i 0 0 0 w 0 I 2 Te icign .Dil -Weneday A ri 1, g00 Wednesday, April 11, 2007 - The Michigan Daily table of contents 4B THE SKELETONS IN OUR CLOSET Michigan's standard historical narrative is missing a few chapters when it comes to racial discrimination in the state 6B STUDENTS OF THE YEAR These 10 students made a name for them- selves on campus this year. THE EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK with WALTER NOWINSKI A look at the big news events this week and how important they really are. Conveniently rated from one to 10. FILE SHARING After a standoff that lasted several 5 , weeks, the House Judiciary committee issued another wave of subpoenas for ' files in the growing U.S. Attorney scan- to dal. Democrats, giddy about the inves- 0 6 tigation, will probably try to extend. it as long as possible. Maybe they'll subpoena one e-mail at a time. MYSPACE.COM The Indiana Court of Appeals ruled that a teenage girl's MySpace.com postings defaming her high school principal were constitutionally protected free speech 4 10 - grantingthe same protections to postings about teenage crushes that are granted to political theses like the Port Huron Statement. EVEN STONERS SELL OUT Scores of aging hippies gathered on the Diag last Saturday for the 36th annual Hash Bash. Inthe past, these rallies focused on big-picture issues like liberalizing drug laws, police tac- tics and ending war. But part of last week's rally promoted a new movie. Maybe next year's organizers can secure corporate sponsorship as well. COWBOY CONCESSION Since the House and Senate approved deadlinesforthelIraqwarlast monthPresi- dent Bush has repeatedly vowed to veto the warfundingbll. ButyesterdayBushseemed to back down when hevowed toveto the bill in onebreath then invited Democratsover totalkaboutacompromiseinthe next. Afew days after Christmas 2003, Wil- liam Willis received some startling news: In 24 hours his U.S. Marine Corps unit would be deploying overseas. The then-25-year-old Willis packed up his belongings and prepared to leave Camp Lejeune, N.C., where he had been stationed since 1997. A day later he found himself in the middle of a massive Ameri- can military buildup in Kuwait. Willis, who grew up in Lansing, spent the next several weeks training with the elite 1st Force Reconnissance Company under the hot Arabian sun. Then in the early morning hours of March 20, Willis and five other Marines drove two Hum- vees deep into Iraq, leading the opening salvo of the war. Willis, who joked that his six-man unit was "a jack of all trades and the master of none," spent the next several months darting around Iraq in a pair of Humvees scouting, target-spotting and providing reconnaissance support for the invading American forces. While Willis seems remarkably modest about his extensive experiecne, a fact that other Marines say they admire in him, fel- low Marine Option ROTC Cadet Nicole Childs, who trains with Willis regularly, spoke bluntly about his achievements in the Marine Corps and what his Force Reconnaissance job in Iraq entailed. "Before the main body of troops moves into an area they send a couple Rambo- type guys ahead to scout out the situa- tion," Childs said. "It is really physically demanding and you have to be stealthy as hell, but that is what he did." Willis's position in Force Reconnais- sance, which is considered one of the most elite postings in the Marine Corps, required him to attend Marine Dive School, which is similar to the training Navy Seals undergo. After returning from Iraq, Willis, who is an expert urban sniper, won a place in the Marine Enlisted Commissioning Edu- cation Program, allowing him to earn his first bachelors degree and become a com- missioned officer. Last year, while taking over 18 credits a semester towards his Arabic Armenian, Persian and Turkish studies major, and waking up before 6 a.m. most days for training, Willis managed to graduate first in his class of 239 from the Officer Candidate School. Today, the lean 29-year old gunnery sargeant, who once stayed in one of for- mer Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's pal- aces, lives in the University's Northwood Vapartmentcomplexwithhis wifeAmber and his two children, Isabelle and Ian. Willis saidhe never really wanted to go into the military as a child, but he enlisted. in the Marine Corps in 1994 after gradu- ating from Lansing Waverly High School even though he was accepted to Michigan State University. "I didn't know what I wanted to study in college," he said. "And I didn't have the money to spend a lot of time studying something that I didn't know I wanted to get a degree in." But today Willis, anticipating a return to Iraq after he graduates next December, studies his Arabic and Farsi diligently. He believes that one daythose language skills might save his life. Childs, who said she transferred from the Navy ROTC to the.Marine ROTC because of the example Willis set, said she feels fortunate to have someone with the abilities and personality of Willis in the program. "I get to train with one of the best Marines out there every single day," she said, Asked about his thoughts about the deteriorating situation in Iraq, Willis, who served two tours of duty in Kosovo and spent time guarding former President Bill Clinton at Camp David, replied bluntly. "Of course, I supportourctroops andthe conflict," Willis said. "I know that I will eventually go back." - Walter Nowinski LONG From page 1OB as a bad person because I'm not." There was nothing bad about Long's performance on the field in 2006-07. Coming off an injury-plagued season during the 2005-06 campaign, Long was still elected a captain of this year's team. He more than lived up to the pres- sure that comes with a leadership role. Following the regular season, Long was named a consensus All-American, a unanimous all-Big Ten first team selection and Big Ten Offensive Line- man of the Year. He was also a key cog in Michigan's run to the Rose Bowl. But ask Long about his favorite moment from the 11-2 season, and the answer has nothing to do with all of those individual accolades. "I will always remember when we went down to South Bend and beat Notre Dame," Long said. "At that point in the season, nobody gave us much of a chance, and we were a huge under- dog. But we came out with a win and it carried us through the rest of the season." The high of that win over the Fight- ing Irish only made the close to the sea- son, in which a previously undefeated Wolverine squad lost to Ohio State and then USC in the Rose Bowl, that much harder to swallow. But Long is past that and is now look- ing ahead to his final year of being a stu- dent and donning the winged helmet. "Myself and the team came a long way this year and proved a lot of people wrong," Long said. "I'm satisfied, yet disappointed. It's just left me wanting more." - Mark Giannotto KIRK KERKORIAN Only 30 people in the world have more money than Kirk Kerkorian, but none of them can put the Big Three on edge like he can. Kerkorian appeared to be retiring from his years of meddling in Detroit when he sold off the bulk of his stake in General Motors late last year. But last week, his private investment company made a $4.5 billion offer to buy Chrysler. Ker- korian claims he's looking for a "true partnership" with Chrysler, but don't believe it. His idea of a partnership is cutting employees, pen- sions and benefits, and passing on the handsome profit to himself. Is it any surprise Chrysler doesn't seem too interested? rule 34: It doesn't matter if you're at Zingerman's - don't pay $15 for mac and cheese. rule 35: Don't bid a sentimen- tal summer goodbye to people you never talked to just because they lived in your hall. rule 36: Never spend your birthday at a restaurant where the wait staff will sing to you upon request. - E-mail rule submissions to TheStatement@umich.edu Like many University fresh- men, Troy native Jennifer Hsu flipped through her copy of the maize and blue Welcome Week booklet when she first arrived on campus in the fall of 2004. The annual Gayz Craze on Palmer Field immediately caught her attention. Now an LSA junior, member of The Order of Angell's class of 2008 and chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Commission, Hsu recalls the impact that event had on the rest of her time here. "I had never experienced any- thing like it before," she said. "It motivated me to become active in the community." The next year, Hsu ran for a rep- resentative seat in MSA with a new left-wing party, and though she lost, she returned to her post as the LGBT Commission chair and went on to become one of the assembly's most effective members. "She was behind so many proj- ects this year and really dedicat- ed a lot of her free time to MSA," said Justin Paul, former MSA vice president. "She wasby far the most active chair of any commission." Hsu said she focused primarily on improving the structure of the commission. "The meetings have become very family-like, very interactive," 1 " i i i '" i - ' I she said. "We threw a lot of social events this year to get people more involved, because the more educat- ed they are about us, the more will- ing they are to fight for our cause." Jill Berberich, a member of the LGBT commission who has known Hsu since high school, says Hsu is so effective because she is great with people. "She organizes rallies, protests, people," Berberich said. "She is very informed and realizes that these issues affect everyone, not just this one commission." Ashley Schwedt, vice chair of the LGBT commission and a close friend of Hsu's, said her dynamic leadership style has rallied more people than ever to the commis- sion and to the cause. "We have the largest commis- sion on MSA, and that's mostly because of her," she said. Known as a "doer" among friends, Hsu is also a member of the Stonewall Democrats, the LGBT caucus of the College Dem- ocrats and the Student Affairs Advisory Board run by E. Royster Harper, the vice president for stu- dent affairs. "I thrive on problems that need to be fixed and issues that need to be addressed," she said. As to life after Ann Arbor, Hsu says she hopes to work for a non- profit organization. "I never thought I'd be an activ- ist, but now I can't imagine my life without it," she said. -Emily Angell LOOKING FOR THE BEST? Look no more... 2 BEDROOMS STARTING at only $330.00 *PER PERSON WITH 4 ON THE LEASE ~STUDIOS $899.00~ We're offering FREE rent on All Apartment Rentals 'specials end at any time 734-761-2680 WWW.UNIVERSITYTOWERS-MI.COM d&AftAft "[XTAXTAXT nrnrnrrnrn,.rti In r ntin r r [ I I UUalIl ta1 lilk'FI irUi 11 jji I I r" 16 T T T s %,A AY A ,-A AY A,7 V A. t. .. A.,. " ... V A-JIL ;A CI I-k -k JL JL -1 -IJL I I JL JL 'A I #