I4an ~4ar A/AA*6ow vtrener Today: Partly Cloudy. High 60. Low 41. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy. High 56. Searc;h I By Nika Schulte Daily Staff Reporter After more than a year of interim leadership. the ersit's internal disciplinary office is looking for a Sdirector. A committee met for the first time this week to begin a national search for a new administrator to oversee the Office of Student Conflict Resolution. Since the presentation of internal and external reviews of the University's Code of Student Conduct last February to the University koard of Regents, the staff and advisers of OSCR have been working to reorganize the office with- out a permanent director to guide the process. OSCR Director's Search Committee Chair Kerin land said that during the last past few months, the One hundred nine years of edt inl fryedZr1 Friday November 5, 1999 _.cs.: :2., f'it.. . '4 /' n:. vsa _- A'. +v ., ',Y 'C .3" !'4'. c< . ..?. - -tom . .. :'x p t .'\. r "". \., '.!>:. - ,. "." .-. ,. . . -.: :: i, i':'C a r.. ,... ..... .: n . i .. fv,..a . y. .r ".n.,;:>,:f L. ;,Xd 6 1 \' ,. .c-,.Cv.v .7.. . ... r ,.. , «\>: a..,.a\ i I egins for OSCR reviews have allowed OSCR to sharpen its focus, basis. and Rackham studint Sean Esteban \eai c eri "Now it needs a leader to make it happen and move the as interim OSCR director untl August. unit forward." Borland said. In addition to xord ) mouth and p insnm the The Code is used by the University to create a scholarly University Record srxing as on-campu, adxertisn a environment and set community values. The University notice w as pla ed in the Oct 22 issue the Chroni. e otf can discipline students under the Code for a number of Higher Education 1 help expand the search natinal violations, including misusing alcohol and other drugs, -Gien the fact that ths s the Unersity of \ieuian. tampering with Unix ersity property or sexually or physi- we want to find the most qualif'ied indixidual whether cally harming another person. Sanctions can range from that's someone familiar 'a th Univ ersity of \ichigan or an educational projects to expulsion. expert in their field, Borland said. Although two people have served as interim OSCR Because the University community is interested in the directors since Mary Lou Antieau vacated the position in selection of the next director. the eight-member search September 1998. the current search is the first "full- committee -- which includes ini ersit Housing and fledged" effort. Borland said. Legal Counsel representatves and one studet --- encom- Silva Goncalves currently heads OSCR on an interim passes "a full campus ice Borland said. director The committee is scheduled to meet w eekly to deter- mine what qualities it desires ii a director and then con- sider applicants and identify a finalist by IFebruary. LSA senior Abe Rafi, who serves as chair of the Students Rigthts Commission for the Michigan Student Assembly, said determining xwhat characteristics a director should ha e is a decision the search committee ~will have to make. Rafi said he ill be looking tbr a candidate who demonstrates concern f r students rights in Code discipli- nary processes. oncal!es, who has, served as interim director since Atgust, said the future director miust approach the position wanting to proxide rot only a disciplinar, hut also an edti- cational atmosphere for students. See OSCR, Page 2 'U' online classes to Vxpand gradually By Jewel Gopwani Daily Stati Reporter Robotic character Max Headroom might not be teaching classes next semester, but online courses at the University could appear on monitors at 4puter labs across campus. Although Director of the Media Union Barbara O'Keefe said the University does not have plans to cen- tralize online courses like Eastern Michigan University and Michigan State University, the Media Union is currently developing tools that will allow departments and schools to indi- vidually create more Internet courses. The Media Union is creating items ,internet infrastructure such as online dscussion groups, virtual office hours and online lessons. O'Keefe said students can expect such innovations to show up in their traditional courses. "This should be faculty dri- ven and allowed to evolve natu- rally," O'Keefe a i d "Eventually you \ end up with a course that Irneqrd C OlOqy' could be offered PJIOd Jopdrlseriesdboul equally well to Ihe/uolore ofjeediclsion distance learn- ing students," she said. O'Keefe explained that the University is not interested in develop- ing an isolated online curriculum. Instead integration of technology and itional teaching methods are the University's chief goals. "We want to obtain a quality of edu- cation where the online programs are fully integrated with the regular pro- grams," she said. Academic and technological integra- tion rears its head in many of the University's classes. Prof. J. David Velleman, who teach- SPhilosophy 361, titled "Ethics," has ized the Internet in an effort to help students pay more attention to com- ments made on assignments. "My hope is that by giving the paper back on the Website with the comments connected to their writing with a link, I can structure the activity of viewing the paper and the comments," Velleman Said. See ONLINE, Page 7 Fed. education budget nearing Completion KiMITSU YOGACHI/Ialy Business senior Dina Goldwasser (left) and LSA senior Shana Kurlandsky attend a vigil held last night on the Ilag for Yttzak Rabin. The former lsraefl Prime Minister was assassinated'our years ago at a peace rally in Tel Aviv. Yitza Rabin-reembredat * Budget negotiations may not affect higher education spending By Yae Kohen Daily Staff Reporter As Congress and President Clinton continue to battle over one of the last budget bills for the next fiscal year, fed- eral spending for higher education appears to be finalized and thus immune to bi-partisan negotiations that will craft the final bill in the coming weeks. On Wednesday, Clinton vetoed the 1 percent budget cut passed by Congress. Negotiations have already begun on a compromise, as Democrats and Republicans try to hammer out the Health, Education and the Workforce budget for fiscal year 2000. "The controversial issues had noth- ing to do with higher education," said John Brandt, press secretary for Rep. Peter Hoekstra (R-Mich.). Negotiations for higher education grant funding and student aid have been stabilized, and funds allocated to the. higher education budget expect to "remain roughly the same," University Vice President for Government Relations Tom Butts said. The differ- ences are more policy issues than fund- ing, he added. Butts, who lobbies in Washington, D.C. on behalf of the University, said the budget "looks fairly good" for high- er education. The budget includes a $75 increase in the maximum size of a Pell Grant - raising the cap to 53,300, which is 550 more than President Clinton requested. F unding for the Federal Work Study Program, which was threatened in ear- lier stages of discussion on the bill, was restored to levels comparable to fiscal year 1999, which was also one of President Clinton's requests. As a result, a feared 6 percent drop in avail- ability of funds did not materialize. Funding for other federal programs, including the Perkins Loans, International Education Program and Graduate Education Program, will also be renewed when the conference com- mittee passes a final form of the legis- lation that President Clinton agrees to sign. But concern is rising about an amendment to the Works Incentive Act, which deals with funding health care incentives for working individuals. The amendment to this piece of the bill would "provide a big windfall profit for the student loan industry," Butts said. "Tax dollars should go to the student not the loan industry." Among these policy issues is that of fund distribution for the National Institute of Health. The NIH received a 15 percent funding increase for health research, but a large portion of the funds are being allocated for the next fiscal year, Butts said. There is concern regarding subsidizing grantees' before the federal money is available, he said. Butts said that the University is nego- tiating so that the entire increase is used in one year. Another concern regarding higher See BUDGET, Page 2. By Jody Simone Kay Daily Staff Reporter Illuminated by soft candlelight, about 100 students gathered last night on the Diag to remember Yitzak Rabin, the former Israeli prime minister who was assassi- nated four years ago yesterday after a 1995 peace rally in Tel Aviv. Students shared significant moments from Rabin's life, their * reactions to his death and songs conjuring his nemory. Rabin was a central figure in Middle East peace talks. In 1993, he signed the Oslo Peace Accords, the first Israel-Palestinian Liberation Organization agreement with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat. In 1994. Rabin, Arafat and former Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres received a Nobel Peace Prize. "The death of Yitzak Rabin for us was also the death of hope and peace. Many of us felt just lost. We didn't know if we could find again the hope to bring people together," said Social Work first-year student Ariel Paleg, who is a native of Givataim, Israel, and was in Tel Aviv the night Rabin was assassinated. Directly after Rabin's assassination by right-wing extremist Yigal Amir, the peace process slowed down because of the switch in political lead- ers, said LSA first-year student See RABIN, Page 2 Senator wants rioters barred from college By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter After the Duke Blue Devils up-ended Michigan State University's men's basketball team in the semifinals of the NCAA men's basketball tourna- ment on March 26, students flooded East Lansing streets and set countless fires across campus that burned long into the night. Under legislation now up for consideration in the state House, students like those convicted of inciting the riot will not be welcomed back - not only to MSU but also to any campus in the state. A bill proposed by Sen. Loren Bennett (R- House coee approves bill i 1 inspired b MSU campus melee Canton) following the melee would allow judges to "My idea of success would be that if this bill is bar anyone found guilty of an offense related to a riot signed into law and 50 years from now no one had within 2,500 feet ofa college campus from attending ever been punished under it and there had never or visiting any public university or college in the been riotous behavior again," Bennett said. state. The ban would last one year for misdemeanors The ; House Criminal Law and Corrections and two years for felony convictions. Committee sent the bill to the House floor Tuesday after the Senate overwhelmingly approved the measure in May. Sen. Dianne Byrum (D-Onondaga), whose dis- trict includes MSU, voted in favor of the legislation, while Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D-Salem Twp.), whose district encompasses the University of Michigan, was one of six senators to vote against it. Rep. Laura Baird (D-Okemos), the House com- mittee's minority vice chair, said the bill places authority in the wrong hands. "I think we should trust campuses to meter out their own punishments," said Baird, whose district See MSU, Page 2 NORTHWESTERN VS. W I L D C A T S #15 v.W L C T THE OPPONENT: The Wildcats won the first-ever matchup between these two teams but since that 892 they've only won a dozen more. THE OUTLOOK: This is the third in a stretch of three games that Michigan should have won. But both Indiana and Illinois have scored at least 30 points. Will the Wildcats be next?hp 1 ACT I AUT O would allow voting b ma By Yael Kohen Daily Staff Reporter As the November 1999 election season comes to an end, legislators are working to increase voter turnout in future elections after the turnout upset Tuesday. The lack of citizen participation in government affairs has prompted Sen. Alma Wheeler-Smith (D-Salem Twp.) to introduce legislation. SB 41, that would allow voting by mail in state and local elec- tions. Voter turnout was at its worst this year in Ann Arbor. with less than 12 percent of the Ann Arbor population voting in Lghts, Camera, Action! I I i