HAS DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR JUMPED THE SHARK? OPINION, PAGE 4A TURKEY AIDWOMENS HOOPS CHIPS AWAY AT CENTRAL FOR WIN THANKSGMVNG FOR THE NEEDY AT COTTAGE INN THE STATEMENT SPORTS, PAGE 9A I e Jidigan Bai3aIj Coleman e ripped on 0 defiance of Prop 2 'U' president subverts voters' will, critics say By ANDREW GROSSMAN Daily Staff Reporter After Democratic Party opera- tive Dick Tuck lost his bid for the California state Senate in 1964, he had a few choice words for his dis- trict's voters. "The people have spoken - the baatarda," he said. According to one of many con- servative commentators from across the country, that's exactly how University President Mary Sue Coleman is reacting to the passage of Proposal 2, which banned the use of affirmative action by public institutions in Michigan. The day after the Nov. 7 elec- tion, Coleman addressed a crowd of thousands gathered on the Diag. She reiterated the University's commitment to diversity. She said the 1996 passage of a similar law - Proposition 209 - in California was a disaster that stripped public colleges of their diversity. "It has been a horribly failed experiment that has dramatically weakened the diversity of that state's most selective universities," she said. "It is an experiment that we cannot, and will not, allow to take seed here at Michigan." Coleman also said the University would explore a legal challenge to the amendment. It was that sort of rhetoric that led Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman to write that Cole- man "exudes contempt" for Michi- gan voters. A editorial in Sunday's New York Post accused Coleman of teaching students to "never let the law pre- vail over your own vanity." Right-leaning blogs have also added to the criticism. Apart from promising to fight the implementation of Proposal 2 in the courts, Coleman's speech on the Diag centered on getting around the affirmative action ban. "We will find ways to overcome the handcuffs that Proposal 2 attempts to place on our reach for greater diversity," she said. Robert Berdahl, who was chan- cellor of the University of Califor- nia at Berkeley in the wake of the affirmative action ban there, said admissions officers did all they could without breaking the law. "I think that we walked very close to the line," he said. "We did not cross the line in violation of the law. We pushed very, very hard ? against the line." Their efforts were mostly futile. See COLEMAN, page 7A Wednesday, November 29, 2006 WHY IS THIS PRI ME SPACE LEFT EMPTY? Five years after Michigamua moved out, no one has moved into the Union tower By Kelly Fraser I Daily Staff Reporter ore than 60 steps lead from a side door on the fourth floor of the Michigan Union to the roof of the Union's tower. Along the way, three small rooms sit empty save for a few paint chips and bottles of aban- doned cleaning sup- plies. The spectacu- lar view of campus from the tower and its central location should make the space prized prop- erty. But this piece , of prime real estate has two key afflictions. One is its lack of an eleva- tor. The other is its stigma. It's been nearly six years since the senior society Mich- igamua - which has since dropped its name - and its two affiliate organizations vacated their spaces in the tower. In 2000, the Students of Color Coalition raided Mich- igamua's space on the seventh floor and claimed to have found Native American relics that the group was allegedly appropriating in its rituals. The group occupied the tower for 37 days. Soon afterward, the societ- ies Michigamua, Phoenix and the engineering honor society Vulcan agreed to leave the tower. Andrew Yahkind, a member ofthesocietywhooftenspeaks to the media on the group's behalf, refused to comment on matters related to the tower. Today, paint peels from the blank white walls of Micha- gamua's former seventh-floor suite, which was decorated with wood beams to resemble a wigwam. Near the room's entryway, a wooden ladder leads to a shallow crawl space where the coalition said it found Native American relics. Today, the crawl space holds only dust See TOWER, page 7A PHOTOS BY ANGELA CESERE/Daily LEFT: Michigan Union employee Jeff towe 00 the seventh floor of the Michigan Union tower, the former headquarters of Michigamua. The ladder leads up toa crawlspace where Native American relics were allegedly found in 2000. RIGHT: Rowe on the Union's sixth floor, which housed the Phoenix honor society. ' , Colleges partner to help economy MAKING BLUE GO 'U' adopts a new way to stop suicide No new staff or capital invested in Research Corridor project By WALTER NOWINSKI Daily StaffReporter Michigan's three leading research universities are start- ing a partnership that they say will help revive the state's ailing economy. Backers of the University Research Corridor say it will help coordinate research and develop- ment efforts between the Univer- sity of Michigan, Michigan State University and Wayne State Uni- versity and help create new indus- tries in Michigan. The three schools conduct 95 percent of the state's academic research. University President Mary Sue Coleman is painting the partner- ship as a vital component of Mich- igan's economic revival. "We have an absolute respon- sibility to the state to help trans- form an economy that is flagging," Coleman said in a written state- ment. The partnership echoes the schools' successful lobbying effort in the late 1990s, when they convinced the state Legislature to earmark a portion of tobacco See CORRIDOR, page 7A Program enlists faculty, staff By EMILY ANGELL Daily StaffReporter Counseling and Psychological Services has adopted a new pro- gram that aims to prevent suicide by training people to recognize signs in those who are close to them. "We know that folks want to help in these situations," CAPS Director Todd Sevig said. "What this program does is give the tools." The Universityhasjoined about 60 colleges that use the popu- lar Question Persuade and Refer program. The initiative teaches students and faculty members to recognize earlyverbal and behav- ioral signs of depression and to use a system of questioning the person, persuading him to get help and referring him to trained professionals. In the past few years, the meth- od has gained popularity on col- lege campuses because it spreads a wider net of intervention. More faculty members will be trained under the new program with the hope that their closer contact with students will lead to earlier interventions. Since the program began on Nov. 13, CAPS has received more than 50 requests for training from various Universityunits and departments, said Christine Asid- See NEW METHOD, page 7A EMMA NOLAN-ABRAHAMIAN/Daily University employee Vic Hamilton empties the trash in the Fishbowl. Hamilton, who has worked for the University for two years, is one of the unsung staff mem- bers who keep campus going. FOR MORE, SEE THE STATEMENT. TODAY'S HI: 65 WEATHER LO 47 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michgandaily.com and let us know. COMING THURSDAY Winter rules: How to deal with tricky bras and stubborn sweaters while making out. B-SIDE INDEX oCXVl No. 58 NEWS ...... Q2006 The Michigan Daily SU 0O K U.. michigandoily.com OP IN I ON.. ..2A ARTS .................... ..3A SPORTS ................ ..4A THE STATEMENT.. SA 9A ....1B ', A