Tuesday January 13, 2004 02004 The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXIII, No. 75 E1tk 4wni 4ai4u One-hundred -hinrtn years ofedziafreedom C E r c TO DAY: 1 Snow show- morning andpartiy h33 cloudly, LOW: 14 skies in the afternoon. Tomorrow: 2416 wwwmihigandaily.com Sisters recall roles in legal milestone By Farayha Arrine and Karen Schwartz Daily Staff Reporters Her mother was at home ironing and listening to the radio and her father was working at 12:52 p.m. on May 17, 1954, when the landmark Brown v. Board of Education ruling was announced, declaring segregation in public schools unconsti- tutional. As Thompson made the long trek home from school, she said, she thought about how her sisters would not have to make the same long walk in the fall, Instead, they could attend the nearby and for- merly all-white neighborhood school. Linda Brown Thompson and her sister Cheryl Brown Henderson spoke with student panelists and the crowd that filled Rackham Auditorium last night in "A Conversation With The Brown Sisters," the University's kickoff event for the 17th annual Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Symposium. The sisters told their stories and answered audi- ence questions about their family's involvement in the Brown lawsuit, which overturned the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson, "separate but equal," precedent. "I know probably you've seen me, sometimes in your history books with that little coat on," Thompson said. "But I want you to sit back and relax and think back with me some 50 years to Brown v. the Board of Edu- cation, and my family's part that we played in that very gghistoric case." ~ She recalled her father's " failed attempt to enroll her in the all-white elementary school four blocks from her house and the anger black parents felt about the "inac- cessibility of the neighbor- hood schools." "I can remember that walk, I would only make half of it some days because the cold would get too bitter for a small child to bear," Thompson said. "I can still remember taking that bitter walk and the terrible cold that would cause my tears to freeze upon my face." See BROWN, Page 3 Linda Brown Thompson stands with a sign-language interpreter yesterday at Rackham Auditorium. Thompson and her sister, Cheryl Brown Henderson, spoke about the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision. Campaign begins for ballot initiative By Ryan Vicko the MCRI, were among the first to sign the fornia that successfully banned race-con- sions standards. Daily Staff Reporter petition. Grutter sued after being denied scious college admissions. Fundamental to the different interpret a- FARMINGTON HILLS - Led by a familiar opponent of the University's race- conscious admissions programs, the Michi- gan Civil Rights Initiative announced yesterday the beginning of its campaign to ban the use of racial preferences in college admissions. "No one should be discriminated against on the basis of gender, religion, skin color,or national origin," said Jennifer Gratz, who sued the University after she was denied admission to the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Gratz will also serve as executive direc- tor of the MCRI campaign. Gratz and Barbara Grutter, a member of admission to the University's Law School. The petition drive for the ballot initia- tive, proposed by University of California Regent Ward Connerly, needs to collect 317,575 signatures within 180 days. Then a a proposal to amend the Michigan constitu- tion will be placed on the ballot this November. + If passed, the ballot initiative would also end the use of ethnicity and several other characterstics in public employment and contracting as well as education. Shortly after the court rulings in June, Connerly announced his plans to contribute to the initiative in Michigan. As chairman of the American Civil Rights Coalition, Connerly led a similar campaign in Cali- While Gratz praised the ideal of diversi- ty, she said race-conscious college admis- sions policies create a "vicious cycle of injustice." Racial preferences in college admissions "only put a band-aid on the immediate problem," and there are better alternatives, she said. She did not specify any alternatives to race-conscious admis- sions policies. At the press conference kicking off the campaign, Gratz and MCRI Campaign Manager Tim O'Brien reaffirmed their support for affirmative action. O'Brien said the original purpose of affirmative action was to assist talented students in poor communities. He said the intention was not to change college admis- tions of affirmative action is a belief in how to achieve equality. MCRI asserted that merit and ability should be the stan- dard for college admissions - not race. "I believe affirmative action is about giving equality ... giving people access" without discrimination, Gratz said. But protesters before the event confront- ed MCRI members about their controver- sial claims to be supporters of affirmative action. "This ballot initiative is a conscious attempt to defraud and deceive the Michi- gan voters. Its aim is to ban all affirmative action in Michigan and nullify the Supreme Court decision in Grutter v. See CONNERLY, Page 2 Winter wonderland Privacy option hides e-mail group members By Lindsy Paterson Daily Staff Reporter Ann Arbor resident Siob iam Armstrong skis at the University's Radrick Farms off y Geddes Road yesterday. Court decides not to review Sept. 11 suspects' detention Data about University students, fac- ulty and staff - including phone num- bers, addresses and e-mail group memberships - is instantly available on the University's online directory. But students who have been hesitant to join certain groups that their mem- bership to be accesible to the public can now select a new privacy option to hide their group membership. Information Technology Central Ser- vices implemented a new confidential- ity feature in the online directory u Saturday. A "priva- 1he con( cy flag" is now that peop] incorporated into the system for e- hesitant t< mail groups. This certain privacy option cetnki allows group lists groups be to be concealed A",t.. from public view Uid L WaU - keeping secret publicly a which campus organizations stu- With them dents or faculty have joined. Senior Techn "The concern Technol was that people were hesitant to join certain kinds of groups because they didn't want to be publicly associ- ated with them," said Wesley Craig, project leader and ITCS senior tech- nologist. "By making the groups optionally private, people will be more free to associate." The new e-mail groups will appear in the old format, except for one major iifference: The only neonle hle to .CE Il 0 n1 tS no tog groups," said Sandy Colombo, director of the Computing Enivironment Ser- vices. This is not the only opportunity for individuals to hide their membership. Individuals have the option of conceal- ing themselves from any directory searches. When groups are made private, the individual members are still seen on the directory - but their affiliation with the private groups will not be seen in their membership lists. The privatization of e-mail groups resulted from a request from the Uni- versity Civil Lib- erties Board in ern was December 2002. were The request was , ,based upon the join "notion that a per- .ds ofson's membership ds of a was available to pause they the public, and Lbunless a whole t to be group agreed sociated with this [public] policy, it probably wasn't the best - Wesley Craig idea," CLB mem- logist, Information ber Dan ry Central Services Sharphorn said. "It's important that (students) have a choice. If as a group they decide to be public, that's their choice. Other- wise, it's necessary not to feel like there might be any public pressure to belong to one group or another," Sharphorn added. UMCES Director Sandy Colombo reiterated that the University is engaged with students' privacy rights. "The University is very concerned SETH LOWER/Daily A thick Salisbury steak Is dished to hungry students at West Quad Residence Hail last week. University Residential Dining Services is still serving beef. 'U' meal services unafectedb mYad cow diseaswe By Michael Kan Daily Staff Reporter WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court said yesterday it would not second-guess the gov- ernment's holding in secret hundreds of foreign- ers after the Sept. 11 attacks. None of the more than 700 illegal immigrants was charged as a terrorist, and the Justice Depart- ment's inspector general concluded last year that the government had trampled on a law stipulating such detentions be limited to 90 days. The high court turned down a request to review the secrecy surrounding the detainees, nearly all Arabs or Muslims, who were picked up in the United States following the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Most were eventu- ally deported for immigration violations. The gov- arnan .--- -A to rlirne txhn itk1 h Ad n hy access to the names and other basic information about the detainees. A federal appeals court had sided with the administration and its argument that knowing the names or details of the arrests would give terror- ists a window on the post-Sept. 11 terror investi- gation. By refusing to hear the case, the Supreme Court allowed that ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia to stand. "Until some other court says otherwise, the government can continue the policy of secret arrests that seems fundamentally inconsistent with basic American values, and that we know in this case led to a series of abuses," said Steven Shapiro, national legal director of the American ivil T iher Tniin which ha rgel the court For the past few weeks, media coverage and consumer wor- ries on the first U.S. case of mad cow disease have caused some beef eaters to think twice before they take a biteutof their next hamburger. But University Residential Dining ger- vices is not hesitating and has no plans to change its meals or the procurement of its meat. In addition, University students and professorssay they have very little concern in a predicament that they think the media have blown out of proportion. "At thiswpoint we haven't received any information that we should change anything," said Steve Meyer, executive chef of the University's Culinary Research Center. Mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, was found in U.S. herds for the first time Dec. 23 in Washing- ton when a cow underwent farming tests which came up posi- tive for BSE. Although BSE cannot directly harm humans, coming in contact with the prion - an unusual formation of a normal protein - that causes BSE can result in variant Creutzfeldt- Jakob disease or VCJD, a fatal medical condition that causes the degeneration of the brain. Despite discovery of BSE contamination in U.S. herds, American officials have said the food supply is safe and Amer- icans are in no danger of contracting the human form of the disease. The U.S. Department of Agriculture last month issued new regulations such as a ban on downer, or sick, animals from entering the food supply to ensure the continued protec- tion of meat. Regardless of the government's restrictions, Residential Dining Services has not changed its procurement of meat. Yet there is still a degree of uncertainty among some stu- i I I