LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 5, 1997 - 3 Death of U of Kentucky prof. caled homicide *A University of Kentucky architec- ture professor was found dead Monday morning, the Kentucky Kernel reported. Police found the body of Paul "Pete" "' nney, Jr. on a rural road outside -Lexington. The death was labeled a homicide, but police would not con- firm how the victim died or if a weapon was involved. Further details of the death have not been released. I*Pinney taught at Kentucky for 30 years, University spokesperson Ralph Derickson said. He was in the process of retiring and last taught a class in February. Indiana U expels ZBT indefinitely Indiana University officially expelled the campus chapter of Zeta Beta Tau last *ek after the fraternity was charged in an Oct. 15 hazing incident, the Indiana Daily Student reported. The university's Dean of Students Richard McKaig said the charges pri- narily focused on a ZBT scavenger "htnt, when pledge members were instructed to steal a street sign and fol- low a hunt list that included several racially and sexually offensive items. As part of its expulsion, identifying V ns will be removed from the house, d the chapter will not be permitted to participate in campus activities. "Expulsion means ZBT immediately ceases to function as a student organi- zation," McKaig said. The fraternity's national headquar- ters also has suspended the chapter. Sculptures not ,elcome at 8righam Young Brigham Young University refused 49 display four sculptures that are part of a travelling exhibit now at the uni- versity's art museum, citing religious aid moral conflict. The four works -"The Kiss," "Saint John the Baptist Preaching," "The *odigal Son" and "Monumental to ,lzac" - are part of an exhibit of the works of Auguste Rodin. Each of the sculptures is nude or semi-nude, the Chronicle of Higher Education reported. "It's not an act of censorship," said Campbell Gray, director of the BYU Museum of Art. "It's a method of insur- ing and respecting the basic integrity of the exhibit:' The university has made similarly ntroversial decisions before. In 1994, even Spielberg canceled an on-cam- pus showing of his Oscar-winning movie Schindler's List after BYU decided to cut scenes containing nudity and violence. Pumpkin prank at Cornell leaves campus baffled A Halloween trick has left Cornell University students and professors try- ing to figure out a riddle. A few days before Halloween, an estimated 60-pound pumpkin mysteri- ously appeared atop the campus' 173- foot-tall McGraw Tower, where it still sits. Area residents remain baffled about ho placed the enormous gourd there Ud how the individual went about doing it. The Cornell Daily Sun has been pub- lishing a daily "pumpkin watch," offer- ing theories about how it got to the top of the building. One guess is that some- one with a helicopter placed it on the spire during the night. University officials said they don't plan to remove the pumpkin because the task would be "too difficult." *stead, they plan to simply let the pumpkin rot away. -Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Mfegan Exley from the University Wire and The Chronicle of Higher Education. Prof. tells of changes in racism By Diba Rab Daily Staff Reporter Racism in American politics has changed dramatically in recent decades. Society's gen- eral attitude of racism also changed from the 19th to the 20th century. This is what political science Prof. Donald Kinder argued in a Rackham Amphitheatre presentation yesterday. "Mid-19th century racism was popular and respectable, but in the 20th century, racism fell into disfavor," Kinder told the crowd of 150 students and faculty members. Kinder delivered his lecture, titled "Whitewashing Racism: Principles and Prejudice in American Political Life," to an attentive audience - some of whom were Kinder's own students. "It's really insightful work. I'd like to see more attention to minority views to what he's doing," said Anna Maria Ortiz, a Rackham student. Kinder argued that racism continues to be a powerful force in American politics, even today. But he does accept the fact that a lot has improved in the past 50 years. "There have been some unmistakable signs of progress since the publication of 'An American Dilemma,"' Kinder said. Written by Gunnar Myrdal about 50 years ago, the book discusses race relations in the United States. Kinder said the country was especially divided by the race issue when Barry Goldwater and Lyndon Johnson squared off in the 1964 presidential election. "The 1964 presidential campaign was defined by conflicts in race," Kinder said. During the campaign, Goldwater, the Republican candidate, attacked the recently enacted Civil Rights Act. On the Democratic side, Johnson was more "careful" on race issues, Kinder said. That issue propelled him to a land- slide victory in which he secured almost all of the electoral votes, Kinder said. "This outcome caused a huge regional differ- ence on matters of race. Northern whites were vastly more liberal," Kinder said. "Origins of racial conservatism are different from the culture and ideology of Southern racism." LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg, who attended the lecture, said she appreciates the work Kinder is doing. "It's a work in progress. He's trying to under- stand the role of race in the progress of American politics," Goldenberg said. "It's a very important project and he's very well equipped to do it. I'm excited he made this the focus of his intellectual growth." JOHN KRAFT/Daily Political science Prof. Donald Kinder spoke about racism and its role in the American political arena last night. Grant to assist phase-out of Peace Corps Fellows Program By Nika Schulte For the Daily A recent $40,000 donation to the University's Peace Corps Fellows Program will not be used to promote the program, but instead to ease it out of existence. The University is one of 11 institu- tions selected to receive a grant from the DeWitt Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund. The Fellows Program at the University is slated to be closed by the end of the academic year. The Fellows Program, which has close to 300 participants nationwide, offers Corps volunteers the opportu- nity to earn a master's degree and teaching certification while teaching at a local public school after their return. Nine University students are currently enrolled in the program. The phase-out is a result of depleted grant money and a lack of sufficient funding from sponsors. While the University will receive $40,000, other schools have been allocated as much as $300,000 to support their Fellows pro- grams. Fran Vaughn, national director of the Peace Corps Fellows Program, said the program's closure is a loss for school systems that could benefit from the Fellows teachers. "I am very sorry to see that the pro- gram will not be accepting return vol- unteers. It is a wonderful program that has produced great teachers," Vaughn said. "Tis is a real loss because this ... was a wn-win-win situation." - Stuart Rankin Education adjunct professor Stuart Rankin, who has coordinated the Fellows Program at the University since its inception in 1991, said the pro- gram's end is unfortunate because of its many benefits. "This is a real loss because this pro- gram was a real win-win-win situa- tion," said Rankin, an adjunct professor at the School of Education. "It was good for the Detroit school system to have this source of hard working young people. It was good for the University because it allowed them to strengthen their connection to the Detroit School System and it was good for the Peace Corps because it brought its work back home." Kate Pett, a teacher at Barbery Magnet Middle School in Detroit, is in her final year as a Fellow and said she is shocked the University won't be continuing the program. "The Fellows Program was one way the University of Michigan School of Education could make a contribution to education in the community," Pett said. "The University has a responsibility to support education and I am disap- pointed it hasn't made the commitment to keep the program." Donald Diehl, who teaches at Noble Middle School in Detroit, said the ter- mination of the program closes doors for returned Peace Corps volunteers. Diehl is also in his second year of the Fellows program. "Ex-Peace Corps volunteers are los- ing out on a great opportunity. The Fellows Program allowed me to do something I might not have found somewhere else; Diehl said. Disappointment about the discontin- uation of the program is magnified by the University's historic role in the development of the Peace Corps, Rankin said. "The University was the location for the first public announcement of the Peace Corps during (President) Kennedy's campaign, and now one of its programs is ending," Rankin said. Although there are no plans to re- establish the Fellows Program at the University, Rankin said other similar options are available. "We will encourage students to enroll in the other teaching certification pro- grams like (masters with certification)," Rankin said. The University is in the "midst of developing committees" to create simi- lar programs, Rankin said. KEVIN KRUPITZ ER/Daily Public Policy student Alicia Pearce took part in a presentation of public poli- cy ideals concerning community policing in Detroit yesterday at Lorch Hail. Students tackle reUal-lie proble-ms U U By Kristin Wright Daily Staff Reporter Students involved in the School of Public Policy's Applied Policy Seminar examine and offer solutions to problems ranging from recycling program delays in Northern Michigan to modernizing Detroit's Mexicantown neighborhood. The course objectives were demonstrated yesterday in three pro- ject presentations given by students in Lorch Hall. The semester-long seminar, taught by Public Policy instructor Marlowe Greenberg, is designed to allow mas- ters students to apply their training to real-life situations. "The ideal is to get real-world experience for applied policy and any coursework they've been tak- ing," Greenberg said. Greenberg pairs students with clients in community developmental organizations that are devoted to implementing specific public policy issues concerning Detroit area com- munities. Students offered presentations yes- terday on Ann Arbor's parking woes, the recycling program in Bay City and economic stability for Mexican- Americans in Southwest Detroit. Finding a convenient place to park in Ann Arbor has repeatedly proven to be a difficult task for residents, especially University students, said Public Policy graduate student Matt Fleming. "Our mandate is to recognize the course of action for Ann Arbor to take regarding the operation of park- ing in Ann Arbor," Fleming said. While the University has 22,000 local parking spaces under its con- trol, the city controls 6,500 spaces - many of which, Fleming said, are not up to proper standards. "Currently, all (city) structures and lots are in need of maintenance, some of which are quite involved," he said. Fleming said the city has three options to alleviate parking hassles: privatizing parking facilities, collab- orating with the University and redesigning parking pricing. Students in the seminar also are making an effort to bring up recy- cling participation in Bay City by altering property taxes and by exam- ining the recycling methods of other cities. In Bay City each week, only one type of material is recycled and col- lected from households. For exam- ple, one week only glass will be col- lected and the following week, only aluminum will be collected. The slow development of Southwest Detroit's Mexicantown area was also a concern to the students. The Southwest Detroit Business Association and the Mexicantown Community Development Corporation are joining forces to provide resources and technical assistance to Mexicantown residents in order to pro- mote economic development in the area and familiarize outsiders with Latino music and culture. Public Policy student Rosa Martinez discussed her ideas on how to prepare the Latino/a community in Southwest Detroit for a more advanced society by increasing the flow of traffic through the area. "We need to get them out of infor- mal society and get them ready for the international market," Martinez said. Leo Burnett Medi~a Please join us for an information presentation TODAY 5-6 pm U of M Business School Paton Accounting Center Room P 1018 Additional office hours will be held Correction * A photo of the MudBowl in Monday's Daily depicted members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. The fraternity was incorrectly identified in the photo's caption. What's happening in Ann Arbor today GROUP MEETINGS U "Swingers," Sponsored by Hillel, Maple Rd., 6-9 p.m. Hillel, 1429 Hill St., 9 p.m. 0 Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley TODAY 2-4 pm The Michigan Union - Pond Room A /f r7TTA T r . +1a.y oc. rw 4 an tna~i n I