The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 2, 1992- Page 7 Chem building to re-open in '93 V. , .. V t~ r. by David M. Powers Students walking past the old Chemistry Building during the past year may have noticed danger signs and sounds of construction coming from within. However, building administrators say ren- ovations could end by April. The old Chemistry Building, erected in 1908, has been closed since May, 1991. U-M Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Farris Womack said the building is undergoing $19.9 million in renovations. Jack Novodoff, director of laboratories and administrative manager of the chem- istry department, said these changes are the final step in a process to physically improve chemistry department facilities as well as create modern laboratory space for the biology and biophysics departments. The process was originally divided into three phases. The first was the construc- tion of the New Chemistry Building - finished in 1989 - which cost the univer- sity $45 million. The second phase was the renovation of the two older chemistry buildings, one built in 1908, and the other in 1948. All three buildings are connected. The third phase, an underground chem- istry library, was aborted due to the over- run of cost in building the New Chemistry Building. Novodoff said the new building and the renovations are part of an attempt by the U-M to improve the department. "The university made a commitment to the chemistry department to really give it a boost so that it can once again work its way up and be one of the top 10 or 15 in the country," Novodoff said. With this program, and with the ex- panded facilities, Novodoff said he ex- pects an increase in enrollment in chem-, istry as well as in other sciences. Novodoff said the renovations were necessary due to problems such as decay- ing ceilings and unacceptable lab hoods. "After 40 years of use you really can't ex- pect more out of it. For safety's sake it had to be done." The buildings are being redone to fit the needs of their users, Novodoff said. The first two floors of the 1908 building will be occupied by biology teaching labo- ratories. The third will be divided between biology and biophysics labs, and the entire fourth floor will be biophysics laboratories. The 1948 building, which reopened this past June, now houses chemistry ad- ministration and faculty offices. It also contains upper-level teaching labs and re- search labs. Jack Warner, administrative manager of the biology department, said he is ex- cited about moving his labs into the 1908 building. The new labs will enable profes- sors to be more innovative in their course work. Microscopes attached to video moni- tors will be in every classroom. VCRs can also be hooked up to these monitors, making educational videos more accessi- ble, he added. The library facilities will be moved to the UGLi, replacing the Engineering Library which is moving to North Campus. Novodoff said, however, that even with the expanding facilities, the university will need even more space. "Within the next ten years we will be extremely short of research space ... The push right now on a national level is to improve the science and math skills of our students." i Workers labor on repairs to the old chemistry building. Renovations are expected to be finished by April. More bike Mann addresses gender issues in media Speechfocuses on journalists' overlookingofnursingpmfession by Nate Hurley racks ease park ing. headaches by Adam Anger tParking in Ann Arbor is notori- ously difficult, but lately even bikers are having problems finding a spot. However, the U-M Departments of Landscape Architecture and Public Safety are working together ''to provide students with safer, more secure parking for their bicycles. t The U-M Department of Landscape Architecture is in the process of installing more bike racks around university buildings to ac- count for the parking problems caused by increased bicycle use on campus. The department has installed more than 100 new bike racks this fall - each designed to accommo- date two bicycles. In addition, more than 200 racks were installed this summer. The installation began at the be- ginning of the school year and should be completed sometime next week. The racks were placed in four ar- eas identified for their inadequate *.bicycle parking - the Business School, the Law Quad, Burton Tower, and the Central Campus Recreation Building. "These areas have been problem areas for a long time and we hope additional racks will provide safe bi- cycle parking for the students," said Ken Rapp, a landscape architect in- volved in the current installation project. The U-M Department of Public Safety (DPS) is involved in the pro- ject because it reports the complaints received from staff members and students who use the buildings with- out adequate bicycle parking. DPS' then presents its record of com- plaints and crime reports to the Journalism and the way it has traditionally ignored the nursing profession was the focus of a speech given by prize-winning Washington Post columnist Judy Mann last night. Mann attributed the fact that me- dia often puts nurses in the shadow of other medical professionals - "such as doctors - to the lack of women journalists in editorial, positions. "Story conferences are over- whelmingly dominated by white men; they decide what's news," Mann told a crowd of about 100 in the Rackham auditorium. "To claim our space in the news, we have to understand men and the differences in the way men and women think and value news." One example Mann offered as support was a recent abortion story in a major national newspaper which quoted 10 experts on abortion. None of those experts were women. It is not enough for nurses to make medical advances. They must also be assertive when telling about them. Registered Nurse Regina Kudla, who was in attendance last night, cited an article from the New 'We have to understand men and the differences in the way men and women think and value news.' - Judy Mann Washington Post columnist York Times about "kangarooing," the practice of premature infants be- ing held against their mothers. "The whole article talked mainly about pediatricians. Only at the bot- tom it said that nurses were the ones who first observed it," Kudla said. Mann offered hope for improved coverage of the nursing profession with several statistics. The number of adult women who read newspa- pers has dropped drastically from 78 percent in 1970 to 60.5 percent in 1990. This is one reason why news- papers need to print what women consider news - to attract more women readers. The other ray of hope is that esca- lating health care costs are currently a hot topic, Mann said. Nursing of- fers preventative medicine which has been proven to cut medical costs substantially. In addition, Carolyn Sampselle, president of the Rho chapter of Sigma Theta Tau, the international honor society of nursing, said nurses are moving into new areas as scien- tists and researchers, even here at the U-M. For example, nurses are exam- ining diverse areas such as Alzheimer's disease, teenage preg- nancy, and substance abuse. The audience was receptive and responsive to Mann's statements. Margaret Reynolds, director for re- search at Catherine McAuley Hospital said, "It would be very valuable if the work that we do gets heard by the general public." Reynolds said nurses have much to offer to women's health care. The Rho, Eta Rho, and Kappa Iota chapters of Sigma Theta Tau and the U-M Medical Center co- sponsored the event. I HEATHER LUVMANIUaily LSA Sophomore Tim Stypinski searches for an empty spot in the bike racks near Angell Hall. New bike racks are being installed around campus. lwC' Mon. Oct. 5 Department of Landscape Architecture. The crime reports state the loca- tion and type of bicycle theft for every case that is reported to them. Records from DPS report at least $30,000 in bike thefts over the past few years. "Installation of the additional bike racks will make parking bicy- cles safer, provided faculty and stu- dents utilize them with appropriate bike locks," said DPS Lt. Vernon Baisden. The Department of Landscape Architecture is currently.planning to replace the obsolete concrete "tire bender" bike racks at East Engineering and in front of Angell Hall with modern loop-style racks. As well, the department plans to in- stall 100 bike racks. on the central campus in addition to the racks al- ready built. Baisden encouraged students to use the new bike racks to secure their bicycles for safety. Locking bicycles to the newly-installed racks with a durable lock (U-bar) reduces the possibility of theft, he said. P RTS oEwl WRITE FOR THE MICHIGAN DAILY 764-0552 Thu. Oct. 8 Fri. Oct. 9 Sun. Oct. 1 -- - - - Clip here to destroy your D~aiiy.- -- - - - - - - I dtIea y I -hirt.;hereIare reasonsI Swy YOU, hauld bUY ue: I 1 } )Every+t? Itis eanng them. I I I I I 2 )It hav a ryfeei I 3) Everyone is wearing them. The University of Michigan School of Music University Symphony Orchestra Gustav Meier, conductor Debussy: Prelude to The Afternoon of a Fawn Mozart: Symphony No. 38 in D Major, K.504 Bart6k: The Miraculous Mandarin Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. Guest Recital by Michael Cameron, double bass University of Illinois School of Music McIntosh Theatre, 8 p.m. Symphony and Concert Bands H. Robert Reynolds, Gary Lewis and Dennis Glocke, conductors Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. 11 Virginia Martin Howard/ Stearns Lecture Series Robert Barclay, Canadian Conservation Laboratories "Saving and Preserving Musical Instruments" School of Music Recital Hall, 2 p.m. Michigan Chamber Players Harry Sargous, oboe; Paul Kantor, violin; Yizhac Schotten, viola; Jerome Jelinek, cello; Karen Lykes, mezzo-soprano; Lynne Aspnes, harp; John Wickey, harp; Leslie Guinn, bass-baritone; Arthur Greene, piano; Andrew Jennings, violin; Erling B16ndal Bengtsson, cello; Katherine Collier, piano. Britten: Phantasy Quartet DeFalla: Song Cycle Brahms: Four Serious Songs Dvorik: Piano Quartet Rackham Auditorium, 4 p.m. Autumn Festival of Choirs 32nd Annual Conference on Church Music A, I I'UA r wv