NEWS CAMPU Out with the old --- Deaths of University Members of the Ann Arbor organ recovery team City Council voted unanimously last Monday to demolish the leave students, Anberay apartment building - also known as Melrose Place faculty in shock IS IN MOURNING - in favor of a new 10-story resi- dential and commercial complex to be built by Zaragon Inc. See page 2. OPINION Gary Graca: The Paris privilege Although most Americans may be happy that the celebrity everyone loves to hate, Paris Hil- ton, is back in jail, maybe it wasn't the right thing to happen. For sick inmates, prisons aren't suited to provide care. For all the outrage over Hilton's release, maybe the "celebrity privilege" that Hilton received should be extended to more prisoners. See page 4. ARTS Thievery and Banjos "Ocean's 13" steals the show and bluegrass musician Bela Fleck plucks a unique chord. See page 9. By EMILY BARTON Daily News Editor Flowers, photos, a hockey stick and a violin bow were placed inside WestSide United Methodist Church on Saturday morning as about 700 people gathered to remember car- diac surgeon Martinus Spoor. The attendees included extend- ed family, friends, colleagues and members of Spoor's hockey team. "Martin was a gentleman and a gentle man," said one of Spoor's hockey teammates. "Tonight, when we play our hockey game, none of us will be thinking about winning or losing, but about No. 14." Spoor will always be remem- bered as "a wonderful man, hus- band, father, son, brother and surgeon," said Thijs Spoor, Spoor's younger brother, in a statement to the media. He recalled the time his older brother won a fiddling competition by playingthe fiddle while standing on his head. "Martin was one who truly knew how to live life to the fullest," said Steven Bolling, a colleague of Spoor. Spoor, along with physician-in- training David Ashburn, transplant specialists Richard Chenault and SHAY SPANIOLA/Daily Two women view a display at the new Cardisvascular Center's opening on Thursday to memorialize the six men who perished in the crash ofva Survival Flight plane June 4. The event was nearly postponed in light of the tragedy. Richard Lapensee and Marlin Air pilots Bill Serra and Dennis Hoyes, was a part of the University's Sur- vival Flight organ transplant team aboard the Marlin Air Cessna jet that crashed in Lake Michigan on June 4. The team, on its way to Willow Run Airport in Ypsilanti from Gen- eral Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee, was transporting a pair of lungs for a 5-year-old man in critical condition. Five minutes into the flight, the pilot of the jet requested to return to Milwaukee due to an unspecified emergency. Seconds later, the plane disap- peared from the airport's radar and crashed into Lake Michigan about six miles from Milwaukee. No sur- vivors where found after an exten- sive searchby the U.S. Coast Guard. The National Transportation Safe- ty Board is investigating the cause of the crash. University President Mary Sue Coleman and Vice President of Medical Affairs Robert Kelch spoke at a press conference on June 5 about changing the aim of the mission from a rescue mission to one that would recover the victims' bodies. "It is particularly difficult when a place of hope such as ours loses hope," Kelch said. "But that is what happened this morning when we learned that our crew was not com- ing home tous." Members of Survival Flight and the transplantation program gathered on June 6 to speak to the media about the tragedy's impact on the Survival Flight Program. "I feel strongly I have lost mem- bers of my family," said Denise Landis, manager of critical care transport for Survival Flight. She said a team had gone on a mission just two hours after the accident and Survival Flight would continue to fully function in the wake of the tragedy Mark Lowell, medical director of Survival Flight, spoke of the mind- set of Survival Flight team members See MOURNING, Page 8 ADMISSIONS 'U' offers applicants early review option INDEX Vol. cvVII. No. 144 '200 The Michigan Daly michigandoily.com N EW S......................................... O PINIO N.................................... CLA SSIFIED............................... ARTS.......................................... SUDOKU..................................... SPO RTS............................. ... ..2 ....4 ...6 ....9 ...10 ...11 By JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN Managing News Editor Applicants to the University now have the option of limiting the length of time they have to wait to find out whether they've been accepted by applying under the Office of Admissions's new Early Response program. Early Response, available for applicants to all University schools and colleges - other than the School of Art and Design and the School of Music, Theater and Dance - guarantees that stu- dents who apply by Oct. 31 will be informed whether they've been accepted, rejected or deferred by Dec. 21. Unlikesimilarprogramsatmany other colleges, Early Response will offer rolling admissions dur- ing the time period rather than notifying all participants of their admission status on the same date, said Ted Spencer, associate vice provost and executive director of undergraduate admissions. The University developed Early Response as a means of monitor- See EARLY, Page 3