge out Blue By Tomislav LadIka Daily Staff Reporter DAVID KATZ/Daily Supporters of RabIh Haddad hold a protest infront of the U.S. District Court In Detroit yesterday. Public hearings sought for Rabih ad case Sarah Boot and Dana Glassel, the Students First candidates for Michigan Student Assembly president and vice president, will be declared winners of the Winter election on Friday, accord- ing to an announcement made by Elec- tion Director Collin McGlashen at last night's MSA meeting. The Election Board still needs to recount some ballots, but McGlashen said he had previously calculated every possible outcome. "The results of the election, basical- ly looking at the exception votes, will not change," he said. Preliminary results released by the Election Board last weekend said Boot and Glassel had won by 31 votes, but following an appeal by Blue Party can- didates John Carter and John Simpson, the MSA's Central Student Judiciary ordered the Election Board to recount all exception ballots - votes that were rejected by the election website. Many of the ballots were erroneously turned back, including the ballots of 65 med- ical students. The board will recount the votes this week and announce the official results, but at last night's meeting both Carter and Simpson congratulated Boot and "It's a little nerve- racking to have the results in limbo.. but I've been assured that even with the recount I'l1 still end up winning " - Sarah Boot Students First presidential candidate Glassel for winning the election. "It was an incredibly close race. Both parties and everyone involved ran a great race," he said. Boot thanked both Carter and Simp- son, stating that they were great oppo- nents, and commented on securing the election."I think it was a very competi- tive election and all the candidates put up a good fight," she said. "It's a little nerve-racking to have the results in limbo ... but I've been assured that even with the recount I'll still end up winning." Simpson added that the Election See MSA, Page 7 By Jeremy Berkowitz Daily Staff Reporter Supporters of jailed Ann Arbor Muslim leader Rabih Haddad, carrying his portrait'and signs demanding due process for his case, gathered in front of the U.S. District Court in Detroit yesterday. Nearly 30 people from the Ann Arbor Muslim Community Association and the University chapter of the Ameri- can Civil Liberties Union, among others came to watch a motion to open Haddad's immigration hear- ings to the public. "We represent members of the press and public who in no way seek to interfere with Haddad's depor- tation," Michigan ACLU Executive Director Kary Moss said in a written statement. "At issue is the power of the attorney general - without judicial review - to order immigration judges to close all immigration hearings to the public and the press." A decision on the motion will be decided before the Haddad family's April 10 deportation hearing. The motion was filed at the end of January against the government by U.S. Rep. John Conyers (D- Detroit), the ACLU of Michigan, the Detroit Free Press and the Ann Arbor News. The defendants named in the lawsuit were U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, Chief Immigration Judge Michael Creppy and Immigration Judge Elizabeth Hacker. The hearing was presided over by Judge Nancy Edmunds, a 10-year veteran of the U.S. District Court appointed by former President Bush in 1992. MCA member Kristine Abouzhar said she was not especially concerned about Edmunds' politi- cal affiliation. "A lot of people across the board are concerned See HADDAD, Page 7 Lessons emerge through tragedies-, Speaker says society should cherish, and not forget, traumatic events By Ted Borden Daily Staff Reporter Society today must seek to eradi- cate the denial of past tragedies that often comprises the foundation of culture, Prof. Ross Chambers said at the University's 24th Distin- guished Senior Faculty Lecture yes- terday. In an analogy he made throughout his speech, titled "Ter- rorism and Testimonial: Conse- quences of Aftermath," Chambers said society is flushing away the memory of traumatic events, yet these events keep floating back to the surface. "Trauma is the hurt that doesn't heal," Chambers said. "Societies live with the realities of violence ... but the truth can't be denied or rep- resented, because it returns in vio- lence," he added, referring to the Sept. II terrorist attacks, the AIDS epidemic and the Holocaust, among other things. Chambers stressed the impor- tance of testimonials and their abili- ty to serve as reminders of past atrocities, but noted they are often forgotten by society and "received as unwelcomed." "Today, residual objects (such as Ground Zero) are insignificant to people and just thought of as histo- ry," he said. He also broke down the definition of terrorism, terming it a "misappropria- tion of cultural elements." Chambers described a former class he taught on cultural oblivion to AIDS to illustrate how many peo- ple wish to avoid and deny testimo- nials. He ultimately realized that "stu- dents wanted to know about AIDS without acknowledging its existence. ... Students tried to deny the mean- ing of what happened." Chambers said his lecture was Students discover religion, college difficult to balance I. By Leslie Ward Daily Staff Reporter College is a time when many students are free for the first time to decide how they will practice their religion, and for some, the bal- ance between school and worship becomes a difficult combination. According to a study at the University of California at Los Angeles, 83 percent of incoming freshmen claim they attended reli- gious services in the year prior to entering college, but many do not keep the same wor- ship habits they practiced with their families. "I went regularly when I was home, but now church-goings are definitely less fre- quent. I try, I really do, but I don't go as often., Work and practice take precedent over church," Kinesiology sophomore Andrea Parker said. While students may not attend religious events on a regular basis, as Easter and Passover approach, many Christian and Jew- ish students do plan on observing the impor- tant holidays. "For most Jews, attending a Passover seder is a central part of the culture of Jewish life," Executive Director of Hillel Michael Brooks said. "While college is often a period in many students' lives when they take a time out from much of their formal religious observance, both believers and doubters have always had a place at the seder table," he added. The tradition of attending an Easter or Passover service is an important factor in why students make a special effort to attend on the holidays. See RELIGION, Page 7 Many call drinking study unnecessary ' A police officer guards the entrance at the University Assisted Living Facility at 11:00 p.m. yesterday as employees reporting to duty were Informed of a coworker's suicide. Man comm its 0 'Od suicie a iving facility By Jeremy Berkowitz Daily StaffReporter A sixty-year old employee of the University Assisted Living Facility, not affiliated with the University of Michigan, on South Main Street killed himself at his workplace around 9 p.m. last night. His was the first suicide in Ann Arbor in more than a year. The disturbance began about 8:30 p.m. when the victim argued with his wife over the breakup of their marriage. He suddenly pulled out a gun and a facility employee called the Ann Arbor Police. When police arrived, the man fled into an office. The residents and employees of the building were evac- uated, but a couple people could not be found. Shortly after, a gunshot was heard. Thinking that the victim might have hostages, police called in their hostage investigation team. The team arrived and attempted to talk with the man but received no response. The police onened the door to find the man dead with a wound to By Kara Wenzel Daily Staff Reporter Like many college women her age, LSA freshman Erin Dronen has spent several nights in her residence hall pulling friends' hair back while they threw up after a night of excessive drinking. More students believe alcohol use on cam- pus is a problem than those who don't, according to the 2001 Student Life Survey, conducted by the University Substance Abuse Research Center and MSInteractive. About 86 percent of survey respondents said drinking is a major problem at the University. The alcohol problem is not getting better over time, and for women, binge drinking has increased by 9 percent since 1999. "I think it's definitely a big social epidemic, but not necessarily in a bad way," LSA fresh- man Sarah Thompson said. "It's socially acceptable." The survey mirrors a national study con- ducted simultaneously by researchers at the Harvard University School of Public Health on student alcohol abuse. But some students do not need survey data to understand that binge drinking is common at the University. "There have been quite a few girls spending the night laying in a bathroom stall," Dronen said. Last fall, the University created a position called the Alcohol and Other Drugs Cam- paign Initiatives Coordinator, currently held by Patrice Flax. "The position came about because there was a binge drinking committee a few years ago that did a very comprehensive report on campus participation in alcohol use, particularly on the Photo Illustration by KELLY LIN/Daily According to the 2001 Student Ufe Survey, 86 percent of students believe drinking is a problem at the University. part of younger students," Flax said. - The University decided there was a need to create a full time position for the prevention and treatment of alcohol abuse, Flax said. See BINGE DRINKING, Page 7 Morning after pill use uncommon By James Ng For the Daily Neither condoms nor birth control pills were handed out, but Students For Choice and Planned Parenthood discussed the com- plexities of emergency contraception at the Michigan League yesterday night. "The aim of this talk is to educate women about emergency contraception by addressing common misunderstandings about its use," said Clair Morrissey, an LSA sophomore and Students For Choice executive board member. Speaker Rhonda Bantsimba-Williams, a health educator from ception. Calling the morning after pill "one of medicine's best-kept secrets," she explained that the morning after pill helps to pre- vent unwanted pregnancy resulting from unprotected sex or rape. The pill works by either preventing ovulation or by preventing the fertilized egg from implanting itself onto the uterus. "The pill has to be taken within 72 hours of the incident of unprotected sex. It would not work if a woman already has an established pregnancy," Bantsimba-Williams said. She cautioned that morning after pills do not protect against sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV. "It should not be taken as a substitute for contraceptives such as