STI I I N THE HUNT APPLES IN STEREO ~II L II Ill~ flINVENTIVE INDIE ROCKERS BREAK NEW GROUND IN MEN'S HOOPS DEFEATS MINNESOTA, LATEST EFFORT KEEPS BIG DANCE HOPES ALIVE SPORTSMONDAY ARTS, PAGE 5A Ann Arbor, Michigan www.nichigandaily.com~ Monday, February 12, 20C HARRIETT WOODS - 1927-2007 First woman to edit Daily dies Woods went on to become first female Lt. Gov. of Missouri By EMILY BARTON Daily StaffReporter Harriett Woods, The Michigan Daily's first female top editor and the first female former lieuten- ant gov- ertor of Missouri, died of leukemia Thursday. She was 79. Woods WOODS served as the Daily's editor in 1949 - when the Michigan Union was still off-limits to women and the Daily had a separate "women's editor." "She had an extraordinary experience (at the Daily)," said her son Andrew Woods. "It changed her life." Andrew Woods said her time at the University and at the Daily taught her how to use her personality to estab- lish friendships and partner- ships. Woods - whose maiden name was Friedman - grad- uated from the University with a bachelor's degree in philosophy. Many of the editors and writers who worked for her at the Daily were men, her son said. Harriett Woods told the Muleskinner, the stu- dent newspaper of Central Missouri State University, in October that her experi- ence at the Daily was forma- tive because while there she supervised male reporters and editors. "I thought I was on top of the world; I was managing men," Woods said. "But when I went out into the real world, those men got jobs, and I didn't." When Woods applied for newspaper jobs, she was only offered positions as a society writer, her son said. Eventually she found work with The St. Louis Globe- Democrat, but her challenges as a woman stayed with her and shaped her career in politics. Woods worked at the Globe-Democrat until she was married in 1953 to Jim Woods. Once married, she began working in politics by a twist of fate. While living in the St. Louis suburb of University City, Woods galvanized her neighborhood by starting a petition to close a street to traffic during construction because the noise kept her children from sleeping. Soon thereafter, she won a seat on the city council, where she focused on nurs- ing-home reform and drunk- driving legislation. Andrew Woods said his mother was passionate about social justice and tried to encourage groups like women and minorities who were underrepresented in government. Her son said that every time his mother tried to run for office, she was told that a female candidate wouldn't be able to garner support. Andrew Woods said his mother was passion- ate about social justice and See WOODS, page 7A Michael Smith (left), LSA sophomore Tom Ritz auditorium on Washtenaw Road yesterday. NEW HOME FOR NEW LIFE After long wait, Campus Christian church moves into new space on Washtenaw By EMILY ANGELL Daily StaffReporter Rock music vibrated through the crowd. Audience members, most of them college students casually dressed in jeans, swayed to the beat of a Christian band called "The Worship Team" as they held open cell phones like lighters at a Phish concert. For the first time since it was estab- lished in the mid-1980s, New Life Church has a home. The non-denomi- national Protestant congregation held its inaugural service yesterday morn- ing at its permanent auditorium on Washtenaw Avenue. The new space, which can hold about 400 people, will also serve as a theater for nearby Angell Elementary School. In exchange, New Life mem- bers will be able to use the school's parking lot. In 2002, the group bought the abandoned Delta Zeta sorority house to convert it into a meeting place. It faced resistance from neighbors who said the building would bring unwant- ed crowds and noise to the area. "It's been eight years in the mak- ing," New Life Pastor Steve Hayes said. "We were pushed around over the years." New Life started as a student group in the mid-1980s and began holding prayer meetings in University build- ings in January of 1998. Later that year, the University banned New Life from using University buildings on weekends, saying the group posed a security threat. TheUniversityequivocatedin2000 and allowed New Life to use the audi- toriums in the Modern Languages Building. New Life leaders soon real- See NEW LIFE, page 7A INTELLIGENCE SYM POSI U M Former CIA lawyer blasts Bush, Pentagon WAITING ON A PRAYER New Cife's rise at the University Alum: "failures of * integrity" preceded Iraq invasion By DANIEL TRUMP Dailyastaff reporter Although he had to sub- mit his speech to the CIA for approval, former CIA top lawyer Jeffrey Smith didn't seem to pull any punches in criticizing the Bush adminis- tration in a speech at the Law School on Friday. Smith, general counsel to the CIA for 16 months in the mid-1990s, criticized what he called "failures of integri- ty" by the Pentagon and Bush administration in the lead-up to the Iraq invasion. A 1971 graduate of the Uni- versity Law School,Smith was the keynote speaker at a two- day symposium sponsored by the Michigan Journal of International Law called "State Intelligence Gathering and International Law." He said the intelligence failures that led the Bush administration to argue that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction occurred because the government crossed the line between intelligence gathering and policymaking. "Whether that was the result of poor tradecraft on the part of analysts or politi- cal pressure from the White House is debatable," Smith said. "My ownview is that it's some of each, but at its base it's a failure of integrity." Smith said the law ensures the integrity of the intelli- gence-gatheringprocess. "Lawyers and judges have a special responsibility to make the system work," he said. "If our integrity fails, the system fails. If our system fails, our country 'fails." Smith stood tall and digni- fied at the podium. He chose his words more carefully than most - he has to have all public remarks approved by the CIA - but didn't appear to be pulling any punches as he leveled his criticism at the Bush administration. on the issue of detainees of the United States's war on terrorism, Smith had direct condemnation for the Presi- dent personally. The Bush administra- tion has held some detain- See CIA, page 7A New Lifi the Uni 1984 Ann Arbor Planning Commis- sion rejects New Life's build- e Church founded at University allows New Life ing plans by a 5 to 3 vote. The versity to use Modern Language city later relented after the Building auditoriams "] charchlthreatened a lawsait. lan. 1998 j 2002 2007 J 2000 2004 New Life starts holding services in University buildings. Later New Life purchases thetformer New that year, the administration bans group from using University Delta Zeta sorority house on church buildings on weekends, arguingthat they posea security threat WashtenawAvenue opens Harvard names its first female president TEA FOR TWO Radcliffe dean to her repeatedly, "It's a man's world, sweetie, and the soon- lead nation's er you learn that the better off you'll be." oldest university Instead, Faust left home at an early age, heading By SARA RIMER north to be educated at Con- The New York Times cord Academy, a girls' prep school in Massachusetts, Recallinghercomingof age and at Bryn Mawr College, as the only girl in a privileged, a woman's college known tradition-bound family in for creating future leaders, Virginia horse country, Drew and to rise as a leading Civil Gilpin Faust, 59, has often War scholar. And yesterday, spoken of through the convergence of her con- sweeping changes in higher tinued education, her own achieve- confronta- ments and the resignation tions with under pressure of Harvard's hermother previous president, she "about the became the first woman require- FAUST appointed to lead the Ivy ments League university since its of what she usually called founding in 1636. femininity." Her mother, "One of the things that I Catharine, she has said, told think characterizes my gen- eration - that characterizes me, anyway and others of my generation - is that I've alwaysbeensurprised by how my life turned out," Faust said in an interview yester- day at Loeb House just after the university announced that she would become its 28th president, effective July 1. "I've always done more than I ever thought I would. Becoming a professor - I never would have imagined that - writing books - I never would have imagined that - getting a Ph.D. - I'm not sure I would even have imagined that. I've lived my life a step at a time. Things sort of happened." Yesterday morning, she said, she found herself lying in bed thinking, "Today I think they're going to vote See HARVARD, page 7A COULD COLEMAN HAVE GONE TO CAMBRIDGE? Although University President Mary Sue Coleman repeatedly said she wasn't interested in the Harvard presidency, she seemed a perfectfit. Harvard insiders told The NewtYork Times last month that the univerdity was lookingfor apresident with experi- ence in academia. The experts also said Harvard was likely to choose a woman for thetfirsttime in the school's history - in paty healithe woundsocaused by previous president Lawrence Summer's controversial suggestion that women might be innately inferior infields like math and science. That's exactly the type of candidate they chose. Drew Gilpin Faust, whose selection as Harvard's next president was made otticial yesterday. is a careernacademic. It could have been Coleman, though. Coleman was an accomplished chem- ist before she made the transition to administrative work and was herself the first female president of the University of Michigan. Although Coleman's name appeared on several lists oflcandidates, with one gambling site listing her odds of becom- ing Harvard's next preidentat-to-1, she signed atfive-year extension on hen contract last summer. "I'm notgoing anywhere," she said in an interview with The Michigan Daily in the fall. GABE NELSON ALLIsON GHAMAN/Dai Alexa Zielinski (right) and Cheryl Morris (left) at a Victorian Valentine's Day Tea at the historic Kempf House on South Division Street. TODAY'S His:25 WEATHER LO: 9 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 ore-mail news@michgandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS College newspapers behaving badly MICHIGANDAILY.COM/THEPODIUM INDEX NEWS...... vol.CXVIl,No.96 SUD0KU.. (2007The Michigan Daily michivvndaily.com OP INIDON- .2A ARTS................A.....A .3A CLASSIFIE.D................6A ..4A SPORTSMONDAY.................16