HOW THE MARCHING BAND DOES MICHAEL JACKSON NEWS, 2A S ITO COMMUNISM TO COLLEGE: N vZOLTAN'S AMAZING ODYSSEY WHY YOU'LL WANT TO GET A WII B-SIDE SPORTS,5A ~IZ e 1I id1igan Da Ijj nn Arbor, Micbigar www.michigandaily.com Thursday, November 16, 2006 An artist's conception of what Michigan Stadium could look like with skybox Board of Regents will vote on the proposed renovations at its meeting Friday. Lame-duck regent to vote on Big House skyboxplan AARON HANDELSMAN/Daily AfifSafieh,who has represented the Palestinian government in the United States since October of last year, speaks with Engineering Prof. Karem Sakallah and George Khoury, a member of a Palestinian Christian group, before giving a speech titled "On Palestinian Diplomacy." Palestinian envoy visits ca-mpus 'Dee sI Ambassador urges U.S. to mediate Mideast conflict By ALESE BAGDOL Daily StaffReporter American foreign policy in the Middle East is at a crossroads, the Palestinian ambassador to the United States said yesterday in a speech in the Modern Language Building. He said the U.S. government can either alienate Arabs by constantly siding with Israel or change course and work with both sides to achieve peace. Afif Safieh, who has represent- ed the Palestinian government in the United States since October of last year, said there is a need for a third party to mediate the peace process between the Israelis and the Palestinians. The United States could be that mediator by withholding support from the Israeli government until Israel changes its policy toward Palestine, Safieh said. The United States does not give the Palestinian diplomatic mis- sion or Safieh official diplomatic status. "We have become unreasonably reasonable," he said. "We have reached the end of our willingness to make concessions." The American Culture depart- ment held the event in hopes of changing the preconceptions of Arabs and Arab-Americans, said Prof Nadine Naber, who arranged the event. She said anti-Arab racism tends to intensify during times of war in the Middle East. "It's important to support the participation of Arab and Arab- American voices in discussions about peaceful solutions and pos- sibilities for change in the Middle East," Naber said. Safieh lamented what he calls the intolerant way many Western- ers view Arabs. "In today's world, the only pho- bia is Islam-phobia," Safieh said. "But there is no different kind of man or woman. We all belong to the same mankind." Safieh said it's not American ideals that he disagrees with, but American policy. "My hope is that America rec- onciles its power with its princi- ples," Safieh said. Safieh said the Palestinians find inspiration in the legacy of Ameri- can reformers like Martin Luther King Jr. and Abraham Lincoln. He stressed the need for the United States to be even-handed See AMBASSADOR, page 7A No Board outspo versial to 14s Brand( Brat Michii ties to was a I voted and n seats t Alth from the bo 'ply disappointing,' Julia Darlowinlastweek's election, he will have one more chance to ays fellow board vote onthe planbefore he leaves his post on Jan. 1. member The lame-duck board is sched- uledtovoteontheschematic designs By GABE NELSON for the proposed renovations to Daily StaffReporter Michigan Stadium at its meeting on Friday. member of the University Critics say the board should post- of Regents has been a more pone voting on the plan until after 'ken advocate of the contro- Darlow replaces Brandon. plan to add luxury boxes Regent Larry Deitch, who voted chigan Stadium than David against the plan in May, criticized on. the administration for bringing ndon, a former captain of the the proposal before the lame-duck gan football team with close board. the Athletic Department, "I am deeply disappointed by key member of the board that their decision," he said in an e-mail 5 to 3 to add 83 luxury suites interview. "I believe it is wrong." early 4,000 premium club University President Mary Sue o Michigan Stadium. Coleman decided to ask the regents hough Brandon, a Republican to approve schematic designs at Fri- Ann Arbor, lost his seat on day's meeting after consulting chair ard to Democratic candidate See REGENTS, page 7A A NEW CROP OF STUDENT LEADERS POLLS OPENED AT MIDNIGHT LAST NIGHT. TOMORROW NIGHT, THEY'LL CLOSE. IN BETWEEN, IT'S UP TO YOU TO VOTE Arrington's troubles deepen MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT Trial moves closer for sophomore wide receiver ByKEVIN WRIGHT Daily Sports Editor YPSILANTI -Athissecondpretrialhearing yesterday, Michigan wideout Adrian Arrington received more bad news: A trial on charges of domestic violence seems to be more likely. Judge Kirk W. Tabbey, presiding over Washt- enaw County 14 A-2 District Court, set Nov. 30 as the date for a settlement conference. The judge also scheduled jury selection for Dec. 4 if the trial proceeds. Arrington,whose charges stemfromanargu- ment with his girlfriend on Oct. 13 in which he allegedly assaulted her, arrived at the court- house at 8:33 a.m. for the 8:30 hearing, about 30 minutes earlier thanathis initialhearingNov. 1 When Arrington's case was called, his defense attorney Chris Easthope immediately asked for a conference at the bench. The conversation between Easthope, Tabbey and the prosecutor lasted several minutes and appeared to be lighthearted. The judge enjoyed See ARRINGTON, page 7A Unlike last time, Starting nine scant scandal in MSA election Four parties vie HOW TO VOTE Visit vote.www.umich.edu any for 23 rep seats before Friday night at midnight on assembly hle helped. By LAYLA ASLANI "I stressed at the b Daily StaffReporter ningthatanyviolationw have big repercussions Despite some chalking, only to the individual, b flyering and the usual poli- the whole party as wel ticking, thisyear's Michigan said. "I don't think as Student Assembly campaign wants to see a repeat of has been uneventful. happened." At least when compared Bouchard was refe wi ' I l d to 010 PI.-Ptct M- are all going to make the team ROUGHING IT time it egin- would s, not but to 41," he nyone what erring 4nrh witn ast spring's no-noias- barred battle for the student government throne. Voting kicked off at mid- night this morning and will continue until midnight Fri- day. Students can vote for candidates running from their school or college at vote.www.umich.edu. 0 MSA election director Ryan Bouchard called the election "very clean" and credits the candidates' good behavior to his communica- tion with party organizers. Perhaps the strict warn- ing he issued several weeks ago to candidates also to tme eiecr on tasr iarcn, during which candidates flooded voters' inboxes with campaign e-mails and par- ties accused each other of tearing down flyers, eras- ing chalking and trying to shut down party websitesby overloading them with hits. Inresponse, MSA formed the Election Reform Select Committee to revise the 15 pages of election rules. The revisions are not in place for this semester's election, but pending approval from MSA, they will most likely be set for the more hotly See MSA, page 3A As many spots as candidates in LSA-SG By JAKE HOLMES Daily StaffReporter Just as students are recovering from the onslaught of campaigning leading up to last week's national election, they've got another brand of cam- pus politicos to deal with. The LSA Student Gov- ernment will hold its elec- tions today and tomorrow online. Any LSA student is eli- gible to vote. But voters won't have many choices. Nine candi- dates are running for nine seats, all from the Michi- gan Action Party. Their platforms are var- ied, but all include work on GSI consistency. Candi- dates said they hope to hold workshops to ensure GSIs across different class sec- tions grade students fairly LSA-SG CANDIDATES Freshmen: Shelley Rosenberg, Nick Glauch, Tonia Berry and Venu Raghavan Sophomores: Tyrone Schiff, det Blouin, Janet Soave and DanaIsen- stein Junior: Sanaa Rawji and consistently. LSA sophomore Janet Soave is running for a representative seat. She said one of her goals is to increase what she called "LSA pride." She said that means reminding LSA students just how outstanding the college is. "The majors and minors that we have in LSA are world-renowned," she said. other candidates said they want to improve the visibility of student gov- ernment. LSA sophomore Alex Blouin said he hopes to make sure students know who their representatives are and what they are doing See LSA-SG, page 7A LSA junior Sheldon Johnson, a member of Phi Beta Sigma, manned the grill for students who showed up to support the annual Sleep-Out for the homeless on the Diag last night. TODAY'S HI: 44 WEATHER LO 35 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michgandaily.com and let us know. COMING FRIDAY: If you still don't have a place to watch Saturday's game, check out our guide. NEWS INDEX NNEWS........ Vdol. COOII,SNo. 50 ES ©2006The Michigan Daily S U D 0K U.... michigondoilycom OPINION.... ....2A CLASSIFIEDS. ....3A SPORTS........... ....4A B-SIDE............ .6A IA .1B