'.1CHODOROW Continued from Page 1 Chodorow, who continues to teach an undergraduate history class, also spoke about relationships within the universi- ty. He supported tenure as a way for faculty members to establish authority, contended the department of public safety is important in "managing public safety" and praised the benefits of learning environments outside the classroom. Out-of-classroom learning experi- ences - whether in a living, electronic or extracurricular environment - strengthen faculty-student relation- ships, he said. Penn's Writers' Guild-an organiza- tion that attracts thousands of people with a smiliar interest - brings the school's various groups together, he said. "It's a place of interaction around an *!activity that students, faculty and staff have in common;' Chodorow said. "It's begun to enrich campus." Chemistry Prof. Thomas Dunn said Chodorow seemed to be "faculty-ori- ented." "The guy is able to express articu- lately many of the things that resonate in this community" Dunn said. "He showed that he is a quick learner. We would learn something from him and he would learn something from us." Regents said after the town meeting that they didn't want to compare Chodorow and Vice Chancellor Carol Christ of the University of California- Berkeley, the first candidate the board interviewed Monday. "We have to suspend lurching to judgment midway through the process' said Regent Philip Power (D-Ann NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 23, 1996 -? Chodorow on the Issues On public universities: "It's a place that can make a real difference." On relieving stress: "I have a deep affection for 100-mite (bicycle) , rides. By the 60th, 70th mile, your breathing is very even. On his personal life: Chodorow jok- ingly told the board that he leads an "alternative lifestyle" in today's society - he's been married for 33 years and has two sons, both of whom married this year. On gender issues: "In some fields, we have succeeded. .. At Penn, we've made an effort .., to create an environment in which women feel comfortable." On faculty: "All great universities are built on the basis of faculty val- ues." Arbor). While Power said the first two candi- dates have been "spectacular," the board still is scheduled to interview Dartmouth Provost Lee Bollinger tomorrow and Vice Chancellor and Provost at University of Illinois Larry Faulkner on Monday. Chodorow said Law School Dean Jeffrey Lehman, chair of the Presidential Search Advisory Committee, provided him with lots of literature about the University to pre- pare him for the interviews. "(The University) seems to have a sense of community that's unusual," Chodorow said. "People care about sus- taining that sense of community inter- est." -Daily Staff Reporter Chris Metinko contributed to this report. Peace talks back on track in Mi9deast TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - After a brief crisis, U.S.-mediated peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians were back on track yesterday and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said a deal was "very close to comple- tion." Talks lasted into yesterday evening at a Jerusalem hotel, and Israel Radio said a deal on Israel's long-delayed pullout from the West Bank town of Hebron might be announced during the night. The sides reached agreement early yesterday morning on the future administration of civil affairs in Hebron and were close to agreeing on the security arrangements, Israeli reports said. "I hope it will be finished quickly," Netanyahu said of the agreement. He told reporters that a meeting between him and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat would be "desirable" when an accord is reached. But despite the optimism of the Israeli side, the Palestinians have said they do not want to settle for a deal that resolves only the question of Hebron. They also want Israel to stop expansion of Jewish settlements, ease the closure of Palestinian areas, release Palestinian prisoners and resolve other outstanding issues. "Hebron is not the issue. It's whether Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, (right) and French President Jacques Chirac raise their glasses in a toast yester< day. In his two-day visit to Israel, Chirac ruffled feathers by endorsing the establishment of a Palestinian state. they want peace or not, and all the indi- cations show that they don't want peace," said Ahmed Qureia, speaker of the Palestinian legislative council. The Israelis claim the Palestinians are stalling to put pressure on Israel and to portray it as having reneged on the agreements signed by its previous, more dovish government. "The person who is stalling today and the person who is posturing is Arafat," said Israeli President Ezer Weizman. The latest round of talks began in response to a plea from President Clinton following a week of violence in which Palestinian police and Israeli soldiers opened fire on one another, killing 79 people. At a summit in Washington, Clinton persuaded the two sides to negotiate until they reached accord. The United States reportedly has been pressing the two sides to reach agreement on a Hebron pullback before the U.S. elections. Under the Israel-PLO accords, Israel was to have pulled out of Hebron in March. But then-Prime Minister Shimon Peres delayed the pullout after a series of bombings by Islamic mili- tants in Israel. Netanyahu postponed the withdrawal again after he won Israel's May election, demanding better securi- ty for the 450 Jewish settlers who live in the city of 94,000 Arabs. On Monday, U.S. envoy Dennis Ross, who is mediating the talks, announced he was returning to Washington, appar- ently after concluding that the talks were hopelessly deadlocked. He was-en route to the airport when he received a phone call - from Netanyahu, accod- ing to one unconfirmed report --ard returned to the talks. U.S. Embassy spokesperson Richard Scorza told reporters in Tel Aviv yester- day that Ross decided to delay his departure when it became clear that the latest round, which lasted until after-3 a.m. yesterday, was producing results, "We were in the midst of the most promising discussions to date on the issue of civil affairs," Scorza said. "The discussions made significant progress." ,- MSA Continued from Page 1 very few of those got all the money -they asked for." MSA President Fiona Rose said that in addition to providing more funding for BPC, the assembly would use the additional funding to end its practice *1of relying on a surplus budget. "The extra funding would make for much more stable funding - we will desist starting our budget year with a big question mark about where all the ,,, money's going to come from;" Rose Said. t But not all assembly members were 'RAN KINGS Continued from Page 1 -,faulty information," Mehta said. Rackham Rep. Douglas Friedman -paid the resolution was futile. "Every ranking system that ranks colleges is horribly biased because ,-they concentrate on things they can -measure instead of things that matter to students," Friedman said. "The magazine is not going to stop doing 9 the rankings - they are very popular "rnd sell a lot of magazines." LSA Rep. Dan Serota said the rank- Sing is an opportunity for the University to advertise. ° "No one can honestly say U-M is -being hurt by being in the ranking - .tke University being in the top 25 does 1help out-of-state admissions" Serota °: aid. "This (resolution) could hurt the University and its out-of-state admis- . ,dons in the long run." Stanford's student government was the first among top-25 schools' stu- in favor of asking students for more funding. Rackham Rep. Douglas Friedman called the fee increase question "pork barrel politics" by the assembly. "I think it's very hypocritical for the assembly to complain about tuition bills and then keep asking students to raise their fees for more money," Friedman said. "An increase will mean we have one of the highest student fees in the Big Ten." MSA government fees are currently fifth highest in the Big Ten. If all increases pass, the fee would become the third highest behind Michigan State and Iowa. dent governments to pronounce the system unfair, Mehta said. "Rankings have had a (drastic) effect on students - every major administrative decision is made with the rankings in the back of the admin- istrators' minds," said Nick Thompson, vice president of Associated Students of Stanford. Local students had mixed opinions about the importance of the U.S. News rankings. "Even if it's hard (for the rankings) to be completely accurate they are still helpful," said SNRE senior Catherine Britt. Second-year Dental School student Carla Skaates said students should look beyond rankings when choosing a University. "I'm from the Upper Peninsula and there wasn't very many people to talk to, so (the rankings) came in handy," Skaates said. "But I wouldn't use them as the only criteria for choosing a school." LEAGUE Continued from Page 1. The development is part of a larger renovation project funded by University-issued bonds. In addition to the construction in the Underground, the bond issue is currently paying for renovations to University Health Services, the Pierpont Commons, the Michigan Union and the upper levels of the League, Yecke said. Construction in the League's upper floors began last October and is nearing completion. Yecke said many League systems now under renovation, includ- ing the heating and cooling mecha- nisms and the bathrooms, have seen lit- tie improvement in the past 70 years. Work done to the League's upper lev- els includes the creation of handi- capped-accessible doors on the main level, total renovation of the hotel rooms on the fourth floor and the instal- lation of completely new, handicapped- accessible bathrooms on all floors. Improvements of offices and meeting rooms on the second floor are not yet completed. Though he doesn't use the League very often, LSA senior Roberto Pando said he thought the Underground was a useful addition to the campus. "It will be very benificial for students who have classes in that area to have a place to go, eat and sit," he said. ... _. . _ ... f THETA CHI Continued from Page 1. Landes, who works in the Office of Greek Life and is also an alum of Theta Chi, said chapter presidents are proba- bly the most responsible for alcohol violations because of their high posi- tion in the fraternity. "Greek Life expects chapter presi- dents to know what's going on," Landes said. "We do hold other (fraternity members) responsible" According to the statutes of the host law, a first-time offense is a misde- meanor punishable by no more than 30 days in prison and/or a $1,000 fine. A second offense warrants a 90-day max- imum in jail. The fraternity is currently under investigation for illegally serving alco- hol to minors and having a common source of alcohol on its premises at the party. "It was a young woman having a one- night problem with alcohol which is no way indicative of the Greek system," said Powell, an Engineering senior. Greek alcohol policies prohibit the presence of kegs, bottles and common sources of alcohol - such as coolers or punch bowls - at any fraternity parties. AAPD officer Alicia Green, a police liaison to the Greek system, said a University fraternity president was found guilty of host law violations two years ago. "The person involved was a member of the fraternity Zeta Beta Tau, and he pled guilty," Green said. "ZBT was shut down (last semester) from a combina- tion of a lot of problems and other things." Green said serving alcohol to minors is also a violation of city ordinances and a misdemeanor. LIX GOOD SEATS; UM football tickets. MSU PSU. Call 332-1273. NEED I TICKETS for U of M/Penn State bahe. Call Audrey 669-0491. ROMANTIC ESCAPE " Cozy log cabins, $54-75 nightly, Ac. hot tub, canoes, & more. Traverse City. 6161276-9502. SPRING BREAK reps. wanted Acapulco from $529, Cancun from $429.90, other des- tinations avail. Call Dan at Regency Travel. 665-6122. 209 S. State Street. LEARN PIANO All ages, levels. Experienced, accomplishedt Cal 213-0739. \ e SPRING BREAK SPECIAL at Stamos Travel in Kerrytown 663-4400. U-M desk 663-5500. Contiki & AESU tours special rate. STUDENTS ANYWHERE in the U.S. on Continental $159 or $239. Bring your Con- tinental voucher & AMEX card. Doris at Regency Travel, 209 S. State, 665-6122. WANT TO BUY student ticket for MSU and Penn. State. Call 517/694-5612 eves. WANTED UofM vs. Penn St. tix. Call 609/ 866-2633. WANTED: UofM/MSU Tickts. Student and -Non-Student. Call Angie 996-9118. COME VISIT REEFER CITY www.reefercity.com EXPERIENCED CHESS players needed to work at Michigan's only full-time chess store and studio. Drop by at Adventures in Chess, 220 S. Main (near Liberty) or call John at 665-0612. FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 Billion in public and private sector grants & scholar- ships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext. F55982. ADDITIONAL COMPENSATION for ideal candidate. Loving Michigan couple seek responsible, anonymous young women for egg donation. Ideal candidate would be white, approx. 20-28 years old, approx. 5'2!'- 5'10", healthy and intelligent. Prefer athletic, medium to thin build, with medium to light hair and fair complexion. If you are inclined to make dreams come true contact Ms. Knight at Ann Arbor Reproductive Medicine Assoc. Clark Rd. Ypsilanti, MI. 313/434- 4766. Donation is for couple "DOPBTY". ADOPTION-U of M alum & her husband would like to welcome a newbom into their loving home. Please call Kitty & Alan at 800/ 787-9050 or call Jan collect at 810/548-1588. PREGNANT? Young couple seeking to adopt newborn baby. Lots of love from us and grandparents is waiting for your baby. Expenses paid. If you or a friend are choosing adoption, please contact Mark & Michelle at 8001253-0072. THE FISH DOCTORS back to school a- quarium sale! 10 gallon tank $7.99 29 gallon tank $25.99 50 gallon tank $39.99 Next to Putt-Putt Golf on Washtenaw 434- 1030. WHAT'S WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE? You're not in it! Are you still unsure of how to get home for Thanksgiving or Winter Break? The Michigan Daily can help you get home to see Mom's smiling face. All you have to do is place an ad in our special Homeward Bound section to find someone headed your way. It's cheaper, easier, and more fun (plus more Earth-friendly) to carpool than to drive alone or fly. Here's the deal: 'it's only sip per ad, to be run November 8 in our special section. *Ads will be taken October 14-25. . The deadline is October 25 at 4:00 p.m. ' How-to: Call us at 764-0557, stop by our office on the second floor of 420 Maynard St, or look for us in the Fishbowl October 21-23. * We take cash, local personal checks, Mastercard, and Visa. You'll find a ride home (and make new friends) in no time. Vinur famliv, will 11 TheStPduI The St. Paul Companies is one of the nation's largest and most respected insurance and, financial services firms. We are seeking graduates for Information Technology careers from all degree programs. We will share more information about the company and career op portunities at our Information Session. Information Session Wednesday, October 23rd 7:00pm - 9:00pm Michigan League Building Conference Room 4 Refreshments served If you are unable to attend, please see our home page at http://www.stpaul.com or contact Terry Gorham at e-mail address terry.gorham@spcmai . stpaul.com Throughout our organization, we 're reengineering our systems and pursuing ex- citing development projects as we move from mainframe to an advanced client/server environ- ment. Technologies in use include: " C/C++ " Windows 95 " Microsoft Word " Access " Excel " LAN * Sybase ICD Gateway ~Antfi n TIOS SELLS TRINIDAD Habenero sauce. Winner three years in a row as the best hot sauce in North America. 333 E. Huron. _ .,.. 4ze onn T«..t......a..te :n trt rt ontc I ~ I I