As the late night TV wars heat up, David Letterman's new show is really the only thing keeping us from studying or getting a few extra hours of sleep. Jason Carroll reviews the play "The Kathy & Mo Show: Parallel Lives," which played here last weekend and move to Pontiac next month. The Michigan football team enjoyed its only bye week of the season last week. But it was anything but a vacation for the Wolverines. Today chance of ran, sun late; High 70, Low 52 Tomorrow Sun, some clouds; High 76, Low 58 i I One hundred two years of editorial freedom tt Vo. *INo 26An rbrMchgaI Tesa, epebe 2,193.193Th icignDal President to endorse national service act By DAVID SHEPARDSON DAILY STAFF REPORTER WASHINGTON - As the White House Office of National Service makes final arrangements for today's signing of the National and Commu- nity Service Trust Act, many of the fundamental details of the plan have yet to be worked out. In question are the authorizing leg- islation, which provides for $300 mil- lion in funding, and the appropriation bill, which only allots $107.5 million and has not passed the Senate, where it "can only go down," said Bennett Minton, a spokesperson for Michigan Rep. William Ford (D-Ypsilanti). The act would allow participants in approved community service projects to earn $4,725 toward col- lege tuition or job training for each of two years of service. The credit is equal to 90 percent of the college benefits under the GI Bill. Participants can also earn the cur- rent $7,400 stipend for VISTA volun- teers and health and child-care ben- efits as necessary. The plan, which with full funding wouldallow 100,000 students to serve over three years at a cost of $1.5 billion, has been scaled back to in- clude fewer than 20,000 participants the first year. Two influential members .of the nine-month-oldUniversity TaskForce on Community Service will attend the signing, and head to meetings with government officials afterward. Social Work Prof. Barry Checkoway, who heads the task force, See SERVICE PLAN, Page 2 FESTIFALL POSTPONED AGAIN 'U, found i whistleblower case By BRYN MICKLE DAILY STAFF REPORTER The University's latest whistle- blowing case entered a new stage today - but not the final one. Today, Washtenaw County Cir- cuit Court Judge Patrick Conlin will file ajudgment of $1,246,000against the University and employees Rich- ardAdelman and Marion Perlmutter. The judge ruled that Adelman must pay more than $1 million, while Perlmutter was held responsible for almost $200,000 in damages. The ruling stems from former University researcher Carolyn Phinney's 1989 charges that the Uni- versity was in violation of the state of Michigan's Whistleblower Protection Act. The Whistleblower Act is intended to protect state employees who re- port abuses of state and federal funds. It is illegal to take any retaliatory steps against these employees while an investigation of their charges is underway. Phinney, a former researcher in the University's Institute of Geron- tology, charged that Adelman - the director of the Institute - made de- liberate attempts to retaliate against Phinney after she reported her suspi- cions of scientific misconduct in the institute. Phinney said she told Adelman that her mentor, Perlmutter, had sto- len Phinney's intellectual properties on aging theories, and used them to obtain a federal grant from the Na- tional Science Foundation. Phinney added that Adelman cir- culated falsified personnel reports in an attempt to discredit her and threat- ened termination if she did not drop her allegations against Perlmutter. Phinney also said she suffered physi- cal illness as a result of the stresses placed on her by Adelman's actions. Phinney refused to recant her alle- gations against Perlmutter and opted to take the matter to court. In May, a jury found Adelman and Perlmutter guilty. The case was held up for five months after the verdict, pending Judge Conlin's filing of a final judgment. In his ruling, Conlin decided to award Phinney interest on the original jury decision of $1,119,500, which brought the total award to more than $1.2 million. The University is not held responsible for Phinney's attor- ney fees. "This is the biggest, or second big- gest, verdict in Washtenaw County history," said Phinney, who added that she intends to appeal to fight for attorney's fees. The University is now faced with three avenues of legal action. It can: . settle the case and pay Phinney; appeal the judgment within 21 days; or, file a motion for a new trial. If the University files a motion for a new trial and is denied by Conlin, it will have an additional 21 days to file its appeal. It is probable that the University will appeal the verdict. When the origi- nal verdict was announced in May, Executive Director of University Re- lations Walter Harrison said an appeal was "very likely" due to the size of the judgment. "We were shocked by the jury's decision (to award such a large amount)," he said. If the University decides to con- tinue the legal fight, it risks adding a significantly higher cost to the more than $127,000 in legal fees it has already incurred on the case - the most expensive legal case the school was involved in for the 1992-93 fiscal year. Phinney said she and her attorney do not believe the University has been truthful in its public estimation of its legal expenses on her case. See DECISION, Page 2 SHARON MUSHER/Dally Maria Coward, a tour guide at the Museum of Art, tries to protect herself from the rain with a notebook. The weather forced organizers to move Festifall for the second time this year, rescheduling the event for Friday. Provost emphasizes teaching to faculty senate By JAMES CHO DAILY STAFF REPORTER Gilbert Whitaker, the University's provost and vice president for aca- demic affairs, emphasized improving undergraduate teaching and maintain- ing free speech in the classroom when he addressed faculty representatives yesterday afternoon. "The reality is that for many of our first- and second-year undergraduate students, only a small fraction of their courses are staffed by senior faculty," Whitaker told the more than 60 mem- bers of the University's Senate As- sembly and University deans gath- ered at Rackham Amphitheater. "Faculty have migrated away from instruction at the introductory level. The result is too much of our under- graduate teaching is left to teaching assistants and to lecturers," he said. Whitaker said the decay in univer- sities' commitments to a "high qual- ity undergraduate education" is at- tributable to the emphasis put on re- search. Whitaker said he believes the di- minishing significance of undergradu- ate teaching resulted from the recom- mendations of the 1945 Vanneavar Bush report, "Science -The Endless Frontier." The report suggested that universities become the source of ba- 'Undergraduate education should be regarded by us as a University-wide obligation, not ... relegated only to those schools and colleges that admit undergraduate students.' - Gilbert Whitaker gram. Whitaker said the program, which pairs undergraduate students with se- nior faculty throughout the Univer- sity as research assistants, has been very successful. In addition, a task force has been appointed by the University to further improve the living-learning atmo- sphere for first-year University stu- dents. "The University can be a confus- ing place where it is not easy to main- tain an identity," he said. Senate assembly representatives, who are the governing body for the University's faculty, expressed ap- proval ofWhitaker's determination to improve undergraduate education. "I applaud the emphasis on im- proving undergraduate education. I think it's long overdue," said Mark Decamp, associate professorof chem- istry at the University of Michigan- Dearborn. Still, many faculty members said they felt incentives should be imple- mented to encourage faculty to teach students. "There should be instituted some motivation to teach undergraduates. People can talk all they want. The University is clearly set up for re- See PROVOST, Page 2 sic research for the country and that the federal government fund all of it. He urged University faculty mem- bers to become more active in under- graduate education. "Undergraduate education should be regarded by us as a University- wide obligation, not one which is rel- egated only to those schools and col- leges that admit undergraduate stu- dents," he said. The University has taken steps to help faculty members continue their research while teaching undergradu- ates with programs like the Under- graduate Research Opportunity Pro- Local police forces sponsor bicycle registration drivesIM By WILL McCAHILL DAILY STAFF REPORTER With the return of students to Ann Arbor, local pedestrians now face a new challenge: avoiding bikers who shootdown city streets and sidewalks. And while pedestrians may be easy targets for the malicious cyclist, the bikes they ride are an even more popular targets for local thieves. To help students battle the bike burglars, local law enforcement agen- cies are making it simple for them to register their bicycles. ister the bikes, which are often stu- dents' only means of non-pedestrian transportation. Katz said the aim of distributing registratimn stickers this way is to make the process more convenient for students. In the last fiscal year, Katz said, his office sold 2,290 bike licenses, translating into more than $5,700 in revenue. This money goes into the city's General Fund, which is used to plug financial holes in various city pro- grams, including the bicycle registra- first 300 students will get their cycles registered for free. Two pieces of identification - at least one with a photograph - are required, as well as information about the bicycle, such as a serial number / and aphysical description of the bike. Baisden said all the money re- ~ ceived from the registration drive" will be given to the City Clerk's of- face. Zach Shipps, a service manager atN Great Lakes Sports and an LSA jun- ior, said between five and 10 people rnita hi hl~ thechnn eac~h .:' .-- I