. , : fir." ' . The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 27, 1995 - 3 *r. . Gift to help 'U' create new institute A gift of $5 million from an alum vill allow the University to create a iew institute designed to aid the re- surgence in American manufactur- ing. Joel D. Tauber, who holds three degrees from the University, recently donated the money to establish the Joel D. Tauber Manufacturing Institute. "Joel committed not only his per- sonal resources but his time as well to make this a success," said Provost and &xecutive Vice President for Academic Affairs Gilbert R. Whitaker Jr. The University Board of Regents voted to, establish the institute at its February meeting. The new institute will focus on integrating expertise within the Busi- ness and Engineering schools, as well as giving students practical experi- ence through a partnership with pri- *ate industry. Provost outlines new budgeting system Provost and Executive Vice Presi- dent for Academic Affairs Gilbert R. Whitaker Jr. described Value-Cen- tered Management, the University's Sew budgeting system, to the Board of Regents at its February meeting. Under the present budgeting sys- tem, the central administration col- lects all funds - including tuition, state appropriations and indirect costs recovered from federal grants - and allocates them to various University units. An annual across-the-board in- crease is provided to the individual nits, which last year amounted to 2.5 ercent. "That process works if every unit stays roughly the same size and re- quires roughly the same resources," Whitaker said. In VCM, the individual schools and colleges will receive funds from tuition and indirect costs recovered from federal grants. Under this sys- tem, the units will pay facility and *entral administration expenses. "It seems plain that we're going to have to find a budgeting system that recognizes all the costs associated with the programs," said Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor). Van Houweling becomes dean of *academic outreach To expand the University's re- sources through technology, the Uni- versity has tapped Douglas E. Van Houweling to fill a newly created post as dean of academic outreach. , The regents approved the appoint- ment of Van Houweling, who previ- ously served as vice provost for infor- mation technology, at the board's ebruary meeting. "I would like to commend Dr. Van Houweling for taking on this addi- tional responsibility without addi- tional staff," said Regent Andrea Fischer Newman (R-Ann Arbor). Van Houweling said increasing the University's use of teleconferenc- ing and electronic communication for instruction as well as improving pro- rams for alumni will be priorities for is new position. However, his position will not be limited to technological issues. An early focus of the post will be im- provement of on-campus offerings, like the summer session, Van Houweling said. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporters Cathy Boguslaski and Ronnie Glassberg Informal dance clubs spring up around Detroit DETROIT (AP) - The driving beat of techno music is filling unofficial, sometimes illegal clubs around the area. At midnight Saturdays, a couple of thou- sand Metro Detroiters, ages 15 to 50, find rave parties. "They'll be dancing until six or seven in the morning, at least," said Brian Mellberg, host with Shane Fuller and Carlos Dumas of a recent rave in Detroit. Police and parents are managing to do little to curtail the events that sometimes feature drugs and underage drinking and that are staged in locations often lacking fire exits and other safety features. In secret locations, ravers come to give themselves to the rhythms of techno music, a worldwide, synthesized, hypnotic style that "Girls dancingall around you, kick-ass music - itYs the whole aura of it" -- Steve Suun began in Detroit. "Girls dancing all around you, kick-ass mu- sic - it's the whole aura of it," Steve Suun, 23, told The Detroit News. Many ascend dark steps to the ""chill out" room, where dancers rest, unwind, buy juice or do a variety of drugs. Dozens, some as young as 15, were an undu- lating mass on the floor, in the thrall of a drug called Ecstasy, the News said. Some walked around, begging to be touched; one of Ecstasy's reputed effects is heightened sense of touch. A 15-year-old girl moves through, giving free massages. Her usual job is as a nude masseuse. "Without these partiesmy life would be point- less," said Stefanie Kay, 17. "This is the place where you're totally accepted." One rave party's location was just two blocks from Detroit police headquarters. Ravers bought $10 tickets from a store several blocks away and entered from the alley. The procedure adds mystery that ravers love, said Michael Isaah, who also throws rave par- ties. It also makes it hard for a police raid to grab the money box or prove it is not a private part Deputy Detroit Police Chief Benny Napo- leon said rave parties are not so difficult to find as their organizers like to think. "It's the easiest thing in the world." he said. The parties cause "lots of concern" in neighbor- hoods, he said. He said Detroit police formed a task force last week aimed at shutting down illegal after- hours parties. "We've been doing raids on them the past month or so." Rave parties break most of the laws of nor- mal clubs, the newspaper said. Organizers never check ID, many ravers appear to be under 18. And it is common to see illegal drugs such as LSD, marijuana and Ecstasy. GOP uses new majority to push business break Homeward bound A Stockwell resident returning from spring break makes the trek back to her residence hall after being dropped off at a commuter bus stop yesterday. Lawmakers struggling t reach The Associated Press LANSING- Republicans are los- ing little time in using their new pow- ers in the Legislature to remedy an old pet peeve - the cost of unemploy- ment insurance in Michigan. In a move that would help busi- ness - and hurt organized labor - a bill to cut jobless benefits and tighten the unemployment compensation sys- tem has emerged from a Senate com- mittee and likely faces a sympathetic greeting in the GOP-run chamber. Republicans have a slight major- ity in the House, too, giving unem- ployment tax cuts their best chance in decades. "The cost of doing business in Michigan is too high," said Sen. David Honigman (R-West Bloomfield), the sponsor of the bill. "If you tax cre- ation of jobs, you get less jobs. The cost is destructive of job creation. "This is one of the first things business looks at when they decide where to create jobs." Some of the measures in Honigman's bill would: Eliminate- "indexing," or the yearly increase in maximum benefits to match inflation. Indexing is in the law, but the maximum benefit now is frozenat $293 a week for up to 26 weeks. Reinstate the "waiting week," meaning jobless workers would get no benefits the first week off work. The AFL-CIO says that means a lost week's benefits for workers who don't draw benefits for the full 26 weeks. That's about 75 percent of those who get benefits, the union says. Cut benefits by 7 percent for most workers not receiving the maxi- mum benefit. There's little minority Democrats can do except argue and hope that Republicans - especially those with some union sympathies or political support - will oppose some of the bill's toughest measures. "We don't have the votes," Senate minority Floor Leader John Cherry (D-Clio) bluntly said. "We can try to appeal to their sense of fairness. "It does make some sense to pro- vide some business tax relief. But that's a smoke screen for doing some mean-spirited things. People are amazed we're talking about this." Gov. John Engler's administra- tion and business interests are solidly behind the revisions. "Studies clearly indicate that Michigan's compensation costs are much higher than other states we're competing with for investment," said James Barrett, president of the Michi- gan Chamber of Commerce. "We need to have relief for employers from this high-cost unemployment insurance." But organized labor is irate about the proposed cutback. State AFL-CIO President Frank Garrison said it fol- lows a "punish the victim" approach. "We are strongly opposed to ... a bill that would take away hundreds of millions of dollars in unemployment benefits from hundreds of thousands of Michigan's jobless workers," he said. "The Engler administration projects record reserves in the Unem- ployment Insurance Trust Fund through the end of this century. At the same time, laid-off workers struggle to get by on benefits that barely reach 75 percent of the poverty level." The Trust Fund, made up of taxes paid by employers and used to pay jobless benefits, has nearing $1 bil- lion. Michigan employers paid $1.28 billion to the fund in 1994, according to the Michigan Employment Secu- rity Commission. The tax is based on a complicated formula that, among other things, is based on an employer's experience in laying off workers. Honigman estimates his bill would save employers roughly $440 million over the next five years, although organized labor says there has been no thorough fiscal analysis of the measure. "It will be a lot smaller than that," Hughes said. agreement The Associated Press LANSING- Lawmakers, who often start 10 a.m. meetings after 10:30, are keeping true to form by taking longer than expected to reach an agreement on Gov. John Engler's plan to cut state taxes. Engler told the Legislature to "just do it" in January, calling for a five- year, $1.5 billion tax cut package by mid-February. Lawmakers approached the job with zeal, but bogged down in struggles over the exact cuts to make. Now, some two weeks after Engler's imposed deadline, lawmak- ers said they should wrap up work on the plan this week - hopefully. "We're close," said Jeff McAlvey, I Dn tax-cut package Engler's chief lobbyist. But he and Increase the pers others acknowledged that tough is- tion on income taxes fr( sues remained unresolved. $2,400. Last week, Engler got the first bills Reduce the Single B in the package on his desk. But other Phase out the intan parts of the plan were sent to conference interest and dividends ov committees for final bargaining. Ironically, the bills1 Legislative leaders hope to get an the intangibles tax in 1 agreement from conference lawmak- first on Engler's desk ers no later than Wednesday. That loudly opposed those b would leave only Thursday for the that they benefit mainly House and Senate to approve those est taxpayers. agreements before lawmakers adjourn One bill in the intang for another weekend. - to start reducing the "We're going to have one big con- - remained stalled in ference," said House Speaker Paul Democrats refused to pu Hillegonds (R-Holland). votes to allow the mea Engler's basic plan would: effect this year. onal exemp- om $2,100 to Business Tax. ngibles tax on ver five years. to eliminate 998 were the . Democrats bills, arguing the wealthi- gibles tax cut tax this year the House. wt up needed asure to take Transplant patient returns home The Associated Press Erik Morganroth said Saturday he is eager to go home, change into com- fortable clothes and just sleep, eat and relax. Morganroth, who received a new heart after his parents made a public appeal to donors, left the University Medical Center Saturday, almost a month after his transplant operation. "Obviously, I'm grateful to the person and the family. In some final- ity, maybe I am carrying on the soul of the person who gave me the heart," Morganroth told reporters. Morganroth survived for 34 days on machine that pumped his heart, although doctors originally expected him to live only two weeks on the machine. "We're very much at peace. At last, he's coming home," said his mother Janice Morganroth. Morganroth, a University pre-med student, received the new heart Jan. 27 from a 32-year-old Detroit woman in a 4 1/2-hour operation. The woman's identity has not been re- leased to the Morganroths nor to the public. Morganroth was admitted to the hospital Dec. 24 when he was stricken with a rare disease in which a virus began killing his heart tissue. His family issued a public plea for heart donations. The Transplant So- ciety of Michigan made his case a top priority. Dr. John Nicklas, one of Morganroth's surgeons, said he ex- pected his patient to recover. Al- though the danger is never com- pletely gone, the risks of the new heart being rejected have lessened, he said. "Erik was able to survive because he did have a great desire to survive, the will to live," Nicklas said. Turn Your Used Computer Equipment into $$$!!! : We BUY, SELL - and TRADE quality used and new - computers and accessories. "We' Waorranty What We Sell! * * *JUST ARRIVED!* * 386 System & Monitor (Great Starter Package)........ as low as $499 S486System & Monitor (Good Word Processor)......... as low as $749 Macintosh Systems (Excellent for Students) ........... as low as $399 kinAIk , f''mrun ,fe /Dnre snkrt n ri\ iAk'MnoIn IA n e OAQ What's happening in Ann Arbor today GROUP MEETINGS U Ninjitsu Club, beginners welcome, 761-8251, iMSB, Room G21, 7:30- 9 p.m. U Shorln-Ryu Karate-Do Club, men and women, beginners welcome, 994- 3620, CCRB, Room 2275,7-8 p.m. U Society For Creative Anachronism, North Campus, EECS, Room 1311, 7 p.m. workshop, 8 p.m. meeting U Taekwondo Club, beginners and ntherrnew members welcome 7A7- University Health Services, Third Floor Conference Room, 7-8:30 p.m. U "Denmark's International Studies Program," liberal arts, architec- ture, engineering, natural re- sources, International Center, Room 9, 4-5 p.m. U "institutionalising Communities of Resistance," panel discussion, LSA Theme Semester public lec- t- - -, :-- - I onr~-r- Computing Site, 747-4526, 7- 11 p.m. Q Campus information Center, Michi- gan Union, 763-INFO; events info 76-EVENT or UM*Events on GOpherBLUE J North Campus information Center, North Campus Commons, 763- NCIC, 7:30 a.m.-5:50 p.m. O Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley Lobby, 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. rl Dn waw.w . . 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