Itt tit! NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 wwwmichigandaly.com 1 APR 0 6 pn Thursday April 4, 200 One hundred nine years ofeditorialfreedom Greekhou ratify new social polic By Caitlin Nish Daily Staff Reporter The Interfraternity Council ratified a new Social Environment Management Poli- *ast night, marking a radical shift in the social trends of the Greek system. The policy was ratified by the IFC in a 17-4 vote with three abstentions following a unanimous vote by the Panhellenic Asso- ciation on Tuesday. It serves to shift many parties from fraternity houses to third-party vendors, such as bars, restaurants and hotels. This policy, which takes effect May 4, follows a National Panhellenic Conference proclamation that sororities will be prohib- ited from co-sponsoring alcoholic events held at fraternity houses beginning this fall. "What we have to do is comply with the NPC and what we are doing is shifting towards third-party vendors. That means having functions at places like bars and restaurants," said Panhel Vice President for Social Responsibility Angie Miller, an LSA junior. "Friends parties" are not included in the policy because they do not involve entire sorority chapters. At a friends party, frater- nity members can invite any guests, regard- less of whether they belong to the Greek system. "We didn't add a certain limit on the number of sorority members on the list, but each chapter must abide by their own national rules which supercede ours," said Kinesiology junior Mike Lovernick, IFC vice president for social responsibility. National rules regulate the number of sorority members it takes to constitute a co-sponsored sorority event. "Basically, the situation we're put in is that we had to adapt. We came up with the best possible way to adapt to NPC," Lover- nick said. Included in the new policy is a change in the rules for pre-rush friends parties. Whereas pre-rush parties have previously been non-alcoholic with an unlimited guest list, fraternities will now be able to serve alcohol but the guest list will be limited to 20 non-Greek affiliates prior to rush. "We've had problems with the residence halls where freshmen were coming back possibly See POLICY, Page 5A Protests span nation in light of conference By Jon Fish Daily Staff Reporter As members of Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality pre- pare to travel to New York this weekend for the first conference of the Worker Rights Con- O s tium, students across . nation continue to pressure their schools to' join the WRC. P }y4 M The WRC is a primar- ily student-developed organization designed to enforce labor codes of t conduct in the produc- g tion of collegiate appar- t el The University joined the WRC in late Febru- EftSu< a along with the Uni- v sity of Wisconsin at Madison and Indiana University. k Prior to the three uni- versities' decision to join, the WRC had only six member schools, which were all much smaller than the three Big Ten schools. The WRC now has 35 members, with other large schools including the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of California at Berkeley among its ranks. SOLE members Peter Romer-Friedman, Lee Palmer and Rachel Edel- VidO man will attend the con- ference. y nRomer-Friedman will Mo.Frepresent the United Stu- dents Against Sweat- N shops, a nationwide i student anti-sweatshop rres umbrella organization, t M on the WRC's governing board. t aAdministrators from member schools are retescheduled to vote this y weekend to decide which 2 arr estedschools will have repre- sentatives on the govern- ing board. University of Michigan representatives hope they will have a seat on this board but rec- See SWEATSHOPS, Page 8A RAGIN CAJUN By Jeremy W. Peters Daily Staff Reporter James Carville wants you to vote. He would prefer it if you vote Democratic, but he wants you to vote nonetheless. The reason the former Clinton political consultant said it is so important for Michigan) residents to vote is because he thinks the outcome of November's presidential election could very well depend on who carries the state. "I'd be willing to predict that whoever wins Michigan will win the presidency" he told a capacity crowd in Rackham Audi- torium last night. Predicting that the campaign battle between Texas Gov. George W Bush and Vice President Al Gore would be intense in Michigan, Carville said residents will definitely see their fair share of political theatrics this election year. "If you like politics, get ready to have a lot of it. If you hate politics, move to Alabama; he said. He stressed that the significance of this election lies in its value as a weather vane for the direction in which the nation is headed. "When you say it's a big election about big things, it's true' he said. "Study the issues, study the candidates;" he beckoned the crowd, "and if you think it's important then go to work. There is critical work to be done in Michigan.' Students who attended the event seemed responsive to Carville's call for political action. "Civic action is definitely on a decline and it is very important for people to get involved," said newly elected Michigan Student Assembly Vice President Jim Secreto. "He made it very clear that if you care, do something about it," said Abby Adair, president of the University Activities Cen- ter, which sponsored the lecture. Carville, who is credited with leading Clinton's 1992 victory over George Bush, predictably hinted to the crowd that Gore would be a better choice than the younger Bush. "Do you want the kind of country that Al Gore will bring you or do you want the type of country that George Bush will bring you?" he asked to roaring applause from the overwhelmingly Democratic audience. Although he said in an interview before the event that he is not going to take a paid role in the Gore campaign, he is plan- ning on being "as helpful as he can.' See CARVILLE, Page 8A *1. to halt use o f S S numbers ABOVE: James Carville speaks to a sold-out crowd yesterdayj at Rackham Auditorium, LEFT: Carville signs a copy of his new book at Borders Books, Music & Cafe for LSA freshman Matt Engelbeig yesterday evening. By Yael Kohen Daily Staff Reporter *rofessors ask for it, credit card solic- itors ask for it, even the CRISP Lady asks for it. Eveyone seems to want it, but not everybody wants to give it. Students who worry about the use of their Social Security number as University identification will be happy to hear that campus officials are switching over to a new randomized number for student identification. &niversity Registrar Tom McEl- vYn said the University is in a tran- sition period and the administration plans to begin using a randomized student identification number this fall. The University's Standard Prac- tice Guide has a policy stating that Social Security numbers are not to be used for student identification purposes. "The real issue ... is the personal identification that comes with the number," McElvain said. The policy states that students will begin using a unique eight- digit identification number that is not derived at all from the Social Security number. The implementation of the new sys- tem is expected to be completed no later than 2002. The unique identification number already appears on the front of the M- Card labeled as "UM ID #." By the end of this summer, with touch-tone registration slated to be replaced an online system, students See SECURITY, Page 7A 0 -..1 Minorityn umbers higher at Berkeley Increases in minority enrollment at UC- Berkeley Black, Native American and Hispanic enrollment was up 16.9 percent from last year, a drop from an increase of 18.8 percent the year before. 7,336 underrepresented minorities were admitted this year -100 more than in the fall of 1997. ® In 1996, voters in California passed a statewide law outlawing the use of race as a factor in college admissions. By Robert Gold Daily Staff Reporter The eight-campus University of California system admitted slightly more underrepresented minority fresh- men for the upcoming fall semester than last year, according to data released by UC on Monday. The minority student admissions numbers are higher than in 1997, the last year affirmative action was used in the UC admissions process, but the overall percentage is still smaller.. This year 7,336 underrepresented minority members were admitted - 100 more than Fall 1997. Blacks, Native Americans and Hispanics make up 17.6 percent of the admitted See UC, Page 5A Professor in the belfry Lecture traces plea ofinsanity By Lindsey Alpert Daily Staff Reporter Many infamous defendants including Lorena Bobbitt, Susan Smith and John Hinkley have used the insanity plea, which would protect the accused from prosecution because of their mental illness. In the final Shipman Series lecture of the -- - y__ --*-1-,n --rp ., Versityto test new notes p rogyram By Jodie Kaufman Daily Staff Reporter Recent controversy surrounding the note-taking service Versity.com has focused on the lack of professor per- mission given to the paid notetakers, but Versity's new Pilot Program requires professor notification before the notes hit the Web. Versity On-Campus Market Repre- sentative Daniel Wolf said the Univer- sity is the pilot school for the program. Wolf said the quality of notes increases when students and profes- sors are more aware of the Website's impact. The professors can even offer up some of their top students for note- taking and check their notes to assure quality, he said. University faculty have mixed reac- tions to commercial notetakers. Political science Prof. Douglas Lemke allows Grade A Notes to be provided for his students. He wants students to be able to catch up if they miss class but said he thinks "it isn't 1 ' "MI"SU 'AI/Daily Psychology Prof. Lisa Damour delivers the final Shipman Series lecture yesterday in Dennison Hall. - I--..... Q0A 2 -T <~T --A-- ) n . j..rtrJr . . :,