TODAY: January 30, 2003 ©2003 The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan One-hundred-twelve years ofeditorialfreedom Mostly sunny during the day, becoming part- ly cloudy by night with winds up to 10 miles per hour Hig29 20 Vol. CXIII, No. 84 www.michigandailycom Bush pushes health care in Michigan President's trip to Grand Rapids is first appearance after State of the Union speech By Dan Trudeau Daily Staff Reporter GRAND RAPIDS - In his first public appearance after delivering his State of the Union address, President Bush discussed many of the same issues in Michigan yester- day. During his speech at the DeVos Place Convention Center, Bush focused his remarks primarily around health care reform and the need for immediate changes to the Medicare program. "Medicine has changed, and Medicare hasn't. Medicare must be more flexible," Bush said. The reforms proposed by Bush include a $400 billion increase to the program's budg- et. This increase would fund an expansion of Medicare to cover the cost of prescribed medication for senior citizens. The president also raised concerns about what he said is an excessive number of med- ical malpractice lawsuits that are raising the cost of health care and called for a federal policy to reduce the frequency of frivolous lawsuits. "One of the problems we have in our soci- ety is we have too many junk lawsuits;" Bush said. "I've had docs come up to me and say 'I can't do it anymore."' Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm attended the event, and afterwards expressed uncertainty about the president's proposals. "I was expecting to learn more with regard to his plan for health care. There were very few details provided today," Granholm said. In addition to discussing Medicare, the president used the address to speak further about the potential conflict in Iraq, expand- ing on the accusations against Saddam Hus- sein that he put forth the previous night. "You don't contain Saddam Hussein - you don't hope that therapy will change his evil mind. The risk of doing nothing is not a risk worth taking," Bush told the loud and enthusiastic crowd. The president made similar condemna- See BUSH, Page 7A Anti-war protesters rally against Bush By Elizabeth Anderson Daily Staff Reporter GRAND RAPIDS - Cardboard posters and anti-war chants filled the streets sur- rounding the DeVos Place Convention Center yesterday afternoon. Around 1,000 people braved the cold and snowy weather for sever- al hours in order to protest President Bush's foreign policy as he spoke inside. Kathleen Brezina, 60, of Grand Junction, came to the rally to voice her opposition to Bush and his politics. "He's the worst presi- dent we've ever had," Brezina said. "It's not unpatriotic to oppose the government. We all have voices." Carrying signs with slogans including "Don't Attack Iraq" and "Peace is Patriotic," participants in the rally - some of whom arrived as early as 8 a.m. - met across the street from Spectrum Health, the hospital in Grand Rapids that sponsored Bush's speech. At about noon, the protesters marched sever- al blocks to the DeVos Center; where they were met by police officers, cars and barri- cades. During the rally, which lasted more than an hour, protesters loudly chanted "Drop Bush not bombs" and "Peace now," accompa- nied by whistles and drums. Families with babies and small children bundled in snowsuits carried signs proclaim- ing themselves "Another Family for Peace." Groups of people posed for pictures taken by fellow protesters and press photographers. Drew Russell, a high school student from East Grand Rapids, attended the rally to show "it's not unpatriotic to oppose the government. We all have voices. .- Kathleen Brezina Anti-war protester Bush that "even hard Democrats live in west- ern Michigan." His friend and classmate Adam Stott said that although he planned on enlisting in the military after high school See PROTESTS, Page 3A In his first speech after the State of the Union address, President Bush speaks about Medicare and foreign relations yesterday in Grand Rapids. University remains silent on its contingency lan for] for two lawsuits challenging the use of race as 'U' will have to change a factor in the admissions policies of the Law admissions policies, pay all School and College of Literature, Science and pls f s fthe Arts, plaintiffs' fees if Supreme If the Court declares the policies unconsti- Court rules against it tutional, the University will have to pay the legal fees of the Center for Individual By Tomislav Ladika Rights, a Washington-based law firm repre- Daily Staff Reporter senting the plaintiffs in both lawsuits. After five years of legal battles, the fees will Minorities would not be the only group amount to at least $4 to $5 million, CIR affected by a U.S. Supreme Court ruling over- spokesman Curt Levey said. turning the University's admissions policies. Although the University's total budget is If it loses the two lawsuits, the University will slated to surpass $1.1 billion this year, the have to pay the plaintiffs' legal bills, but legal fees represent about 1 percent of the administrators declined to comment on University's total tuition revenue from last whether they are considering possible contin- year. They also exceed the annual research gency plans for this scenario. expenditures of 11 schools at the University, The Court will hear oral arguments April 1 including the Law School, according to statis- lawsuit loss tics from the Office of Budget and Planning. The University will already have to cut down on its budget expenditures or raise tuition next year because former Gov. John Engler and the state Legislature cut higher education appropriations for the current fiscal year by 2 percent, and may slash it further for next year. Despite the possibility of incurring such costs, University spokeswoman Julie Peterson said she would not discuss payments to fees before the Court's ruling is announced. "We believe our admissions policies are legal and that we will prevail in the Supreme Court. We already have won important victories at the district and appeals court levels," Peterson said. "We're not going to speculate about costs that we don't believe we are likely to face." See LAWSUITS, Page 7A Basketball team s" streak Cook-ed in Champaign By Chris Burke Daily Sports Writer Work it DAVID KATZ/Daily As Palestinian supporters gathered yesterday In a vigil to mourn recent deaths, Israel supporters rallied across State Street and sang Israel's national anthem. Students face of on State St. with rall, V1gi By Min Kyung Yoon Daily Staff Reporter In response to the continued bloodshed and violence in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Students Allied for Freedom and Equality sponsored a vigil last night to recognize and reflect on the lives lost. The students planned to meet on the steps of the Michigan Union, but set up their vigil on the other side of State Street when they found supporters of Israel on the Union steps. Holding an Israeli flag aloft, students watched the vigil on the opposite side as Palestinian supporters chanted "Divest from Israel, divest from hate." "Palestine never had a single day without occupational forces controlling their lives," said LSA senior and SAFE founder Fadi Kiblawi. "We are here to remember democracy." He called Israel an apartheid state and an "ethnocracy." See VIGIL, Page 7A Colleges, INS form student database, By Andrew McCormack Daily Staff Reporter Until they received a last-minute extension, U.S. colleges and universi- ties that request student visas faced a deadline of today to implement a new database system allowing the federal government to access their records on all international students. Any school not incorporating the database, called the Student and Exchange Visitor Information Sys- tem, will no longer be able to accept foreign students who want to attend it on student visas. The University already has its system online. Last night, the Immigration and Naturalization Services granted a 15-day grace period for schools experiencing difficulty with the transition. Under the new rules, international students will be required to notify the International Center of any change in their name or address within 10 days. They will also not be allowed to drop below a full coarse load. "If anyone wants to initiate paper- work or invite an international stu- dent, they will have to go through SEVIS," said John Godfrey, assis- tant dean of international education at Rackham School of Graduate Studies. SEVIS's primary function is to provide INS with an automated sys- tem to access existing electronic files on international students. "This is the kind of information we've always kept, but because INS's system's were so antiquated, they couldn't access it," Godfrey said. "We began using our end a week ago," he said yesterday. "We went live this evening. ... We will go to an entirely new environment, one that hasn't been fully tested." Doubts about SEVIS's reliability are serious, Godfrey said. "We've heard rumors that the software isn't very robust, that there's a lot of bugs." Purdue, the first university to C,.a. IATARA@E Pads A CHAMPAIGN - After 52 days and 13 consecutive games without a loss, the Michigan basketball team finally ran out of gas last night at Illinois. And Illinois forward Brian Cook took full advantage. Cook scored 26 of his game-high 30 points in the second half - Michigan (6-1 Big Ten, 13-7 overall) scored just one more point, 27, in the same 20 minute span - and led the 13th-ranked Fighting Illini (5-2, 15-3) to a 67-60 victory, handing the Wolverines their first loss since Duke on Dec. 7. "Certainly, Brian Cook's second half was a tremendous effort by an outstanding player," Michigan coach Tommy Amaker said. "He put his team on his back, and they responded and won a very tough basketball game." The Wolverines looked well on their way to a 14th con- secutive victory for much of the night, extending their lead to as much as 45-35 with just 12:44 left in the game. But Cook took over shortly after that, and the Wolverines began to unravel. Michigan still held a six-point lead with 8:18 to go when freshman Graham Brown hacked Cook under the basket, fouling himself out of the game. Junior Bernard Robinson compounded the problem, throwing the ball off the backside of an Illini player after the whistle, earning a technical foul. "I don't know if (the technical foul) was a turning point, but it was a momentum builder," Illinois coach Bill Self said. Cook hit four free throws, closing the gap to two, and a 3- DAVI' KAT'/Uaily Architecture student Joe Kowalski watches a aerobics session yesterday in the Central Campus Recreation Building, saying he was impressed with the women's synchronization. GM counsel: affirmative action works By Carmen Johnson Daily Staff Reporter Affirmative action supporters heard an alternative reason for the importance of diver- sity in the workplace at last night's National Association for the Advancement of Colored People dinner - it makes good business sense. vice president and general counsel of Gener- al Motors Corp., spoke to college students and NAACP members about the changing ethnic landscape of America and the need for corporations to address this change to stay competitive. "The population of the U.S. is becoming more diverse so we must embrace diversity or disappear from the market," Johnson said, potential customers. "And the workplace needs to be a diverse atmosphere to ensure that everyone reaches their highest ability," he added. Johnson - who in October 2001 became the highest-ranking black male in GM, the nation's largest national automotive manufac- turer - is responsible for managing all legal services for the company. coo nflItitiFQ A I