The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 9, 1995 - 3 *LSA begins theme semester with 'Confict' By MARIA KOVAC Daily Staff Reporter Does conflict and change create commu- Oities or destroy them? How does sexism, racism or homophobia affect a divided soci- ety? The College of LSA hopes to spark exami- nation of these and other timely ideas under this semster's theme: "Conflict and Commu- nity." LSA dedicates each semester to a topic that faculty members have suggested as a prominent issue. Last winter's theme was "evil." This semester's theme was proposed by 'e Program on Conflict Management Alter- natives, a University group comprised of fac- ulty members from various departments who are concerned about conflict and social jus- tice. "PCMA is concerned about disharmony and fragmentation in society ... and how we can use conflict to enrich the community intellectually and personally," said David Schoem, assistantdean for undergraduate edu- ation and PCMA member. Thinking of conflict in a positive light might seem ironic, but LSA plans to ex- plore the idea by offering 35 courses in- cluding a lecture about violence against women. The centerpiece course is American Cul-, ture 308: Conflict and Communities. The three-credit course is a lecture series that presents a different speaker every Monday rom 7:30-9 p.m. Lecturers include promi- 'ent members of the University faculty and other scholars. American culture Prof. Frances Aparicio is participating in the course. She said she hopes the course and the theme will "allow students not to be afraid of conflict and to work wit it in creative ways." "Conflict leads to the emergence of new communities," Aparicio said. She cited the conflict of the 1960s as the Onfluence for the ethnic and women's studies of today. Students enrolled in the class are ex- pected to attend the lectures along with a discussion section. All lectures are open to the public. Architecture Prof. Sharon Sutton will present the first lecture tonight called "Voices, Images, and Sounds of Conflict and Commu- nity". The theme also encompasses a film se- ries Wednesdays in Angell Hall Audito- rium B which will be open to the public, said Diana Kardia, a graduate student and coordinator of the events surrounding the theme. Auto exec: Lower-priced utility vehicles coming DETROIT (AP) - The "utility" of cars and trucks is one of the strongest forces driv- ing the auto industry, and a new wave of lower-priced utility vehicles is coming, a fa- ther of the minivan said yesterday. "The conventional wisdom is that the truck market has grown. The truth is the car-truck split is meaningless except for registration purposes," former Chrysler Corp. executive Harold Sperlich said in a speech prepared for the Automotive News World Congress. "What's happened in the last 14 years is simply that increased vehicle utility has be- come an important new value in our personal transportation, in cars as well as in trucks," said Sperlich, chairman of Delco Remy America Inc., an Indiana-based automotive supplier formed last summer with the sale of three General Motors plants. Sperlich was one of the developers of Chrysler's minivan, which by his calculations produced about $15 billion in new profits for the company, the payoff for gambling on a product for which no defined market existed. "Interestingly, many saw it as a truck. Some saw it as a small van or a tall wagon," he said. "If you stop to think about it, these perspectives were trying to force it to fit some notion of historical product segmentation. In fact, it wasn't a small this or a tall that at all." Sperlich said the explosion in buyer de- mand for vans, pickup trucks and so called sport-utility vehicles is based on their utility, and because the market is fairly new, only the top half -the higher end of the price scale - is being served. "No one's offered utility in the bottom half," he said, but when production capacity catches up with demand, that will happen. "Eventually you'll be able to buy utility for 12 grand, in current prices, but it's going to take time," Sperlich said. "Until you satu- rate the higher-priced market... my daughters are going to have to buy used Chokees." Ford Motor Co. chairman Alex Trotman told automotive executives at the annual con- ference that the new "borderless" industry will face a new set of problems with the next decline in its business cycle. "Agreements like (the North American Free Trade Agreement) and the latest (Gen- eral on Agreement Tariffs and Trade) round, the developments in the former Soviet Union and in China, all are working to make the playing field larger and more open than it's ever been before," Trotman said. "Some people are calling the intense, fast- paced, high-stakes battle that will result from this new global market 'hypercompetiton,"' he said. "I call it a real dogfight." U' unveils solar car From Staff Reports After 16 months of work under wraps, members of the University's Solar Car Team unveiled its sleek, streamlined ve- hicle at the 1995 North American Interna- tional Auto Show Friday morning. "It is a completely redesigned car," said David Goodman, project manager and an Engineering junior. "It is faster, lighter and more efficient." "Solar Vision" boasts more than 3,000 monocrystalline silicon solar cells pro- ducing up to 1,200 watts of power in full sunlight. The last vehicle's characteristic round shape has been flattened. The car is made entirely of carbon fibers. The vehicle will remain on display at Cobo Hall until Jan. 15. LATHER, RINSE. THEN REPEAT. Michigan reps. support GOP changes in House WASHINGTON (AP)-Most of the Michigan delegation voted for the sweeping changes in U.S. House rules that were passed on the first day of the Republican-led 104th Congress. "We're setting the stage for the rest of the Congress," said Rep. Fred Upton (R-St. Joseph). "We had to prove day one that we could get our house in order." The votes on House rules late Wednesday included reducing the size of committee staffs by one- third, a term limit for the House Speaker and holding House mem- bers to the same rules of employ- ment imposed on all other Ameri- cans. Both Republicans and Demo- crats noted the bipartisan coopera- tion in passing most of the first day's legislation, although there was substantial Democratic resis- tance on a required majority of three-fifths of the House for pass- ing any bill that would increase income taxes. The proposal passed 279-152 in the House, with Michigan's seven Republicans voting for it and all of Michigan's Democrats vot- ing against it except James Barcia of Bay City. Barcia said he had to "think long and hard" about the vote. "With the country's long-term ef- forts at tax reduction, it's my hope that tax increases would be a last resort," he said. Many Democrats, including Bart Stupak (D-Menominee), said the majority rule on tax increases could only be changed with a con- stitutional amendment and the vote, if necessary, would be challenged in court. "Hours after we took our oath under the Constitution of the United States, we trampled it," said Stupak. Lawmakers voted 416-12 to re- duce the size of committee staffs by one-third, and reduce the num- ber of subcommittees. "A stream- lined Congress is integral to an efficient Congress," said Dick Chrysler (R-Brighton), who was in the rare position of managing the legislation on the floor as a fresh- man. Barbara-Rose Collins (D-De- troit) was the only Michigan repre- sentative to-vote against it. "The reduction in subcommit- tees and full committees was started in the last Congress by the Demo- cratic Party," David Bonior (D- Mount Clemens) said on the floor. Lawmakers voted 355-74 to limit the speaker to no more than four two-year terms and commit- tee and subcommittee chairmen to no more than three terms. Michi- gan representatives voting against it were Bonior, Collins, Dingell, Lynn Rivers (D-Ann Arbor), John Conyers (D-Detroit), and Dale Kildee (D-Flint). "I think it's kind of silly to bar wisdom and experience," Rivers said. Lawmakers passed by 429-0 the "Congressional Accountabil- ity Act" that puts House members and offices under the same em- ployment laws that are imposed on all other Americans. The House approved, 421-6, a requirement that lawmakers com- pare future spending requests to current spending levels, not cur- rent levels plus estimated infla- tion. Voting against the item were Collins and Dingell. Minority whip Bonior led the Democratic charge against the Republican's "closed rule" for the day. Under a closed rule, legisla- tive items introduced can't be amended or changed on the House floor. Republicans balked, saying such legislation would be considered later and the rest of their 10-point agenda, embodied in the "Contract With America," would be discussed un- deran open rule where amendments could be proposed. TUNYABROADU/aly St. Francis student Eric Newcomb, 13, braves the cold'weather to help his father wash their car at Rain Station 11 on Stimson Street yesterday. Estranged husband shoots wife, kills friend and self at Ford plant Woman in fair condition at 'U' Hospitals after Saturday shooting From Staff and Wire Reports PLYMOUTH TOWNSHIP-Co-workers and family members say Michael O'Brien knew his relationship with Sandra Brattin angered her estranged husband. Michael Brattin "warned the other guy. He told him, 'If you want to see my wife, don't do it in front of me,"' Charlie Van Zandt, a Ford maintenance crewman, told e Detroit News for a story yesterday. On Saturday, Brattin, 43, walked into the Ford Motor Co. plant where the three worked and shot and injured his estranged wife, fatally shot O'Brien and then killed him- self. Sandra Brattin, 39, who was shot several times in the legs and once in the stomach, was in fair condition recovering from surgery yesterday at University Medical Center, said Kristen Finn, a hospital spokeswoman. "I knew it was going to happen," said O'Brien's son- in-law, Jason Kaye. "I was in bed and my wife woke me up and said Michael had been shot. It didn't surprise me." O'Brien, 41, even told his ex-wife in New York that he'd probably wind up dead if the affair continued, said O'Brien's current wife, Barbara O'Brien. Other plant workers said Brattin was distraught that his wife of 16 years was divorcing him. The plant was shut down several hours after the shoot- ing about 5:25 a.m. Saturday. Supervisors called a meet- ing and told the workers what happened and they were sent home. The Climate Control Plant, which makes heating and air-conditioning units for all Ford assembly plants in the United States and Mexico, resumed operations 3 p.m. Saturday, Many of the 300 to 400 workers at the plant at the time of the shooting were back at work for an overtime shift at 5 a.m. yesterday, Ford spokesman Bill Carroll said. He said officials would meet with workers before they return to work today to tell them about counseling ses- sions available. He said counseling will be available at the plant and people can take time off and receive counseling outside the plant without losing pay. "Naturally, everybody's basically in shock," Don Jividen, president of the United Auto Workers Local 845, said Sunday. "All three of them had lots of friends in the plant. None of them were problem employees.' Carroll said he doesn't expect the shooting -the third at a Detroit-area auto plant since September- to have any major impact on plant security. Employees already need identification badges to get inside and Ford tries to pro- vide help for people who are overstressed. MSA Continued from page 1 now," Neenan said. "He has made it clear he wants to help us next semes- er, though." The current battle for representa- tion is at a standstill, as regents con- sider the issue over the next few months. Neenan, however, sees little room left for compromise. "I don't know how much more we can compromise. There needs to be a student there at all times. I'm not giving up that argument," she said. * Lansing Lobbyist In contrast to the uncertainty sur- rounding student representation on the Board of Regents, the fight for a private University lobbyist in Lan- sing is coming to a close this week. The proposal was submitted to Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford at the beginning of October. After three months, both Hartford and MSA have signed the contract to hire the lobbying firm of Cawthorne, McCullough and Cavanaugh at a cost of $25,000. LSA Rep. Andrew Wright is the official link between the lobbyist and the assembly, and is now looking to involve students in the lobbying pro- cess. "While we will have a lobbyist who will be looking to serve the University's interests and those inter- ests only, we're hoping to to get stu- dents into Lansing also," Wright said. Working with a $2,000 fund for direct student lobbying, MSA will be recruiting students to participate in two student lobbying days in March. On these days, students will travel to Lansing and meet with state legisla- tors. Although the lobbying firm con- tract has been signed, the next few months will involve communication between MSA and the lobbyist to finalize plans for the next semester. "U-M wants the largest appro- priation of money that U-M can get. This is the way to do that," Wright said. Interested in working for the Daily? Thursday at 7 p.m. 9lvi ass Meeti Don't miss the inteStdn = = = = = Publi cations Bldg. Over 2,000 imag9es! The Art Print and Poster Sale is here at the University of Michigan for a limited time only...choose from fine art, photography, movies, music, romantic, nostalgic, nature, children, 3-D, and much more, plus a full selection of poster hangers and frames! qp..? l t - -~A Group Meetings 0 AIPAC, Policy Conference Meeting, Hillel Building, 7 p.m. O IMPAC, Hillel Building, 6:30 p.m. 0 Ninjitsu Club, beginners wel- come,761-8251, IMSB, Room Q Taekwondo Club, beginners and other new members welcome, 747-6889, CCRB, Room 2275, 8:30-10 p.m. Events Q "Kickoff for Wolver-Green Games," sponsored by ENACT, Student Services U 76-GUIDE, peer counseling phone line, 7 p.m.-8 am. U ECBPeer Tutorial,Angell Hall Computing Site, 747-4526,7- 11 p.m. U Campus Information Center, Michigan Union, 763-INFO; I I