news@michigandaily.com NEWS The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 16, 2004 - 3 MSA forum discusses budget, tenants union .Rally protests against rape, sexual violence The Ann Arbor Coalition Against Rape and University Women Against Rape will hold the 25th annual "Take Back the Night" tomorrow at 7 p.m. on the Diag. The rally will feature a vari- ety of speakers. This year's keynote address will be given by survivor and activist Sara Ylen, whose story of survival and the aftermath of her sexual assault led to a series of articles in the The Times Herald, a newspaper in Port Huron. A march will directly follow the rally to protest sexual victimization in all forms. During the march, Men Against Violence Against Women will host a dialogue as an alternative event for men who do not want to participate in the march. "Take Back the Night" strives to provide an environment of healing, to create a community free of sexualized violence and to raise awareness of the ways sexualized violence is a force used to perpetrate oppression. Child care will be available. Prof: Life may have 0 begun on Mars, moved to Earth The Michigan Center for Theoretical Physics will host Paul Davies, a profes- sor of natural philosophy at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia, tonight at 7 p.m. in the Business School's Hale Auditorium. Davies's lecture, titled "Did Life Come From Mars?", will discuss the origin of life. Davies, an internationally acclaimed physicist, cosmologist, astrobiologist and writer, has championed the theory that life may have started on Mars and then moved to Earth by hitching a ride in rocks blasted from Mars by comet impacts. In his lecture, Davies will explain why Mars was a more favor- able environment for life to get started, and why it may still harbor life today. A reception will precede the lecture at 6:30 p.m. Glee Club holds spring concert The Men's Glee Club with the Friars will present their 144th annual spring concert tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. Tickets can be purchased by calling 764-1448. Reserved seating spans the main floor and mezzanine of Hill, and student-price seats are in the balcony. Reserved seats close to the center are $15; others are $13 and are gener- ally toward the wings. Student tickets are $5 with a valid student ID. Conference seeks to examine ways r to reduce poverty The William Davidson Institute, the Law School's Center for Interna- tional and Comparative Law and the John M. Olin Center for Law & Eco- nomics will host the "Globalization, Law and Development Conference" this weekend. The conference will be today from 2:15 to 5:30 p.m., tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Sunday from 9 a.m. to noon in Room 250 in the Law School's Hutchens Hall. Keynote speakers will be U.S. Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) and Daniel Kaufmann, director for global gover- nance at the World Bank. Discussion at the conference will center on three critical components of the "Millennium Development Goals" set out by the United Nations to reduce global poverty by 2020. Minority groups work to deter stereotypes The United Asian American Organi- zations will hold their first Advocacy Night tomorrow from 4 to 6 p.m. in Room 2105A of the Michigan Union. The event, titled "Minority Stereo- types and Media Portrayals," will include a panel of student leaders rep- resenting the Asian Pacific American, Hispanic, black, Native American and gay communities. They will be presenting issues involving stereotypes and media repre- sentations of their respective communi- ties. An open forum will follow, and drinks and snacks will be provided. By Cianna Freeman Daily Staff Reporter In an attempt to receive input from stu- dents, the Michigan Student Assembly held a public meeting last night. Although turnout at the meeting was low, MSA representatives discussed some of their current and future plans, including addressing University budget cuts and the possibility of creating a new ten- ants union. MSA is currently in talks with Vice President for Student Affairs E. Royster Harper about forming a student advisory board to assist in the University's budget process. University President Mary Sue Coleman approved the idea of creating a student board two weeks ago. Mironov said he wants students to be involved in the allocation of funds in the Division of Stu- dent Affairs. "On the subject of budget cuts, MSA would like to include interested students from all areas of campus at every step of the process, from pro- posal to senior leadership confirmation," Mironov said. But Student Voices in Action member Liz Hig- gins said she was skeptical that the assembly will be able to fulfill this promise. The faculty has been unsuccessfully pushing the University to open the budget to them com- pletely, said Higgins, an LSA senior. SVA formed this term in response to a pro- posed 4 percent decrease of the Division of Stu- dent Affairs. They have organized several protests and meetings with the administration to discuss how to avoid these cuts. But, MSA Student General Counsel Jesse Levine illustrated how students have a voice in some budget decisions, such as on the Intercolle- giate Athletics Advisory Committee. The MSA president gets a seat on the board, as well as one additional student Levine said. "In the athletic department there is a precedent for students having a say in budget discussions," Levine said. "The athletic department cannot pass their budget without the consent of the two stu- dent members that are on the board." MSA intended to discuss the Naked Mile at the public meetings, but no students spoke in regard to the event. Mironov said MSA does not have a specific stance on the Naked Mile other then to protect student rights and try to keep participants as safe as possible. MSA Vice President Jenny Nathan said in the past there was a lot concern from the administra- tion about the Naked Mile. Participation in the Naked Mile has sharply declined after it received criticism in the late 1990s for the threats it posed to students' secu- rity, both due to the possibility of sexual assault and the fact that many runs were filmed by spectators. The revival of a group similar to the Ann Arbor Tenants Union is an additional concern for MSA. The AATU was formed in the late 1960s and designed to inform students of their rights as ten- ants and to serve as an outlet for student-landlord dilemmas. The closing of the AATU occurred because MSA said it was receiving complaints about the ineffectiveness of the service from students. But Mironov and MSA representatives dis- cussed the formation of a new service to resolve student tenants' problems. "It seems that a tenants union will be assem- bled through MSA, and will hopefully be allo- cated the proper funding in next year's budget, pending assembly support in the fall," Mironov said. ALI OLSEN/Daily Michigan Student Assembly President Jason Mironov and Vice President Jenny Nathan speak at a public forum in the MSA chambers yesterday. LSA freshman Makael Burrell sits in the background. Nathan said the members of the assembly decided to conduct a public meeting in addition to their weekly Tuesday meetings to engage in a more direct dialogue with students. The assembly wanted to make students aware that MSA meetings are always open and that additional meetings are available to handle stu- dent affairs, Mironov said. MSA representatives were positive about con- tinuing to conduct meetings to converse with their constituency, Mironov added. "I think that this is the first of many public meetings," Mironov said. "While initial turnout was low, this was a pilot program that we intend to carry out through the summer and next year," he added. In the past MSA has had dinners at residence halls to reach out to the public and members plan to continue this outreach next fall, added Mironov. Smog levels too high in 25 Michigan counties WASHINGTON (AP) - Twenty-five Michi- gan counties fail to meet the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's new limits for smog and will have to take measures to reduce pollution, the EPA announced yesterday No Michigan counties were on the EPA's list of areas with the most extreme smog. The EPA iden- tified 474 counties nationwide that aren't meeting the new standards. But eight southeast Michigan counties - Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, Livingston, Lenawee, Monroe, St. Clair and Washtenaw - will have mandatory vehicle emissions inspec- tions under the new rules, Michigan Department of Environmental Quality Director Steven Chester said. "I don't know what other avenues we have, but I can guarantee you we're going to continue to argue for more flexibility," Chester said yester- day. Chester said the vehicle inspections wouldn't start for several years. Chester said the DEQ had asked to have Lenawee given a separate designation, since it isn't creating enough pollution to affect sur- rounding counties. But the EPA refused. The EPA requires Michigan to submit plans for meeting the standards by 2007, and most Michigan counties will have until 2009 to meet the standards. The eight southeast Michigan counties and two counties in west- ern Michigan - Cass and Muskegon - have until 2010 to meet the standards. The standards allow less ozone in the air and require more hours of sampling. Rep. Vernon Ehlers (R-Grand Rapids), said west Michigan counties won't have to require emissions tests for vehicles but may have to impose stricter emissions requirements for facto- ries and power plants. He said he was encouraged by the EPA's action. "The administration ... developed a plan that will help us to clean the air in our area without imposing unworkable burdens on our commu- nity," Ehlers said. Michigan lawmakers, including Gov. Jen- nifer Granholm, had been asking EPA Administrator Mike Leavitt to give western Michigan counties up to 10 years to meet the standards. They said western Michigan is being unfairly targeted for pollution coming from Chicago and Milwaukee. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) said yesterday that "Continuing to place restrictions on areas that are impacted by overwhelming transport of pollution from other areas, in our case from outside of Michigan, is not only unreasonable and unfair, but is not consistent with the purpose of the Clean Air Act," - U.S. Sen. Carl Levin Senator (D-Mich.) western Michigan counties fared better than counties that will have to meet the standards by 2007. But he expressed disappointment that the counties weren't given more time. "Continuing to place restrictions on areas that are impacted by overwhelming transport of pollu- tion from other areas, in our case from outside of Michigan, is not only unreasonable and unfair, but is not consistent with the purpose of the Clean Air Act," Levin said in a news release. But Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R-Holland) said the EPA acted with "the greatest amount of flexibility ... under existing law." Hoekstra noted that an energy bill that hasn't yet passed Congress would delay requirements for western Michigan until the completion of a pollution study. The.new.ozone standards were crafted by the Bush EPA after being initiated under the Clinton administration. They are intended to reduce smog from ozone produced by paint and gasoline vapors combining at ground lev- els with nitrogen oxides from fossil fuels. The standards were delayed from taking effect for four years because of failed court challenges by business groups and by several states, includ- ing Michigan. The Supreme Court upheld the standards in February 2001. Abortion opponents move to bypass Granholm on ban Ifpetition signatures are approved, abortion ban would only require majority vote from state Senate and House to pass into law LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Abortion opponents yesterday turned in more than 460,000 petition signatures to state elections officials in an effort to return to the Republican-controlled Legislature a bill that would outlaw a certain abortion procedure. The initiative is aimed at getting into law a bill that would define the moment a person is legally born as being when any part of a fetus is expelled from a woman's body. It's intended to ban a procedure referred to by critics as partial-birth abortion and by medical organizations as "intact dilatation and extrac- tion" - or D&X. If election officials approve the petition signatures, the bill only would need a simple majority vote from the House and Senate to take effect. It wouldn't have to be signed by Gov. Jennifer Granholm, who vetoed the bill in October. The Democratic governor said the bill didn't include an exception for the health of the mother and added that the bill's definition of life could make it apply to first-trimester abor- tions. "It has the ability to ban all abortions in Michigan," said Shelli Weisberg, legislative director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan. Weisberg said the ACLU would file a lawsuit to stop the law from taking effect, which likely wouldn't be until next spring because the House and Senate do not have the two-thirds vote needed to allow it to take effect immediately. A federal ban on so-called partial birth abortions is tied up in the courts. Michigan failed in 1996 and 1999 to have the courts declare con- stitutional a ban on so-called partial-birth abortions mostly because they didn't include exceptions for the health of the mother. Right to Life of Michigan President Barbara Listing said the new bill will withstand a court challenge. She said it's stronger than an Ohio ban on the late-term abortion procedure upheld late last year by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. "This legislation does not specify a specific type of abortion," she said, standing next to a large pyramid of boxes of petition forms outside the Elections Division of the Secretary of State's office in Lansing. A number of groups participated in the petition-gathering effort, called "The People's Override," including the Michigan Catholic Conference. They submitted 460,034 signatures, nearly twice as many as the 254,206 needed to send the bill back to lawmakers. Listing said she expected it would take 45 to 60 days for the Elections Division to review the petition signatures. When they are approved, the Legislature has 40 days to sign off on the bill before it would go to voters on the ballot. The House and Senate likely will take up the bill before begin- ning their summer recess. "As soon as we're able to we're going to take it up," said Bill Nowling, spokesman for Republican Senate Majority Leader Ken Sikkema of Wyoming. House Speaker Rick Johnson (R-LeRoy) and Sikkema were among the 87 lawmakers who signed a petition for the initiative, said Ed Rivet of Right to Life of Michigan. Similar initiatives have worked twice in the past. A 1988 initiative stopped the state from using Medicaid funding for abortions. Another in 1990 got a bill into law requiring parental consent before a minor could have an abortion. Corrections: A headline on Page 1 of Wednesday's Daily should have said SAPAC staff members support changes to the center. Please report any errors in the Daily to corrections@michi- gandaily.com WArn TO WITE.. OVER TH E SUMWt.... CL 76-DAIlY. :IIf [IM ii: WE DELIVER TO ALL 333 DORMS & STU DENT AREAS3 I MEXICAN CAFE E. Huron - Am,1 Arbor ) 761-6650 I