ws: 76-DAILY ertising: 7640554 lee,,w tYi One hundred seven years ofeditorklfreedom Tuesday April 7, 1998 Owwvl, Vr w. .a ialogue o nAddress LS' LS - roblems v - c' kGerard Cohen-Vrignaud ily Staff Reporter Seeking to identify racial prob- ms, the Michigan Student ssembly is sponsoring a town hall eeting on race relations tonight at 30 in the Michigan Union aliroom. e dialogue is part of President on's Initiative on Race, a sweeping" an proposed by the president about e year ago to enhance the education- and economic opportunities of all ces. "Today, I ask the American people join me in a great national effort to rfect the promise of America for is new time as we seek to build our ore perfect union," Clinton said in. ne of last year. "That is the unfin- work of our time, to lift the bur- n of race and redeem the promise America." Judith Winston, executive director of e President's Initiative on Race, will eak along with other panelists, cluding University administrators, culty and students. MSA Rep. Brian Reich, who orga- zed the event, said he planned the eeting in response to concerns he has from fellow students. Reich cited e separation of the races in the niversity's dining halls as an example existing racial tensions. "We're very diverse in numbers, but tually we're self-segregated," Reich id. "I think it's a shame. I can't imag- e how much we could do if all the dent groups felt comfortable with ch other. I think dialogue is the first p" ich, who said his White House nnections helped him bring to cam- s the initiative's highest ranking offi- al, said the event will not solve racial LSA Dean Edie Gol oblems, but will attempt to define department, after em. "There are no concrete goals," Reich "d. "We will leave the discussion with better understanding of what students ed to understand and work with each her. I would like to start us down the to a constructive resolution of ese big problems." The dialogue is part of what has been signated Campus Week by Initiative ticials. Yesterday, a town hall meeting as held at Howard University and will ter be televised on C-SPAN. By William Na David Chai, a spokesperson for the Daily Staff Report ce initiative, said the University was Economics osen to host the dialogue because it the Golden A a prominent and a diverse institute Rackham Audi igher education. as the "grim re ichigan, in a sense, leads this Adams call untry in many aspects," Chai said. chair of St e have done work with i the University Tea niversity before. We're excited about of the finality e activities and events that have been lecture, called ing on here on campus." But this grim Chai said the Initiative has worked carried a small creating education empowerment Adams for exc nes, stopping housing discrimination In his lectur d encouraging broad dialogue on Adams chose t rug could ause side WASHINGTON (AP) - A drug found to prevent breast cer in half of high-risk women also causes serious side ects, researchers cautioned yesterday, leaving women with complex decision about the best course to protect their alth. "The results tell us that breast cancer can be prevented, but e is no simple take-home message," Dr. Richard sner, head of the National Cancer Institute, said at a ws conference yesterday. "There are important and serious e effects from this drug."- Because the issue is so complex, Klausner said the cancer stitute is developing guidelines to help women and their ctors decide when to use the drug, tamoxifen. 72 r - an cl nii I-o iiar nn by tn m a hhr A dean resigns from post By Katie Plona and Mike Spahn Daily Staff Reporters After serving as the first female dean of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts for nine years and being one of five finalists in the 1996 search for a University president, LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg announced yesterday that she will resign from her position. "It was time for me and it was time for the college," Goldenberg said, adding that she is not leaving on bad terms, but because it is time for a change. "It's time for new ideas, for new initiatives" Goldenberg's resignation is effective Aug. 31. She will be on leave from her faculty position for one year before return- ing in the fall of 1999 to teach and research within LSA and the School of Public Policy. Provost Nancy Cantor said a search committee to find a permanent dean to lead the University's largest school will be formed within several weeks. She would not speculate on the appointment of an interim dean. University President Lee Bollinger said he is not surprised by Goldenberg's resignation considering the number of years she has served as dean. "Nine years is a long time in terms of deans," Bollinger said. Cantor said Goldenberg is a valuable member of the University's academic community. "She's just been a superb dean and a very strong advocate of the college for undergraduate education," Cantor said. "We expect to see more of her wonderful contributions in coming years here." Former University President James Duderstadt said Goldenberg's contributions to the University have been numerous and wide-ranging. "She has done a lot of focusing on the quality of under- graduate education," said Duderstadt, who is a member of the Engineering faculty. Duderstadt said that in addition to her educational contributions, the state funding the college received during Goldenberg's term will allow her "to say that during the Goldenberg years, the entire college was rebuilt." Communications studies Prof. Nick Valentino said having her back on the faculty will "be a great benefit to students. "I have a lot of respect for Edie and what she's done for the college," Valentino said. Public Policy Dean John Chamberlin said Goldenberg played a crucial role in interacting with all the University's deans. "I think Edie has a very important role, partially stemming from the fact she is dean of the largest college and partially stemming from the fact that she is one of the deans with the longest service," Chamberlin said. Working with the other deans was one of Goldenberg's strengths, and the University community should be thankful See GOLDENBERG, Page 7 High dean turnover not unusual By Katie Plona Daily Staff Reporter LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg's res- ignation does not stand alone in a period marked by constant changes among the leading posts of the University's 19 schools. While most 'of the recently vacant executive officer positions have been filled during the past year and a half - including University President Lee Bollinger's post - new and interim deans are leading many of the University's schools and col- leges. But a number of University offi- cials said a high dean turnover is not unusual. " "There's no policy to try to encourage turnover in deans," Bollinger said. "It's just the sequence of natural course of action at a uni- versity of this size ... Economics and Public Policy Prof. Paul Courant, former chair of the economics department, said that although dean positions are always changing, the period between former University President James Duderstadt's resignation and. Bollinger's first day as head of the University was unique because deans took on more central adminis- trative roles. "Now that we have a president and an permanent provost, that's proba- bly less true," Courant said. "Deans are probably more in the business they have always been in" But Courant said deans have always been instrumental within the University administration. See DEANS, Page 7 JOHN KRAFT/Daily denberg hugs her colleague and friend Gaylyn Studlar, chair of the film and video announcing her resignation as dean to faculty members yesterday in Angell Hall. i winner gives allast lecture sh er Prof. Jim Adams was presented Apple award yesterday in the itorium by a person he referred to eaper." ed LSA sophomore Heidi Lubin, udents Honoring Outstanding ching, the "grim reaper" because associated with the Golden Apple the "ideal last lecture." reaper didn't carry a scythe - she golden trophy that she presented to ellence in undergraduate teaching. e, titled "Beginnings of the End," o give the audience a glimpse into his life outside the classroom. "In a way, it was hard to give because it was intensely personal," he said. "In the classroom, I try to be very objective to encourage discussion." Adams detailed his life from when he was a student at Harvard University until today, with two sons now in college. Adams' lecture honored the people who have influenced his life. He began his talk by describ- ing environmental law Prof. Joe Sax, a good friend and squash partner. Sax helped Adams develop an interest in his current field of study, industrial organization. "By confronting rather than avoiding his dis- comforting opinion, I developed a new sense of See APPLE, Page 2 JOHN KRAFT/Daily Golden Apple winner Jim Adams, a professor of economics, shows off his trophy and framed poster last night in the Rackham Auditorium before he gave his ideal last lecture. Global weaving Students suggest North Campus changes By Trevor Gardner Daily Staff Reporter In the first of two town hall meetings, University President Lee Bollinger and Provost Nancy Cantor met with stu- dents on North Campus yesterday to explore issues relating to student life at the University. About 50 people filled the Chrysler Center of the Media Union to offer University administration officials the North Campus perspective on student life.- Participants expressed their appre- ciation for the meeting's location, because it gave them an opportunity to express their views about trans- forming North Campus into a more student-friendly part of the University said. Students also asked questions about general problems facing the University community. One audience member suggested that Bollinger create a North Campus presidential office that he would occupy for a few days each week, in order to bring a more human feel to the North Campus area. Bollinger said he considered the idea and believes that the division of the University into various campus locations, such as North and Central campus, affects its sense of continu- ity. Bollinger went on to share his ideas about how North Campus could shape itself into a thriving I - f~ I