NEWS Monday, October 2, 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 3A ON CAMPUS Chef to teach how to cook veggie favorites The University Unions Arts and Programs will present "Cooking 101: The Basics" at the Univer- sity Club in the Michigan Union from 7to09 p.m. today. A chef will prepare several vegetarian dishes, including vegetable strudel and vegetable phillo purse. Tonight's event is the first of four cooking workshops. The workshops cost $10 each or $35 for all four. Campus Co-ops to display art on Diag Ann Arbor Co-ops will display a collection of artwork on the Diag today from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. The collection includes photography, paintings, sketches and prints by co-op residents. The Inter-Coop- erative Council is sponsoring this free event. Scholar to talk on infrastructure in Europe Erik van der Vleuten of the Eindhoven University of Technol- ogy in the Netherlands will lecture on, "Europe's System Builders: $ Infrastructure and the Shaping of Contemporary Europe" today from 4 to 5:30 p.m. The lecture will be held in room 1644 of the School of Social Work. CRIME NOTES Sexual remark appears on RA's board A sexual remark appeared on a female resident adviser's dry-erase board in Bursley Hall Saturday night, the Department of Public Safety reported. The remark read "My dick feels like corn." Police have no suspects. Gate of parking structure broken A gate arm securing the entrance to the parking struc- ture on Thompson Street was found broken Saturday morn- ing, DPS reported. The value of the arm is about $100. It will be repaired by Monday. Possible alcohol CLASSIC GAMES Granhoim, DeVos set to debate 1 East Lansing Contest is chance for candidates to tell voters who they are LANSING (AP) - Jennifer Granholm and Dick DeVos have largely avoided each other on the gubernatorial campaign trail, but they'll be face-to-face tonight when they meet for their first debate. For both candidates, the hour- long contest will provide a chance to give voters an up-close look at who they are, where they stand and the direction in which they want to take the state. But opportunities for slip-ups, over-the-top responses and missed opportunities also will abound. Both candidates are expected to point out what they see as their opponents' weaknesses, whether it's DeVos going after the Democratic governor's han- dling of the economy or Gran- holm criticizing her Republican rival as someone who has laid off workers and is out of step with Michigan voters. Grand Valley State University political science professor Erika King said DeVos needs to show that, as a businessman, he's the most competent person to tackle the state's economic problems. King said Granholm needs to demonstrate she has been doing as good a job in tough economic times as possible and pin some of the manufacturing sector's woes on the policies of President Bush, a Republican who get low marks in Michigan and nationally on his handling of the economy. "She needs to talk about ... new ideas that she will have, that she's the energetic and innovative but still experienced leader ... to rebut the notion that it's time for a change," King said. She said she tonight expects Granholm will try to widen the debate beyond economic issues so she can paint DeVos as more conservative on social and cultural issues than most state voters. King said she expects DeVos to heavily focus on the state econo- my. The state's seasonally adjust- ed August unemployment rate of 7.1 percent tied with Mississippi's as the nation's highest, and DeVos has said repeatedly that Michigan is in a one-state recession. DeVos needs to continue to define himself as the most competent person on economic issues and convince voters he's a solid alternative to the gover- nor, King added. The debate will not include the three third-party candidates run- ning for governor: Douglas Camp- bell of the Green Party, Bhagwan Dashairya of the U.S. Taxpayers Party and Gregory Creswell of the Libertarian Party. On Friday, the Michigan Democratic Party began airing a new ad criticizing DeVos and the Republican Governors Asso- ciation began running its first ad supporting his campaign. The ads were expected to raise the already feverish pitch of a cam- paign that has seen about $26 million spent on television ads so far. DeVos has tried to lower expec- tations of how he'll do in the first debate, saying in a video journal on his campaign website that Granholm has a leg up in debate experience. "The governor's a Harvard- trained lawyer, a skilled debater, a good communicator. She's been taught how to stand up and debate in front of juries," DeVos said. "l'm just a business guy who's accustomed, more accustomed anyway, to getting things done than talking about it. So we're going to have a challenge." The University's Bocce Ball Club hosts the Autumn Classic in the Arboretum yesterday. Engineering junior Kip Daugirdas prepares to throw the boccla while other members of the club look on. ebanese Americans help homeland rebu~ld Hundreds of Michigan Lebanese have gone to help DEARBORN (AP) - Many members of southeastern Michi- gan's large Lebanese community are returning to their homeland to help it rebuild after a devastat- ing monthlong war between Isra- el and the Shiite Muslim militant group Hezbollah. Moe Makki, 44, of Dearborn said Saturday night that he has noted many changes in Beirut. Makki said that when he vaca- tioned in Beirut last year, it was full of life, but not now. "It's a little eerie," he told a Detroit Free Press reporter in Beirut. "You can feel the lack of activity, the lack of vibrance.... The electricity isn't there." He is part of a delegation from the Dearborn-based American- Arab Chamber of Commerce. The visitors are touring areas of Lebanon hurt by the 34-day war with Israel that ended Aug. 14. They planned to meet with Lebanese leaders to study the country's needs. Hundreds of southeastern Senatoars "You can feel the lack of activity, the lack of vibrance." - Moe Makki Lebanese American man from Dearborn, on post-war Beruit Michigan residents have made their way back to Lebanon in recent weeks because of ethnic, religious or family ties. Kamal Shouhayib, 60, of Troy said he is in Lebanon to recon- nect with family members. "My heart is broken, like so many American Lebanese," said Shouhayib, who was to visit his parents in Aley, a sister city of Troy. "The country was hurt." The effects of the war are vis- ible in several parts of Beirut. The cafes that dot Raouche Street are mostly empty, much different from last year, Makki. said. In southern Lebanon, visitors can see areas heavily bombed by Israel, which said they were Hez- bollah strongholds. Abdul-Ghani Mekkaoui,45, of Windsor, Ontario, said he hopes to get a contract to help rebuild homes and offices. Ali Dagher, a Dearborn attor- ney, was among a number of Michiganians who planned plan to visit the predominantly Shiite Muslim southern Lebanese city of Bint Jbail this week. Hun- dreds of Bint Jbail natives and their descendants are among southeastern Michigan's about 300,000 people with roots in the Arab world. Bint Jbail was the scene of fierce ground fighting between Israeli forces and Hezbollah guerrillas, and large parts of the town are in ruins. "I'm nervous, very nervous" about looking at the damage, Dagher said Saturday in Beirut. "I'm afraid what I'm going to see." "I saw the images on TV and read about it," said Mariam Bazzi of Dearborn Heights, who also was on the way to Lebanon. "But I don't think anything can compare to the reality of seeing it on the ground." poisoning puts s1lt on. woman in ER 'V" A student was taken from South Quad to the University Hospital for possible alcohol poisoning Satur- day night, DPS reported. The stu- dent is over 21. THIs DAY In 'U' History Student Council solidifies rules for fall rush October 2, 1907 - At the first meeting of the Student Council last night, class representatives defined the regulations for freshmen and sophomore rush. The captain of the football team, Paul Magoffin, will referee the rush. To give freshmen the oppor- tunity to organize, there will be one full day free of hostilities. This truce begins Thursday at noon and ends Friday at noon. At a meeting Thursday evening, representatives of the freshmen and sophomore classes will con- vene in the Michigamua room of the Michigan Union. Magoffin will explain the contest's proce- dures at that time. S The rush will begin Friday eve- ning at 8 p.m. on Medic Green, with a time limit of 30 minutes. According to the rush rules, the sophomore class "shall defend its class banner." The banner will be hoisted on a pole in the same man- ner it was during the 1906 rush. terror proposal Stabenow splits with party on bills to govern interrogation techniques WASHINGTON (AP) - Mich- igan Democratic U.S. Sens. Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow split over a proposal to prosecute and interrogate terror suspects last week, as Congress adjourned until after Election Day. Levin voted against a detainee bill that would create military commissions to prosecute terror- ism suspects. It would prohibit abuses such as mutilation and rape but would give the president room to decide which other interroga- tion techniques are permissible. Democratic opponents said the bill could set a dangerous prec- edent that might lead to other nations mistreating captured Americans. They also focused on language barring detainees from going to federal court to protest their detention and treatment - a right referred to as habeas corpus. "The habeas corpus language in this bill is as legally abusive of rights guaranteed in the Constitu- tion as the actions at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo and secret prisons that were physically abusive of detainees," Levin said. EraPrinceton Review AR - - We:Score More! ** 800-2Review I PrincetonReview.com Corner of South University andForest To play: Complete the grid so that every row, column BRINGING THE STORE TO THE SAVE UP TO OFF THE SAME MERCHANDISE WE HAVE IN OUR STORES! OCTOBER 2 - 4 10:00am - 7:00pm PENDLETON ROOM Michigan Union i I 4 V0 8 9 6 i5 -- 4 91 5 5 2 7:8! 8 7 4 513 F 1 6 9',4 3- k 7 2