LOCAL/STATE Olint program creates new degree The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 20, 1999 - 5A Solemn streets By Risa Berrin Daily Staff Reporter The College of Engineering and the College of Pharmacy formally introduced their latest collab- oration to a room filled with presidents of the nation's largest pharmaceutical companies Friday at the Michigan League. The collaboration is a new master's degree pro- ram - the Master of Engineering in Pharmaceutical Engineering. Nair Rodriguez, associate pharmaceutics pro- fessor, said the timing of this jointly-administered program was impacted by the University's new partnership with Pharmaceutical company Parke- Davis, which is moving its product development group from New Jersey to Ann Arbor. "Parke-Davis coming to town triggered us get- ting together. The needs of Parke-Davis and other pharmaceutical companies led to this opportuni- s," he said. "Parke-Davis will be helping with minding and research and with internship posi- tions for students in this program." Chemical engineering students interested in the program will apply beginning the second semes- ter of their junior year and pharmacy students during the first semester of their first year in the College of Pharmacy. Courses offered in the pro- gram include process engineering in drug discov- ery, novel gene and drug delivery systems and "This joint program looks like it's going to fit nicely both locally and nationally." P - Roger Brummel Parke-Davis Vice President receptor biology and chemical signaling. Parke-Davis Vice President of Pharmaceutical Delivery David Pope said he plans to help Rodriguez and chemical and biomedical engi- neering Prof. Henry Wang with development of the course. "I need trained people in chemical and all aspects of manufacturing," Pope said. "Most stu- dents in pharmaceutics only have a doctorate in the clinical area. What I need is people also trained in the development of the forms and processes of pharmaceutics." Pope said the new Parke-Davis building is cur- rently being built on the corner of Plymouth Road and Huron Parkway, near North Campus, and should be completed in 2001. He said 200 phar- maceutical scientists will be relocating from New Jersey to Ann Arbor. Representatives from other pharmaceutical companies including Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pharmacia and Upjohn participated in the two- day symposium of lectures and panel discussions. Rodriguez said the reason for the symposium is to bridge the gap between pharmaceutics and engineering. "We want to discuss with academic representa- tives and industry about where we start, what are the needs out there," she said. "Then we can start integrating both the academic and industrial per- spective and bring that earlier to our students." Parke-Davis Vice President Roger Brummel said he thinks the new master's program is a fantastic move. "We depend on good, solid training from acad- emia," he said. "No one school ever trains a per- son completely. We have to be better prepared. This joint program looks like it's going to fit nice- ly both locally and nationally." Founded in 1876, the University's College of Pharmacy was the first established at an U.S. pub- lic university. The University first offered engi- neering courses in 1853 and established the nation's first program in chemical engineering in 1898. ,.. a , - . - g AFB PHOTO Visitors look at a portion of the AIDS quilt in downtown Royal Oak yesterday as part of AIDS Walk Detroit. 1would FESTIVAL Continued from Page 1A change bottle tieposits LANSING (AP) -- Michigan's "bottle bill," which requires deposits for beer and soft drink containers, can be summed up with a series of cliches. Leave well enough alone, say bot- tlers and grocers who bristle at the idea expanding the law to cover other verages. Make a good thing even better, say backers who want to increase the deposit and include water bottles and fruit-juice containers among the return- ables. No news is good news, say a lot of defenders who are wary about changing the law, which everybody agrees has cleaned up Michigan roadsides. Add to those feelings a Republican administration and Legislature which many environmentalists feel are cool to expanding the law, and there's a recipe for the status quo. "-But a Boston consulting firm is studying the issue and expected to ~release a report in January. They won't discuss their work, but they are expect- ed to evaluate the size of the deposit, .whether to include other containers and #ether to call for centralized recv- cling centers as opposed to having retailers handle the returnables. "The hopes (of expanding the law) are pretty slim," said David Dempsey of the Michigan Environmental Council, which supports including other beverages under the deposit requirement. "We're not in a climate where envi- ronmental laws have an easy time get- g through the Legislature," he said. very time you ask people if it makes sense to cover soft drinks and not bot- tled water, they say no. But there is no clamor.' Michigan voters adopted the bottle bill, following a petition drive led by the Michigan United Conservation Clubs, in 1976. It requires a dime deposit on beer and soft drink contain- ers - and any carbonated beverage - .da nickel if the container is refill- Ie. It was later expanded to cover wine coolers. Michigan is one of 10 states with a bottle deposit law. With environmentalists making little ,headway in beefing up the law, the only action now is a new $44,811 study Michigan has funded with the Tellus Institute of Boston to review the bottle bill. bif"Michigan's bottle bill is 23 years old d it's a good time to look at it," said 'ark Coscarelli, an environmental spe- cialist in the state Office of the Great .Lakes, which awarded the contract. "1'd guess this would inform the debate:' Both sides have hopes for the study -- environmentalists would like to cover bottled water, fruit juices and other containers and maybe raise the deposit, while grocers generally sup- port community recycling centers to et the job off their backs. There's a lot of special interest oppo- sition to expanding the law, said Pat Franklin, executive director of the Container Recycling Institute of Arlington, Va. But she said their is a - trend toward more deposits. jackets to scraps of torn paper. "You made such an impact on me when I first saw you two years ago," a fan said to Steve Turre. "I wouldn't have missed you for anything. I just wanted to say thank you: Although it was only revived six years ago, the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival manages to draw some of the most respected musicians to the grassy field in the back of Gallup Park each year. "Our mission is to present blues and jazz in an appropriate setting. Listening to this music is all about having a good time, said Joe Tiboni, member of the festival's Board of Directors and host of a blues show on WEMU, Eastern Michigan University's radio station. "I think people take it for granted. The atmosphere of the show is like nothing you could find in a club or concert hall,' Tiboni said. "This is something special, something thrilling," he added. While the music festival first sashayed into Ann Arbor in 1972, as one of the first of its kind in the nation, it lasted only two years before being forced to close. Money troubles, combined with the City of Ann Arbor not reissuing the Gallup Park permit after the festival left it in "a bad situation" sent the show to Windsor, Canada in 1974 where, Tiboni said, it "crashed and burned." "But the early shows were unbelievable - they featured every artist that was or would be major figures in the music world," Tiboni said. Billings for the 1972 and 1973 festivals included Ray Charles, Miles Davis, Count Basic and Muddy Waters. Peter Andrews, a force in creating the first Ann Arbor festivals, "never let go of the idea of resurrecting" the show. And, after 18 years, Andrews teamed up with a University student group called Eclipse Jazz Series to create a non-profit corpo- ration with the mission of making the festival happen again, Tiboni said. Backed by the new Prism Productions, the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival took over Gallup Park once again in 1992, headlining Reba McIntyre and Al Green. Tiboni said a hallmark of the fes- tival is making memories. "I remember meeting Count Basie myself," he said. "I remember introduc- ing Charles Brown in 1993, even though I lost my voice before the show." The 1999 musicians have ties to the festival as well. In a rather appropriate circle, Muddy Waters' son, Big Bill Morganfield swept the stage at the 1999 festival. Muddy Waters helped christen the inaugural Ann Arbor festival. "Ann Arbor has a long tradition of major musicians. They keep coming here because of city support and the reputa- tion of our music festival," said Tiboni. Ann Arbor ends up with the "best mix of what people want to see." What's next for the show? According to Tiboni, everything from making the concerts free to expanding into the night to indoor shows have been considered. Despite possible changes, one constant will be the musicians' dedication. "I wasn't a blues fan at first" Davis said. "I always thought of it as 'Mama's music.' But then I started living life. Once you start living life, you can appre- ciate the blues." Jimmy Dillon told about how he got his first guitar when his mom matched the money he made after a summer of mowing lawns. Since then, he says, he's had fun experimenting with songs. "I'm a songwriter first and a blues artist sec- ond," he said. Turre said his philosophy on music is one others of his kind can relate to. "I'm a musician," he said. "This is my life. I'm here. I've got to play." LANSING (AP) - State lawmakers are ready to jump right into controver- sial issues when they return to Lansing this week after a three-month summer break, with debate planned on abortion and school strike restrictions. House and Senate leaders resisted the urge to call the Legislature back earlier this month when Detroit Schools chief David Adamany refused to fine striking teachers. But House Speaker Chuck Perricone (R-Kalamazoo Township) said requiring the penalties will be one of the first priorities for majority House Republicans. "Teachers should not be paid for days that they are on the picket line and there is broad support for that in the caucus," Perricone said.Under a state law passed in 1994, teachers can be fined one day's pay for each day they are on the picket line. But the school district must first officially . notify the Michigan Employment Relations Commission of the strike, a requirement Perricone and Senate Majority Leader Dan DeGrow (R-Port Huron) want to end. "It's self-evident have problems. We need to correct them," DeGrow said. "The trigger puts superintendents in an untenable position." Perricone would not say exactly how fines would be imposed under the legis- lation. But he said he hoped the plan would be introduced and debated in com- mittee as early as this week. House Democratic Leader Mike Hanley of Saginaw said he doubts the proposal will get much support from members of his party, since Democrats opposed the law outlawing teacher strikes when it was passed in 1994. "The Republican mentality on this is to punish teachers like they are little children," Hanley said. "It's important that teachers are motivated and want to be in the class- room. To force them in there just creates more fighting." 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