LoCAL/STATE The Michigan Daly - Wednesday, September 24, 1997 - 3 U', of Wisconsin student found dead on campus University of Wisconsin stu- dent was found dead in a campus family housing unit on Monday night. The student, a 29-year-old male, was found by his roommate, who immediately called the police an paramedics, said Lt. Gary Johnson of the university's police and security office. A cause of death has not yet been determined. Autopsy results from Dane County coroner's office a. expected by tomorrow, Johnson said. "At this point we have nothing to lead us to believe that foul play was involved," Johnson said. He said the identity of the student will be released when all family members are contacted. structor and urdue students killed in crash Two Purdue University students a4d their instructor were killed this month when a twin-engine airplane they were flying crashed on takeoff frpin the Purdue airport. The plane was used by the univer- for training in the aviation Martment's flight program. The students were identified as Julie Swengel and Anthony Kinkade, both juniors majoring in aviation technology. The instructor, Jeremy Sanborn, was an aviation- education specialist and a Purdue alnnus. ,The National Transportation Safety Board has found no indica- of mechanical failure last week, but was still investigating the crash. The safety board investigators have not yet identified which student was pilting the plane. Female football player sues Duke A female football player is suing ke University and its head foot- i coach for allegedly keeping her offethe team because of her gender. Lawyers for Heather Sue Mercer filed the suit last week in a federal court in Greensboro, N.C., The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. They charged that Duke University and its Coach Fred Gpldsmith have violated Title IX of 0 Education Amendments of 1972, ich prohibits sex discrimination at. ,institutions that receive federal funds. Mercer, a senior, had been trying to become the first wvoman to play Division I football. She is seeking compensatory and punitive dam- ages. Ship safety aemester at Sea questioned The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating possi- bl fire hazards on a ship that set sij. this month carrying 641 stu- dits enrolled in the Semester at Si4 program. °Safety board officials said the vestigation stemmed from con- ,ns about a fire on the ship in July 1996 that killed five crew members. Officials are investigating whether the ship has proper fire detectors and sprinklers, an NTSB spokesper- son said. 'Students from 205 institutions, including the University of Michigan, are enrolled in the three- month program sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh, The *fonicle of Higher Education reported. A University of Pittsburgh spokesperson said the ship passed inspection by the U.S. Coast Guard fol- lowing $1.5 million in repairs. ,Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Megan Exley from University Wire and The Chronicle of Higher Education. MSA budget increases funding to student groups JOHN KRAFT/Daily RC junior David Caroline speaks to the Michigan Student Assembly at last night's meeting. MSA addressed a rash of recent campus hate crimes. MSA -earmarks $ for student regent poii By Susan T. Port Daily Staff Reporter Along with balancing budget num- bers last night, Michigan Student Assembly members discussed the pos- sibility of placing a student member on the University Board of Regents. The assembly voted to allocate $800 to fund a student task force fighting for a student seat on the board. Trent Thompson, who chairs the task force, said the $800 will be used to hire a service to poll 600 people in the state of Michigan and find a gen- eral consensus about student represen- tation on the board. MSA Vice President Olga Savic said the money allocated for the poll will be beneficial to see how the state feels about the possibility of an amendment to the Michigan's state constitution. "The poll is very important," Savic said. "Then we'll know what support (is) in the state before we go further." Thompson said the group has been working with representatives from Wayne State, Michigan State University, and the University's Flint and Dearborn campuses to devise a proposal for a state constitutional amendment. "The amendment would allow for two student members - one with voting power and the other would be an ex-offi- ciary," said Thompson, an LSA junior. Thompson said the reason for hav- ing only one voting student member is to allow the non-voting student mem- ber to act as a protege and then step into the other's shoes at the end of a two-year term. MSA President Michael Nagrant supports having students on the board. "I disagree with (University President Lee Bollinger) that there is no direct input from the students,' Nagrant said. "I will continue the fight to have students on the board:' At a meeting of the faculty governing body Monday, Bollinger did not lend support for the idea of adding student or faculty representatives to the board. He said student or faculty regents would not necessarily improve lines of com- munication with the administration. By Susan t. Port Daily Staff Reporter After almost two hours of debate last night, Michigan Student Assembly members ended up right where they started. The assembly passed its 1997- 98 budget without any changes or additions to the document on the table last week. The approved budget, written by MSA executive officers, increases funding for student groups from $90,000 to $140,000 for the 1997-98 academic year. MSA Vice President Olga Savic said the increase is a result of cutting the operational costs of running the MSA office. Approximately 13 phone lines were cut, along with other office supplies and services. "Basically, cleaning the little things in terms of ourselves," Savic said. "MSA should have just enough money that the office can function. No point in time did we (need) 13 phone lines." The money budgeted by MSA members comes entirely from a $5.69 fee on student tuition bills. The fee was increased by $1 this year, after stu- dents passed a ballot question last spring to increase the money available for student groups. "All of the money comes from the students directly," Nagrant said. "The dollar increase is going directly into student organizations." Budget Priorities Committee (BPC) Chair Karie Morgan said there is an application process stu- dent groups must go through to receive funding. "Basically, our goal is to try to provide funding as equally as possi- ble, not promoting one student group over another," said Morgan, an SNRE senior. "We try to look at events and activities that will impact the most number of stu- dents." To receive funding through MSA, a group must fill out an application with BPC. The committee then con- tacts the group via e-mail or by phone if it has questions. The group will have a week to answer. The committee abandoned the past practice of holding BPC hear- ings where student groups looking* for funds would make presentations to the committee. "It's more fair this way," Morgan said. "Some groups know what we want to hear." Savic said the committee goes through a screening process with the applications to ensure the organiza- tions are non-profit. "We screen for them when they turn in their forms," Savic said. "Student resources are for student groups." Savic said this year the assembly is backing several special projects to host high profile speakers or conferences on campus. Savic said the assembly granted funds to "projects that really fit in but are special student services that we haven't done before." The eligibility of the special stu- dent services to apply for funding was in question at last night's meet- ing. "For a second I was concerned because I didn't think people realized there was a difference between com- mittee discretionary funds and special projects," Savic said. Committee discretionary funds can be spent on causes throughout the year, instead of being specifically approved with the budget. LSA Student Government Rep. Gary Zhao said the budget commit- "basically, our goal is to try to provide funding as equally as possible, not promoting one student group over another." -- Karie Morgan BPC chair tee of LSA-SG has money to give to student groups in a similar fashion to MSA. The organization has funded Diversity Days, Hillel's Holocaust conference and Alternative Spring Break. Zhao said the relocation of the government's office to the fourth floor may have caused some confu- sion. "My purpose is to serve the LSA students'"Zhao said. MSA President Mike Nagrant said this semester's budget fulfills one of the campaign promises the Students' Party ran under in last spring's elec- tions. "One of the promises we made when we ran was to increase funding to student groups" said Nagrant, an LSA senior. "We got rid of internal wastes." Campus Government Committee Chair Dan Serota said MSA has to prove to the student body that the student assembly does more than give out money. "I think MSA has to evaluate why we have trouble," Serota said. "MSA services have dropped sig- nificantly we need to work out a balance." External Relations Chair Erin Carey tried to get the assembly to pass an amendment for allowing for the allocation of $500 of MSA funds to help pay to send University representatives to a national confer- ence. "I am disappointed it didn't go through,' said Carey, an LSA junior. "It doesn't necessarily mean we won't go to the conference. LSA focuses on gender. By Christine M. Palk Daily Staff Reporter At a university of more than 30,000 students, it's hard to imagine any com- mon theme within the hundreds of cours- es available to a diverse student body. Nonetheless, LSA is hosting a theme semester this fall tying together issues of "Genders, Bodies, Borders" in 45 classes in 24 departments. Abby Stewart, director of the Institute for Research on Women and Gender, said the purpose of "Genders, Bodies, Borders" is to provide a the- matic approach to academics and to integrate different disciplines, mainly those of gender and women's studies and international studies. "We want to study the construction of self across borders," Stewart said. "By having a theme semester available to stu- dents, we can provoke different kinds of dialogues across different departments." LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg said the six previous theme semesters have been successful. "The idea of theme semesters is to provide an opportunity to focus in a coherent way on such a broad theme," she said. "It's one that engages the exper- tise of our faculty and that excites the intellectual curiosity of students." LSA junior Jennifer Britton said that the theme semester is "adding a new twist to some of the same old stuff." "I am learning that the issues of gen- der, bodies and borders is very broad, that it spans into many other aspects of soci- ety," Britton said. "I think that issues on genders and bodies are very important, some of the biggest issues in society now are tied to them, and for people to have an understanding of what is going on around them, they must also look at what ties us all together." Deli blamed for Hepatitis A outbreak Women's studies Prof. Pat Simons, who is currently teaching a class on representations of "Lesbianism in Early Modern Western Europe," said the theme semester focuses on allowing students to obtain an understanding of gender and an awareness of related his- tory and culture. "It's important for students to gain an understanding of the complexities that are out there now socially and political- ly in the late 20th century," Simons said. "For a long time now, we've been aware of the need to look at intersec- tions between such categories such as race, class and sexuality, but now, with 'Genders, Bodies, Borders,' students can study this more in depth." Frank Ukadike, an assistant professor of communications and Afro-American and African studies, is teaching a class about cultural issues in cinema. "The goal is generally to make stu- dents aware of other cultures, other ideas, have the courage to read what might be deemed as alternative writ- ings, and try to understand why the people within these alternative tradi- tions, react to the issues they do," Ukadike said. Emily Marker, an LSA junior, said she was surprised to see a variety of courses relating to the theme semester. "I was happy to see the University support such course offerings and was excited to see such a wide range of top- ics covered," she said. DETROIT (AP) - Oakland County health officiE they have traced the deadly statewide Hepatitis A outb a side dish served at a county deli. So far, 43 cases of Hepatitis A have been cons including a 67-year-old man who died. All the victin exposed in August at the deli. "We know the food itself was the cole slaw," Patters, yesterday. How the virus got into the slaw remained u. The West Bloomfield Township deli serves abc pounds of the slaw every week to its 6,000 or s tomers, said owner Steven Goldberg, who was shoc the news. "We have a 35-year history of serving high qualil and no history of food-borne illness," he said. He buys shredded cabbage for the slaw, then adds I sauce. Hepatitis A is caused by a virus that attacks the liv typically passed from person to person through food 1 by unwashed hands. While authorities don't know where or how the sI State sees s apdlo sharp drop i teen birthrates DETROIT (AP) - Births by Michigan teen-agers are dropping faster than in any other urban, industrial state, and the drop in Detroit is even more pro- nounced, new federal statistics show. Health officials and experts have no single reason for the decline, but 13- year-old Tercia Hill and other students said they know. "I ain't grown yet," the student at Jackson Middle School on Detroit's east side said yesterday. "I have trouble trying to find time for my homework. Those couple of minutes are not worth it; they're not worth the rest of your life?' Michigan's birth rate among 15- to 19- year-old girls fell from 59 per thousand in 1991 to 49 per thousand in 1995, the latest year for which complete figures are available from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That's a drop of nearly 17 percent. Only Alaska, Hawaii, Maine and Vermont showed greater declines. In Detroit, the decline was 25 percent from 1991 to 1995, an analysis of state health statistics shows. That compares with a 14-percent drop in Oakland ('. nnnt * n an t-jr.n n a . n. .~ni., tainted, Goldberg is taking his own precautions. His staff now must wash their hands every 20 minutes, and use more disposable gloves in the kitchen. He has brought in a consultant to examine food preparation for possible food safety suggestions. Patterson's announcement yesterday hadn't affected early lunch traffic at the deli, Goldberg said. The wife of one customer who is afflicted with Hepatitis A said she wasn't sure if they'd ever eat at the deli again. "I think I would be apprehensive although now it's proba- bly the healthiest place in town now," said Marilyn Frommer,: whose husband often dines at the deli. "He has the slaw every time he eats there" she said yester- day. Al Frommer got sick about two weeks ago. "You know how men are; he wouldn't go to the doctor;' Marilyn Frommer said. After a few days, his temperature shot up to 102 degrees and his skin was yellowing. Al Frommer ended up hospitalized for several days. His recovery could take up to eight weeks, Marilyn Frommer- said. *PointCast Paid Internship + Get Internet marketing experience + Set your own hours " Work on your campus PointCast Inc., the leader in Internet broadcast news, has a paid internship opportunity for an enthusiastic, Web savvy student. Work 10-15 hrs/week evangelizing the PointCast College Network on your campus. Give product demonstrations, promote user benefits and encourage fellow students to use the FREE PointCast College Network software and service -downloadable at www.pointcast.com. Earn $1.50 for EVERY new PointCast user on your campus (up to $5,000 this semester). Call (408)990-6525 or visit our online application form at: www.pointcast.com/products/college/evangelist.html 1I "-GROUP MEETINGS $4- EVENTS U Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley Lobby8 pim.- 1:30 a.m. 0