Friday, December 10, 2004 Opinion 4 Sports 9 Zack Denfeld wants your ears to hurt Two top goalies face off at Yost tonight THE BEST AND WORST SF THE FALL V SFASCN Akrs, PAGE 8 Weather 1W44 LOW: 30 TOMORROW: q/ v One-hundredfourteen years ofeditoridfreedom www.michikandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXV, No. 50 02004 The Michigan Daily I ' njury sidelines Horton for month By Eric Ambinder Daily Sports Writer The Michigan basketball program announced yesterday that junior guard Daniel Horton is expected to be out for four weeks with a sprained left knee. Hor- ton injured himself after colliding with a teammate during practice on Sunday. "Based on evaluations, it has been deter- mined that Daniel Horton has a partial ligament sprain and associated swelling in the knee," team physician James Car- penter said in a statement released yester- day. "We anticipate that this ligament will heal, and his swelling will resolve over the course of the next few weeks. I antici- pate that he will not be released for full activity for approxi- mately one month." Horton will undergo rehab with the Michigan ath- letic medical staff to regain strength in Horton the knee. "We are very fortunate to have the caliber of medical professionals avail- able to us that we have here at Michi- gan," coach Tommy Amaker said in a statement released yesterday. "We will obviously follow their guidance and advice as Daniel rehabilitates his knee." Horton had played in every single game of his Michigan career before missing Tuesday night's game against High Point. He averaged 13.4 points, four assists, 2.6 rebounds in 71 games as a Wolverine. This season, Horton is averaging 11.7 points per game - down slightly from last year and more than three points from his freshman campaign. But, Horton was brilliant in Michigan's 61-60 victory over Notre Dame on Saturday, scoring 11 of the Wolverines' last 12 points. Michigan is already without two start- ing captains - wing Lester Abram and forward Graham Brown. Abram is out for the season with an injured shoulder and Brown for four to six weeks with a hernia injury. Michigan will most like- ly have to turn to walk-on wing John Andrews, freshman Ron Coleman and junior forward Chris Hunter to start against South Florida tomorrow. "We're just kind of figuring out when it's going to stop," Amaker said about the pleth- ora of recent injuries after the game against High Point. "That's the nature of it. If you talk to many coaches, we all go through it, and I've been fortunate as a head coach to never have this occur in the past." Filling in for Horton Tuesday, junior guard Dani Wohl logged 30 minutes against the Panthers. Wohl converted his one shot attempt, scored four points, committed four turnovers and had one assist. See HORTON, Page 9 r.AYwB Low-rent housing divides neighbors A= leaders: Cheap housing needed, but consensus difficult to reach By Anne Joling Daily Staff Reporter Over the past two months, neigh- bors living around the area of the pro- posed apartment site at 828 Greene St. have gathered at Ann Arbor Plan- ning Commission meetings to protest the 36-bedroom building. Some neighbors said they believed a building of that size would increase traffic in the neigh- borhood and make it impossible to park in a place with already limited parking availability. Oth- ers spoke of how important their homes are to them and how a large influx of students would ruin the tight-knit dynamics of the neigh- borhood. On Nov. 30, the commission ruled against the builder's request to devel- op the site. Like the neighbors who protested the plan, the main reason the commission rejected the pro- posal, saying that they believed the building was not well-suited for the area. Many neighbors considered this a victory in the fight tosave their way of life. According to city officials and many members of the community, the need to develop more affordable places to live in Ann Arbor like the apartment site at 828 Greene St. is a prominent and pressing need. But it is difficult to please everyone, when it comes to actually building new housing. Remodeling a city of elites Mayor John Hieftje has attributed the lack of affordable housing in Ann Arbor to a variety of things, the two most prominent being the popularity of the city and a shortage of available space in which to build. "Lots of people want to live here. We have the lowest unemployment in the state, a vibrant university, high tech industries - it's a great place for people to be. Every community that's as successful as Ann Arbor has this problem," Hieftje said. "We're also very constrained in that we can't grow - the city limits are there and there's not much room to develop in Ann Arbor anymore." Because of the popularity of the city and lack of space, some people say they believe Ann Arbor has reached a point where only the wealthy can afford housing. "If we allow (Ann Arbor) to become a city of just very high hous- ing values, it becomes a city of elites, and we begin to see that other voices, or voices of people who just happen to have a lower income, are left out of the community conversation," Hieftje said. "So we may become a place - and we already are a place - where See HOUSING, Page 5 The houses shown are across the street from the Maple Meadow apartment buildings on South Maple Road in Ann Arbor. Some residents worry over the Influx of new affordable housing In their neighborhoods. Don't ask' By Kristin Ostby Daily Staff Reporter A recent appeals court ruling allowing some universities to ban military recruiters from cam- pus could have future implications on the Uni- versity's Law School and its gay community. According to last week's ruling in a Phila- delphia federal appeals court, universities in Delaware, New Jersey and Pennsylvania are no longer subject to the federal Solomon Amend- ment. The amendment allows the government to withhold funds from universities that refuse military recruiters. Opponents of the amendment say many schools believe the military's "don't ask, don't policy imp airs military recruiting tell" policy - which discourages military service people from discussing their sexuality - conflicts with antidiscrimination policies that protect their students on the basis of sexual orientation. "If an employer discriminates on sexual orientation, they are not allowed to come to campus. The exception is the military. They do discriminate based on sexual orientation," said Susan Guindi, dean for career services at the Law School. Guindi said the Solomon Amendment has steep penalties for schools that do not allow military recruiters. "If the military is not allowed on campus, then all funds can be cut off, not just from the Law School, but from the entire university," she added. But the ruling does not yet apply to the Uni- versity, and Law School Dean Evan Caminker said, "It's unclear at this point whether it will ever become a nationwide decision." Caminker added that it is possible that the plaintiffs in the case could issue an injunction to stop the Solo- mon Amendment from applying to universities nationwide. Still, some student groups see the ruling as a positive change. "I think it's a great decision," said Frederic MacDonal-Dennis, director of the Office of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Affairs. "I think that it's been a while in coming, and I'm glad that the courts have decided that, because I think now that the universities can uphold their non- "We believe that the military is losing some very talented law students." - Carl Monk, executive director of the American Association of Law Schools discrimination policies without penalization from the government." Cliff Davidson, a member of the University student group Outlaws, said he is also pleased with the ruling. Outlaws represents lesbian, gay, See MILITARY, Page 5 Survey: Profs teach political views in classes AURAL FIXATION Google unveils new search engine for academic research By Philip Svabik For the Daily By Margaret Havemann Daily Staff Writer Many students at top schools, like ' the University say that not only are they exposed to liberal viewpoints during lectures, but also that they must agree with their professors' political views to succeed in class- respondents also said they felt they had to agree with the professor's political views to get a good grade in the course, and about 42 percent said reading assignments consistently pro- vide only one side of a controversial issue. Such bias deprives students of a fair and objective education, said Carl Cohen, a phi- losophy professor at who was a vocal sity and opponent of the University's race- chools conscious admis- sions policies. es, according to a new study. Forty-six per- cent of students at the top 50 univer- sities and liberal arts colleges say Using the Internet for academic research may have just become easier because of a new academic search engine created by the well- known Internet portal Google. Google last month released a beta, or experimental, version of a new search engine with those in academia specifically in mind, www.scholar.google.com. Dubbed Google Scholar, this latest devel- opment from Google allows stu- dents to search through only the portion of Google's catalog that contaiinsbshed matrils from Google Scholar Academic gateway The new search engine is found at www.scholar. google.com. Search only parts of Google's database that contain scholarly journals, books, theses and technical reports. searching for," explained Durshaw, though she admitted, "I don't real- ,v have ,nother use for it vet" Many facu the Univer other top s present the I - - ' L