NEWS Tuesday, October 10, 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 3 ON CAMPUS Vigil to be held for actor Reeve The Student Society for Stem Cell Research will hold a candle- light vigil in memory of actor Christopher Reeve on the Diag at 8 p.m. today. Reeve was paralyzed in an equestrian accident in 1995 and died in 2004. Dance professor to hold discussion Dance Prof. Peter Sparling will lead a discussion on the Martha Graham Dance Company at the Ann Arbor District Library at 7 p.m. today. Sparling, a former dancer for the company, will dis- cuss Graham's life and legacy, as well as the impact of his work on modern dance. Artist to give talk on comic strip, sign books Comic artist Alison Bechdel will speak about her comic strip, "Dykes To Watch Out For" at 7 p.m. today in the auditorium of East Quad Residence Hall. After the talk, the Common Language Bookstore will sell copies of Bechdel's hooks. The author will also be available to sign copies. The event is free. CRIME NOTES Man exposes self to woman in parking lot A woman who was asleep in her vehicle at a University Hos- pital parking lot awoke to find a man exposing himself to her, the Department of Public Safety reported. Person arrested at 'U' camping property A person was arrested for tres- passing on University property in Pinckney, DPS reported. Cash stolen from emergency room Someone took cash from a purse at the University Hospital last night, DPS reported. The patient had left a purse in a lock- er before going for treatment in the emergency room. THIS DAY In 'U' History Physical education classes begin Oct. 10, 1931 - Classes that fulfill the mandatory physi- cal education requirement for freshmen students will begin Monday, Oct. 12. Students in most colleges are required to take a physical edu- cation class. The classes will be offered three times a day on Mondays, Tuesdays and Fri- days. The classes offer a wide assortment of sports and activi- ties. No experience is required for wrestling, boxing, basketball and track and field classes. However, for participation in other sports such as football, cross-country and swimming, it is expected that students have had prior playing experience. When students return from spring break, they may choose to focus on a particular sport or activity. This will allow students to obtain more experience with a single sport they particularly enjoy. Students may also participate in courses such as golf, tennis, fencing and baseball. ROLL OVER BEETHOVEN NUL president campaigns agamstMC Marc Morial says political impact." arc MrialSayS Morial said Michigan was picks passage of MCRI for this year's election becaus would roll back years the University of Michigan w phe focus of a 2003 U.S. Suprem of progress Court decision related to affirm, ed se as ia- LANSING (AP) - The presi- dent of the National Urban League traveled across Michigan yester- day to lobby against a ballot pro- posal that would ban some types of affirmative action programs in the state. Marc Morial, president of the New York-based organization since 2003, said Michigan is in the national spotlight because of the proposal. "This is an effort to use Michi- gan as part of a campaign to try and roll back progress and roll back affirmative action;' said Morial, a former New Orleans mayor. "Michigan is being used as a politi- cal pawn. This is not the only stop on the retrenchment train. There will be another state next year. It will be selected for maximum tive action programs. Michigan's status as a large Midwestern indus- trial state also made it an attractive political target for anti-affirmative action groups, Morial said. The ballot proposal is sponsored by a group called the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative. It would ban the use of race and gender prefer- ences in university admissions and government hiring. Similar proposals have passed in California and Washington state. The National Urban League is one of several groups trying to derail the movement in Michi- gan, saying it would undo years of progress for minorities and women. The proposal's opponents say that, if it passes, it could hurt Michigan's reputation and make it appear as if the state does not wel- come diversity. Northwest reaches K K d U s y yLL/yas Kenneth Kiesier conducts the University Symphony Orchestra yesterday at Hill Auditorium. agreement with Gubernatorial candidates striking mechanics prepare for second debate MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - North- old jobs back will be classified as Debate will compete for viewers with the Detroit Tigers game LANSING (AP) - Gov. Jenni- fer Granholm has to tone it down. Republican rival Dick DeVos has to beef it up. Those are among the sugges- tions for the two gubernatorial contenders as they head into their second debate tonight. The debate, to be held at the WOOD-TV studios in Grand Rapids, will be much more struc- tured than the initial freewheeling debate last week at WKAR-TV in East Lansing. That debate drew hundreds of thousands of viewers eager to hear more from the candidates than what they've been saying in 30- second television ads. This time, the audience may be smaller. DeVos and Granholm are up against an even tougher opponent than each other: the Detroit Tigers. The baseball team this weekend won its first playoff series since 1984 and will take on the Oakland Athletics tonight in the first Amer- ican League championship series playoff game. Both the debate and the game start at 8 p.m. William Rustem of Public Sec- tor Consultants, a Lansing think tank, said DeVos and Granholm both need to improve in the sec- ond debate. "He's got to be gubernatorial, show he can explain the facts, rationally discuss the issues and lay out where he wants to take this state in the future," Rustem said. "At the same time, she has to be a little less pushy and let him go a little bit." Rustem said both candidates need to do a better job of giving voters specifics on how they'll help turn around Michigan's trou- bled economy. "It shouldn't be a debate about who's worst. It should be a debate about who's best for the future of Michigan," he added, predicting that "the one who does it best will improve dramatically in the polls." A poll conducted last Tuesday and Wednesday found Granholm slightly leading DeVos, 46 per- cent to 40 percent, with 12 percent undecided and about 2 percent going to the three third-party can- didates in the race, who weren't invited to any of the debates. The EPIC-MRA poll had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points. Bill Nowling of The Sterling Corp., a strategic communica- tions company in Lansing that has worked for Republicans, said the poll showed more people moved into the "undecided" column after tuning in to the first debate. "To me, that's a clear indica- tion that people didn't care about anything else that didn't have to do with, 'How are you going to create jobs and improve the econ- omy?"' he said. "Unless you're talking about jobs and the econ- omy, then Michigan voters aren't paying any attention." Nowling said that means DeVos has to get back to what has been the prime focus of his campaign until recent weeks: Telling voters that he can do more to create jobs than Granholm, Nowling said. west Airlines Corp. adits striking mechanics reached a tentative agree- ment yesterday that would end the 14-month-old strike, but few workers are likely to get their jobs back. Approval by union members would end a walkout that began in August 2005 but long ago ceased to have any visible impactontheairline, which hired permanentreplacements and outside contractors to replace the striking mechanics, cleaners and custodians of the Aircraft Mechan- ics Fraternal Association. Northwest, Michigan's largest passenger air carrier, said replace- ment workers would keep their jobs. Striking mechanics who want their laid-fa n ca wa---it for openings created by replacement workers who quit or retire. Those positions would be filled based on seniority, so the longest-tenured mechanics would be the ones who stand the best chance of getting a job back. Union officials said the airline no longer employs union cleaners and custodians. The agreement reached yester- day is far less favorable than earlier offers rejected by the union. But the union said it does improve on the terms Northwest imposed, including 1.5 percent raises beginning in Janu- ary, sick time paid on the first day of illness-instead-of after two days, and overtime after 8 hours a day. I,... Levin speaks out against Amway WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Carl Levin says the conditions Amway Corp. agreed to so it could sell products in China undermined work by Michigan lawmakers to tear down trade barriers there against U.S-made goods. Levin, a Detroit Democrat, told the Associated Press in a recent interview that Amway acquiesced to discrimination against U.S. products by the Chi- nese government and restrictions on selling U.S.-made goods on the Chinese market. He takes exception to comments made by Republican gubernatorial candidate Dick DeVos that, while he was Amway president from 1993-2002, he "competed in China and won." The direct-sales compa- ny invested $200 million in China to build a factory there because China would allow Amway to sell only goods that were made there. Levin said he was troubled by DeVos' address to the state Republican party convention in late August when the business- man said "there is only one can- didate in this race who has ever run a manufacturing company. There is only one candidate in this race who has competed in China and won." Said Levin: "That characteriza- tion to me is so off the mark, runs so contrary to what we have to do, what we need to do, to reduce this trade imbalance. "That's not competing and win- ning for Michigan," he said. U1 1 ForYour Best Choice in ..M ,heFinancial Services SM' checkt " Free online banking 2417 " ATMs on campus umcu.org - Three campus branches email: umcu@umcu.org " StudentVISA credit card phone:734-662-8200 -VISA Check Card To play: Complete the grid so that every row, column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9. I v THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 8 PM UM INTERNATIONAL CENTER ROOM 9 CONNECT WITH A BRIGHT FUTURE Visit us at the Career Center Graduate School Information Fair in the Michigan Union Ballroom from 2-6 p.m. October 11l UNVRST OFMCHGN Enhance your skills to meet the challenges of the Information Age. Now is the time to earn the professional degree that's right for today: the Master of Science in information from the U-M School of Information. 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