LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 20, 1998 - 3 AMPUS [lo Public Health Prof. emeritus dies at 96 Mabel Rugen, professor emeritus of *-Public Health and Education, died in her Ann Arbor home Oct. 15 at the age .of..96. Rugen, a pioneer in public health and education, retired from the University in1970 after 40 years of teaching. The School of Public Health estab- lished the Mabel E. Rugen Fund for Health Education in 1992 in honor of Rugen's 90th birthday. Funeral arrangements will be han- dled by Muehlig Funeral Chapel in *Anth Arbor and services are scheduled to take place in Glenview, Ill. Memorial contributions may be made to the Mabel Rugen Fund, in care of the School of Public Health. Service helps target depression >a-Counseling and Psychological x Srvices is offering to help students *control depression through its six-week group, "Beating the Blues." Topics of discussion include discov- ering the sources of negative thinking and preventing future depressions. The group, which is free for stu- dents, is scheduled to meet every Monday at the CAPS office from 3:15 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. and will run Oct. 26 through Nov. 30. Students may sign up by calling CAPS to set up a pre-group interview Author to speak on nuclear weapons 1, Jonathan Schell, author of "The Gift if-Time: The Case for Abolishing Nuclear Weapons Now" is scheduled to ° speak at various locations throughout - lAnn Arbor on Oct. 30. Schell, a leading voice on the nuclear question, plans to include a noon hour panel discussion in the Dana Building, Room 2024, a book-signing at Shaman Drum from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. and an allress at 8 p.m. at Rackham Amiphitheater. Shell was the recipient of the 1998 ' fanbrook Peace Foundation award. Foundation donates $1M to *film studies The University's film and video studies program received a $1 mil- lion dollar gift from the Four Friends Foundation. ~Foundation founder Robert Shaye, a University alumnus, said the gift will be used to facilitate the develop- nMent of a strong screenwriting pro- .gram. The two-part gift will fund the ilonald Hall Collection, which will pr vide a library of scripts and tapes of motion pictures as well as viewing equipment and a librarian to oversee "the"collection and the James Gindinn Visiting Artists and Master Classes Program. The program intends to bring two to four working screenwriters to the :U niversity each term for seminars and to conduct classes for students who completed a screenplay. The two components of the gift were named for two professors who a nfluenced Shaye during his under- -graduate years at the University. Website connects, users to 'U, Destination Discovery, a new 0Website created by Academic Outreach and the University libraries, makes it easy to find infor- mation on what the University has to offer. w . The Website, located at ttp:www.outreach. umich.edu/ameri tech /discoverv, lets visitors scroll through an alphabetical listing of all the resources in the site, check a list gpf University departments, units and affiliates or wander along "Paths of Discovery" - information organized by topic. A group of 25 teachers tested the site, which was sponsored by Ameritech, last spring. Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Katherine Herbruck. Homecoming week promotes spirit at 'U' By Jamie Winkler D)aily Staff Repoter Homecoming has begun. But what does that mean? This week is full of events intended to involve students and encourage them to display University spirit. Homecoming is designed to bring alumni back to join generations of University students in cele- brating the University. "Homecoming is a challenge at (the University) because alumni come home every football game," said Ken Blochowski, manager of Student and Young Alumni Programs at the Alumni Association. There are about five or six alumni reunions at every home football game, Blochowski said. This year, the Homecoming Committee is trying to consolidate efforts on a few activities to increase attendance. Rather than having many activities with few people attending each, the committee hopes to have one big event -- the pep rally - and attract many people to attend, Blochowski said. The rally is scheduled for Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Cliff Keen Arena on Hoover Street. Michigan Football Coach Lloyd Carr and the football team captains are expected to attend, along with the Michigan Marching Band and cheerleaders. After the rally, alumni and fans will have the chance to attend a "Meet the Athletes" session, where representatives from almost all of the University's athletic teams will be accessible, Blochowski said. "This year we've decided to put our efforts into turnout for the pep rally," Blochowski said. "If we can start a tradition there, we can build on that" The Alumni Association also is sponsoring the Go Blue Brunch Saturday morning on Oosterbaan field. The brunch will be all-you-can-eat and will feature the presentation of Spirit of Michigan Awards to the 1997 Michigan hockey and football teams. Many campus groups are foining the Alumni Association in planning Homecoming events. For example, the Compulsive Lyres will perform a concert with the A Cappella Ensemble of the University's Greek System and "DeClusions of Grandure" from Indiana University on Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Mendelssohn Theater in the Michigan League. Many schools within the University plan to host dinners and events connected with Homecoming and welcoming alumni. Homecoming seems to focus around alumni and not generate enthusiasm from undergraduates, said Roger Fisher, associate director of campus activities and progrars at the Student Activities and Leadership otice. "One of the most disappointing things about Homecoming is undergraduate participaton," Fisher said. "Diag Day and the pep rally (are efforts) trying to make (Homecoming) a student-centered activi- ty while holding onto alumni ties,' Fisher said. Diag Day is scheduled for Thursday. Games, a moon bounce, a giant gyroscope and many other carnival-like attractions will take over the Diag, Fisher said. Capping the Homecoming activities is the addition of Black Homecoming Week. Black FoIx, an umbrella organization for smaller black student groups, will sponsor Black Homecoming Week, which promotes spirit through events, fundraising and community service. Sister 2 Sister, a community organization in the Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti area, is sponsoring Date Night - a date auction - on Thursday in the West Quad Wedge Room at 7 p.m. The money will finance a scholarship fund for young black women in the community. Black Homecoming Week wraps up Saturday night with a party in Bursley Residence Hall at 10 p.m. "We expect Date Night to be big (as well as) the party at Bursley Saturday Night, " LSA junior Joy Greenwood said. "The events, they really focus on social cohesiveness" I Senate Assembly discusses budget strength, renovations By Paul Berg tain a high Daily Staff Reporter University'st Chief Financial Officer Robert Education Kasdin discussed the strength and allo- surpass all o cation priorities of the University budget "Over tim at yesterday's meeting of the Senate spent on ed Assembly, the faculty's governing body. redirected tov "The finances of the University are said. "Last quite healthy," Kasdin said. "We are in a inventory of) strong financial position, but it would be "This yea foolish to suspend our diligence" lyzing then Kasdin set forth general priorities and Central( before addressing specifics about renova- A combi tions that will be investigated in the new constru University's ongoing Master Plan, the Univers University President Lee Bollinger's Kasdin said long-term campus construction and reno- Hill Auditor vation initiative. buildings un "We must ensure the one-time money "The over is matched with one-time expenses, will be spen while recurring money must be applied using existing to recurring expenses," Kasdin said. the media a He also emphasized the need to main- buildings," K Peace Corps By Adam Cohen lDAi StaffReporter Founded on the steps of the Michigan Union by Pre John F Kennedy, the U.S. Peace Corps offers invaluable e ences to all its volunteers. An information session is scheduled today for po recruits at 7 p.m. in the University's International Center, is attached to the Union on East Madison Street. Today's meeting is not limited to students, but include one interested in the program. Those attending will learn Peace Corps activities and speak with returning voluntee The nationwide organization sends a diverse represen of the U.S. population to Third World countries every yea "First, we want to provide and train people for countrii need people. Second, we want other cultures to gain know of us, and third, we want to foster a knowledge of other cu level of service from the central administration. nal needs, Kasdin said, must ther financing concerns. ne, every dollar that can be ucational purposes must be wards those pursuits," Kasdin year, we focused on taking what facilities we had. ri is being dedicated to ana- relationship between North Campus," he said. nation of renovations and action will alter the face of ity in the coming years, . The Frieze Building and ium will be two of the first dergoing changes. whelming majority of dollars nt on rehabilitating and re- g space, while the majority of ttention will go to the new {asdin said. The University, Kasdin said, must han- dIe the Ann Arbor's finite space resources with care. "Every remaining plot must be allocat- ed based on academic priorities," he said. "There is a limited amount of space. remaining in the Ann Arbor community." Dermatology Prof Elizabeth Duell, a member of the Senate Assembly's Budget Study Committee, presented a final report of the committee's research. Duell discussed the effects of the centralization of libraries and discontin- uation of the mandatory retirement age on the University's budget. "It's very difficult to really get clean data," she said. The report expressed concern among the science faculty about the inconve- nience of combining department libraries into one Science Library and concluded that the combination of resources had a negligible budgetary effect. DAVID ROCHKIND/Daily Associate Prof. of Architecture and Urban Planning Mojtaba Navvab adjusts a speaker at Hill Auditorium yesterday, where his class tested acoustics. Ar ch1iecture class tests celebrated Hill a~oustics seeks recruits for our volunteers," said Rackham student Sarah Naasko, the University's Peace Corps campus representative. sident The abroad experience also may offer specific educational xpcri- opportunities in degree work. "We have a lot of opportunities open now, especially in tential teaching English. What a lot of people don't know is that which we have graduate programs through the Peace Corps,, so you could work on your degree while volunteering," said s any- LSA senior Matthew Pavich, a work-study assistant for the about University's Peace Corps. rs. "Although the recruits are volunteering, they are compensat- ntation ed with food, housing, travel and safe conditions; Pavich said. ar. Compared to all other Peace Corps divisions, the University es that sends the largest amount of volunteers, he said. vledge Additional information on the Peace Corps may be found at ultures the Website, http://wwwumich.edu/~icenter/peacecorps. By Daniel Weiss Daily Staff Reporter They listened to Elvis and they listened to Bach. Then they sounded off. , Scores of architecture students visited Hill Auditorium yesterday, testing the auditorium's celebrat- ed acoustics that have made it the ideal place for nearly any concert. Professor Mojtaba Navvab's Environmental Technology class sat in strategic locations through- out the auditorium's three levels, listening to a variety of musical samples and recording their impressions. Instruments designed to mea- sure light, sound, temperature and humidity provided objective mea- surements. The measurements will be cor- related with the students' subjec- tive impressions of the acoustics. Students will use the informa- tion to reach conclusions about what types of sound please the human ear most. The class project comes as Hill Auditorium is waiting for possible renovations. University Architect Douglas Hanna said a renovation project has been in the works for eight years, and his office expects to propose a plan soon. Hanna said some of the improvements include power sup- plies, electrical outlets, elevators and handicap-accessible sdating. Hanna said his office has not even reached the point where it could review the possibility of installing a new sound system. But even the possibility of a new sound system concerns some people. "If you put in a sound system, you have acknowledged that you cannot distribute the sound prop- erly," Navvab said. George Gershwin, Leonard Bernstein and the Vienna Philharmonic top the impressive list of performers who have graced the auditorium's stage. But some think the auditorium still is in need of a sound system. Roger Arnett, sound engineer for the School of Music, said the current sound system "is not ade- quate." Hanna's office expects to have a plan for the renovation by spring. He said one of the questions his office is asking as it examines the possibilities in renovating Hill Auditorium is, "What do we need to rejuvenate?" Coection: In yesterday's photograph of Courtney Cantor and her hallmates, Cantor was incorrectly identified .Cantor is in the front row, second from the right, not left. .... 4 . KI IILE (JLLEND AL What's happening in Ann Arbor today "GROUP MEETINGS J Allanza Weekly Meeting. Michigan EVENTS Fl i'Evftw.icm an nA granhv in SERVICES U Campus Information Centers, 763- i f m