LOCAL/S TATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 6, 1999 - 3A AMPUS Prof. emeritus dies after six decades at 'U' A memorial service was held F iday for emeritus botany Prof. neth Jones who died Nov. 14. Jonstaught botany and great books classes at the University for 58 years, beginning after he earned his master's degree and doctorate at the University. Jones discovered a vitamin B-12 producing microorganism that today produces the vitamin for commer- cial use He also srved as a juror for School of Music organ students. hwish leaders to speak at Hillel Edgar Bronfman, chair of the Segram Company Ltd. and President of the World.Jewish Congress, and Richard Joel, presi- dent of International Hillel, will join students and community mem- bers at Hillel Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. t' hare experiences. Union study break o take place on last day of classes University students possessing an M-Qard and a need to break from studying can attend the Great Union Study Break, held Dec. 13 in the Michigan Union from 8 p.m. to I hroughout the evening, movies including "The Blair Witch Project" nd " The Matrix" will run free of charge to students. Billiards, pizza and soda also will be provided. Students with a thirst for adventure can participate in laser tag, survival bingo and karaoke. University Goethe- Astitut to close The Goethe-Institut is closing and transferring its library to the University's Germanic languages and literature department. Materials will be available at the Language Resource Center in the Modern Languages Building. The week leading up to the clos- ing, the Goethe-Institut will be open dJing the day. On Dec. I1, a brnch is planned at the Goethe- Instittut located at 2201 E. Huron St. Suite 210 Speech to draw parallels between Japan and U.K. The 7 Washington Post foreign spondent T.R. Reid plans to deiver" a lecture today at 12 p.m. titled "Separated at Birth?" The lecture will focus on the sim- ilarities between the United Kingdom and Japan. Reid is a visiting professor in the Japanese studies department. Library to present holiday concert wThe Ann Arbor District Library ssa free holiday music con- ter in ihe library located at 343 S. "iffhAve. 12:10 p.m. to 1 p.m. The group will perform holiday carols while dressed in late 19th Century costume. They will sing songs in their original French, Spanish and German language. Unliversity Library to display early King James Bibles' The University Library's Special Collection Library holds fragments from early versions of the King James Bible, including Deuteronomy Matthew. he exhibit runs Dec. 8 through Jan. 29 in the Special Collections Library's display area on the 7th floor of - the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library. Copies of Latin and Greek bibli- cal, texts will also be on display. In some cases, the texts are turned to the same page, offering opportunity for comparison. Compiled by Daily News Editor Jaimie Winkler. Iranian speaker discusses literary works * Censorship imposed upon literary works in.Iran central to Mujabi's lecture By Shabnam Daneshvar Daily Staff Reporter "Every country has their own story and his- tory. Our's happens to be thousands of years old ... and extremely rich in oral and written custom," said Javad Mujabi, a writer and lit- erary historian from Tehran, Iran who spoke with the University community last night in Angell Hall Auditorium D. Prof. Mujabi, whose talk was titled "Co-opting the Popular: The Interplay Between Classical and Popular Literature in Iran," spoke mainly of the connection between the two types of literature and the way in which many poets and writers have had to persevere despite strict governmental regimes in Iran's history. Because of the restrictions imposed on the poets, Mujabi said writers like Hafez had to ori- ent themselves toward the people and avoid gov- ernmental situations. "The poets learned from the people and the people from the poets," despite the "tyrannical rule," which Iran's literary writers have dealt with throughout Iran's history. Kathryn Babayan, professor of Iranian Culture and History in the Near Eastern Studies depart- ment, said she enjoyed the event thoroughly and described it as a "very good summary of the kinds of exchanges between popular and literary culture." "He showed the humor in the way poets take the plights of day-to-day life and return to the people with morals" to learn from. LSA junior Azadeh Shahshahani, president of the Persian Students Association, also attended Mujabi's speech and said she was impressed by the gravity of his lecture. "I thought his speech was just awesome," she said. "I'm glad that in recent years we have received more speakers and opportunities to see more of our Iranian culture and heritage through movies and speakers like Dr. Mujabi who come here to educate us. We're fortunate to have chances like this to learn more about our histo- ry and culture." Mujabi is here in the United States with the sponsorship of the international writer's group, PEN, and has had a series of governmental resis- tance against his Persian literary pieces. lie will spend the next few days in Michigan touring and will soon return to Tehran where he is working on completing two books of literature and history of satire. Mujabi also worked as a journalist and a mem- ber of the Ministry of Education and Ministry of Justice under the reign of the last Shah of Iran. The event was sponsored by the Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies, Department of English Creative Writing Program, the Department of Near Eastern Studies, Comparative Literature Program, the Institute for the Humanities and the Horace Rackham School of Graduate Studies. Santa Claus is coming to town Archers hunt 38 Detroit area deer DETROIT (AP) - Amateur archers killed at least 38 deer at two Metroparks in the latest phase of a state-endorsed plan to thin the white- tail herd, an official said yesterday. Bow hunters killed 14 deer Friday and eight Saturday at Hudson Mills Metropark near Dexter in Washtenaw County, said Dave Moilanen, a spokesperson for the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority. Hunters killed six deer Friday and nine Saturday at Stony Creek Metropark in northwest Macomb County. One was killed yesterday morning before inclement weather forced an early end to the hunt sched- uled to end at noon, Moilanen said. Metroparks officials hope the hunt will kill up to 50 antlerless deer at Hudson Mills, where 118 whitetails were counted in an aerial survey in January. The Stony Creek hunt is aimed at eliminating 175 to 200 of the estimated 501 deer there. "Certainly Hudson Mills is on tar- get. We'll get between the 40 and 50 we wanted," Moilanen said. "Stony Creek, we thought we'd get a few more this weekend. It's always weath- er-dependent." Archers killed 37 deer at Stony Creek on Nov. 5-7, the first weekend of the controlled hunt there-.Hunters were less successful this weekend because of mild weather Friday and Saturday and rain yesterday, condi- tions that make deer less likely to move about in search of food, Moilanen said. Opponents claiming the hunt was inhumane and unjustified protested at Hudson Mills on Friday afternoon, several hours after an Oakland County judge refused to block the Metroparks plan. Moilanen said he was not aware of protests Saturday at Hudson Mills or on any of the three days at Stony Creek. Metroparks officials have said high concentrations of deer within park boundaries have left the ani- mals with little food, threatening them with starvation even as they forage on plant life - some of it endangered. ALEX WOLK/Daily Santa Claus spreads holiday cheer by guiding his reindeer-drawn sleigh of presents toward Main Street. The festivities were part of the 11th Annual Children's Parade, which took place in downtown Ann Arbor yesterday despite the rain. Mich. legislators to end session, charter schools bill debated grade yovur UofM prfe sr onlieat LANSING (AP) - Legislative leaders say they will end the 1999 ses- sion Thursday, but they are far from winding down. With issues as contentious as charter schools, residency requirements for city workers and farming regulations still unresolved, Democrats and Republicans will be working late this week to stay on top of rapid developments. GOP Gov. John Engler is pushing hard to pass his plan to allow 50 more charter schools to open next fall. Democrats and nine dissenting Republicans in the House blocked it from being introduced last week, even after Engler made personal pleas to the holdouts. "We've worked very hard in the House," Engler spokesperson John Truscott said. "We had a lot of meetings and discussions. But in the end when you can't get it, you go to your next best alternative." So Engler will go to the Senate this week to push through a bill the House might be willing to pass. "It'll be a close vote, no doubt about it," Truscott said. Engler may be able to win some votes from Detroit Democrats in the House if he is willing to block a bill that would prohibit cities and towns from telling municipal workers where to live. The Senate passed such a ban, but the House amended the bill to leave the matter to local contract negotiations. Bill sponsor Sen. Loren Bennett (R- Canton Township) successfully urged a "no" vote on the House version. The bill was sent to a conference commit- tee, which is expected to meet this week. "Lurking somewhere in there is a middle ground," he said, referring to the differing House and Senate ideas on what the bill should contain. Several compromises are being dis- cussed, including allowing residency requirements to remain in place for the next three to five years. Another alter- native may be allowing cities to require workers to live within 20 miles of the city limits. "I'm willing to talk about all the options and any other options that are reasonable," said Rep. Robert Gosselin (R-Troy) who is expected to serve on the conference committee. "We just can't live with it from the way it is from the House perspective. Meanwhile, farmers are pushing the House to pass a bill that would exempt them from most local zoning regula- tions. They say the exemptions are needed to preserve farmland. But local officials are aggressively lobbying against the bill, saying their regulations protect against excessive noise, odor and environmental contam- ination that could affect nearby resi- dents and affect communities' quality of life. "Family farms strive to be good neighbors and are not the concern," said John LaRose, executive director of the Michigan Townships Association. "The concern is with the growing number of intensive livestock operations locating in Michigan." Several other bills also are waiting for Senate approval this week, and are scheduled to return to the House for final passage before lawmakers break for their holiday vacation. They include: A campaign finance bill that calls for candidates to report every dollar contributed to their campaigns. Now, candidates have to report the source of all contributions above S20, or above $25 at political bingo games. Democrats say the real issues are "soft money" donated to political par- ties and large campaign donations, but Republicans have rejected attempts to reform those laws. A bill to prohibit top school administrators from joining unions. The Senate version of the bill applied statewide; the House version targeted only Detroit, Inkster and possibly Benton Harbor as districts that need the restriction. I =3i. I 'g 1i4. ,.., .. V... ..'. y _.. 1 ... .. . _. c,. r. r ': .,% w.. .3R..:1S Anyone for take-out? ' . With the new iBook; everything you need to get onto the Internet is built in. Just plug it in, answer a few simple questions and you can be surfing in ten minutes out of the box. iBook gives you a bright 12.1-inch screen, built-in CD-ROM and a battery that lasts up to six hours. So come get your hands on a new iBook today. Then the Internet will always be as close as your nearest phone jack. u F { I