it t1 LAlaathar roday: Mostly cloudy. High 40. Low 21. romorrow: Partly cloudy. High 46. Low 15. One hundred eightyears of editoradfreedom Friday March 19, 1999 .OY cl tN .*1 , . m \ r~ 1)i t ^Y h w I Fleming, jiollinger exiled or 0 Michael Grass Daily Staff Reporter Discussions continued yesterday between University administrators and student activists who have occupied President Lee Bollinger's office in the Fleming Administration Building since Wednesday morning. Members of Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality said they will not vacate the office until administrators meet their demands to have a strong set of labor standards for the collegiate apparel industry. The students, encamped on the second floor, spent much yesterday blocking doorways, keeping University ministrators and other workers out of Bollinger's office. SOLE's bargaining team met with Bollinger, University General Counsel Marvin Krislov and Provost Nancy Cantor yesterday but did not come to an agreement, LSA senior Trevor Gardner said. SOLE members said they are upset with parts of the University code of conduct for licensed manufacturers that Bollinger presented at yesterday's University Board of Regents meeting. "The policy statement the University released at the regents' meeting does not represent an agree- Wnt between the students and President Bollinger," said SOLE member Peter Romer-Friedman, an LSA sophomore. "We're upset, however, we know that this code is the strongest in the nation and its existence is due solely to the efforts of U of M students, Gardner said. Members participating in the sit-in said they will remain in the president's office overnight. SOLE has called on the University for full public dis- closure of factory locations and ownership and the living wage -- a salary factoring in local living conditions. The University agreed to full public disclosure in dis-, ssions with SOLE last week. The living wage remains major point of contention in the University's discus- sions with SOLE. "I have already said I will not agree to a timetable or an abstract living wage," Bollinger said, adding that the administration will not take further action on the issue for the time being. Bollinger said it is not wise for the University to sign on to the living wage when the concept hasn't been tested. In the three-page code, the University made a commit- ment to join in living wage research studies, and called on A1 er organizations, such as the White House-sponsored pparel Industry Partnership's Fair Labor Association, to perform additional inquiries. "Codes that don't have a living wage are going to protect poverty wages," said Ginny Coughlin, who coordinated See SOLE, Page 7 SPEED members Lnder siege 'U ' graduate schools rank in top By Jaimie Winkler Daily Staff Reporter The U.S. News & World Report yes- terday named several University gradu- ate schools and programs among the best in the nation. The rankings are scheduled for pub- lication in the magazine's March 22 issue. The School of Engineering - tied for third with the Georgia Institute of Technology - is the University's highest-ranking graduate school. The University's Law School and School of Education are both ranked eighth. The Law School shares its spot with Duke University, and the School of Education stands alone. "Of course we're happy to be in the top 10:' Education Dean Karen Wixson said. "It's an honor and recognition for all the hard work of the faculty and staff in the past 10 years." The School of Education ranked sixth last year, but Wixson said the school has moved up and down the top 10 during the past few years due to the non-standardization of the U.S. News & World Report's ranking system. Wixson said the report is. good for judging a school's peer status. She 10 added that students take the report seri- ously, which forces educators to take it more seriously. Wixson said the report compares schools that are very different because of the programs they offer and how the pro- grams are run. There also are inherent differences in public and private schools, Wixson said, noting that private schools seem to dominate the top five slots. Consistency is more a measure of a school's performance than a one-time appearance, Wixson said. "Those schools are our peer institu- See RANKINGS, Page 3 ABOVE: A security officer escorts Gary Krenz, special counsel to University President Lee Bollinger, out of the president's office, which is blocked by LSA junior Mara Luna and other members of Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality yesterday. LEFT: Rackham second- year student Charles Goodman, president of Students Promoting Export-oriented Economic Development, leads a march into the Fleming Administration Building yesterday. DAVID ROCHKIND/Daily No-ads policy may cost $7.6M pro test By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter While nearly 200 students gathered outside the Oeming Administration Building yesterday after- noon in protest of sweatshop labor, a much smaller crowd of students had gathered on the opposite end of Regents' Plaza. Nine members of the newly-organized student group called Students Promoting Export-oriented Economic Development voiced their disapproval of the sweatshop protests. Members of the group, which they described as a right-wing Libertarian organization, said the seizure 4 University President Lee Bollinger's office by Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality is "socialist" behavior. "We're trying to stiffen Bollinger's backbone," said SPEED President Charles Goodman, a Rackham second-year student. "If Bollinger backs down in the face of intimidation, what kind of precedent is that?" SPEED members marched into Fleming with a letter stating their position addressed to Bollinger, who was meeting with members of SOLE at the time. A security officer said he would give the pres- ident their statement, and the group resumed protest- ing outside.. The group's members were signing a form verify- ing their existence as a student organization as they began their protest. Seventeen members signed the letter to Bollinger, a small group in comparison to SOLE's membership. "We need to make up in noise what we lack in numbers," Goodman shouted. As members of SOLE arrived for their demon- stration, SPEED quietly disbanded its protest while the larger group took center stage. Ian Wiesner, an LSA sophomore and organizer of the SOLE protest, disputed Goodman's claims about COLEaions SOLE's fight for a sweatshop code. "That's not a socialist idea; That's a humanitarian idea;" Wiesner said. Thomas Wheatley, a member of the Madison Anti-sweatshop Coalition at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, said his group has experi- enced some opposition. "It didn't amount to any widespread pressure," Wheatley said. "Those groups don't understand the issue. It's usually just a couple of vocal individuals." Wheatley said protesting in support of sweatshop labor doesn't make sense to him. "Making an argument that sweatshops are good is hard to do," he said. Goodman said SPEED opposes child and prisoner labor, but in some countries, laboring in sweatshops is all that is available to some workers. "Those are the best options people in those coun- tries have," Goodman said. By Rick Freeman Daily Sports Editor What's the price of tradition at Michigan? It might be $7.6 million. The University recently turned down an overture from a Tulsa, Okla. compa- ny to provide a free Sony JumboTron system for Michigan Stadium because the deal would ended the Athletic Department's prohibition of advertising in Michigan Stadium. Instead, the University spent nearly $7.6 million to install the mammoth screens in the stadium, as part of a pro- ject that also included new liquid crys- tal display screens in Crisler Arena and a new production facility housed in Crisler. StadiaNet, the company that approached the University about installing the system has done similar projects on 12 other campuses across the nation and in the Liberty Bowl, located in Memphis, Tenn. The compa- ny works, StadiaNet President Joe Tippens explained, by offering to foot the bill for the installation of an entire JumboTron system, and the partnership then profits by splitting the advertising revenue. The specifics of the deal vary from venue to venue. Tippens could not con- firm that StadiaNet offered guaranteed profits to the University but said he wouldn't rule out the possibility, citing the potential of Michigan's market. What ultimately scuttled the deal, Tippens said, was the Athletic Department's refusal to abandon its tra- ditional ban on advertising within Michigan Stadium. "We would suffer the indignation of fans if we brought advertising into the stadium," said Michigan associate Athletic Director Tom Cecchini, who has been involved in the purchase of the JumboTron. Tippens claims the Athletic Department "believed in us, in what we were doing,", and would likely have entered into a deal with StadiaNet. Instead, the University decided to handle the purchase of the JumboTron internally - a move that required StadiaNet's permission, Tippens said. StadiaNet has a deal with Sony to be the exclusive supplier of JumboTrons in the college market, but was willing to permit the exception, Tippens said. Officials from Oklahoma State, one of the 12 schools that has a StadiaNet- purchased JumboTron in its football stadium, said yesterday they've enjoyed success, if not profits with StadiaNet. The Oklahoma State Athletic Department has yet to see a profit from its deal, but it has yet to incur any costs, either. "One thing we did learn, is you don't want 30-second commercials with sound," Oklahoma State Corporate Sales Director Larry Reece said, explaining that the commercial spots seemed to interrupt the flow of the game. "The commercials seemed to See STADIUM, Page 7 Students' Party focus: tuition, group outreach By Angela Bardoni and Jewel Gopwani Daily Staff Reporters For this year's election, Sarah Chopp and Sumeet Karnik are seeking Michigan Student Assembly re-election by emphasizing ways to put w twists on their current leadership. With many new planned changes and ideas, the members of the Students' Party said they are excit- ed about the elections and the possibility of win- ning positions on MSA. LSA first-year student Shari Katz, a Students' Party member who is trying to gain a seat on MSA, said she thinks the party has a lot to offer bers said they would like to become active partici- pants in constituting change. M S A eParty members also said that if MIV A elected, they hope to implement new programs that will increase student awareness of prominent campus issues and possibly ease some of the stresses of student life. One of the proposed programs PART FOUR OF A would allow students easier FOUR-PART access to and increase communi- MSA ELECTIONs cation with government leaders. SERIES. Students would be able to con- tact their local, state and federal Med students learn residency placements By Asuna Rafeeq Daily Staff Reporter A hush fell over the audience and all eyes were on University Medical student Christa Williams as she opened an envelope sealed with her future waiting inside. After years as an undergraduate and a medical student, the words contained in the long white envelope represented Williams' next step on the long road to a medical career. Williams was one of about 13,000 graduating medical school students nationwide that shared in the exhausting yet exhilarating experience of learning their residency place- ,I