The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, October 28, 2009 - 7A From Page 1A Michigan coaching staff told him the cause of the dismissal was "just a combination of missing study tables, missing class and missing workouts." "I never saw it coming," Wilcher said, adding that Cis- soko never caused trouble in high school. "Whatever he was asked to do, he did it." Wilcher did not know exactly when these issues began, but said "it's like the second time it hap- pened, I know." The coach spoke with Cissoko and a Michigan assistant coach V yesterday evening about the dis- missal. "He accepts reality, that's all," Wilcher said. "He was calm. He wasn't upset because he knows he messed up." Cissoko was suspended by * Rodriguez for the Oct. 10 game versus Iowa and the Oct. 17 game versus Delaware State after start- ing the first four games of the sea- son. He also did not play on Oct. 3 against Michigan State. Rodri- guez first attributed the suspen- sion to "a violation of team rules." "When he comes back, it's really up to him," Rodriguez said after the Iowa game. "He's got certain things he's got to do, on and off the field, academically and all that, and if he does that, he'll be back sooner rather than later." Wilcher said Cissoko strug- gled in his classes freshman year, but did "whatever it took to make * sure he got his grades." During his suspension, Cis- soko was relegated to the scout team in practice. But he returned to the field last weekend against Penn State, playing in third-down man-coverage situations. After Saturday's game, Rodri- guez said Cissoko would stay in the lineup "unless he screws up again." Cissoko practiced Monday, the team's first practice since the Penn State game, according to a source close to the team. The same source said Cissoko would frequently "show up a few min- utes late" to practice during the season. But that was his last day prac- ticing for Michigan, where he will leave after a 20-game career in Ann Arbor. Cissoko, who was considered the cop prospect in Michigan by rivalsacom and scoutrcom, tallied one intercep- tion and 30 tackles, including one for a loss, while wearing the maize and blue. It's unclear what the future holds for Cissoko. "Well, it depends on how he comes out with this right here," Wilcher said, adding that the decision hinges on Cissoko's grades. "I think he'll probably go someplace else and play." But one of Cissoko's high school teammates, Edward Eniang, who played cornerback with him, said he thinks Cissoko will stick it out at Michigan. "Since tenth (grade), all he's talked about was Michigan," Eniangsaid. "I expecthimto stay, try and get his grades up, and do anything he can to get back on the team." His dismissal was particularly shocking to Eniang. "I was definitely surprised when I heard the news," Eniang said. "Everyone in high school, they have a few classes they struggle with. But Boubacar loved football, and he always put in the extra work to make sure his grades were up and he could stay on the field." Former high school teammate Delshawn Morris agreed. "(It was) very surprising," Morris said. "I never will find a reason why he'd be kicked off. He's a good person." "The last couple weeks, he's been working, so we thought it was time for him to play again," secondary coach Tony Gibson said after the game. Junior cornerback Donovan Warren said Saturday that Cis- soko had regained the trust of his coaches. "Boubacar just came back with a vengeance," Warren said. "You know he worked hard in prac- tice this week. Got the coaches to trust him real well. This was just a matter of them having con- fidence in him, and they got con- fidence in him." That confidence was broken Tuesday. "He almost turned it around, though," Wilcher said. - Daily Sports Editors Courtney Ratkowiak and Andy Reid contributed to this report. In reversal, MSA approves policy some say infringes on free speech From Page1A five minutes to three minutes per speaker and from an hour to a half an hour total. MSA President Abhishek Mah- anti voted to pass the resolution both times and said he was pleased with the discussion between mem- bers of the assembly last night. "All the voices were heard and we had really good discussion," he said, "which I'm really happy about." LSA Rep. Andrew Chinsky authored the amendments to the resolution. He said the changes made the selection process for speakers more objective than in the original version. Chinsky said the resolution will redirect the focus of MSA's meet- ings back to the students, where he said it should be. "I am very happy that we could come together and take some of the first steps to making sure stu- dents come first in our meetings," he said. "(The resolution) really promotes free speech and empow- ers students to come forward with their issues knowing that they are our primary concern and they will be the ones that will be heard above all else. That's why we were elected." Opponents of the resolution said that even with the amendments, the resolution is still too restrictive of free speech. Public Health Rep. Hamdan Yousuf voted no on the resolution twice. He said that this resolution threatens the democratic legitima- cy of the assembly. "If I were to give a caption to this meeting it would be 'democ- racy reconsidered,"' he said. GOOD SAMARITAN From Page 1A rather than to prioritize safety. "How can it be more important what kind of a fine you have to pay if you truly believe someone's going to die?" Brown said. "I don't get it." Michigan Student Assembly Business Rep. Alex Serwer said he thinks the bill will be effective in encouraging students to receive medical attention when necessary. "(The bill) will provide students with a safety net should they be at risk late on a Saturday night," Ser- wer wrote in an e-mail interview. ABILITY WEEK From Page 1A dents, faculty and staff with dis- abilities. Ability Week, Schnitzer said, is the one time in the year when the council can promote its message to a broader audience. "We kind of focus on events that are open to everybody to get people of all backgrounds and interests to come," Schnitzer said. Schnitzer said the council selected several speakers who have channeled their disabilities into artistic presentations. She spoke of Sadie Wilcox, an artist who was badly burned in a domestic violence incident and decided to tackle her experience through art. "Instead of just saying, 'This is the end of my life because this "It will make students more proac- tive when considering what to do in response to excessive drinking behaviors." Rep. Mark Meadows (D-East Lansing), one of the bill's primary supporters, along with members of the Associated Students of Michi- gan State University (ASMSU), contacted Serwer earlier this month, asking him to have MSA write a letter of support to the state Senate on behalf of the bill. "As students from various class- es, grades and circles of friends, we have found that we can all relate to having heard stories of fellow classmates who have found terrible thing happened,' (Wilcox) made a positive thing out of it," Schnitzer said. Wilcox has two presentations scheduled for today in the Ability Week event calendar. During the first, she will specifically address creating art while recovering from traumatic burns and violence. Sadashi Inuzuka is another artist who overcame adversity and will be speaking throughout the week. Inuzuka, an art pro- fessor at the University's School of Art & Design, has faced sig- nificant visual impairment since birth. Inuzuka said he first considered becoming an artist when he was three, but that his condition pre- vented him from pursuing it. At age 30, he moved from Japan to North America where he finally discovered a mediumthat he could work with under his condition - themselves in the scary situation of either being too intoxicated or having to deal with another student who is too intoxicated," MSA's letter read. "In both situa- tions, students are scared to call the police for fear of damage to their records or being punished by alcohol policies." The letter goes on to explain situ- ations in which intoxicated students may choose to drive their friends to the hospital over calling for help. This scenario, it reads, puts the stu- dents involved, along with everyone else on the road, at risk. Serwer said he learned from various House administrators and clay. "Because I have a visual impair- ment, I really depend on touch," Inuzuka said. While Inuzuka has created multimedia artistic presentations for some time now, he said he did not feel comfortable acknowledg- ing his disability in his work for a long time. "I didn't want people to label me as an artist with a disability. I just wanted to be an artist," Inuzuka said. However, Inuzuka said he recently started considering how his disability affected his work, or "how I do what I do." And after some reflection, he said, he came away with a more positive out- look. "Because of my condition, I think differently and I see things differently,"Inuzuka said. "I think my 'disability' is actually an abil- the University's Vice President for Government Relations Cynthia Wilbanks that the letter articu- lating MSA's perspective of the bill held great significance in the House Judiciary Committee's pro- ceedings as a representation of the student opinion. "Now that the bill is in the Sen- ate Judiciary Committee, we will certainly strengthen our efforts," Serwer said. "We have reached out to (the Ann Arbor Police Department) as well as DPS so that we can create a coalition of law enforcement officials. Their voices at the state level would be very powerful." ity." Consequently, he said his work is changing to focus more on dis- ability issues. Inuzuka will discuss his person- al artistic journey during a presen- tation tomorrow, and on Saturday he will lead a clay workshop for children. He said he's confident art can help bridge the gap between stu- dents with disabilities and those without, and encourages students to attend the presentations to gain understanding of a perspective different from their own. Schnitzer said she hopes the presentations will diminish com- mon preconceived notions about people with disabilities. "Some people might say, 'Oh this person is disabled and can't do anything,"' Schnitzer said. "That's not true at all Were plucking the art from the disability." GARDASIL. [Human Papillomavirus Quadrivalent (Types 6,11,16,and 18)Vaccine, Recombinant] IN R1ESTE IN NDARASIL EARDASIL IS WIDELY AVAILABLE AND MANY PRIVATE INSURANCE PLANS* COVER IT. TALK TO YOUR CAMPUS HEALTH CENTER OR OTHER HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONAL #1