BECOMING A WOLVERINE Coaches and Atic t anstudent-athletes come to Michigan for a bevy of reasons. For more see page 11. NEWS Stadium lawsuit proceeds Any chance to settle the legal conflict over Michigan Stadium out of the courtroom has passed. The Paralyzed Veterans of Amer- ica are taking the University to court in September 2008. See page 2. OPINION From the Daily: Listening in If there is one thing that President Bush can't be trusted with, it's the Constitution. He has trampled on it for seven years, and now the Democrats in Congress has given him one more opportunity with its new intelligence bill. Better watch who you talk to. See page 4. ARTS 'Rush'-ed out Daily Arts is sick of the "Rush Hour" series. Even Jackie Chan can't fight his way out of the abomination that is See page 9. The Daily will not publish again until the beginning of the fall term on Sept. 4. IINDEX vol CvVII, No. 152 02007 The Michigan Daily michignduily.com NEWS.............................................2 SU D O KU ................... ..... ......3 O PIN IO N - ............................ .....4 CLASSIFIED................................... 6 A R T S ..............................................9 SPORTS......... ......11 ISRAELI ACADEMIC BOYCOTT Colleges protest boycott with newspaper ad Former and current 'U' presidents sign in support By EMILY ANGELL Daily News Editor University President Mary Sue Coleman and former Univer- sity presidents Lee Bollinger and Harold Shapiro, along with presi- dents of other American colleges, endorsed an advertise- NOTABLE QUOTABLE ment that appeared " ... I for one in the New am prepared York Times on Aug. 8 to stand in that agreed solidarity against the United with Israeli Kingdom's academics in University the face of a and Col- lege Union's boycott." proposed boycott of - MARY CUE Israeli uni- COLEMAN, versities. in a July The statement. UCU, which has about 120,000 members, passed a resolu- tion158 to 99 in May that supported a boycott of Israeli universities. Some union members who are unhappy with Israel's policies con- cerning relations with Palestine advocated the resolution. Bollinger, who is now president of Columbia University, criticized the UCU's decision in a statement entitled, "Boycott Israeli Universi- ties? Boycott Ours, Too!" that was featured in the full-page adver- tisement. The advertisement listed about 300 names of presidents of higher education institutions who support Bollinger's statement. Robert Hornsby, Columbia's director of media relations, said in an e-mail that Bollinger originally issued the statement featured in the advertisement on June 12. In his statement, Bollinger chal- lenged the UCU to consider the effect a boycott would have on col- leges. "If the British UCU is intent on pursuing its deeply misguided pol- icy, then it should add Columbia to its boycott list, for we do not intend to draw distinctions between our mission and that of the universities you are seeking to punish," Bol- linger's statement said. Coleman first made public her position on the issue in July when she published a statement similar to Bollinger's on the University website. "At the University of Michigan, we have many valued connections with colleagues in Israel, and I for one am prepared to stand in soli- daritywith Israeli academics in the face of a boycott, should it come to pass," Coleman's statement said."It is in the nature of academic boy- cotts directly to impede academic freedom and the intellectual dis- course that are at the heart of our mission in higher education." Several prominent universi- ties' names did not appear in the advertisement, including Harvard University, Yale University and the University of Chicago. University of Chicago spokes- woman Julie Peterson said in an e-mail that University of Chicago President Robert Zimmer sent his own letter to Sally Hunt, the gener- al secretary of the UCU, on July 31. "President Zimmer believed he could be most effective by articu- lating his position directly to the UCU," Peterson said. Representatives from Harvard and Yale could not be reached for comment. Coleman's statement said that the Association of American Uni- versities, a group of 62 research universities in the U.S. and Canada to which the University of Michigan belongs, also opposes the boycott. David Askins said that when it comes to Teeter Talk, his blog that consists of interviews with local peopie on a teeter-totter, "what's said on the teeter-totter is said on the record." By JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN ManagingNewsEditor Last November, Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje discussed city politics as he rode a teeter-totter in near-freezing weather with a man dubbed Homeless Dave. The setup is one other local politicians, including State Rep. Rebekah Warren, City Council member Leigh Greden and Washt- enaw County Clerk Larry Kesten- baum, have also experienced. David "Homeless Dave" Askins arranged the interviews for Teeter Talk - his blog at www. homelessdave.com that contains photographs and transcripts from 110 interviews between Askins and people from Ann Arbor and surrounding areas. Askins, a 43-year-old with a long, straggly beard that is about 20 years old, said he calls him- self Homeless Dave in the series because an assistant at a friend's office once mistook him for a homeless person and the moniker stuck. Teeter Talk began with an interview with co-owner of Arbor Brewing Company Rene Greff in December 2005 and features peo- ple of many backgrounds - from musicians and activists to local families and business owners. Askins said he tries to interview a diverse group of "totterees" to provide a full portrait of the com- munity. He said anyone could be on Teeter Talk who's willing to ride the teeter-totter of truth in the backyard of his house in the west side of Ann Arbor. "I think that certainly anyone is 'totter-worthy,' " he said. See TEETER, Page 3