news@michigandaily.com NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 31, 2004 - 3 THIS WEEK *~jLmwIamuk1& New weapons inspector refocuses search I IL1 N it A. LL L1 L11V 1 VLi 1' I Five years ago... After a week of controversy over the election vote, Brain Elias and Andy Coulouris were officially named Michigan Student Assembly president and vice president, respectively. Due to 71 fraudulent votes cast in the election, the election board held a partial revote that reaffirmed Elias'and Coulouris's victory. "I've never been so proud to be a part of something in my whole life," Couloris said, after hearing about his victory. 10 years ago... Although James Duderstadt was named president of the University, he was not the first choice for the posi- tion, according to a recently released court files. After reviewing five finalists for the position, the Board of Regents was prepared to offer the position to Vartan Gregorian, presi- dent of the New York Public Library in 1988. Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor), however, made it clear he did not sup- port Gregorian. After Baker made a phone call to Gregorian expressing his disapproval, Gregorian withdrew his name from consideration, leaving Duderstadt as the lone candidate. "When Regent Paul Brown called to ask if I had made a decision, I told him I did not want to go to a place where someone was pledging guerilla warfare," Gregorian said. March 30, 1984 A simple and lighthearted game led to several incidents involving the police at the University. "The Assasi- nation Game," or "Killer" - a game in which each player was assigned to "kill" another player with a toy gun while being stalked by a third - was popular on campus. The game, however, had serious consequences when police were called on several occasions because observers thought the threat was real. Students maintained the game was an innocent release of tension, but Uni- versity Housing Security Supervisor Fran Foster said it was disruptive and promoted real violence. Yet despite their objections, Univer- sity officials said they will still allow the game to be played. "It's hard to ban a game," Vice President for Stu- dent Services Henry Johnson said. March 30, 1954 University President Harlan Hatcher postponed a decision on the construc- tion of the Student Activities Building on other pending projects and finance restrictions. The proposed cost of the center was $200,000 to $350,000. March 31, 1953 A proposal to eliminate listings with racial or national origin qualifi- cations in the Office of Student Affairs off-campus housing file was placed before the Student Legisla- ture. According to the proposal, only landlords who were willing to rent their housing without any race or nationality qualifications would be listed with the University. April 2, 1946 Law student John Wilson described his involvement in the atomic bomb mission over Japan. Wilson piloted the lead ship when the atomic bomb was dropped over Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. "By the time the bomb was dropped, our plane was 150 miles from the tar- get, but we could see the thick cloud of smoke that rose from the explosion," Wilson said. April 2, 1983 A committee collected nearly 2,000 student signatures in a day and a half to protest against The Michigan Daily. The petition charged that the new edi- tors were publishing articles that were sensational with increased racial, gen- der and religious tensions. The petition accused the Daily of misquoting sources and misrepresent- ing the news. Brian Sher, head of the Committee for a Responsible Michigan Daily, said the committee's goal was to make the Daily publicly admit to practicing irre- sponsible journalism. "If a group this size comes to the Daily, they will have to respond," Sher said. March 30, 1970 The Black Action Movement organ- WASHINGTON (AP) - Still unable to find banned Iraqi weapons, the new U.S. weapons inspector said yesterday his strategy is to expose Saddam Hussein's intentions regarding weapons of mass destruction. Charles Duelfer, the CIA's special adviser on the weapons hunt, said the Iraq Survey Group he oversees is looking for a comprehensive picture, not simply an answer to the question: Were there weapons or not? He did not say how long the effort might take. "We're looking at it from soup to nuts, from the weapons end to the planning end to the intentions end," Duelfer said at a Capitol Hill news confer- ence, nine weeks after he took over the weapons search. In a closed session before the Senate Armed Services Committee earlier yesterday, Duelfer said U.S. weapons hunters in Iraq have found more evi- dence Saddam's regime had civilian - or "dual use" - factories able to quickly produce biological and chemical weapons. And, according to declassified testimony shared with reporters, Duelfer said the survey group has found new evidence that Iraqi scien- tists flight tested long-range ballistic missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles that "easily exceeded" U.N. limits of 93 miles. Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, the committee's top Democrat on armed services, called on the CIA to declassify Duelfer's status report. Levin said he is "deeply troubled" that the public ver- sion leaves out information that casts doubt on the notion that Iraq had an active WMD program. For instance, Duelfer's unclassified status report indicates that it's unclear whether Iraq's efforts to obtain aluminum tubes were to develop a uranium enrichment capability. But, Levin said, "you'd get an impression of unlikelihoods" in the classified version. Levin said the selective use of information in Duelfer's statement raises the same issues the CIA has faced regarding the prewar intelligence on Iraq. "The CIA should not go down that road again," he said. Through a CIA spokesman, Duelfer said he wrote both versions of his status report, which were not meant to draw conclusions: "They mir- ror each other, consistent with the protections for intelligence sources, methods and other classified information." Duelfer didn't break significant ground on the weapons search, saying he lacked sufficient infor- mation to make conclusions about what Saddam had. He said the survey group is still going through 20 million pages of documents, visiting possible weapons sites and trying to glean infor- mation from former government officials. Duelfer took over the job as the top civilian weapons inspector after his predecessor, David Kay, resigned in January and told Congress "we were almost all wrong" about Saddam's weapons programs. In a flurry of public statements ques- tioning whether weapons would ever be found, Kay renewed the debate about the very weapons programs that the Bush administration used to justify last year's Iraq invasion. After yesterday's session, Senate Armed Ser- vices Chairman John Warner (R-Va.) said the panel wasn't considering whether Kay was cor- rect. "It's his opinion. The opinion has been expressed this morning that a good deal of work remains to be done." SPRAWL Continued from Page 1 serving rural land. "It's our duty now to create more dense communities," Heiftje said. "We're not trying to block growth, we're not trying to stop it - we're try- ing to direct it." Smith spent a good portion of his speech encouraging city residents to get involved in the issue of sprawl. "It's an obligation of living here that you have to get involved," Smith said. The types of policy necessary to pre- vent urban sprawl are specific zoning codes inside and outside of the city, Las- siter said. Participation in local govern- ment is key in shaping this type of policy, he said. "Take part not just in the presidential elections, but state and local elections as well," he said. "Places that have done the best job of addressing sprawl have strong state policy." Students for PIRGIM chairwoman Carolyn Hwang said students can improve the urban sprawl problem. "Something we learned from the Greenbelt campaign is that students can really make a difference locally," "We're not trying to block growth, we're not trying to stop it - we're trying to direct it. -John Hieftje Ann Arbor mayor said Hwang, an LSA junior. "It's easy to go to City Council meetings and get involved there." The Greenbelt was a proposal to perserve parks and green spaces in the Ann Arbor area. Hwang also encouraged writing to members of Congress, getting involved with the Michigan Student Assembly Environmental Issues Commission and joining Students for PIRGIM as ways to get involved. The evening's other panelists includ- ed law Prof. Rick Hills and Ann Arbor Councilmember Jean Carlberg. Co-sponsoring the forum were the MSA Environmental Issues Com- mission, the Urban Issues Collabora- tive and the Urban Planning Student Association. Reading zn the rain WILLA TRACOSAS/Daily Geological Sciences staff member David Glaser reads his book as he waits for the bus in the rain yesterday afternoon. Corrections: A photo caption on Page IA of Monday's Daily should have said 10,000 specta- tors and participants attended the Dance for Mother Earth Pow Wow. It also should have identified the dancer as Neil Wolfgang of the Seneca tribe of New York. Please report any errors in the Daily to corrections nichigandaily.com MSA Continued from Page 1 vote impartially. She told represen- tatives to elect people that will work well with the assembly and not people that will work towards their personal agendas. "Don't vote party lines ... don't vote friendship lines," MSA Presi- dent Jason Mironov said. The assembly also passed the res- olution to pay $3,600 for Springfest 2004. Springfest is held on the North Campus diag on the last day of class. "It is like a carnival atmosphere MTV will be a sponsor and there will be free food," said Dan Levy, co-chair for Springfest 2004. Members of the assembly also voted to fund the screening of "The Weather Underground." The screen- ing is yet to be scheduled. The film about a radical group of students who violently protested the Vietnam War and racism in America during the 1960s and 1970s. MSA will also sponsor a guest speaker, Laura Whitehorn, the founder of the Weather Under- ground. "This is huge and going to get great coverage in radical arts cir- cles," MSA Rep. Matt Hollerbach said. 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