Friday, October 6, 20 News 3A Harvard may bring back religious studies req Opinion 4A From the Daily: Torturing tbe Constitution Arts 5A Music School talent tonight at Blind Pig 06 ETALE BG ADY RA One-hundred-siteen years ofeditorialfreedom @2006 The Michigan Daily www. michikandai~y corn Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVII, No. 24 Bo knows class Senate hopefuls face students Incumbent Stabenow and challenger Bouchard pressed on education issues By Gabe Nelson Daily Staff Reporter With Michigan's economy struggling, the two major-party candidates in nt month's U.S. senate race have spent mo st of their campaigns touting plans to sre the Great Lakes State. On Wednesday at the University, though, Democratic incumbent Debhie Stabenow and Republican challene1 Mike Bouchard had to answer togh. questions about education. In Weill Hall, Stabenow and Bouchad took turns appearing in front of a pane4 of students from the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, the School of Natural Resources and Environment and the political science department. Bouchard went first. When asked about educational issues, he broke the conservative party line. His positions on a number of key issues were similar to Stabenow's. Bouchard said he does not support the teaching of intelligent design in science classes. Also, he said he disagrees with the concept behind the No Child Left Behind Act because he thinks states should be responsible for designing their own educational programs. On a follow-up question, Bouchard said he opposes the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative - also known as Proposal 2 - because its language is ambiguous and could have unintended consequences. If passed, Proposal 2 would ban some affirmative action programs in Michi- gan. As a graduate of Brother Rice High School, an all-boys school in Bloom- field Hills, Bouchard said he realizes the value of single-sex high schools and would hate to see MCRI prevent the state from starting public ones. During her time with the student panel, Stabenow also said she opposes MCRI, not only because she supports affirmative action but also because she sees Title IX as a crucial moment in American education. Title IX, which passed in 1972, estab- lished equal treatment for both sexes in all institutions receiving federal fund- ing. It is best known for mandating equal funding for men's and women's sports. "Proposal 2 is bad for you," Stabenow said. "Everybody, remember that." But Stabenow tried to distance her own policies from Bouchard's. "We're very different," Stabenow said in an interview. "He supports the poli- See SENATE, page 7A Former Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler attends a public policy class yesterday afternoon in Weill Hall. Schembechler is auditing the course. Legendary coach goes back to school, By Alese Bagdol For the Daily In January of 1969, Bo Schembechler began his career as one of the University's most legendary football coaches. Almost 38 years later, he is tackling a new chal- lenge -attending a Systematic Thinking class, one of the prerequisites for the Ger- ald Ford School of Public Policy's new Bachelor of Arts degree. Schembechler said he heard about the class through his involvement with the School of Public Policy on its board of directors. "The class sounded interesting and there was space left, so I decided to enroll," Schembechler said. While he does not attend the discus- sions, he said he has sat through every lecture but one thus far. He plans on con- tinuing in the class for the remainder of the semester. "When I've been in town, I've never missed a class," Schembechler said. "Although I must say that I've been late a couple of times." The class, overseen by former Univer- sity Provost Paul Courant, explores using systematic thinking in solving a wide range of current problems. The first topic explored was globalization with a focus on the auto industry. The class has since shifted to copyright issues. Five professors teach the course, and at least two faculty members teach each topic. "The course is by no means limited to Public Policy BA candidates," Courant said. "It would be good if more of our students used the kind of things that one learns in college to think about problems in the world." Business school student Karen Boore has class with Schembechler. "He seems like a fun guy," Boore said. "His presence doesn't impact the class much, but anyone important to the Uni- versity adds some value to the class." Schembechler said he attends the class as a silent observer in order to listen and learn about what's going on in the world. He does not take the exams or participate in the class because he doesn't want to interfere with the natural flow of discus- sion. "His attendance in class has been a nice way to raise awareness on campus about our new undergraduate program,' Public Policy Dean Rebecca Blank said. The Public Policy BA program will begin in fall 2007. Students will apply to the program during their sophomore years to be admitted to the Ford School for their final two years at the Univer- sity. The program will accept 50 students per year, and the application deadline for the fall 2007 term is Feb. 1. Blank said the addition of an under- graduate program will expand and diver- sify the Ford School. "There are a number of good schools, such as Duke and Princeton, that offer well-regarded public policy undergradu- ate programs," Blank said. "We thought we could offer something just as good that would be of interest to a number of undergraduates and that would enrich the undergraduate curriculum overall." Schembechler said he is thorough- ly enjoying the class. He retired from coaching here 16 years ago but said he still feels connected to the University. "While I worked with the Tigers and on other projects for a few years, I never really left the University of Michigan," Schembechler said. "Most of the current students don't recognize me anymore, but I still feel very welcome. I've always had an office" Schembechier's career Bo Schembechler led the Uni- versity football team to 13 Big Ten championships during his 21-year tenure, in which the team won 194 games. In his 27 years of coaching, including the six at Miami Uni- versity in Ohio, Schembechler's teams never had a losing season. His years solidified Michi- gan's rivalry with Ohio State as one of the most competitive in all of sports. In 1969, Schem- bechier's team overcame heav- ily favored OSU in what would become the coach's statement game. Schembechler retired as the winningest coach in Division I football history, but his win total has since been eclipsed. Schembechler was inducted into the National Football Hall of Fame in 1993. A humanitarian on war in Sudan Return of an MSA insurgent r Refugees saved by speaker Sister Radlmeier attend lecture By Jessica Vosgerchian For the Daily In the audience at the 16th annu- al Raoul Wallenberg lecture last night were 22 Sudanese refugees who owe their lives to the speaker. The speaker, Sister Luise Radl- meier, has made the pursuit of higher education possible for more than 1,000 Sudanese youths over the past two decades. In her lecture, Radlmeier relayed graphic stories of the wartime experiences of refugee children and lamented the violence in the Darfur region of Sudan. "My hope is that the mighty powers of this world will find a solution for the senseless and unnecessary violence plaguing the Darfur region?' Radlmeier said. "But some political powers fear to get involved, so war drags on." The lecture is delivered by the recipient of the Raoul Wallenberg Endowment and Medal, named for University alum Raoul Wal- lenberg, who saved upwards of 100,000 Jews in Budapest during the Holocaust. The endowment and medal were established in 1985 to memoralize Wallenberg and recognize people who demonstrate similar humani- tarian spirit. The Wallenberg Endowment committee took notice of Radlmei- er after an article in Reform Juda- ism magazine revealed her part in coordinating the sponsorship of 10 Sudanese women by a Jewish con- gregation in Boulder, Colo., com- mittee member Irene Butter said. Radlmeier's work began infor- mally in 1987 when Sudanese refu- gee children began to beg at the Dominican missionary where she lived in Nairobi, Kenya. The chil- dren had fled to a United Nations camp in Kakuma, Kenya from war-torn Sudan, where they had See SUDAN, page 7A Not long after his defeat in the presidential election, Fantuzzi forms new party By Layla Aslani and Andrea Coombes Daily Staff Reporters A third-place finish in last spring's Michi- gan Student Assembly presidential election hasn't kept LSA junior Ryan Fantuzzi away from student politics. He is returning with a new outlook, a new agenda and a new party. "To quote Michael Corleone from The Godfather III, 'Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in,' " Fantuzzi said, imper- sonating Al Pacino, who played Corleone in the 1990 film. Fantuzzi, who ran on the now defunct Stu- dent Conservative Party ticket last spring and is perhaps best known for standing in the Diag screaming about bringing Coke back to campus, has founded the Student Liberty Party with the intention of focusing solely on student issues. Fantuzzi said he wants to provide students with another party option in the upcoming MSA elections. "We want to give students more of a choice on student issues than they have right now" Fantuzzi said. "The same party has been in power for a while now, and we just want to give students a reason to vote." Still in its recruitment phase, SLP has not ALEX DZIADOSZ/Daily LSA junior Ryan Fantuzzi talks on his cell phone in Amer's in the Michigan Union Wednesday night. taken stands on broader political issues, and Fan- tuzzi said it does not have a political agenda. Although many of the party's members are holdovers from the Student Conservative party, SLP does not have a single ideology, Fantuzzi said. The party hopes to recruit stu- dents of different political beliefs and a variety of schools and colleges within the University to represent diverse student interests. "With the Student Liberty Party we're attracting Libertarians, Republicans, Demo- crats - any political ideology," said SLP member Dan Shuster, a Rackham representa- tive in MSA, who was elected on the Student Conservative Party ticket. The concept is distinctly different from Fan- tuzzi's last attempt at MSA glory, the Student See SLP, page 7A p1