Friday, April 7, 2006 News 3 Libby implicates Bush in CIA leak case Opinion 4 Jesse Singal's last words on politics One-hundred-sixteen years of editorialdfreedom Arts 5 Gilbert and Sullivan opera comes to Mendelssohn www.mirkgandaty.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 108 ©2006 The Michigan Daily TAKING BACK THE NIGHT Regents to defend seats JEREMY CHO/ Daily Students and community members march past the Michigan Theater on East Liberty Street during a rally against sexual violence last night. The rally was part of Take Back the Night week. Marchers started at 7 p.m. on the Diag and progressed through the streets of Ann Arbor, chanting: "What do we want? Safe streets. When do we want it? Now." With ex hibit artists to Frieze past At least three other major party candidates vie for two seats on board By Gabe Nelson Daily StaffReporter With seven months until November's elections, candidates are already gear- ing up for the race for the two avail- able seats on the University Board of Regents. Incumbent regents David Brandon (R-Ann Arbor) and Kathy White (D- Ann Arbor), whose eight-year terms have run out, hope to win re-election. Three other candidates from the two major parties will vie for a bid at the state party conven- tions this sum- mer. White At that time, the state Dem- ocratic and Republican Parties will announce their nominations for the Novem- ber ballot. Joining Brandon on the Republi- Brandon can ticket will be Susan Brown, a Republican from Kalamazoo. According to Brown's website, she will officially declare her candidacy at the Mackinac Republican Leadership Conference in September. Casandra Ulbrich, a Democrat from Rochester Hills, and Julia Darlow, a Democrat from Ann Arbor Township, are seeking nominations on the Dem- ocratic ticket. Each party is expected to run two candidates. Until the conventions, candidates will campaign by petitioning the state's politicians for endorsements. "Trying to win a nomination is kind of an inside game," Ulbrich said. "It's who you know. It's all about who likes you and who doesn't." Candidates said they're also trying to inform the state's citizens about the election's importance. "The people who vote, by and large, do not know what a regent is," Brown said. "They're missing an obligation and an opportunity to have a say in the Uni- versity, the third-largest employer in the state of Michigan, and that's a problem." But no matter how close the contest becomes, don't expect mudslinging and heated policy debates in the race. Most candidates agreed regents shouldn't have a strong agenda. "Serving as a regent is not the same as being a legislator with a platform and a set of policies you want enact- ed," Darlow said. "While serving as a fiduciary, you need to study the infor- mation while you're there and come to a decision." Regents should make decisions based on benefit to the University, not a preexisting opinion, Darlow added. Brown, though, said she wants regents to take stronger political stances. Her campaign slogan is "Our Ticket to a Conservative Voice." "I think the job should be taken far more seriously," she said. "The University of Michigan is the engine behind the economy of the state, so it's important to have a fiscally conservative voice on the Board of Regents." If elected, Brown said she would advocate lowering the University's operating costs by increasing efficiency and using the savings to lower tuition. While other candidates aren't pro- moting platforms as specific as Brown's, they each highlighted their priorities. White said she would continue to fight for generous financial aid if re-elected. "Accessibility to outstanding higher education is paramount for the people of the state of Michigan," she wrote in a statement to The Michigan Daily. Darlow said her priorities are affirma- tive action, ensuring affordable education for students and economic development. Ulbrich said she is concerned by skyrocketing tuition costs, adding that the state needs to show its dedication to higher education by increasing its funding to the University. "Without the appropriations, it's the students who really get hurt in the long run," she said. Brandon is seeking reelection to oversee the construction of the new C.S. Mott Children's and Women's Hospital, the renovations to Michigan Stadium and the Michigan Difference fundrais- ing campaign - all issues the regent stressed during his current term. In an e-mail interview, he said his platform is his "record over the past seven-plus years as a regent of the University." See REGENTS, page 3 Inspired by the Frieze Building's impending destruction, two artists will temporarily transform the historic site into a giant work of art By Becky Kollar For the Daily The soon-to-be demolished Frieze Building will be transformed into an enormous outside theater for an eve- ning on April 18. LSA senior Jacqueline Wood plans to project giant images of Frieze history onto the outside walls and win- dows of the historic former high school as part of her senior thesis. Throughout this semester, Wood has collected an array of imagery and audio clips about events and people that have filled the Frieze Building since its construction in 190'7. Wood, a film and video studies major, is organizing the large-scale, multi-projection exhibition, titled "Frieze Frame," as a farewell to the building, which is slated to be destroyed to make way for North Quad. Frieze housed many of Wood's classes during her time at the University. Nine video projectors and five slide pro- jectors will project images onto Frieze for two hours. "I was thinking about my experiences in college and said, 'What am I going to remember in 50 years.' Those memories are usually tied to a place, and for me that was Frieze," Wood said. Wood said she has collected more than 400 photo- graphs and video clips for the project to date. She has gathered pictures, texts, flyers, old yearbook photos from the building's years as Ann Arbor High School and photos of original architectural plans. Wood plans to incorporate pictures of all current staff members in their Frieze offices and is also looking for personal photos from community members or students. "It is a community event and it's open to contributions," she said. "All the imagery has to do with the history, cul- ture and life of the building: anything and everything Frieze." University alum Heather Radke is organizing the audio component of Wood's project. Radke has conducted inter- views and set up a voicemail accoumt to collect students' and community members' memories of the building, How to contribute your memories of Frieze The artists are seeking from student and community members contributions for the project. To share a story or personal memory, call the Frieze Frame hotline at 661- 0323. The artists also need Frieze artifacts - photographs, flyers, texts or any other Frieze memorabilia - to be incorporated into slide shows. To make a contribution, e-mail friezeframeinfo@umich.edu. which she plans to meld into a running commentary to accompany the images. "It's interesting to hear people say, 'This is what I did in this space.' It's amazing to hear about the building, both the momentous and mundane memories, just everyday 'moments'" Radke said. "Giving people a voice is the most important part of this project." The building has occupied the corner of State Street and See FRIEZE, page 7 Diag gets sexy - in a safe way Medical school professor hands out advance prescriptions for Plan B By Jeremy Davidson Daily News Editor Together, sex and politics usually spell con- troversy. But when various student groups stormed the Diag yesterday afternoon for the second annual Safe Sex Fair, they spelled activ- ism. About a dozen groups participating in the event promoted reproductive rights and sexual health and safety, answering questions, pass- ing out condoms and distributing flyers to stu- dents. Members of College Democrats and the Uni- versity's undergraduate chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union distributed information about current legislation in the state House that would require Michigan employers that offer health insurance to provide coverage for pre- scription contraceptives. "We want insurance companies that cover drugs, like Viagra, to cover the pill," ACLU member Dan Ray said. With election season fast approaching, sup- porters of Rebekah Warren - one of two Democratic candidates vying to represent Ann Arbor in the state House - also took advan- tage of the fair to pass out information about Warren's platform, which is heavily geared toward reproductive rights. Warren, who is hoping to win the seat as state representative of the 53rd district, is the executive director of Pro-Choice Michigan, a group that advocates for women's reproductive rights. Students for Choice, which sponsored the event, invited Medical School Prof. Tim John- son to hand out advance prescriptions for emer- gency contraception. Johnson, an OBGYN, said the prescriptions for "Plan B" can be filled within a year of the date they were issued. Since 2002, University Health Services has offered. advance prescriptions for emergency contraception to students, a measure adopted largely because of the efforts from Students for Choice. In addition to passing out hundreds of con- doms and packages of lubricant, several stu- dents talked about ways to reduce the risks of sexual behavior. See SAFETY, page 7 i~ It a University President Mary Sue Coleman responds to questions from students in a classroom discussion yesterday afternoon. '' : 1.GOMEZ/DAILY Students question Cole-man o olce Alum came to 'U' after months as POW Leon Zimmerman, now 81, remembers World War II, days as a Wolverine By Christina Hildreth Daily News Editor attending college with the help of the GI Bill, Zimmerman was three years older than most students and anxious to get on with his life. Most WWII veterans on cam- pus "were above the college rah- rah," he said. "We just wanted A L U to get a degree and get out of there." an interview earlier this year. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in business administration in 1948, just two short years after entering the School of Business as "half a sophomore" M N I because of a few credits he had picked up at the University of Grand Rapids before enlist in the U.S. Air Force. Zimmerman couldn't escape the terror of his time in captiv- Barrage of questions include cost of out-of-state tuition, quality of'U' education By Gabe Nelson One student cited a Wall Street Journal story that said colleges are receiving a record number of appli- cations and asked how the University is responding. Coleman said the University has begun rejecting more applicants in response to all-time-high fresh- man class sizes the last two years. JACKSON - Less than eight months after the Russian Army liberated him from a Nazi prison camp in May 1945, Leon Zimmerman And so he did, taking a full load of courses year-round to accelerate his academic career. I -m i