LOCAL/S TATE THIS WEEK IDAILY ISORY Nov. 13, 1956 The U.S. Supreme Court ruled state and local laws requiring segregation on buses unconstitutional. The court cited its 1954 decision against segregation in public schools and subsequent deci- sions outlawing segregation in public parks, playgrounds and on public golf courses. Nov. 13, 1972 A group of Alice Lloyd Residence Hall residents participated in legit- imized racism for a Pilot Program class on Race Relations. Two groups of students, the Scugs and the Hyek- lops, had to alternate taking superior and inferior roles. The experiment was designed "to study the overt and blatant facts of racism" according to instructor Allen Giles. Nov. 13, 1973 Pulitzer Prize winning playwright and University alum Arthur Miller told an audience at the Michigan League that "the best theater is that which reflects the whole society as much as possible. The rest often weakens itself." Miller spent his mornings at his room in the League working on his next project, "The American Clock," which he planned to premiere at the University. Nov. 14, 1982 The Wolverine football team beat Purdue 52-21 to seize the Big Ten title and guarantee a Rose Bowl appearance. With an 8-2 overall record, this was the 10th time the Wolverines won or shared the Big Ten title in coach Bo Schembechler's 14 year career. Nov. 15, 1971 University President Robben Fleming announced the University would sever its ties to Willow Run Labs, the organization that conduct- ed most of the military research on campus. Nov. 15, 1974 The University Board of Regents warned University officials not to purge confidential information from student files. The vote came in response to a new federal law that granted students access totheir files. Nov.16, 1920 The University student government voted to form a representative body of the sophomore class with the responsi- bility of enforcing freshmen traditions. These included the wearing of a dis- tinctive 'pot' hat. Nov. 16, 1973 The Board of Regents ordered Uni- versity executive officers to come up with a plan for returning about $1 mil- lion in excess tuition to students. The rebate was to correct a 24 percent tuition hike that resulted in an excess of over $3.75 million. Nov. 16, 1978 State Rep. Perry Bullard of Ann Arbor told students he would intro- duce a bill to decriminalize the pos- session of alcohol for 18 to 20 year olds. A recent bill had made mem- bers of this age group minors when the drinking age became 21. Nov. 17, 1966 The University administration answered student demands that the University cease compilation of class ranking for use by the Selective Ser- vice and rescind a new ban on sit-ins with a mimeographed "no." In response, the Student Government Council declared itself independent from the Office of Student Affairs. Nov. 18, 1920 The junior literary society spear- headed a drive to collect funds to send to needy European college stu- dents. In a letter to the head of the organization, former food adminis- trator Herbert Hoover described the "general spirit of hopelessness and the terrible physical sufferings of the student classes in the central European countries. Nov. 18, 1966 Almost 40 faculty members signed a pledge not to give male undergraduates letter grades in order to protest the use of grades to grant student deferments from the Viet- nam draft. The professors said they Ready, set, stop The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 13, 2002 - 3 Resolution would ask MSA to oppose war By Carmen Johnson Daily Staff Reporter Although a highly controversial resolution was under first read at last night's Michigan Student Assembly meeting, debate and dis- cussion were kept to a minimum. A new resolution calls for MSA to con- demn the actions of Saddam Hussein as crimes of humanity and also urge President Bush not to preemptively or unilaterally start a war with Iraq. "It's imperative and our obligation to give this issue which students support a fair hear- ing," said Matthew Reynolds, Environmental Issues Commission co-chair. "We've had 500 student signatures support- ing this resolution. We should condemn the war because most students find this war unjust," he added. What makes this a controversial issue is that some students and representatives think MSA should focus more on campus issues rather than national or global concerns. Various MSA candidates have been cam- paigning on the issue of what MSA should and should not be passing resolutions for as one of their platforms for the upcoming election. MSA representatives will be discussing and voting on the resolution, titled Against the War in Iraq, at next week's meeting. Vice President Dana Glassel spoke about the Newspaper Readership Program, which is still in the experimental phrase. The program provides three newspapers, USA Today, The New York Times and The Detroit Free Press to the University commu- nity free of charge. Glassel said she does not expect a student fee to fund the program, but rather she plans to work with the administration to cover the costs. "The purpose is to make it easier for stu- dents to obtain newspapers and enlighten and inform students of what is going on," she said. AP PHOTO Border Patrol agents question a truck driver at a traffic check in Casco Township yesterday. Federal agents are stopping drivers unannounced, looking for illegal immigrants and drug or weapons smugglers. TICKETS Continued from Page 1. packages and instead purchase single-game tickets. Michigan Director of Ticket Services Marty Bod- nar said he has heard such requests for refunds via e-mail, but no students have been refunded. Brooks said that will not happen. "I don't agree with (refunding tickets) because we're going to play all games and still have the ability to compete for the Big Ten championship and I don't think that should have an effect," Brooks said. In addition to this season's postseason ban, the absence of marquee games on Michigan's home nonconference schedule has also affected ticket sales. The Wolverines travel to Duke and UCLA, but their most high-profile home games include Mid- American Conference foes such as Western Michi- gan, Central Michigan and Bowling Green, along with matchups against Vanderbilt, Charleston South- ern, San Francisco and Indiana-Purdue Fort Wayne. The Athletic Department announced tickets for the Wolverines' only matchup with Michigan State Jan. 26 will go on sale today. "It's similar to a national trend, that if a school played a marquee nonconference schedule, it'd kill itself before the Big Ten season," Brooks said. "I recognize that this is a young team and it's good in a sense to build confidence and get some wins." "Wins and losses are the ultimate indicator of when fans start to show a lot of interest," said Jason Winters, Michigan athletic department chief finan- cial officer. "It takes time." Winters said the decrease in student ticket sales, "Wins and losses are the ultimate indicator of when fans start to show a lot of interest." - Jason Winters Michigan Athletic Department chief financial officer along with the $450,000 the University is paying back to the NCAA for past tournament earnings, won't affect the Michigan program in the short run. He even said the lack of student ticket sales can actually be beneficial financially since the depart- ment can charge the more expensive, regular rate for non-student tickets. "But we're not exactly expecting to sell out the arena, so that's probably not going to be a big factor," Winters said. Groesser said he expects the Maize Rage student section will still make an impact, even if the num- bers are dramatically down. "I'd rather have 200 fans out there that are motivated and actually want to be there than 500 fans doing absolutely nothing and sitting on their hands," Groesser said. Amaker was unavailable for comment. MSA electzon excitement sweeps through campus MSA Continued from Page 1 flyering but we expect a good voter turnout," Collin McGlashen, MSA election director said. Changes have been applied to this year's election code to eliminate the time-consuming hearing process. The new code gives the election board the ability to throw out a case if it does not believe there is enough substance to the complaint to merit punishment, McGlashen said. Members of the Defend Affirma- tive Action Party, Blue Party, Students First and an independent candidate are running for representative seats in this fall's election. Rackham student Benjamin Lynch said he is running for DAAP because he has the same views as the party on affirmative action and the anti-war movement. "DAAP is the only party with any real stance on anything," Lynch said. Brian Doughty is running under the Students First ticket because he said he wants to actively improve campus life for all students. "I feel Students First strives to rep- resent every student so they feel that they are represented on MSA," Doughty said. Blue Party, one of the oldest par- ties, has been on campus since the winter election in 1999 and has 13 candidates running for positions this year. "We're the only party that puts stu- dents issues first before anything else," party leader Darth Newman said. Candidate Paul Scott is running independent because he wants to put more focus on the classroom, cam- paign manager Mike MacVay said. "We are strapped for manpower; but we are working diligently to get Paul elected," MacVay said. For the next week candidates will continue to hang up posters, chalk and go door-to-door in residence halls. Candidates face the challenge of edu- cating students about the issues involved with this year's election and the differences between the parties, as many students feel posters do not give enough information about the party platforms. With 23 open seats in MSA, next week's newly elected students will begin attending the MSA meetings immediately after. So far, campaigning this fall has not been marred by code violations as in the past years, like when stu- dents illegally put up flyers in Uni- versity buildings. "We've had no problems so far," McGlashen said. "There have been no complaints filed, which is good news." THINK YOU CAN DO BETTER? THEN DO IT. JOIN THE DAILY. JUST WALK IN TO 420 MAYNARD ST OR CALL 76-DAILY REALLY, IT'S THAT EASY. WE'LL SEE YOU SOON I mar . I this week... AVON KOTi I november 13. 14. 15 'flrSt 50dflfnkS fTO mAnanren m