2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 18, 1997 NATION/WORLD i HOUSING Continued from Page 1 "The spacing fact is a reality of every major university," Bollinger laid. "Each university has three people in rooms built for two people. This is just the reality. I would doubt that the use of the dorm space here is any worse than that at any other major inqsitutions."' The regents asked for further infor- mation regarding possibilites of privati- zation and cost reduction. Regent Andrea Fischer Newman (R-Ann Arbor) said the report did not include all the information she was anticipat- ins. # "We need to think out of the box," Newman said. "I want to hear creativi- ty. I want to hear ideas. I know we have them. I'm sure if you think about it there are things you could do that are npt being done anywhere else.' ;Bollinger agreed that the option of privatization in housing may be valid and cost efficient.. '"This is the regents' first effort to start to get data," Bollinger said. "I think we do need to get more data on private ownership versus University maintenance. We cer- tainly can look at private institu- tions." Hartford said the University has already begun to look at peer institu- tions as comparisons and possible mod- els for improvement. "We have begun to ask some peer institutions where they are in this area," Hartford said. "This is something that has not been asked much before. We asked eight of them, and only (Pennsylvania State University) answered ... and they are in about the same place as us." Newman said steps should be taken to bring closure to the housing issue. "This is something that can't keep getting dragged out," Newman said. "We want to make sure we remain com- petitive and do the right things to take us into the next century." Hartford promised to bring the board a more extensive report that examines the issue of privatization. "I'm hearing you say you want a good extensive presentation that includes benchmarking, but don't let the benchmarking constrain our think- ing," Hartford said. EARTHWEEK Continued from Page 1 care of the environment. "We're hoping this is the beginning of a community environmental movement on campus," said SNRE senior Ami Grace, a mem- ber of Environmental Action at the University. Grace said one of the things ENACT will be involved in during the week is gathering the junk mail students in res- idence halls receive, such as J. Crew catalogs, and sending them back to the corporations. "We're doing things like the junk mail campaign," she said. "We're going to count the junk mail and then we're going to write a letter to the ... differ- ent organizations and say, 'This is how much you waste."' Hanna said she is excited about today's Critical Mass Bike Ride. "This was started in San Francisco ... as a means for people to use alternatives to cars," she said. "We want to get as many people as possi- ble ... promoting alternatives to cars." The cyclists will meet on the Diag at 4:30 p.m. and bike around Ann Arbor, Hanna said. Lisa Baker, associate vice president for university relations, said the University is enthusiastic about upcoming Earthweek events. "The University welcomes students' input on environmental issues and I think people will be interested in see- ing all of the planned activities," she said. The University plans to give chlo- rine-free paper a trial run in the computing sites in the Michigan Union and Dana Hall, in honor of Earthweek. Producing chlorine paper pollutes nearby waterways and causes other environmental problems, Hanna said. BOARD Continued from Page 1 community servants." "We have labored, we have worked ... for the community," Swanson said. "Now it is the time for us to get out into the community and tell them, 'We need your help."' While other speakers voiced their grievances with the University, Catherine Wilkerson, a doctor repre- senting Physician for a National Health Plan, pointed fingers at some of the University's top officials. "We have to make 'profit' a dirty word in health care," Wilkerson said. "I charge President Bollinger, the regents ... and others in power to be leaders of the pack." But not all the action took place out- side of the regents' meeting. The speaker's list for this month's public comments session was unusal- ly lengthy. Although many of the comments were linked to cuts at the University Medical Center, some speakers raised concerns about the use of the Nichols Arboretum. . Rackham student Ronald Holzhacker issued complaints with the regents about the use of the arboretum by University students in the Reserve Officer's Training Corps. Holzhacker, who is also a member of the Citizens for the Preservation of Nichols Arboretum, said ROTC's pres- ence in the arb represents a threat to the environment. "No one has said that ROTC intends to threaten other visitors or destroy plant specimens or frighten off wildlife," Holzhacker said. "The point is that the very nature of ROTC activities threaten other users, dam- age plant specimens and contributes to the severe erosion problems of the Arb." SAROUND THE NATI N Gingrich to pay fine with Dole loan WASHINGTON - In a startling bid to close the books on his ethics case, Speaker Newt Gingrich announced yesterday he would borrow $300,000 from retired Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole to pay a sanction imposed for violation of House rules. Gingrich told a rapt audience in the House chamber he had a "moral obligation" to make the payment from personal funds. Anything else, including establishment of a legal defense fund, he said; "would simply be seen as one more politicil shirking his duty and one more example of failing to do the right thing." With his wife, Marianne, looking down from her seat in the visitors' gallery, Gingrich took responsibility for his case, and said, "To the degree I have made mis- takes, they have been errors of implementation but never of intent." Documents released by the speaker's office said the loan was for a term of eight years, with simple interest at an annual rate of 10 percent. J. Randolph Evans, Gingrich's attorney, said no payment is required until the loan is due in 2005. Gingrich, no longer eligible to be speaker by then, could well be out of Congress and able to earn substantial money as a private citizen. Senior Democrats immediately said they would seek a thorough review of the proposed transaction by the ethics committee. Officials said Dole, the losing GOP candidate in last fall's presidential caW paign, offered to lend the money to Gingrich two or three weeks ago. SPEAKER dontinued from Page 1. rade me hope it would be someone better known," Gray said. "I'm disap- ppinted it's not someone coming in ftom the outside to give us a new per- spective." Engineering senior Chris DeRonne called the selection "strange.' "I think a lot of people will be dis- appointed," DeRonne said. "We fig- ure we can see him speak anytime ... people were just expecting someone djifferent." ; Not all seniors were disenchanted v4ith the news. "Every year it seems like we get the worst speakers,"Gladis said. "I wish we got someone big. We pay enough money." Recent commencement speakers include President Bush, First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, Spelman College President Johnetta Cole, Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and cartoonist Cathy Guisewite. LSA junior Todd Gladis said he is worried about who next year's com- mencement speaker will be. The Spring Commencement is sched- uled to take place Saturday, May 3, at 9:30 p.m. in the Michigan Stadium. White House holds panel on children WASHINGTON - A panel of experts at a White House conference yesterday described compelling new research showing that a child's lan- guage, thinking and emotional health are largely formed before age 3 and argued that the nation needs to inter- vene earlier if the lives of many disad- vantaged young children are to be turned around. In an unusual conference convening a range of scientists and child-develop- ment specialists from around the coun- try, the panelists called for higher qual- ity day care, parenting education and expanded health coverage for children, much of which is supported by President Clinton and First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. "We know what works," said Hillary Clinton, who hosted the all-day affair. "We have to intervene with over- stressed parents. But we don't have any systematic way to do it." The conference, carried by satellite to nearly 100 sites across the country, was meant to highlight a growing body of research that points to the rapid peri- od of brain development in children from birth to age 3. Until a few years ago, infants were commonly viewed as passive creatu largely unaware and unaffected by the surroundings. Jumbo jets have close encounter LOS ANGELES - Jumbo jets e route from Japan and Holland passed dangerously close to each other - within two-thirds of a mile - while flying over south-central Los Anger apparently because of a faulty auto- pilot device, authorities said yesterday: On approach Wednesday afternoon, flying about 10 miles east of Los Angeles International Airport over the densely populated residential and industrial area below, a Dutch KLM Boeing 747 was forced to make a sud- den turn to avoid a Brazilian VASP MD-11, authorities said. a _: * AROUND THE WOR( Israeli leader says he won't resig JERUSALEM - Insisting "the truth will triumph,' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said yesterday he wouldn't resign in the face of his country's burgeoning political corruption scandal. In an afternoon speech just two days after police investigators recommended he be indicted for fraud and "breach of trust, Netanyahu said he was not going away so quickly or quietly. "Put away your suits" he warned his opponents. "This government is not going anywhere. We are staying where the people and history have put us." Cabinet Secretary Danny Naveh, one of Netanyahu's top advisers, noted the police recommendation to indict had been based on the testimony of only one key witness, and predicted that the charges would never be brought. David Bar-Illan, Netanyahu's senior policy adviser, called the evidence unearthed during the 12- week investigation "flimsy and trivial" and said the administration's motto was "business as usual." "No resignation, no suspension, nb new elections, no nothing"he said. "We do not expect an indictment and we see nothing in the evidence to warrant one." Still, most administration offici* acknowledged that an atmosphere of cat- astrophe had settled in as the government lurched into the latest crisis of its short tenure. Russian officials call for internal cutbacks MOS.COW - Russia faces such huge financial crisis that it must the out its federal budget in mid-year and adopt a plan that drastically cuts gov- ernment spending, President Boris Yeltsin's top financial official said yes- terday. The nation is in "a monstrous budget crisis, the scale of which calls into question the ability of the government to perform its functions" said. First Deputy Prime Minister Anatoly Chubais in a speech to parliament. * - Compiled from Daily wire reports. YELLOW 2050 Commere M Ann Aito, Ml48103 663-3355 0 Largest and newest fleet ® 4 can share the fare ® Service to metro airport E Night Ride service o 663-3888 24 Hour Taxi Service REUGIOUII SERVICES AVAVAVAVA CANTERBURY HOUSE Episcopal Center at the University of Michigan 721 E. Huron St. Ann Arbor, MI. (313) 665-0606 The Rev. 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