NEWS The Michigan Daily. - Thursday, November 10, 2005 - 5A 1Cox admits affar * n ball-sy move LANSING (AP) - Attorney General Mike Cox acknowledged yesterday having an affair a number of years ago and accused an associate of trial lawyer Geoffrey Fieger of threatening to expose the indiscretion. Fieger, who won the 1998 Democratic nomi- nation for governor after becoming famous as the attorney for assisted suicide advocate Jack Kevorkian, has said he wants to challenge Cox, a Republican, in the 2006 attorney general election. Cox said he came clean publicly because a Fieger associate threatened to expose the affair if Cox didn't stop investigating Fieger. Fieger said the person Cox is accusing is not an asso- ciate of his. Cox said he told his wife Laura about the affair on March 22, 2003. The couple went to counseling and attended a church pro- gram, and the affair is now "old news" in his family, he said. "What I did was inexcusable," Cox said in prepared comments. "I am completely respon- sible for what happened - it was entirely my fault." Since March, Cox's office has been inves- tigating a $450,000 television ad campaign that urged viewers to "vote no" against Justice Stephen Markman in last year's state Supreme Court race. Markman easily won re-election. But it was not until June - seven months after the election - that Fieger, a multimillionaire, filed papers in Oakland County acknowledging he paid for the anti-Markman ads. Fieger said Cox's allegations yesterday were "amazingly sick." "Something sounds absolutely insane about what's going on here," Fieger told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. "How could the attorney general have so many skeletons in his closet that he could be blackmailed? Why is he subjecting his wife to this humiliation?" Cox said a lawyer named Lee O'Brien con- tacted his office Oct. 14. O'Brien told a Cox staff member that "Fieger wants me to deliver a threat to your boss," according to Cox. A message seeking comment was left on O'Brien's cell phone yesterday afternoon. Cox said he contacted the Oakland County sheriff and prosecutor, who monitored meet- ings between O'Brien and his staff member in which O'Brien said Fieger wouldn't do any- thing if the campaign finance investigation went away. One meeting involved Fieger him- self, Cox said. "They thought I would cower," Cox said. "They thought that my wife did not know nor did they count on my resolve to do my job at any cost. And they did not count on my wife's resolve that justice be done even if it means personal embarrassment." Oakland County Prosecutor David Gorcyca said Cox contacted him about the case roughly a month ago. Law enforcement officials turned in material related to their investigation this week, Gorcyca said, and his office is reviewing the material to determine if extortion or obstruction of justice charges are warranted. FRANKEL Continued from page IA Moore said she believes Jewish studies are cut- ting across borders and expanding in new direction. As she discovered on a recent trip to China, "Jewish scholarship is seen as enlightening to people other than Jews." "Judaic studies belongs to all who are interested and willing to learn," Moore added. The center hopes to create an interchange of ideas between members within the institute and the general University community. "The way this center is going to educate the aca- demic community and itself is as important as the academic output," said University Hebrew lecturer Doron Lamm. History and German Prof. Scott Spector said he believes the new institute will have a positive affect on people who have not been involved directly in Judaic studies and has the power to open up Judaic studies to people in other fields. "This is a very significant event, and the center is already one of the most important centers in the world," said Spector, "I hope the people will see how this benefits the general community." Yesterday's inaugural event also served as a wel- come to the new director of the institute, Anita Norich. Norich is an English professor at the University, as well as a Yiddish literature scholar. VOTE Continued from page IA done," Benton an LSA senior said. In contrast to Voice Your Vote, Members of the College Democrats said they regis- tered 210 students to vote in this year's Ann Arbor election - 149 on the Diag and about 60 from other places around the campus. About 20 members from College Democrats worked over a period of two weeks to get these students registered. "(Voice Your Vote) hung one sign outside the Union to encourage students to come to MSA to register. I never really saw Voice Your Vote," Benton said. But Meghan McDermott, co-chair of Voice Your Vote, said the commission was working in collaboration with the College Democrats, although the College Democrats say no such cooperation was ever formalized between the groups. McDermott said she had communicated with the College Democrats earlier in the school year and that the groups had agreed that the College Democrats would relieve Voice Your Vote from the duty of canvassing the Diag for voter registration. "We decided that since Voice Your Vote is so small, we would concentrate on get- ting into the dorms, and focus on getting new students ready to vote in Ann Arbor," McDermott said. This year Voice your Vote has about 5 to 7 members. Schopfer added that members of the com- mission worked with College Democrats at tables on the Diag. But Jamie Ruth, vice chair of College Democrats, said Voice Your Vote members never showed up to the Diag event, nor would it be appropriate for Voice your Vote to have participated. "As the College Democrats, it's impossible for us to do nonpartisan registration," he said. "We made it clear that we were the College Democrats while we were registering. Our effort was not the sort of thing Voice Your Vote would get involved with." "I don't think the College Republicans would be very happy if MSA funds were going to staff a College Dems table," Benton said. Although Voice Your Vote canvassed in two dormitories, South Quadrangle and Mary Markley residence halls, and regis- tered 50 students to vote in South Quad, and about 30 in Mary Markley, only 22 ballots were cast in South Quad, and only 15 were cast in Markley. ETHICS Continued from page 1A every department would be unpopular with faculty, but it would institutionalize the teach- ing of professional morals to students in their respective fields. But he added that in lieu of required classes he thought an ethical slant to existing classes, would be the next-best thing. "Something is better than nothing," Greens- pan said. "With the proviso that we don't turn ethics into something that we just do on Sun- day, like church." Chamberlin said whatever lasting effects the initiative has will depend on the attitude of the faculty and other administrators. But he added that Duke has implemented a successful ethics program that included required courses. "Here no one wants to go near (a new requirement), so in parens I don't support it," Chamberlin said. "We're not going to be able to reorganize the University to make this thing happen. We have to work with the university we've got." I