B AMAMI Wednesday September 18, 2002 02002 The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXIII, No. 12 One-hundred-eleven years of editorialfreedom TO DAY: Isolated thun- derstorms dur- ing the day. Light rain expected early evening, with skies clearing at night. 78 ~)63 Tomorrow- 5841 w wwwmichigandaily.com w 1: 11, 1, Ili 11 1:1 1;!!I:illi;i;lill 11111 - New LSI director to be named tomorrow By Megan Hayes Daily Staff Reporter Saved by the bell Haddad's time in jail may end By Jeremy Berkowitz and Loule Melzilish Daily Staff Reporters The announcement of a new Life Science Institute director and the approval of a new Cardiovascular Center Project are two of many items on the University Board of Regents' meeting agenda. Tomor- row's meeting is not only the first of the semester, but also the first over which new University President Mary Sue Coleman will preside. McGowan said she expects the change in leadership will not hamper the meeting and that Coleman will proceed as someone who has been at the University for a while. "She has hit the ground running," she said. The regents' agenda is filled with numerous items, but there are a few. that will receive greater emphasis, some regents said. "The issue of future leadership of the LSI is of enormous conse- quence," Regent Rebecca McGowan (D-Ann Arbor) said. The regents will announce a new director for the LSI to fill the vacancy left by Jack Dixon, who plans to leave the University at the end of the year for a position at the University of California at San Diego, McGowan said. Of equal importance is the antici- pated vote regarding the Cardiovas- cular Center. McGowan said the administration has proposed that . the health system add a significant new clinical facility to treat cardiac patients - one that will bring all clinical efforts for cardiac patients to one place. While she admitted it is a very expensive proposition, McGowan said the regents have been very pro- nounced in their insistence that it be approved. "It is good for the financial health of the health center and the physical health of its patients," she said. "The regents have felt strongly about this for some time." In July, the regents approved a new University budget increase of 7.9 percent for the upcoming aca- demic year, which will be reviewed tomorrow, although nothing has changed since its approval, interim Provost Paul Courant said. Courant said the increase in A See REGENTS, Page 3 In a ruling yesterday that could put an end to the nine-month detainment of Ann Arbor Muslimi leader Rabih Haddad, a federal district judge yesterday ordered Haddad released with- in 10 days unless the government grants him another deportation hearing before a different r federal immigration judge. Haddad has been incarcerated since federal immigration authorities charged him with 1'overstaying a six-month visa. The charity he co-founded, the Illinois-based Global Relief " E Foundation, Inc., had its offices raided last year and the government contends it has fun- neled money to terrorists. Haddad's rights to due process were side- stepped because of a Justice Department's classification of the case as "special interest," °k wrote Judge Nancy Edmunds of the U.S. Dis- trict Court for the Eastern District of Michi- gan. The classification was made when the government considered an open immigration hearing a threat to national security with investigations into the Sept. 11 terrorist r= attacks ongoing. That classification biased Haddad's immi- ,F ;gration judge against the Lebanese native, Edmunds said. The infringement of Haddad's TOM FELOKAMP/Daily rights warrants either a speedy immigration leaves the Industrial Operations and Engineering Building on North hearing or a speedy release, Edmunds added. fter class yesterday. Under direction from Attorney General John Ashcroft, Chief Immigration Judge Michael Creppy, a Justice Department official, ordered redesigns religion program any case connected with the investigation of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks classified as spe- cial interest. Edmunds ruled in April that the hearings have to be open in order to keep the government publicly accountable, rebuffing the national security rationale for closed hear- ings provided by the government. "This classification inevitably suggested a link between Haddad and terrorists and terrorism or, more specifically, the attacks of September 11;' Edmunds wrote in Haddad v. Ashcroft. "We stand by our statement that Pastor Had- dad has never been a threat to national securi- ty," Haddad attorney Ashraf Nubani said. Richard Rossman, a former U.S. attorney and top official in the Justice Department's Criminal Division, said Edmunds' decision has a good chance of review from the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals because it is a legal interpretation rather than a factual determination. Michael Steinberg, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Michigan branch, praised Edmunds's decision. "Her ruling was consistent with her early decision that the Creppy memo violates the First Amendment," Steinberg said. "The courts right now are standing up to the Ashcroft administration at this stage and they're saying that executive power is going to be checked." Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller said the government has not yet decided whether to appeal Edmunds' latest decision. "We are reviewing the judge's order, and we have not made any other determination at this time," he said. A studentI Campus af U' After a two-year hiatus, a revamped religious studies major and minor return By Karen Schwartz Daily Staff Reporter The University is redesigning the way stu- dents study various religions, with more struc- tured academic classes to give students the chance to specialize in concrete religious tradi- tions while gaining comparative perspective. Two years ago, former LSA Dean Shirley Neuman asked that a committee convene to review the status of the Program on Studies in Religion, which was suspended for further investigation. The program suffered from a lack of a graduate level program and lack of commit- ment from faculty who were disbursed across units, Department of Near Eastern Studies chair Alexander Knysh said. "There were no permanent faculty associat- ed with the program. It depended on the 'kindness of strangers' - professors whose institutional home was in other units," Knysh said. "They were all over the place and the Program on Studies in Religion was unable to coordinate their efforts efficiently." Knysh, the program's co-chair, said there was also a problem with the subject matter. Each specific religion needs to be placed in a social, political and institutional context so it can be studied holistically, along with the history and language through which it is expressed, Knysh added. The study of religion will be conducted by units that specialize in the languages, regions and specific spiritual traditions students elect. Students selecting this major or minor will focus on a particular religion and take a few courses in other units offering courses on other religious traditions to acquire a compar- ative perspective. Emphasis will be placed on student special- ization and proficiency in a particular tradition. "The idea is to study each religious tradition in its own environment, in its own terms, in its own language, rather than study something that has no connection to reality - a religion, a reli- gion that is not qualified by any adjective" such as Islamic, Christian or Jewish, he said. Knysh also said he looks forward to the opportunities and options the program will offer students. "I think the (University) has great strengths in the study of religion and we feel that the new arrangements would give units and stu- dents a wider range of possibilities of study of religion," he said. "I see a bright future for the program and I think it's good news for stu- dents also because it's going to be good for students and faculty." Other additions include an annual confer- See RELIGION, Page 3 'WebRoomz' pairs roommates together By Allison Yang For the Daily Many students arrive at the University prepared to spend a year living with another student they know very little about. But for students at some universities, a new online program called WebRoomz allows students to pair themselves up with other incoming students based on their living habits and personality traits. Students fill out a detailed profile which other incoming freshman from their universi- ty can view. Those students can rank their potential roommates and contact them online or over the phone. With both students' con- sent, they choose their ideal roommate, resi- dential hall and room - getting immediate "We can learn to get along with people in our classes, but we shouldn't be stuck in a living situation with people you know nothing about." - Maria Spear Music freshman ing hours, study habits, music types, hob- bies and other interests. But the University of Michigan asks only four questions to students who request to be assigned to a roommate in the residence halls. These questions include location of residence halls, hallways that are substance or sub- stance-free, smoking preference and whether the applicant wants a single or co-ed floor. "The University definitely should have asked more questions about our preferences. I was actually very surprised they didn't," LSA freshman Dustin Hughes said. "WebRoomz sounds like a great idea. It may take a little work for the University, but in the long run it would help with conflicts such as room reassignments and swaps. I See ROOMMATES, Page 3 confirmation from their university. The University of Tennessee at Chat- tanooga and Kennesaw State University in Georgia currently use WebRoomz for hous- ing assignments. Other universities, like the University of Texas at Austin and Ball State University, created their own web programs similar to WebRoomz. Though only a few universities use roommate-matching programs, most have incoming freshman fill out a survey about their preferences regarding sleep- Couple seeks to spread peaceful UA VIU v In/La i. y Wayne State University Board of Governors candidate Richard Bernstein would be the first blind person elected statewide. Bernstein urges stu dents to vote in next election By Loule Meizlish Daily Staff Reporter With the deadline for voter registration quickly approach- ing, political groups on campus are revving up their efforts to register as many voters as possible for the Nov. 5 general election, a task that one candidate says could shape the way interest groups respond to student concerns. Twenty-eight-year-old Richard Bernstein, a 1996 University graduate, said his race for statewide office is being watched by power brokers in the state Democratic Party to determine how influential younger voters are. If elected to the Wayne State University Board of Governors this fall, he would be only the second blind person serving in any office in the state. "It's very easy to gauge the influence students have because (interest groups) can see where students are voting," Bernstein said during a recent interview with The Michigan Daily. An attorney and recent graduate of the Northwestern Uni- versity Law School, Bernstein is the first blind person seek- ing statewide office. But voter turnout among students has traditionally been low, political analysts say. "Generally, not even half of people under 24 vote," said Ed Sarpolus, a pollster and vice president of the Lansing- based EPIC/MRA, Inc. "The problem of past experience is people on campus don't follow politics." The University's chapter of College Democrats was on the steps of the Michigan Union yesterday registering stu- dents and several groups plan to have voter registration tables on the Diag, in the basement of the Union and outside mnessage In By Rob Goodspeed Daily Staff Reporter Newlyweds Robin Goldberg and Erik Foley had been planning to travel to Europe for their honey- moon after graduating from college. Instead, they ended up driving across the United States to promote nonviolence and peace. Motivated by the events of Sept. 11, the couple decided to plot out a road trip across the U.S. that would spell out "NO WAR" on the map. Ann Arbor was the most recent stop on their trip, which will conclude in A tl n i2 t] K 1T a P cross-countryjourney Americans could pause for a minute." road trips," said Foley, who added that Foley said they are trying to after Sept. 11, he saw the words "no nake people "stop and think about war" spray-painted on the ground. "As heir lives." soon as I saw it, I said 'that's it."' The two embarked on the 20,000- The two decided to go on the trip nile trip in a Volkswagen van deco- by the end of last September, ated by a friend. The decorations departing shortly after they gradu- ncluded paintings of the Trail of ated from the University of Massa- Tears, the Crazy Horse Monument, chusetts at Boston last spring. :he eternal flame at John F. "My mom thought it was pretty Kennedy's grave and a large sun. ridiculous," Goldberg said. "I don't They plan to stop at 50 places to think either (family) thought we nemorialize victims of violence would do it." md recognize those working for They began their journey by vis- >eace. Stops include Walden Pond iting Doris "Granny D" Haddock. n Massachusetts, the National Civil Haddock walked 3,200 miles across A& TONY DWG/Daily