- . - A-_ - _a - - IeamnIIIr',I Im I ITnII ae-frvZ~r iur a : LOCAL/ 3IAE i Iit IV[luIligari udity - rriuay, iditucfty 1! t lt;zlt -- u Collier ,eaves teaching position Former Golden Apple winner stepped out after 'disagreement' By Janet Adamy Dai y Staff Reporter Students expecting to see Thomas Cellier behind the podium at the first eeting of History 366: 20th Century 4Ainerian Wars encountered a different ace last Thursday afternoon. Instead of Collier, who was voted by stpdents to receive the Golden Apple Award for outstanding undergraduate teaching in 1995, history lecturer Bil Kerrigan stood before the class. Collier said yesterday that he chose to stop teaching this term because of a dis- agreement with the history department about undergraduate education. I'm not really anxious to get into a dogfight about it," Collier said, declining specify details of the disagreement. Collier said he no longer is connected with the history department, but will continue to work as an LSA academic adviser. "I don't see any opportunity to return to teaching anytime soon," Collier said. Collier served in the military between 1952 and 1972. He has taught classes about the Vietnam War, World War II and American history. During ,is tenure in the history department, his qourses have been popular because of his unique style of teaching, which draws from his own experience. Although Collier said that "nobody's begging (him) to teach," many students expressed disappointment that Collier will not be standing at the front of the lecture hall. , LSA junior Rachel Flynn said she was "very disappointed" when she #ound out that Collier was not teaching the class. "I was just taking it to take it with Collier," Flynn said. "That's like the only reason I'm taking this class. The whole buzz going around the class on - the first day was 'Oh my God, Collier's not teaching."' Flynn asserted that all the students in .her discussion section said they chose the class to study under Collier. Kerrigan, who was informed in Iovember that he would be teaching the class, said he feels comfortable lee- turing because he previously worked as a teaching assistant for the course. "I'm not Tom Collier," Kerrigan said. "I'm trying to respect the history ~.f the course and keep it fundamental- ly the same, but make some of my own ,changes." Kerrigan said the class will focus rgely on personal experience with ar and war's impact on society. History department Chair Rebecca Scott said it would "not be appropriate" to comment on Collier's choice to leave the department, but said the course was ontinuing to flourish" with Kerrigan teaching. Scott said Kerrigan asked students -on the 142-person waitlist to sign a new list to confirm their interest in taking the class. Scott said that based on the iew list, the department decided to ;open three new discussion sections. "The key fact is that the handwritten w'aitlist that confirmed the students' esire to take the class was sufficient enough to allow us to reopen three new sections,' Scott said. Vazira Zamindar, who served as a graduate student instructor for Collier and is a GSI this semester for Kerrigan, said she is glad Kerrigan is teaching. "Of course a lot of students enrolled because they thought that Collier was teaching the class, so I expect that Collier had a considerable following with the students," Zamindar said. "However, a lot of students have chosen to stay with the class. It has lots of information, and the students will still get that." History Prof. W Andrew Achenbaum said he would "love to see a situation where Collier could contin- due teaching." "Any time in which excellence in classrooms is not maximized is a loss,' Achenbaum said. Achenbaum said he did not feel the history department treated undergradu- ates unfairly. "I think the department has long enjoyed teaching undergraduates," Achenbaum said. Ilona Cohen, an LSA senior major- ing in history and political science, said the department should listen more to the input of students. "Obviously the happiness of the undergraduate students reflects on the reputation of the University," Cohen Senate committee debates wage jump LANSING (AP) - Michigan busi- ness and organized labor locked horns again yesterday over a bill to increase the state minimum wage. But this time, the outcome may be different. The chair of the Senate committee reviewing the bill said "something" will win the panel's approval. And the mea- sure is sponsored by a member of the Republican majority in the Senate, where such legislation died last year. "Something will come out of commit- tee," said Sen. Mike Rogers (R-Howell) chair of the Senate Human Resources and Labor Committee. And Tim Hughes, a spokesperson for the state AFL-CIO, said "it's a basic issue of fairness." He noted the state minimum wage has not been increased in 19 years. "I think it's going to pass the Senate" Rogers said. "This is a much more responsible bill than came over last year. I think it's a much more responsi- ble approach." Last year, the House passed a bill to boost the wage, but business also objected to other provisions. The Senate never took up the measure. The federal minimum wage was boosted last year; the state wage would apply only to companies that do not engage in interstate commerce and have gross receipts under $500,000 a year. The Senate bill would: ® Raise the minimum wage to $4.75 an hour on July 1 and to S5.15 on Sept. 1, 1998. Permit a $2.52 per-hour wage foi employees who earn tips, as long as the tips make up the difference to the mini- mum wage. Allow a $4.25 "training wage" foi employees less than 20 years old for the first 90 days of work. AP PHOTO A recovery technician from the Marine Pollution Control in Detroit sifts through debris from the Comair Flight 3272 crash. The crash remains are being stored in a warehouse in Raisinville Township, Mich. Investigators give tour of wreckage reconstruction RAISINVILLE TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) - One week after it was supposed to land in Detroit, Comair Flight 3272 has arrived, for now, at a cold, aban- doned nursery warehouse about 20 miles short of its destination. Here, investigators will clean off and lay out the crushed and charred pieces of the Embraer Brasilia 120. And it's where the pieces will stay until federal investigators decide they hold no more clues about why the plane crashed, killing 29 people. The wreckage is in. the hands of Richard Rodriguez, the chief investiga- tor for the National Transportation Safety Board. He said everything except the engines and propellers, which have been sent back to their man- ufacturers for testing, will be washed with bleach, arranged by location before the crash and kept under lock and key. Any clues to the crash are probably somewhere else. "There are no Easter eggs in there," Rodriguez said. "The stuff is available for examination should we find the need." All of the pieces that recovery teams could find have been removed from the crash site. For the past two days, nine men wearing yellow protective suits and blue helmets with face shields have scrubbed the pieces with soft brushes soaked in household bleach or sprayed the larger parts. Several large pieces of the plane are still recognizable, including the right and front landing gear, the wing flaps and the tail section. Some pieces are charred, but itTherea Easter eg there." els managed to keep their white-and- red Comair paint scheme. Rodriguez pointed out some parts of the plane that had attracted interest before. The two tanks that held fire extinguisher fluid for the engines were found. Investigators found the handle that activates the right engine's extin- guisher in the "on" position in the wreckage. NTSB offi- ire no cials have said that there was no s Il sign the engine was on fire before the crash, ard Rodriguez and Rodriguez declined to say if B investigator any residue was found in the tanks, which were torn open in the crash. Rodriguez also pointed out the throt- tle control. Although some of the han- dles had been torn away, the control for the right engine was found open farther than the one for the left engine. - Rich NTSE most were mangled when the plane nosed into the frozen ground. Many of the wires and pipes were marked with yellow plastic flags tied with wire, used by investigators to mark the pieces in the field. A few metal pan- Board of Ed. faces scrutiny Engler looks to limit state panel's power LANSING (AP) -Gov. John Engler might as well have been peddling ice cubes door-to-door in Michigan yester- day when he talked with the State Board of Education about his orders stripping away the panel's authority. Few were in the mood to buy what Engler was pushing. "I think that it's; unconstitutional and I think it's a? mistake. I'd love to see you with- draw it," board member Barbara Roberts Mason (D-Lansing) told Engler bluntly. Engler Engler reject- ed the criticism of Mason and other board members, insisting he has the power as head of the executive branch to take away duties of the elected board. He laughed at Mason's comment that the board has been involved in policy matters in the past, such as school finance. "It would come as a thunderbolt to the Legislature to know you were secretly involved," he said. And he repeated his claim that the board has been too bogged down in triv- ial details to look at the broader picture of how to improve schools in Michigan. "I think some of the forest is missed for the trees;" he said. "This board has been focused on the trees and you don't know if you're in sequoias or pines." Engler last month issued two execu- tive orders transferring to the state superintendent of public instruction many duties that have been carried out by the board. One takes effect in March and one in July. Discussion of the orders came at the first meeting of the board after Republicans gave up control of the panel. Democrats and Republicans are now deadlocked 4-4. The only board members clearly in Engler's corner were Republicans Clark Durant of Grosse Pointe and Sharon Wise of Owosso. Republican Gary Wolfram of Hillsdale was absent. "It does challenge us to have a clear- er focus on what we do," Durant said. Republican Dorothy Beardmore of Rochester joined Democrats in com- plaining that the orders give the super- intendent more than ministerial duties, including setting requirements in areas such as teacher certification. Program on Intergroup Relations Conflict and Community *onday, January 20, 1997 Michian League 1:00-7:OOPM I 9 I IAnn Arbor's best kept lunch secret: ' SOUP and BREAD A variety of delicious soups served with freshly baked bread. I Small $3.15 Large $3.65 I Receive $1 OFF either size with this coupon. I Good through Feb. 14 at these locations: 302 S. State " 1123 S. University 9 3060 Washtenaw Ave. L - ..- .....m.....-......................... Registration begins at 3:30 Me3 hour Intergroup/lntragroup dialogues are an opportunity for people to come together to talk about commonaities and differences, address issues of conflict and explore common ground. You can choose one of the followin gdialoues: __.- , ,,, Every Day! -Participants must be a member of one of the social identity groups attendng the dialogue. The meeting wil be co-facilitated by two