NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 22, 2005 - 3 ON CAMPUS Tickets for ride to airport available Students who need a ride to the airport for Thanksgiving break can purchase airBus tickets for $7 at the Michigan Union Ticket Office. Stu- dents with tickets will get a ride to Detroit Metro Airport. Students can also purchase $10 tickets from other locations on North Campus, Central Campus and the Hill. Students can swipe their Mcards at locations where tickets are sold. The service is provided by the Michigan Student Assembly Schedules are at http://www.msa. umich.edu/services/airbus.php. Pianist to perform on North Campus Jin Ju will be playing during a free event titled "Masterclass" at 5:30 p.m this evening in the Brit- ton Recital Hall of the E.V. Moore Building. Speaker to talk on first Thanksgiving Tobias Vanderhoop, member of the Wampanoag Tribal Council, will discuss the first Thanksgiving from a historical and Native Ameri- can perspective. Alice LLoyd Hall to host drawing class Free figure drawing sessions will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in the Art Studio of Alice Lloyd Residence Hall. Beginners are welcome. CRIME NOTES Shapiro trash can fire extinguished A trash can outside of the Sha- piro Undergraduate Library was reported to be on fire Sunday night. A Department of Public Safety officer was called to the scene and reported that a cigarette tossed into the garbage had not been properly extinguished. Man found asleep in 'U' Hospital OR A man was found sleeping in the operating room of the University Hospital yesterday, DPS reported. He was given a warning and escort- ed off the property. THIS DAY In Daily History Int'I students fear spies on campus Nov. 22, 1984 - Fears and suspi- cions of spies on U.S campuses have now reached the University. When a Taiwanese student who was studying at the University was discovered dead upon returning to his home country, reports of spy activities on campus surfaced. Several Taiwanese students and staff claimed their peers were reporting their activities back to the government in Tapei, Taiwan. They alleged the Taiwanese government murdered Chen Wen-Chen because of information leaked to Taiwanese officials regarding his activities in the United States. University officials have refused to take action on anonymous allega- tions. In addition, because interna- tional students fear for their families back home, they are unwilling to publicly testify. Other universities are taking the problem of campus spies more seri- ously. At Carnegie-Mellon University, where Chen taught statistics, Rich- ard Cyert, the university's president, decided to confront the issue. He launched a "harassment hotline" for students to communicate informa- tion about suspicious activities to the proper authorities. "I do think there is less (spy) activ- ity as a result," Cyert said, referring Become an activist in winter 2006 By Laura Frank and Ruth Neuman Daily Staff Reporters How do you stop genocide? A new sociology class on the conflict in Dar- fur may give students interested in activism a better idea of how to answer this question. The class, a collaboration between the Department of Sociology's Organizing for Social Change program and the group Stu- dents Taking Action Now: Darfur, will be offered for the first time next semester. The class will be taught by student members of STAND. Organizers said the course seeks to provide an in-depth history of the conflict in the Darfur region of Sudan, as well as tech- niques for encouraging international action to end the conflict. Since early 2003, Arab militias in the Dar- fur region of western Sudan have attacked non-Arabs in a conflict that has left tens of thousands dead and displaced more than two million individuals. Many voices in the inter- national community accuse the Sudanese gov- ernment of supporting the ethnic cleansing of non-Arabs by Arab militias. In February 2004, the U.S. Congress, as well as former Secretary of State Colin Powell, declared that the actions of the Arab militias constituted genocide, although the United Nations and some human rights organizations have not acknowl- edged that genocide has taken place in Darfur. The U.N. defines genocide as an attempt to destroy in part or in whole a religious, ethnic or national group. Under the 1948 U.N. Con- vention on Genocide, the member nations of the U.N. must take action to stop genocide wherever it occurs. STAND and other campus groups believe decisive action is necessary. These groups are working to promote awareness of the situation on campus and campaigning for legislative action by the U.S. government. "There's a hope among people that geno- cides are a thing of the past, but they're not," said LSA junior Alison Barrall, founder of the University's chapter of STAND. Barrall will serve as one of the teachers of the class. Last semester, STAND focused its efforts on encouraging Michigan Democratic Sens. Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow to spon- sor the Darfur Peace and Accountability Act, which would authorize the president to aid the African Union in relief efforts in the region. The measure - which was sponsored by Levin and Stabenow - passed the Senate in a unanimous vote Friday. Lacking a concrete goal to work toward this semester, the group has had difficulty inspiring students to become involved, said RC junior Lauren Boland, who will teach the proposed class with Barrall. To renew interest and mobilize students on campus, STAND has partnered with Project Outreach in the Department of Sociology to develop a class that will energize a core group of students for work on the Darfur issue. "(The class will) give them a stance on which to base their activism," Barrall said. "It's real- "We're an influential country, and if we were to press them - the U.N. or Sudan -- then something would be done." - Lauren Boland Residential College Junior ly important for activists to have a significant knowledge of what they're in support of." The main focus of the class will be urging the Bush administration to take action against the government of Sudan, organizers said. "We're an influential country, and if we were to press them - the U.N. or Sudan - then something would be done," Boland said. The Department of Sociology first pub- licized the class last week in an e-mail to STAND members. Student response to the class has been overwhelmingly positive, said faculty sponsor Ian Robinson, co-chair of the Lecturers' Employee Organization. "Within 24 hours, we had 34 people who said they want to be part of it," Robinson said. "I've never seen anything like that before." Students active in the Darfur campaign said they hope the class will build on ongoing efforts to raise awareness and stop the genocide in the region. On Thursday, the University chapter of Amnesty International, STAND and the Mus- lim Students' Association held a Sudan Day of Action on the Diag to raise awareness about the genocide and encourage students to take action on the issue. The groups collected signatures for a petition demanding that the Bush administration lead an international movement against genocide in Darfur, said MSA political chair Shimaa Abdelfadeel. On Nov. 8, the Michigan Student Assembly passed a resolution calling on the University Board of Regents to formally declare that the University will not invest in Sudan because of links between the Sudanese government and Arab militias that target civilians. LSA senior Mike Forster, former External Relations Committee chair for the assem- bly, who sponsored the resolution, said it was meant to, "send a message that we care about issues outside of campus." The Univer- sity does not have any investments or plans to invest in companies operating in Sudan, Uni- versity spokeswoman Julie Peterson said. Class organizers hope the course will address both students' desire to help and their lack of knowledge about the issue. "We're trying to find out what we can do so that in the end we don't have to stand back and say we did nothing," Boland said. CU, accepts 1%~01 niansion Offer M The mansion, built by the Village of Dexter's namesake, once housed runaway slaves and presidents DEXTER (AP) - The University said yesterday it has accepted a $1.5 million bid from the Dexter Area Historical Society and Museum to purchase a 162-year-old mansion that once hosted two U.S. presidents and many fugitive slaves. The university has owned Gordon Hall, a white mansion on an about 68-acre site that overlaps Washt- enaw County's Webster and Scio townships, since 1950. The school has been considering selling it for many years. GordonsHall is on the National Register of Historic Places. Proceeds from the sale will be used to fund need-based financial aid spholarships, the University said. The 9,900-square-foot mansion, with its 22 rooms and numerous porches, was built in 1843 by Judge Samuel Dexter and is considered one of the most significant exam- ples of Greek Revival architecture in the state. Dexter was the first chief justice of Washtenaw County in 1827 and planned the nearby village of Dexter in 1830. At various times, Dexter and wife Millisent entertained presidents James Polk and James Buchanan at the home. The Dexters also gave shelter to escaped slaves seeking a path to freedom on the Underground Railroad. ALEX DZIADOSZ/Daily Ann Arbor Mayor John Heiftje speaks at a meeting between student representatives and landlords in Michigan Student Assembly chambers yesterday. Students skz out on lease-date mee t1)1g ORDINANCE Continued from page 1. circumvent the ordinance. Ehn said that the ordinance is harmful to land- lords and students because any government-imposed restrictions will create a greater perceived demand for housing resulting in fiercer competition. "The ordinance is telling a business that they can't conduct business the way the market is run," Ehn said. "This is the same as restricting a retailer from putting up Christmas decorations before Thanksgiving." Campus-area landlords said the ordinance imposed unfair restrictions on personal freedoms. "We don't like the pressure either, ... but what I'm more concerned about is a restriction on (business)," said Lelahni Wessinger, a campus landlord. Mark Hannaford, a representative from Campus Management Realty, said he was surprised by students' sudden support for legislation that imposed restrictions "The ordinance is telling a business that they can't conduct business the way the market is run. This is the same as restricting a retailer from putting up Christmas decorations before Thanksgiving" - Alice Ehn Executive Officer, Washtenaw Area Apartment Association on personal liberties. He pointed to the overwhelm- ingly negative student reaction to the recently proposed ordinance that would ban couches on porches, which he said was also a personal-freedom issue. "Maybe students will rethink their stance on that next time it comes around," Hannaford said. The discussion, organized by University Director of Community Relations Jim Kosteva, brought the two parties together for the first time yesterday after- noon to discuss the proposed lease-date ordinance in the presence of the mayor. The meeting was held in the Michigan Student Assembly chambers, with the intention of better accommodating students, though they only needed three chairs. CONNERLY Continued from page 1 Opponents of MCRI have charged that Michigan residents who signed a petition to end affirmative action were told they were actually supporting race- based policies when signing. Smith and the other picketers also encountered resistance from a group of students protesting BAMN. The most vocal pro-affirmative action group at the University, BAMN has often been criti- cized for its tactics. LSA senior Matthew Gage, who pro- tested BAMN, said it is possible to raise awareness for affirmative action without using violence. "BAMN sees affirmative action as the way to go about further integrating minorities into society, but we see other ways to accomplish this," Gage said. "They think we're racist. But the mind- set should not be that (they) need extra points to make it." tions of affirmative action with Wu. "There is an academic gap - let's admit that," Connerly said. "But we have to close the gap not by applying different standards to different people." But Wu said that when you take into consideration the stereotypes of dif- ferent minorities - such as the Asian "model minority" stereotype - and the varying quality of different school dis- tricts, the standards cannot be equally applied. Affirmative action is needed to counteract stereotypes of women and minorities, Wu said. "We shouldn't characterize affir- mative action as a handout," Wu said. "No one is in favor of discrimination on any basis." Wu added that affirma- tive action is consistent with the Civil Rights Act of 1964. "It will make (the act's) claims a real- ity and ensure that people can study where they want to study and live where they want to live," he said. In addition to the planned dialogue, ence members' questions regarding the use of legacy preferences and point sys- tems for college admissions, as well as their outlook for the future of race rela- tions in America. Wu said that while he is optimistic about the nation's civil rights progress, he also realizes that affirmative action is a necessary yet insufficient step in the fight to eliminate the continuing racial disparities in America. "We as a nation believe our institu- tions should be inclusive, but the ques- tion remains as to how to attain these ideals," Wu said. "We must rededicate ourselves again and again to a diverse democracy." But allowing government interven- tion on the basis of racial preference is not the answer, Connerly said. Affirmative action presumes that minorities need the extra help without giving them the chance to meet the stan- dards, Connerly said. "It is inappropriate for the gov- citizens. My government shouldn't dis- criminate for me or against me," Con- nerly said. "You can fuzz it up and call it diversity or affirmative action, but it is racial discrimination." FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY brings you the Wld Choose your time: January Intersession *Florence, Italy Spring Break SFlorence Fall or Spring Semester " Florence " Galway, Ireland Summer * Galway * Florence or Padova, Italy * County Clare (Ireland) B risbane, Australia Managua, Nicaragua Manaua St. Petersburg, R ssia