LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 18, 2003 - 3 CAMPUS * 'U' orchestra to perform at Michigan Theatre The University Symphony Orchestra will be giving a free performance at the Michigan Theatre today at 8 p.m. The program will include Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 2 and Glazunov's alto saxophone concerto with concerto competition winner Robert White- Davis, a Music School junior. Effects of Chinese labor reform to be discussed To explain how aggressive economic restructuring of state-owned enterpris- es since 1997 has affected different types of Chinese urban workers, eco- nomics Prof. Albert Park and Business School Graduate Student Instructor Fang Cai will be lecturing today in the School of Social Work Building at noon. Sponsored by the Center for Chi- nese Studies, the lecture will address the evidence of a recent survey to com- pare restructuring effects on workers. Prof will address perceptions of ancient Egypt David O'Connor, an Ancient Egypt- ian art and archaeology professor at New York University, will be giving a lecture titled, "Men Who Give Birth: Ancient Egyptian Perceptions of Libyan Identity," at Angell Hall Audi- torium C today at 5:30 p.m. The event is co-sponsored by the Kelsey Muse- um, the Institute for the Humanities, Department of Near Eastern Studies, Interdepartmental Program in Classical Art and Archaeology and the Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies. LSA concentration fair held in Union An LSA Concentration Fair will be held in the Michigan Union Ballroom tomorrow from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Stu- dents can talk with representatives and student concentrators from LSA aca- demic departments and programs. LSA general advisors will also be available to talk about a range of academic issues and questions. Prof to explore Israeli-Palestinian relations Tel Aviv University Prof. Zeev Moaz will give a lecture titled "Missed Opportunities in Israeli- Palestinian Relations: Can We Avoid Repeating Past Mistakes in the Future?" in Angell Hall Auditorium A tomorrow at 4 p.m. Moaz is the author of "Domestic Sources of Glob- al Change" and the coeditor of "War in a Changing World." Historian shares experiences with culture wars Jonathan Zimmerman, a guest lec- turer from New York University, will give a lecture titled "Second Thoughts: One Historian's Encounter with the Culture Wars" in the School of Educa- tion Building tomorrow at 4 p.m. 'U' student assaulted in library, man arrested By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter A University student was assaulted by three non-University affiliates Monday night in the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library, after an encounter with one of the suspects earlier that day. The Department of Public Safety arrested Dex- ter resident Richard Curry, 19, and two friends last night. Curry, who was arraigned yesterday at the Washtenaw County Jail, is being charged with two counts of felony assault and conspiracy to commit assault. His two friends were released. DPS is anticipating the arrests and arraign- ments of two other suspects, whose names were not released, DPS Sgt. Melissa Overturn said. Those suspects will be facing misdemeanor charges for assault and battery and conspiracy to commit an assault. Meanwhile, the student, who was taken to University Hospital after the attack and has since been released, is suffering from multi- ple injuries, including lacerations to the left upper and lower eyelids leading to blurred vision, abrasions to his forehead and back injuries, Overturn said. The assault occurred at 9:30 p.m. near the lobby of the graduate library, as the victim was preparing to leave the building. None of the attackers knew the victim, though Curry and the victim had been involved in a brief fight at 7:30 p.m. on the Diag. Overturn said the victim first met Curry while Curry was walking a dog with another man and a woman on the Diag. The victim had been nearby and approached the suspects after believing they were trying to ask him a question, Overturn said. Curry then allegedly began cursing at the vic- tim for an unknown reason, causing the dog to start growling at the victim. Curry also took an inch-thick chain out of his pocket and started swinging it at the victim, who tried to push Curry in an attempt to get away, Overturn said. But according to DPS reports, Curry swung the chain at the victim, hitting him across his back, and then fled the scene. The victim then went to the library to study. Overturn said Curry was gone for two hours before returning to the Diag with two different individuals, both men. The group went to the library searching for the victim. "He was walking down the stairs, he was get- ting ready to leave," Overturn said. Upon finding the victim, Overturn said one of the attackers asked him to go outside. The victim refused, and was assaulted by one of the men, who punched him in the face with a closed fist an estimated five or six times. Curry then picked up a chair and threatened to use it on the victim, at which point library staff members broke up the fight. Police arrived at the scene soon afterwards, taking all three suspects into custody. As of yesterday, Curry was still in Washtenaw County Jail on $5,000 bond, Overturn said. A preliminary trial has been set for March 26 at 1 p.m. at the 22nd Circuit Court. If convicted, Curry could face up to eight years in jail and a $4,000 fine for the felo- nious assault charges, as well as additional time for the conspiracy charge. Overturn said DPS will also seek charges for the other two men, who could face a year in prison and a $1,000 fine for conspiracy charges. The man who assaulted the victim in the library could also receive a 90-day imprisonment and a $500 fine for assault and battery. CIR research shows race factor affects only median of applicants By Jeremy Berkowitz Daily Staff Reporter Center for Individual Rights and the University, the opposing parties in the Law School admissions lawsuit Grutter v. Bollinger, agree on one important factor - race plays a factor most prominently for people in the middle of the admissions spectrum. "It's when you're close to the decision line, that preference makes the difference," CIR DI spokesman Curt Levey said. In CIR's brief, a grid creat-' briefs ed by CIR depicts a break- down of applicants to the 'y Law School who desired to enter in the fall of 1995. The grid is divided into three sections - Asian Amer- icans, whites and underrepre- * sented minorities, which port o"' 11a consists of blacks, Native four-Pa if Americans and Mexican Americans. For each group, CIR shows the ratio of applicants to accepted students by their grade point averages and LSAT scores. The grid shows discrepancies in the middle - a larger number of minority students being admitted for a certain cell than white or Asian students. For example, 10 selected minorities, 65 whites and 20 Asian/Pacific Island Americans with grade point averages between 3.50 and 3.74, and LSAT scores of 159-160 applied to the Law School. Of those admitted, eight were underrepre- sented minorities, two were white, and one was Asian. "A review of the data for all the years at issue ... shows that although there are variations from year to year, the odds favoring students from African American, Mexican American, Native American and Puerto Rican groups are always 'enormously' large," the brief states. But University Assistant General Counsel Jonathan Alger, who made it clear that these grids are not used by the Law School admissions office, said it is impossible to get the gist of a class by dividing the class into very small subsections. He added that the differences between the subsections are very small. "It's probably some very tiny number of questions on one test," Alger said, referring to the LSAT. "It really over- states the impact that an additional counselor would give to the test score." Alger added that there are other areas of the grid where the number of whites admitted is higher. He said the class needs to be looked at as a whole to show a better picture of its demographics. "It's not meaningful when you subdivide the pool into such pieces ... that's inherently misleading," Alger said. But Levey pointed out that CIR's argument consists of more than statistics. "It's not about pure numbers," he said. "It's about two individuals with equal credentials being treated equal," Levey said. CIR also attacks the relevance of the Bakke v. University of California Regents decision. In its arguments, the Uni- versity repeatedly says diversity serves as a compelling interest in higher education, using Justice Louis Powell's opinion in Bakke, where he said race could be used as one of many factors in college admissions systems. But CIR argues that race is not a compelling interest. They discount Powell's opinion, and say that the definition of diversity is too vague to make it important. "An interest in diversity is simply too indeterminate, open-ended, and unbounded by ascertainable standards. Its acceptance as a compelling interest would mark a sharp and lamentable departure from this court's precedents by authorizing an interest that would ... become the nation's first permanent justification for government-sponsored racial classifications." An unidentified man cries next to a shrine in honor of Rachel Corrde during a protest outside the Israeli consulate in downtown San Francisco yesterday. Vigil rem--embers 11 deaths in West Ban~k By Carmen Johnson Daily Staff Reporter In response to the 11 victims killed in Gaza this week, students gathered last night on the steps of the Michigan Union for a candlelight vigil to remember the losses. One of the victims was 23-year-old Rachel Corrie, an American student killed in Gaza on Sunday when she was run over by an Israeli bulldozer. She had been protesting its use in the destruction of Palestinian houses. The Israeli military said her death was an accident. At the vigil organized by Student Allied for Freedom and Equality, stu- dents held candles and paused for a moment of silence. SAFE member Fadi Kiblawi addressed the crowd, describing the deaths of the victims in detail. "After these deaths, there has been silence from the American govern- ment, giving us the message that any life taken by Israeli forces is not worth talking about," Kiblawi said. "The loss of humanity is something that needs attention." Art and Design freshman Kaitlin Freewind said after she read about the deaths, she wanted to express her frustration with the deaths in the Boot reflects Middle East. "It's American tax dollars that are supporting these tanks that are killing people," Freewind said. "This gathering will show that peo- ple don't approve of the American tax dollars funding the killing of civilians." The vigil was held an hour after President Bush stated that Saddam Hussein and his sons have 48 hours to leave Iraq or face "military conflict." Some vigil participants expressed their disappointment in U.S. diplomacy in the Middle East. "Bush's statement shows that the deaths of so many in Gaza doesn't affect the agenda of the U.S. govern- ment," LSA freshman Wajeeha Shut- tari said. "But the candles show the unity and that Rachel is not alone. She was a girl just like me, someone who wanted peace." Within hours of being killed by the bulldozer, Rachel Corrie was honored by the peace activists of her hometown in Olympia, Wash- ington, where several hundred peo- ple gathered for a candlelight vigil Sunday evening. "It's very important to stress that all humanity is important," Kiblawi said. "At this point I just feel helpless - all we can do is stand in solidarity." on creating U U tiananmen June 3-4, 1989 a play about the Tiananmen Square Massacre written by Brian Chan & directed by Zac Pavlov The Theatre Company & RC Players production Fiction writer to give reading from debut novel Novelist and alum Kathryn Larrabee, a previous winner of the dis- tinguished Hopwood Award for cre- ative writing, will be reading from her debut novel, "An Everyday Savior: A Novel," at Shaman Drum Bookstore on Thursday at 8 p.m. Conference to address issues of modern women A day-long conference will feature presentations and panel discussions regarding a number of women's issues, including the impact of wel- fare reform, women and war, Title IX and violence against women, will be held in the Michigan League ball- room Thursday from 8:30 to 4:30 p.m. The conference is co-sponsored by the Center for the Education of Women, the American Civil Liber- ties Union of Michigan, Women's Studies and the Institute for Research on Women and Gender. History, theory of * images in art to be discussed unified student assembly By Andrew Kaplan Daily StaffReporter Musing on her term as Michigan Stu- dent Assembly president, LSA senior Sarah Boot said she leaves behind a more unified and approachable legisla- ture than when she took office. Elected by a 28-vote margin last spring, Boot said she wanted to familiarize herself with representa- tives before collab- orating on political resolutions. "I met with every rep last year at the beginning of the year to ask them what they Boot wanted to work on," she said. "Our biggest goal was to make MSA more of a representative body, and I feel like we did that with the people who got elected with us." In her year-end MSA officer report, Boot said in addition to mobilizing rep- resentatives to adopt projects and devel- op "game plans" for their terms, she also initiated several resolutions seeking to better the rapport between MSA and its make a big difference," Boot said, refer- ring to a recent resolution funding air- port transportation for students during Spring Break. "When students can con- tact us and see us in action, that also makes a big difference." Although representatives said Boot's proposals were sometimes controversial, they added that she maintained order in an assembly polarized by party alle- giances. "I think it's hard to find a point that Sarah didn't handle professionally, even when the assembly got controversial," MSA Communications Committee Vice Chair Courtney Skiles said. "I'd behard- pressed to find anyone who didn't have a lot of respect for Sarah." But some representatives said Boot's presidency also bears the mark of ineffective legislation and low attendance at assembly meetings. In addition to gathering votes for many campus improvements, Boot support- ed dead-letter resolutions about cen- tral issues such as race-conscious admissions and war with Iraq, LSA Rep. Darth Newman said. "We passed a lot of resolutions that did nothing, and certainly had no effect on President Bush," he said, cit- ing a letter MSA sent to the federal March 21 - 23, 2003 - Fri & Sat: Bpm/ Sat & Sun: 3 pm Residential College Auditorium, East Quad. 701 E. University St. Tickets sold at door $3 for students / $5 for adults contact: znavloveumich.edu i