news@michigandaily.com NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 16, 2004 - 3 CAMPUS Lecture focuses on church and China nationalism Emeritus history Prof. Ernie Young will speak on Catholic missions and Chinese nationalism in the 19th and early 20th centuries today at noon in room 1636 of the School of Social Work Building. Sponsored by the Cen- ter for Chinese Studies as part of its Noon Lecture Series, the title of the lecture is "Catholic Missions and Nationalism in the Era of the Unequal Treaties' Students speak on Islam, Arab Americans Rackham student Mucahit Bilici and Public Health student Sawsan Abdul- rahim will present a dual lecture today at 7:30 p.m. in room 3050 of the Frieze Building. Bilici will speak on Arabs in America and representations of Islam after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Abdulrahim will address questions of Arab American identity and whiteness. The Muslim Graduate Students Associ- ation will sponsor the event. Civil rights activist to hold lecture, show documentary The documentary "A Civil Rights Journey" will be shown today at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League Underground. The film records the civil rights move- ment in Huntsville, Ala. from 1962 to 1963, as seen through the eyes of civil rights activist Sonnie Hereford. Footage of Martin Luther King Jr.'s speeches to the Huntsville leaders is also included. Sponsored by Dialogues on Diversity, the program will be followed by a ques- tion-and-answer session with Hereford and refreshments will be provided. Hereford is the leader of what is con- sidered one of the most successful civil rights protests in Alabama history. In 1963, he and the Community Services Commission sued the Huntsville School Board on behalf of his son and four other students, resulting in the first desegregated school in Alabama histo- ry. Hereford used psychological tactics and nonviolent, peaceful protests to get his messages across to opponents of desegregation. Diag vigil honors cancer victims In accordance with Cancer Aware- ness Week, a candlelight vigil will be held today at 8 p.m. on the Diag. Eng- lish Prof. Macklin Smith and LSA stu- dent Aaron Viny will share their personal cancer stories. Performances by The Harmonettes and The Michigan Men's Glee Club will also be featured. Health strategies are focus of annual conference The University's Health Management Research Center will sponsor its annual conference tomorrow beginning at 8 a.m. at the Michigan League. The theme of the conference is "The Value of Health" and it will focus on strate- gies to increase participation in work- place wellness programs. Health management specialists will include Sheila Calhoun of Pfiz- er Inc., Beth Spyke of Sparrow Health Education and Steve Cherni- ak and William Sullivan from the United Auto Workers-Ford Motor Company. Speaker talks on gender themes in new media art The Center for Japanese Studies will feature a lecture by University of Mon- treal Prof. Livia Monnet Thursday at noon in room 1636 of the School of Social Work Building. The title of the lecture is "Technohor- ror's Time Machine" and Monnet will explore themes of gender, history and the uncanny in women's new media art. Monnet is a professor of compara- tive literature, film and media studies at the University of Montreal. Her publications cover a wide range of areas, including the literature and cul- ture of Japanese women, feminist the- ories, the feminist cinema and queer studies. Talk remembers labor's challenge to corporations As part of the corporate account- MSA hopefuls suit up for elections Students First Cuts to Student Affairs: "We must not tolerate budg- et cuts without student input- it's our money, it's our lives, we should make the choices." - Presidential can- didate Jason Mironov Voter Registration: "As a student government, we have the resources and the responsibility to encourage civic participation in any way possible. Regardless of party affiliation, students should realize the importance of educating ourselves about political issues. When students don't vote, politicians don't care what we think." - Vice presidential candidate Jenny Nathan Trotter House: "Trotter House holds special impor- tance not only to minority students, but also to the uni- versity community at large in the form of increased understanding of and ability to experience different cul- tures." - Mironov Jason Mironov (P) and Jenny Nathan (VP) DAAP Defend Affirmative Action Party Defend Supreme Court victory in Grutter v. Bollinger: "Our campus prides itself on its diversity. If we allow the current attack on affirmative action through the misnamed 'Michigan Civil Rights Initiative' to succeed, our campus loses that diversity and the University will be de facto reseg- regated." - Presidential candidate Kate Stenvig Build up the May 15 march on Washington: "This May will mark the 50th anniversary of the Brown v. Board of edu- cation decision, and we will be mobilizing the campus and the nation to march against the separate and unequal condi- tions that still permeate American education." - Stenvig Reverse the cuts to Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center: "This is just not acceptable. Women on campus who have faced rape and sexual assault need a place to go for help and support." - Stenvig Kate Stenvig (P) and Cyril Cordor (VP, not pictured) In dec.pendent candidates , Candidates for executive office lay out planks By ClannaFreeman Daily Staff Reporter With the election only one day away, candidates for the Michigan Student Assembly continue to vigorously campaign and convince students why they should be chosen as the leaders of the MSA. Students First party president and vice president candidates Jason Mironov and Jenny Nathan said that their commitment to the students is what makes them ideal to lead MSA next year. The party currently holds the majority of seats on the assem- bly. MSA President Angela Galardi, an LSA senior, is a mem- ber of Students First. "I think that students should vote for me and the Students First candidates because we do exactly what our name says: We put students first in all matters both on and off of cam- pus," Mironov said. "Our goal is to make sure all students feel welcomed to bring any issue that is on their minds to MSA and that they find that MSA is receptive, responsive and proactive." Nathan said she plans on making sure that students know what MSA is and how to get in contact with the assembly. "I plan to be there to listen and respond to the representatives as well," she said. "A student government is at its most productive when it can foster an environment of trust, openness and mutual respect, and as vice president I plan to be open to listening to any and all questions and concerns," added Nathan, an LSA junior. Mironov, a Business School junior, said the three most important issues facing campus are housing, Trotter House ren- ovations and abating the effects of budget cuts. But independent president and vice-president candidates Tim Moore and Anita Leung, said MSA needs to be renovated. "If you think MSA doesn't do anything for the students, vote for us. ... If you don't care about MSA because you've never heard about it, vote for us" said Moore, a Business School jun- ior. "We will bring MSA back to the students, opening lines of communication, improve relationships with administrators and make MSA productive for once." Moore and Leung said they want to begin improving MSA by working with the Residence Halls Association and the Information Technology Central Services to improve MSA elections. "To begin with, we will push through a lot of campaign and election reform, working with ITCS and RHA and emphasize that parties and party politics do not belong on student govern- ment," they said. "Monthly meetings of reps and the exec will make reps more accountable, and as (executive board) we will actually hold regular office hours for any student needing access to us," they added. Students in the Defend Affirmative Action Party said they want to become leaders of MSA for a more specific reason, the preservation of affirmative action at the University. More exactly, DAAP members are fighting a ballot ini- tiative backed by the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative that would seek to ban race conscious admissions policies in the state. "We, DAAP, were at the forefront of organizing and leading the 50,000-person April 1 national march on Washington that secured that victory (in the Supreme Court), and now we are at the forefront of leading the campus in defending our victory," DAAP presidential can- didate Kate Stenvig said. "No other party running for MSA has even taken an official stance on this key question facing the campus. ... Whether or not we defeat this attack on affirmative action (the MCRI) will determine the climate on this campus." Steving, an LSA junior, said MSA needed to become more than just resume filler for assembly members. "We will make MSA into a student union that stands up and fights for students' rights and interests, rather than a junior partner of the administration," she said. "If there was a strong DAAP leadership on MSA right now, the administration would not be prioritizing cuts to (Sexual Assault and Prevention and Awareness Center) and other stu- dent services." Matt Lapinski, the Other Political Party vice president candi- date, said he believes MSA is in need of a good leader. "In my past experience I have been responsible for managing a sizable staff which included conducting meet- ings and making sure the entire team of employees was motivated and on task, not to mention the fiscal responsi- bilities of being in charge of an organization," said Lapin- ski, LSA junior. "These are skills that seem to be lacking in student government." OPP presidential candidate NickChuck Heidel, an LSA junior, said that currently MSA is in disarray. "MSA is currently dysfunctional, redundant and abortively pedantic," he said. "I hope my presence in MSA will ignite an orgy of productiveness." The MSA election is tomorrow and Thursday. Students can vote online at vote.www.umich.edu. Budget cuts: "We need to get on top of the Universi- ty's budget situation because the long-term effects of eliminating such critical parts of our campus are quite frightening." - Presidential candidate Tim Moore Making MSA cohesive and productive: "Working to rebuild MSA's reputation and productivity, eliminating divisiveness caused by the party system and remember- ing that we are there to serve students, not promote individual agendas." - Vice-presidential candidate Anita Leung Student unification: "Residence Hall Olympics, CareerTools ... these are all examples of great projects that serve all students,which is the essence of MSA."- Moore Anita Leung (VP) and Tim Moore (P) i i Tenant rights: "The idea of bringing back the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union is a phenomenal one but it can't stop there, there needs to be more ... The truly substantive measures of tenant's rights will live and die by the Ann Arbor City Council." - Vice-presidential candidate Matt Lapinski Housing: "I have campaigned on North Campus, and there is a strong sentiment to re-flatten the wave field so it may be used as prime real estate." - Presidential candi- date NickChuck Heidel Beer: "I believe the next step is bringing beer back to the Big House in the vending booths as is common in many other arenas." - Heidel NickChuck Heidel (P) and Matt Lapinsky (VP) COOL CITIES Continued from Page 1. "The city's noise ordinance is some- thing that we've been talking about. For instance, Leopold's can't have live music and all the bars have to close at 2 a.m. - which is pretty early. I think live music is important to drawing a creative commu- nity," taskforce member and LSA senior Rob Goodspeed said. True to Granholm's worries, many students do plan to leave the state after graduation. They feel that larger cities have more to offer. "I'm staying for now, but I plan on transferring out at some point. I don't want to stay in Michigan. I want to go to someplace like Chicago - to a real city that's not falling apart," WEBLOG Continued from Page 1 Honors Program. He said he established the blog in order to instruct students to give outsiders - including prospective students and their parents - a sense to things that go into the Honors Program. Some professors said they use weblogs to remain active in their fields of study. Linguis- tics Prof. Sarah Thomason is one of more than a dozen contributors to the national lin- guistics blog, languagelog.org. The site began last fall, headed by linguists Mark Liberman of the University of Pennsylvania, Geoff Pul- lum of the University of California at Santa Cruz and Arnold Zwicky of the Ohio State University. The linguistics blog discusses "anything son said. For students, blogging often serves as a tool to voice their perspectives. Rackham student Nathaniel Poor, who studies communications, said he keeps his blog for per- sonal enjoyment. Poor said when he started his blog in January 2003, the reason for developing the site was because he missed writing on a reg- ular basis. One University course this year requires stu- dents to create a blog. LSA sophomore Rachel Pultusker said she kept a blog for "University Course 151 - Com- munity in the 21st Century: Exploring Home, Identity and Place in Virtual Context," taught by Prof. Maurita Holland in the 2002 fall term. "It was an assignment on virtual communities and how people stay connected when they're not close geographically," Pultusker said. AATA Continued from Page 1 it would only make sense for the buses to go there" Chen said. Beth McCarty, an LSA sophomore, said she would travel to Detroit more often if buses went there. "So many events happen in Detroit. If the buses went there, I would definitely go more often" said McCarty. Political science Prof. Greg Markus said Detroit resi- dents would benefit from having transportation to outside regions. About 30 percent of city residents do not have access to a vehicle and need transportation for daily affairs, Markus said. "(Extended bus routes) would be great for thousands of Detroit-area residents who are elderly or disabled, and need to come to Ann Arbor to see their doctors. It would be great for all of us who want to visit museums or restaurants or sporting events in Detroit, and for folks in Detroit who want to tin the ca~me. thingr here-" he si- I I