F j IMRAN SYED ON THE MYTH OF ARTS, LIBERALISM PAGE 5A OPINION, PAGE 4A lie 1Ndian BiI~ 12 _ . EDIT : Ann Arbor, Michigan www.michigandaily.com Monday, December 4, 2006 THREE AND OUT Gators get title shot, Blue gets roses By SCOTT BELL against No. 1 Ohio State. Daily Sports Editor The Gators rode the momentum from their 38-28 win against No. Michigan got all the help it was 8 Arkansas in Saturday's South- supposed to need, but somehow, it eastern Conference Championship still wasn't enough. Game to slip past idle Michigan in Despite Southern Cal's 13-9 loss the BCS standings. to UCLA on Saturday, the foot- The Wolverines will play South- ball team's national championship ern Cal on Jan. 1in the Rose Bowl hopes officially came to an end yes- in Pasadena, Calif. terday. "We are delighted to accept a bid Florida, ranked No. 4 in last to the Rose Bowl," Michigan coach week's Bowl Championship Series Lloyd Carr said. "I want to encour- rankings, jumped past both Michi- age every Michigan fan across the gan and Southern Cal into the BCS country to come to Pasadena and National Championship Game support the team." 4 A The two teams met in the Rose Bowl three years ago, with the Tro- jans emerging victorious, 28-14. Michigan led Florida, the SEC champions, by .0319 points in the standings going into last week. Seven days later, without setting foot on a football field, the Wol- verines saw their .0319-point lead turned into a.0101 deficit. For information on how to buy student tickets, visit mgoblue.com. "I don't think there's any ques- tion there are some flaws in the system," Carr said. "The system as I understand it was designed to put the two best teams in the national championship game." Many fans, too, were left puz- zled by the abrupt turnaround in the poll numbers. The BCS system, which was implemented in 1998 to take the human element out of determining the top teams in college football, ironically ended up depending on the human polls. Florida and Michigan received an identical .940 computer rank- ing, which accounts for one-third of the total BCS average. The other two-thirds, composed of the Harris and ESPN/USA Today coaches poll, put Florida ahead of Michigan (.9451 to .9317 and .9484 to .9316, respectively). "I don't think (Florida) would have moved ahead ofus had (South- ern Cal) won the game," Carr said. See ROSE BOWL, page 3A HOW THE BCS RANKINGS ARE CALCULATED * Two polls are taken into account. ESPN/USA Today polls coaches, and Harris Interactive polls coach- es, administrators, former players and current and former media pro- fessionals. 0 These are combined with the average of sin computer rankings. *The computer rankings, the Har- ris poll and the coaches poll each contribute one-third to a team's overall BCS score. The three are averaged to compute a team's BCS ranking. Mideast 'talk leads to scuffle RACE AT THE UNIVERSITY Protesters allege police brutality By KELLY FRASER Daily StaffReporter Campus police arrested three Ann Arbor residents accused of disturbing a lec- ture on Iran at the Michigan League on Thursday night. The protesters have accused campus police of using excessive force in removing them, while event organizers say the protesters were violating free expres- sion by preventing a lecturer from speaking. The lecture was spon- sored by the student organi- zation American Movement for Israel. Raymond Tan- ter, a professor emeritus of political science who now teaches at Georgetown Uni- versity, said he was inter- rupted repeatedly during his lecture. The protesters were chanting things like "Hands off Iran" and "Tanter is a pig," Tanter said. Tanter said he was not advocating that the United States use military force against Iran, but did say that it may be one option. The protesters were not affiliated with a campus organization. A 47-year-old woman was arrested for disturbing a public meeting and resist- ing and obstructing an offi- cer, campus police said. Two men were arrested on charg- es of resisting and obstruct- ing an officer and interfering with an arrest. Witnesses identified the men as Blaine Coleman and Henry Herksovitz, two pro- Palestinian activists who often protest on and around campus. When asked to com- ment on his arrest, Coleman responded by asking The Michigan Daily to advocate for divestment from Israel and decried what he consid- ered "campus Zionists using their police to brutalize us on campus." Herksovitz did not respond to attempts to con- tact him yesterday. Tanter said that although he mentioned Israel, his lec- ture focused on diplomacy problems in Iran. Department of Pub- lic Safety spokeswoman Diane Brown said Michigan League staff made the first call to DPS because protest- ers were blocking the build- ing's entrances well before the event was scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. Organizers had not expected a protest and did not request police presence prior to the lecture, said American Movement for Israel Chair Josh Berman. With about 150 people in attendance inside the Vandenberg Room, Berman said the protesters began to heckle him before he intro- duced Tanter. See MIDEAST TALK, page 3A PETER ScHOTTENFELS/Daily LSA freshman Keith Binion (left) and LSA sophomore Seth Wittman (right), members of Pi Lambda Phi, in their house on Wilmont Court on Saturday. The fraternity was founded in 1985 at Yale University with commitments to diversity and open-mindedness among its primary goals. Greek execs us for racia unity Frats, sororities seek to bury legacy of segregation By ALEX DZIADOSZ Daily StaffReporter When Randal Seriguchi, the National Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil's vice president, talks about the Greek system's capacity to cultivate campus diversity, he is more blunt than most execu- tives. "It's kind of inherently knownby students that Greeks have a great deal of influence within the student body," he said. "But I don't think a lot of Greeks exercise that influence - correctly, anyway." Seriguchiseems determined to change this. A movement toward inte- gration that encompasses all four Greek councils is grow- Part two in a two-part series on race in the Greek sys- tem. For the first installment, visit michigandaily.com. ing - from the culture-specific movement is occurring on two chapters ofthe relatively young fronts: across the Greek sys- Multicultural Greek Council tem's four councils and within to the centuries-old majority- its individual chapters. white houses of the massive Interfraternity Council. ACROSS COUNCILS Jared Averbuch, president Ask Greek executives to of the IFC, said the integration identify the key to an integrat- ed system and most will tell you it is interaction between the different councils. Press for specifics and the conver- sation will inevitably wind toward Greek Week, the mid- March burst of activity that transforms campus into a play- ground of volleyball tourna- ments, Diag dunk tanks and dance contests. Traditionally, Greek Week has been the domain of the See GREEKS, page 7A As car crashes into his bedroom, student saved by skin of his teeth LSA senior was brushing teeth when Buick struck By KIMBERLY CHOU Daily StaffReporter For the most part, LSA senior Keshav Srinivasan's William Street studio apart- ment looks like a typical col- lege home. Clothes are scattered on the couch and the unmade bed. Dirty dishes idle on the kitchen counter. Except now there's agaping hole in the wall where a Buick Legacy smashed through the window Saturday night.- After being rear-ended by a stocky, gray Pontiac Grand Prix, the station wagon crashed into Srinivasan's apartment at about 1:10 a.m. The vehicle's crumpled front end broke through the rect- angular window on the apart- ment's east wall, right above Srinivasan's bed and comput- er desk. At the time, Srinivasan was in the bathroom. "I went to brush my teeth To see more photos of the crash, visit michi- gandaily.com. before bed - and that's when it hit," Srinivasan said. "I thought it was the sound of a bottle breaking." The Legacy's impact sent brick and earth tumbling onto his bed and desk. Dust piled with broken glass in miniature hills, mingling with parts of an evergreen shrub planted outside the ground-floor window. A few broken bricks on Srinivasan's pillow and half a cinder block on the sheets made for mor- bid decoration. "If I was sitting by the computer desk or on the bed, I might have been (badly) hurt," Srinivasan said. He suffered minor cuts on the inside of his right knee and shin, a result of what he believes were glass shards propelled into the bathroom. The force of the impact scat- tered debris around the sink and toilet in the apartment's bathroom, about a dozen paces from the site of the crash. See CRASH, page 7A A Buick Legacy pokes through the window of LSA senior Keshav Srinivasan's William Street apartment after it crashed into the building on Saturday night. HI: 29 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail LO: 18 news@michgandaily.com and let us know. COMING TUESDAY Andrew Sargus Klein on the morality of muse- ums' multinational collections.ARTS hi INDEX Vol.CXVll,No. 61 NEWS. 92006 The Michigan Daily SU DO KU....... michigondoily.com OPINION...... ............. 2A ARTS ................................5A ...............3A CLASSIFIEDS ...................... 6A .............4A SPORTSMONDAY................1B