t 'Elan ti t NNFW vows: 76-DAILY Advertising: 764-0554 One hundred six years of editorialfreedom Friday April 18,1997 I - vol evl NO 1IAd..r ,97Th ihga al students plan Eartlweek Commencement speaker named Sources confirm Bollinger will deliver keynote address eents By Alice Robinson Daily Staff Reporter Students passing through the Diag today may see more garbage than usual. A display of trash, designed to draw attention to wastefulness on campus, wj be set up from noon to 6 p.m. as of Earthweek, which starts today and runs through Earth Day, April 22. The Michigan Student Assembly's Environmental Issues Commission is { sponsoring the week of Earth awareness t under the theme "Love your Y Cmother, there is no other:' *RCY MCCORMICK /Daily T h e Environmental Issues Commission, with help from various other student organizations, hopes to emphasize the importance of conserving the Earth's resources, with various participatory events planned throughout the week, including today's Critical Mass Bike Ride and tomorrow's day of environ- mental service, "Hands on the Planet" garthweek this year is very, very inclusive. We have many (new) events sponsored by lots of different kinds of groups," SNRE junior Mona Hanna said. Hanna, chair of the Environmental Issues Commission, an umbrella group for all environmental organizations on campus. "We have people ranging from the College Republicans having events, to Project Serve," Hanna said. lthough this year's Earthweek a vities were planned later in the year than last year's events, organizers said they hope students will take time out from studying to learn about taking See EARTHWEEK, Page 2 Studennts experience Weightless flights By Matt Weller Daily Staff Reporter 'hreeUniversity students are read- justing to civilian life after spending a week as astronauts-in-training and two daunting days in experimental flight. Engineering seniors D.J. Kroeger, Amber Thweatt and John Korsakas traveled to NASA's Johnson Space Centerfield at Ellington Field, Texas, to test their VORTEX microgravity exper- iment in a modified airplane. The RTEX is an experiment in fluid amics that produces drops of liquid in a weightless environment. The trip was not all thrills and chills, however. There was at least one spill. "It was an amazing experience," Kroeger said. "I did puke on parabola number six, but up until then it was unreal." Kroeger said that a bad case of but- terflies in the stomach was the culprit in his sickness. 0 guess I was a little nervous, " he said. Kroeger said that although he may have lost his lunch, he has not lost his astronaut aspirations. "It is still such an amazing and excit- ing occupation," Kroeger said. "One bad moment on a flight is nothing ... without a doubt, I'd do it again." Thweatt said she had reservations a out the airborne roller coaster ride. I thought to myself, 'Oh my gosh, do I really want to do this?' I heard horror sto- ries about people getting sick," she said. But for Thweatt, the weightless inter- vals ended up being nothing short of a flying funhouse. "Oh, we had a blast:' she said."We By Katie Wang Daily Staff Reporter Sources close to the University Board of Regents said yesterday that the regents plan to invite President Lee Bollinger to deliver the keynote address at next month's Spring Commencement ceremony. The source said Bollinger will accept the invitation. "It is an opportunity for him to talk directly to students who were, after all, his first (graduating) class," the source said. The regents also will be asked at their board meeting today to approve a list of candidates who have been nominated to receive an honorary degree from the University. The source said that it has been a tradition for a new University presi- dent to deliver the keynote to commence- ment speech during his first year in office. Bollinger was selected for the presidential post by the regents last November and he took office in February. Former President James Duderstadt delivered the keynote address for the 1989 shortly after he took office. Even if the regents had extended an invitation to deliver the keynote another speaker, Bollinger would have been expected to speak at the ceremony as University president. This year's candidates for honorary degrees are: Mary Frances Berry, chair of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and this year's keynote speaker for the University's Martin Luther King Jr. Day sympo- sium; Robert Fiske, Jr., trial attorney and original special counsel to the Whitewater investigation; mathematician Sergei Godunov; and Eugene Roberts, managing editor of the New York Times. The official announcement of the commence- ment speaker at today's regents' meeting will bring an end to weeks of speculation and rumors that had been circulating about the identity of the speaker. "I heard it was Bush or Clinton, but I guess those rumors come up every year," said LSA senior Alyssa Dunn. Dunn said she is disappointed that the keynote speaker isn't a nationally recognized figure. "I don't think it's fair" Dunn said. "I'm just real- ly disappointed." When LSA senior Christine Gray heard the news, she said if she didn't have family coming in from California, she would not attend the ceremo- ny at Michigan Stadium. "I was wondering why it took so long, but it See SPEAKER, Page 2 Spring Commencement, Hartford addresses housing difficulties ' By Heather Kamins Daily Staff Reporter Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hartford deliv- ered the first of a three-part presentation on University housing at yesterday's meeting of the University Board of Regents, and she admitted that the University must make some changes. Hartford said yesterday the University increases housing costs each year, but the money is just used to maintain the halls, rather than to make changes and improvements. "We know we are falling a little behind in these areas" Hartford said. "We have some major challenges ahead of us?' After the board approved a housing rate increase in February, it requested to see data ensuring that the annual increases are necessary. The board requested assurance that the most efficient manner of improvement and maintenance in the residence halls was being implemented. Hartford also said the University may not be housing stu- dents adequately. "It's probably not a wise idea to put three persons in a room that was made for two," Hartford said. Regent Laurence Deitch (D- Bloomfield Hills) said the residence halls currently do not provide students with an enriching learning environment. "I believe the residence halls are too ' crowded and too expensive, period," Deitch said. "We put three people in a room built for two people who brought a pillow and a bag. Now it's computers and microwaves. "If we're serious about improving undergraduate education, it seems to me Hartford the residence halls may or may not be conducive to learning and growth experi- ence;" Deitch said. However, University President Lee Bollinger said the University is not alone in its shortages of space. See HOUSING, Page 2 Board hears public concerns By Erika M. Smith and Katie Wang Daily Staff Reporters The University Board of Regents confronted more issues at its monthly meeting than outlined in its agenda, as protesters outside the Fleming Administration Building demonstrated against financial cuts in the University Hospitals budget. "They are trying to herd us like sheep and treat us like dogs," said Frank Williams, chief steward for the University Skilled Trades Union. "The people who are going to suffer from this reduction in care is us" Following the rally, a number of the union members filed into the Michigan Union's Kuenzel Room, where they addressed the regents during a public comments session. Citizens for Quality Health Care, a consortium of groups concerned about national changes in health care policies, sponsored the rally, drawing the support of more than 60 par- ticipants. Coordinators of the event said it was planned in anticipation of the second phase of a three-part budget cut- back plan for the University Medical Center. Speakers included members of supporting unions, hospital employees and community members. Many of the protesters were longtime members of the University community, and some were current students. LSA first-year student Dave Ginsberg said he was excited about the rally and hoped it would increase activism on cam- pus. "I think it's great that we can have a labor movement," Ginsberg said. "I think we should do more of this." The afternoon rally brought back to Ann Arbor former University Medical Center employee Trudy Swanson, cur- rently an Ypsilanti City Councilmember. When it was her turn to speak, Swanson said the workers were "much-needed See BOARD, Page 2 JOHN KRAFR/Daily Malcolm Marts, president of local UAW #1976, protests yesterday outside the Fleming Administration Building in support of the Labor Party of Washtenaw County. Groups use jeans to rally for rghts By Alice Robinson Daily Staff Reporter Members of the Queer Unity Project hoped to force people to take a stand - even one of indifference - on lesbian, gay and bisexual rights yesterday by proclaiming the day as a a time for supporters to wear jeans. Organizers said they understand that wearing jeans is not exactly the most self-sacrificing form of activism. "A lot of people make jokes about Jeans Day, they say they're going to start a straight day where everyone who doesn't support (gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered) rights wears shoes, etc.," QUP member Jen Trudell said in a written statement. "The point is it's not about the jeans, it's about inspiring discussion." "I think it's good that they have something that people can do," said LSA first-year student Julie Keller. "I think a lot of people will be able to sup- port it." Those who organized the day of subtle activism said they felt the goal team. Ghoshal and other volunteers helped spread the word by handing out denim patches to interested stu- dents in the basement of the Michigan Union from Il a.m. to 3 p.m. yester- day. "There were some people who just looked at the table and walked away, but there were others who came up," Ghoshal said. Although fliers and e-mail messages were intended to reach students, many said they had not heard about the cam- paign. Some students said they doubted their denim would make much of a dif- ference. "I think it's difficult because so many people wear jeans," LSA senior Sara Miller said at the Angell Hall computing site yesterday afternoon. "I don't think a lot of people knew about it. I didn't know about it and I read the paper pretty much every day." LSA senior Brad Rosenberg, who was not wearing jeans, said he was not aware of Jeans Day, but had to dress up Make art, not war , ~ - t * t,- ..i ~s ;. -4 JOSH BIGGS/Daily Students in Mike Sell's 'The 60s, the Counterculture and American Literature' class splatter and brush on the Diag yester- ,dv hnnfino $ Ae +,udents+ tat ef tha ecletic cnuntercuiture art of the 1960s. The work incorporated representa- I Ii I