SIGNING THEIR LIVES AWAY WHAT MARY SUE COLEMAN'S AUTOGRAPH SAYS ABOUT HER THE STATEMENT JOHN STIGLICH: ALLOW WHITE REPS IN CLAP YOUR HANDS. SAY YEAH. THE BLACK CAUCUS REALLY, OPINION, PAGE 4A ARTS, PAGE 5A () NI ~N)IflIf IDISIXTEN Y'Il\ls()Il ll' I I \,L tOs Ann Arbor, Michigan www.michigandaily.com Wednesday, January 31, 2007 r ; p - : ., Third in an occasional series about the University's connection to the Iraq war Profs go from edge to center The three men billed as ex-terrorists - Walid Shoebat, Zachariah Annani and Kamal Saleem - speak in Rackham Auditorium last night. A fur over 'ex-terrorists' They were on the fringe, but now much of America agrees with them By CHRIS HERRING Daily Staff Writer Outspoken University History Prof. Juan Cole does not often find himself at a loss for words. But Cole was struck speechless for more than 15 seconds when asked what he thought of President Bush's plan to send more than 20,000 additional troops into Iraq. Even if it took a little lon- ger than usual, Cole man- aged to find his voice. "Bush is on death row with regards to his Iraq policy," Cole said. "It's doomed. It's over with, and he's sending 21,500 troops there to post- pone the inevitable." Cole's thoughts on Bush's plan are notsurprising. After all, Cole, a renowned Middle East commentator, has been a vocal critic of the war since preparations for it began more than three years ago. When Cole first spoke out against the war, a solid majority of Americans sup- ported it. But today, after more than three years of eroding public opinion about the war, Cole finds himself in somewhat unfamiliar waters - the mainstream. And while Cole's opinions may be rooted in different ideas than those of the average Ameri- can, his perspective puts him in the majority. "Bush is on death row with regards to his Iraq policy" - University history Prof. Juan Cole A Pew Research Center poll released earlier this month showed that less than one-third of respondents view Bush's plan to send more troops to Iraq favor- ably. Meanwhile, 61 percent of those surveyed said they opposed the proposal. Three University profes- sors who focus their work on the issues surrounding the war are no different from the majority of Americans, each arguing that the war is in shambles. THE 'SURGE' of those opposed to send- ing additional troops in the Pew Center's poll, 43 percent See PROFS, page 7A Protesters say World's Greatest Threat." Billed as a lecture by three event promotes ex-terrorists, the event drew opposition from several stu- intolerance dent groups and the Michigan office of the American-Arab By LISA HAIDOSTIAN and Anti-Discrimination Com- DANIEL TRUMP mittee. Daily StaffReporters A large crowd gathered outside of the Rackham Build- More than 300 people - ing an hour before the event's including both students and scheduled 7 p.m. start. Flash- non-students - protested an es of yellow shirts worn by the event last night organized by protesters showed through the University's chapter of the the winter coats of many in Young Americans for Free- the crowd. dom called "Terrorism: The A half hour before the event, YAF Chair Andrew Boyd shouted "We're ready!" and the doors to the audito- rium opened. The aisles filled immediately with people in yellow shirts, who had gath- ered early for the event. I As the protesters rushed to fill seats, already-seated YAF members stuck their feet out into the aisles. After the initial surge, seats continued to fill steadily. Bythe timethe eventbegan, protesters make up about a quarter of the audience. See YAF, page 3A LSAjunior Hanan Dakhlallah protests the speakers. WMGAMA ACLS POST-PROPOSAL 2 A DIGITAL PLAN UAAO boots groups for society ties FOR DIVERSITY t W sity for on c; of P ence Uni' foun In affir bres Cou bega calle bert univ grou rely pref G ware peop terd T cant shar tion wou simi gran a fe Auburn prof: lower similarity ratings. Students with high simi- System would larity rankings are grouped together. In this way, the pro- be legal, help gram divides the applicant pool into several groups of admissions students who, as evaluated by the program, resemble each By JAKE HOLMES other. Daily StaffReporter The system only gives rec- ommendations and doesn't rhile lawyers and Univer- make admission decisions. administrators scramble Staff is still responsible for ways to preserve diversity choosing applicants from ampus after the passage within each group. roposal 2, a computer sci- By picking applicants from professor from Auburn different groups, admissions versity thinks he may have officers can admit a diverse ad the solution. group of students. n 2003, Juan Gilbert saw This system is fairer than 'mative action debates human-based holistic evalu- wing in the U.S. Supreme ations, Gilbert said, because rt and in California. He people have inherent biases an work on software now that his software does not. edApplications Quest. Gil- "It is impossible to be a said his program allows human being and fairly evalu- 'ersities to admit diverse ate something holistically," he aps of students without said. ing on racial quotas or The software has a specific erences. set of rules for determining ilbert presented this soft- similarities and differences, e to a group of about 20 so it produces consistent, ple on North Campus yes- reproducible results that are ay. made independently of the he software divides appli- admissions committee. :s into groups based on This would allow the Uni- 'ed attributes. Applica- versity to consider diversity sthatareentirelyidentical when admitting students. id be given a "100 percent Because admissions staffers lar" rating by the pro- wouldn't need to consider race m; those that only shared or ethnicity in admissions w traits would get much See DIGITAL, page 7A Umbrella group kicks out Indian, South Asian orgs By AMANDA MARKOWITZ Daily StaffReporter The Indian American Stu- dents Association and the South Asian Awareness Net- work were quietly kicked out of an organization they both belonged to earlier this month because their leaders were members of the contro- versial senior society former- ly known as Michigamua. United Asian American Organizations, a network of 35 Asian/Pacific Islander student groups, passed an amendment last semester identifying the two groups as members not in good stand- ing. SAAN co-chair Ashish Shah and former IASA presi- dentGopalPaiare members of the elite honor society. UA AO objected to their membership in the society because of the society's past of appropriat- ing Native American customs and rituals. The only way the groups could regain membership was if the senior honor soci- ety institute a list of reforms or the leaders left the society. UAAO demanded that the society submit a formal name change, hold open meetings, publish a list of its members, stop the "tapping" process for new members and publicly apologize for its past. UAAO chairsnotified IASA and SAAN of their removal in an e-mail on Jan. 4, the deadline stated in the amend- ment. IASA members declined to comment and SAAN mem- bers did not return repeated phone calls from The Michi- gan Daily.. The honor society was not informed of SAAN and IASA's removal from UAAO, LSA senior Andrew Yahkind, a member of the society who often serves as its unofficial spokesman, said in an e-mail interview. "We must express our disappointment in learning that UAAO has chosen a path of divisive exclusion rather than inclusion," he said. "We believe that the UAAO's deci- sion to issue 'demands' and 'deadlines,' while holding See UAAO, page 3A JUST FOR KICKS STUDENT WRITING New Hopwood winners honored By ABIGAIL B. COLODNER Daily Arts writer Some of the most famous writers associated with the University - playwright Arthur Miller among them - were aided in their rocky young careers by the Hop- wood writing awards. In a ceremony yesterday awards were presented to a new class of writers, this year's winners of the Hop- wood Underclassmen Con- test for fiction, nonfiction and poetry. Eligibility for the Under- classmen Contest isn't required to join the ranks of professional writers, though. Linda Pastan, who read at yesterday's ceremony in Rackham Amphitheatre, said she hadn't taken any writing classes in college. Pastan read from several volumes of her poetry, includ- ing her newest, "Queen of a Rainy Country." She was a finalist for the National Book Award in 1998 and served as the poet laureate of Maryland See HOPWOOD, page 3A A group of advanced karate students spar at Keith Hafner's Karate Studio on Main Street yesterday. Terry Brennan, a veteran instructor at the studio, encourages his students to "bring (their) partner's energy down to zero." TODAY'S HI: 24 WEATHER LU: 12 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michgandaily.com and let us know. COMING THURSDAY Get nostalgic. Daily Arts revisits your childhood. B-SIDE INDEX NEWS ............ Vl, cynrI, No. 87 OPN N (2007 The Michigan Daily OPINION. michigandailyvcom A RTS............. ....2A CLASSIFIED...................6A ...4A SPORTS.. . ..A.........8A 5A TH ESTATEMENT.............1...1IB i B