The scandalous stories behind the namesakes of campus buildings. The Statement. e Jidigan BuIly Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, September12, 2007 michigandaily.com SRace to stay on this year s apps Administrators say officers will ignore factors banned by Prop 2 By KIRSTY MCNAMARA Daily StaffReporter University officials have decided to continue mak- ing race, gender and national origin information vis- ible to admissions officers. In November, voters approved Proposal 2, a ballot initiative that banned the use of affirmative action by public institutions in Michigan, but University didn't delete that information from applications. Some criti- cized the University, arguing that admissions officers would either consciously or unconsciously take that information into account when judging an applicant. The University is required by federal law to ask for race, gender and national origin information on appli- cations. Admissions officials said in March that they hadn't decided whether to restrict that data. But they decided over the summer to keep the information available for this admissions cycle with the understanding that it would not play a role in decisions, said Erica Sanders, the interim director of recruitment and operations for undergraduate admissions. Sanders said she didn't think letting admissions officers see the data would pose a problem. "We simply have stated that race and gender can- not be considered in the process," she said. See APPLICATION, Page 7A REMEMBERING SEPT. 11, 2001 Sales of controversial book resume Anti-Zionist text called 'propaganda' By ANDREW GROSSMAN and JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN Daily StaffReporters The University of Michigan Press will resume distributing a controversial book critical of Zionism, the press's executive board decided yesterday. The book, called "Overcom- ing Zionism," argues that Zion- ism and democracy don't work together and that Israelis and Palestinians should form a single, secular state that isn't explicitly Jewish or Palestinian. The University Press distrib- utes the book through a contract it has with Pluto Press, a London- based publisher that prints left- wing, scholarly books on social sciences. In its Aug. 13 newsletter, the Michigan chapter of the pro- Israel group Stand With Us con- demned the book and asked its members to call the press's direc- tor and ask why the press decided to publish the book. The group called the book a "collection of anti-Israel propa- ganda, misquotes, and discred- ited news stories, and is carried forward throughout by declared contempt for Judaism and its adherents." The University Press stopped distributing "Overcoming Zion- ism" in August in response to what University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham called "seri- ous questions raised by several members of the University com- munity about the book." The press's executive board, which is made up of University professors, reviewed the book, written byBard College Prof. Joel Kovel, before making its deci- sion. Kovel said he was glad the press restored distribution of his book, but said the controversy it created was an example of an all- to-common problem. "People have to join together and combat the tendency to sup- press alternatives, particularly where the state of Israel is con- cerned," he said. In a statement, the University Press's executive board said ithas "deep reservations" about "Over- coming Zionism," but because its contract calls for it to distrib- ute all of Pluto Press's books, it wouldn't break the contract for that book alone. "Such a course raises both First Amendment issues and concerns about the appearance of censor- ship," the board said. "As mem- bers of the University community See BOOK, Page 7A ANGELA CESERE/Daily Flags set up on the Diag yesterday. College Republicans at campuses around the state set out flags to commemorate the victims of the Sept.11 terrorist attacks. The attacks were marked with memorial services around the country. On Sept. 11, a call for human rights Amnesty Int'l USA head slams response to attacks By ALESE BAGDOL Daily StaffReporter The American response to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks has fueled the degeneration of human rights in the United States and the rest of the world, Larry Cox, the executive director of Amnesty International USA, told an audience at Rackham Auditorium yesterday. Cox slammed the American gov- ernment's reaction to the terrorist attacks. "In the world we aspire to, this day should be marked exclusively to honor those who died on Sept.11, 2001," Cox said. "Instead, this day has become 9/11, the political tool. It has become the rallying cry for a war for which none of us volun- teered." Coxsaidthegovernmentusedthe nation's fear from Sept.11 to openly defy the idea of human rights. He said the government's defense of the events at Guantanamo Bay and the 2006 Military Commissions Act - a bill that strips access to federal courts for people the administra- tion deems "unlawful enemy com- batants" - helps dictatorships in other countries to justify their own acts of cruelty. "How can we criticize Syria or Egypt for torture when we sent people (to Guantanamo) knowing they will be tortured?" Cox said. He said the best way to combat terrorism is to set an example for the rest of the world and work to increase human rights. He lauded the United Nation's adoption of the Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 and said the American legis- lature needs to encourage similar acts in the future. "The whole world has seen that those who fight for human rights have the power to open prison doors and transform society," Cox said. Cox's lecture was the sixth in a series of annual lectures that was established in 2002 by former Uni- versity Prof. Marilynn Rosenthal. Rosenthal's son, University alum Joshua Rosenthal, was killed while working in a south tower office of the World Trade Center for Fiduciary Trust International. He received his graduated from the University in1979. "My mother established this lec- ture series to try to make sense of See SEPT. 11, Page 7A Want safe sex? It's going to cost you more Law school kicks off environmental program Fmr. EPA head tells students to focus on service By EMILY BARTON Daily StaffReporter Speaking at the Law School last night, Carol Browner, a former head of the Environmental Pro- tection Agency head chal- lenged students to get involved in public service by focusing on environ- mental concerns like cli- mate change. And that's what the Law School is hoping to encour- age with its new Environ- mental Law and Policy Program. "If this generation doesn't solve it, we will leave to the next genera- tion a problem they cannot solve," she said. Browner said colleges are places of ideas and leadership, and that she believes the new program will change the way people address environmental problems. David Uhlmann, a lec- turer and program man- ager at the Law School, said the creation of the program comes at a critical time for environmental concerns. "In our country today, people are focusing on environmental issues in ways they haven't in 25 years," he said. Unlike other schools, the University's law school doesn't offer specific con- centrations. Instead, it See GREEN, Page 7A Contraceptive prices rise on campuses around country By KIMBERLY CHOU Daily StaffReporter Sex is getting more expensive for students. The price of contraceptives has begun to climb as a result of the Deficit Reduction Act, a measure passed by Congress in February 2006 that changed Medicare cal- culations and made it harder for manufacturers to sell their prod- ucts to certain buyers - like uni- versities - at discounted rates. Since the bill went into effect in January, prices for prescription contraceptives have spiked. Many universities and clinics that provide discounted contra- ceptives to low-income women and college students have been forced to raise their prices. Oth- ers, including University Health Service at the University of Mich- igan, are concerned about rising prices, said UHS chief pharma- cist Gwendolyn Chivers. Several organizations, includ- ing the American College Health Association, are lobbying for a reversal, Chivers said. "It was something that hap- pened inadvertently and we're trying to get it fixed," said Lori Lamerand, the president of Planned Parenthood Mid-Michi- gan Alliance. "We consider birth control basic health care, but we simply, as an agency, cannot eat the cost." Some clinics have seen prices for brand-name prescription con- traceptives rise from as little as $5 a pack to $55. "We've stockpiled some things so we haven't had to pass on the price increase to our patients," Lamerand said. "We're hoping it can last another two to three months." Ortho Tri-Cyclen Lo, the most commonly prescribed brand of oral contraceptive, is available for about $20 per cycle at the 11 Planned Parenthood centers Lamerand oversees, includingthe two in Ann Arbor. The price of the pill at UHS has hovered around $20 for the last See BIRTH CONTROL, Page 7A Former EPA chief Carol Browner said the law school's new environmental law program will help change the way people deal with environmental problems. TODAY'S WEATHER HI: 64 GOT A NEWS TIP? LO: 45 Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.comand let us know. ON THE DA CY 6L005 Ave Maria School of Law under investigation MICHIGANDAILY.COM/THEWIRE INDEX NEWS................2A CLASSIFIEDS...........A.......6A Vol. CXVIII,No.7 OPINION...............4A SPORTS.. . ......... 9A v2007TheMichiganDaily ARTS... . ..........5A THESTATEMENT..................1B michigondaily.com