Tuesday, September 26, 2006 BRITJ;gi TS, PAGE 5 News 2 Airlines relax restrictions for liquids on planes Opinion 4 Toby Mitchel on why we torture Sports 10 Grand Rapids native makes great strides One-hundred-siteen years ofeditoriadfreedom <, 4' --- ------- --- --- -- --- --- --- - M www.michikandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVII, No. 16 02006 The Michigan Daily -a - DeVos joins debate on evolution ALEX DZIADOSZ/Daily Michael Venyah, a Lansing man who is on a tour of college campuses preaching condemnation, fends off LSA sophomore Jeremy Borovitz on the Diag yesterday. Borovitz danced close to Venyah and verbally attacked him for his statements against homosexuality. Anti-gay spekr ii volatile crowd onDia Gubernatorial candidate backpedals on intelligent design By Andrew Grossman Daily Staff Reporter Republican gubernato- rial candidate Dick DeVos's campaign has focused on Michigan's struggling economy. But he made a rare foray into the politi- cally dangerous debate over social issues last week when he told The Associ- ated Press that he supports teaching intelligent design alongside evolution in pub- lic schools. TheDeVos campaign later backpedaled. It released a statement Wednesday saying the AP report was inaccurate and that DeVos only supports letting local school boards decide what to teach. "In the end, I believe in our system of local con- trol," he said in the state- ment. "Local school boards should have the opportunity to offer evolution and intel- ligent design in their cur- riculums." The state Board of Edu- cation currently issues cur- riculum guidelines laying out what students should know upon graduating high school. The guidelines say that schools should teach evolu- tion, but make no mention of intelligent design. Intelligent design is the idea that life on Earth is so complex that it could not have evolved through natural selection but was created and guided by a supernatural being. Propo- nents, often affiliated with religious groups, argue that intelligent design is a scien- tific theory that should be taught alongside evolution in public schools. Like many in the scientif- ic community, Anthropolo-' gy Prof. Beverly Strassman disagreed. "It's a pseudoscientific theory," she said. "You can't compare something based on faith against a scientific theory." More than 80 years after a Tennessee court fined John Scopes $100 for teaching evolution in his high school classroom, the debate over teaching intelligent design in science classes has heat- ed up again. After the Kansas state school board adopted cur- riculum standards that ques- tioned evolution, a school board primary in August ended with the election of a pro-evolution majority. In a study of the United States and 31 European countries published this summer by Science maga- zine, the United States ranks second to last in the percentage of adults who believe in the theory of evo- lution, ahead of only Tur- key. The state Board of Edu- cation is currently writing binding graduation stan- dards for public high school students. The board delayed approval of the standards earlier this month to allow for more comment from leg- islators. Some speculated that the delay resulted from debate over the standards for teaching evolution. Liz Boyd, spokeswoman for Democratic Gov. Jen- nifer Granholm, said Gra- nholm opposes teaching evolution in science class- es. "We need to teach estab- lished theory, which is evolution, in our science classrooms," Boyd said. "But we can explore the controversy over intelligent design in a current events or comparative religion class." Education Prof. Nancy Songer said a current events class would be the ideal place to discuss intelligent design. "The theory of intelligent design has some interesting ideas, but there is no scien- tific evidence to support any of the ideas," she said. "It would be a great topic in a current events course." She said local school boards shouldn't have the option of teaching intelligent design in science classes. "What's problematic about letting school boards decide is that it confuses the issue about whether it's a scientific issue or not," Songer said. "If it's allowed to replace scientific theory, it just confuses students." In response to cries like 'Homos are going to hell' students react with shouts of their own By Walter Nowinski Daily Staff Reporter A Lansing man stood on the Diag yesterday preaching hatred toward the gay. His booming voice drew a fiery and at times offensive counter-pro- test. "The Pope is going to hell, Michael Venyah shouted to the crowd of doz- ens gathered around him. "Homos are going to hell." Then, signaling one student out of the crowd, Venyah proclaimed "You are going to hell!" The comment was one of the many that inflamed the large, angry crowd that faced off with him on the Diag for much of the afternoon yesterday. Venyah and Chris Lemieux, who said he'd been following Venyah since he became a Christian seven years ago, berated students with religious rhetoric for at least five hours, squar- ing off with students who swore and cursed at them. Both wore red shirts with yellow lettering that said "ALL HOMOS GO TO HELL." "God did not make you gay'" Lemieux shouted, following his proclamation with obscene descrip- tions of sexual acts, which he said would result in damnation. Venyah, who leads the Lansing- based Soulwinners Ministry with his wifeTamika,saysheisonanationwide tour of college campuses. According to his website, www.soul-winners.org, he and Lemieux are at the beginning of an eight-month, 15,600-mile, 27- state, 64-campus tour. "We are here to tell the students, faculty and staff of the judgment that awaits them" Venyah said. Venyah also condemned oral sex, masturbation and any form of sex out- side of marriage. LSA sophomore Jeremy Borovitz was one of the many students who challenged Venyah and Lemieux in response to a derogatory comment about anal sex. After Lemieux fin- ished a vivid tirade, Borovitz jumped out from the crowd toward the two black preachers. "You know what else it says is OK in the Bible?" Borovitz said. "It says slavery is OK." Borovitz then sarcastically sug- gested onlookers chain the preacher up and "drag him out of here." Many in the angry crowd cheered and laughed. Although most modern Christians do not believe the Bible condones slavery, scripture has been used to support the practice in the past. Reached by phone late last night, Borovitz said he regretted using slav- ery as an example. He said he was angry at the preacher and that he reacted in the heat of the moment. "It angered me what that guy was doing:' he said. "I'm not gay, but if there was a gay person there, it would have offended them" Borovitz said that he was trying to point out how ridiculous the preacher was being. "Slavery's wrong," Borovitz said. "Slavery's inherently wrong. I mean it entirely sarcastically. It's a ridiculous concept." Other students consulted their Bibles and tried to confront the two preachers with theological rebukes of their claims. LSA junior Jonathan Tyrpak, who identified himself as a member of Campus Crusade for Christ, urged interested students to join him for a more civil discussion of Christianity. "I think this man is a misrepresen- tation of what Jesus Christ says in the Bible," Tyrpak said. "I believe that God will forgive all your sins if you believe in him. I think the crowd's reaction has to do with the lack of grace that this man shows." As the afternoon wore on, the exchanges between the two preachers and the crowd grew more intense. A large group of students began chanting "asshole" loudly. Several same-sex students kissed and hugged each other in order to draw the scorn of the preachers. Others went a step further and tried to spank Lemieux. Another student attempted to flick ash from his cigarette on Venyah's head. Jeff Speaks, a School of Music sophomore who stopped one stu- See PREACHERS, page 7 Alum's job: Be friends with a senator Aide reflects on Obama's personality, presidential run By Dave Mekelburg Daily Staff Reporter Every so often, recent Uni- versity graduate Nick Colvin looks out into the Washington traffic to see a cab driver, win- dow down, declaring his sup- port for Sen. Barack Obama. For Colvin, scenes like these are reminders that the man sit- ting next to him in the car is not only the junior Democratic senator from Illinois, he's a national star. It's only his first term in the senate, but Obama's already become a Democratic darling. He delivered a key speech at the Democratic National Con- vention, he's the only black Senator on Capitol Hill and whispers around Washington hint that he might have presi- dential ambitions. But as Obama's personal assistant, Colvin has a closer view of him. "He's just Barack to me," Colvin said. Colvin does not follow Obama home to Illinois on weekends, but from Monday night to Thursday afternoon, he works with him 11 to 16 hours a day. Most of Colvin's friends don't understand what the job of a personal assistant entails. "They ask if I ever get to see him or talk to him;' he said, laughing. Colvin likened himself to Charlie Young, the character on "The West Wing" who is Conference explores race and the press Note: Michigan Daily that does not inform," Editor in Chief Donn said keynote speaker Ellis Fresard normally edits Cose, a Newsweek colum- the stories on the front nist. page. Because he was The symposium, called quoted in this story, he "Can You Print That?" did not edit it. brought together report- ers, editors and academics Panelists discuss from diverse backgrounds how offensive is and was sponsored by the University chapter of the too offensive National Association of Black Journalists. By Laura Frank Controversies about Daily Staff Reporter what is and what is not appropriate to print when Journalists have not it comes to racial and only a right but a duty to ethnic issues affect many offend in certain situa- types of news media, tions, according to pan- including campus publi- elists at a conference cations. yesterday about minori- At a panel discussion ties and the media. in the afternoon, Tiffany "A greater danger to Hsu, editor in chief of our society than a press The Daily Californian at offending people is a press See PANEL, page 7 ANGELAccCESRE/Daly Nick Colvin, who graduated from the University this spring, is now the personal assistant of Sen. Barack Obama (D-iii.) the personal aide to fictional the senator. and senior Illinois Sen. Dick U.S. President Jed Bartlet. The job of waking up Durbin. Another day, it might Colvin doesn't work at an Obama often belongs to Col- be delivering a speech about anonymous desk in the back of vin. After the wake-up call, genetic research. a campaign office, far from the the agenda changes daily. On According to Colvin, only a action. Instead, he spends his Thursdays, it's "Constituent handful of senators have per- hours in close company with Coffee" with Illinois residents See OBAMA, page 7 1~