4C iChipari 4:)atiV nn Abor MImichganail~co MonayMay14,2007Sumer e6k 1 Strides for student vote NEWS Up to no good at the Frieze Adventurous students are drawn to the remnants of the Frieze building, but construc- tion workers said students are unaware of the hazards that await them. See page 2. OPINION From the Daily: Rogers & me Just when you thought it was illegal to disenfranchise a whole group of people, along came Rog- ers's law. With the latest push to overturn it, it's time for students to be vocal. See page 4. ARTS MOCAD exhibition Daily Arts talks a with art collec- tor Burt Aaron about his exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit. See page 9. ANGIE CESERE/1 State Rep. Rebekah Warren presents her bills to the House Committee of Ethics and Elections in front of an audience that included several University students and state district poll workers. CONVERSATIONS Michael Moore sounds off in A2 By AMINA FARHA For the Daily Documentary filmmaker Michael Moore is no stranger to political hell-raising. Now, the man behind "Fahrenheit 911" and "Bowling for Colom- bine" hopes his latest produc- tion "Sicko" will get Americans heated about thestate ofhealth- care nationwide. "I want people leaving the theater asking, 'Where are the torches?' "he said at the Michi- gan Theater Saturday night. Moore participated in "X- treme Private Documentary: Kazuo Hara and Michael Moore," an event sponsored by the University's Center for Japanese Studies and featured a conversation between Moore and Japanese filmmaker Hara. The line of people waiting for the theater to open its doors for the event extended to the end of the block and consisted mostly of middle-aged people. The event appeared to attract few students. Mark West, the director of Academic Program for the Center for Japanese Studies, said the event was the brain- child of University Prof. Mark Nornes, who came up with the idea during a conversation with Hara about Moore's interest in Hara's work. West said Moore came to the event "despite being in the throes of editing for 'Sicko."' See MOORE, Page 8 By EMILY BARTON AND JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN Daily News Editors --------------- State Rep. Rebekah Warren (D-Ann Arbor) brought two bills intended to repeal a law that many believe impedes student voters before a state House committee in a hearing last Tuesday. Warren's legislation - which will come to a vote in front of the Committee of Ethics and Elec- tions tomorrow - would allow Michigan citizens to register to vote without changing their per- manent address. Public Act 118, legislation spon- sored by U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) in 1999 and popularly known as Rogers's Law, requires Michigan residents register to vote using the same address as their driver's license. Under the law, students who live in Ann Arbor during the school year, but list their parents' resi- dence as their permanent address, must either change the address on their drivers' license to Ann Arbor or vote using an absentee ballot. First-time voters are notallowed to vote absentee and must vote in person in the district of their per- manent address - a major incon- venience for students who can't make it home on election day, Warren said. Students who choose to change their permanent address to Ann Arbor must update it each time they move around campus, she said. Warren said her aim in draft- ing the bills was to make voting as accessible as possible for all popu- lations. Rogers's Law undermines the student population's influence in shaping state law, she said. Doug Novak and Chris Thomas, directors inthe Secretary of State's office testified in opposition to the See BILLS, Page 3 INDEX vol. CXVII, No. 14 (c)2007 The Michigan Dail michigandailyIcom N E W S ........... ..................... SUDOKU.............................. O P IN IO N .............................. CLASSIFIED....................... ARTS..................................... SPORTS.............................. ...2 ...2 ...4 ...6 ""9 .13 Secretary of State director Doug Novak speaks to oppose Warren's bills.