Thursday Oe hundedn in ea f dtoril f~freedom 2Se ptembe 8,200 NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 Setebe i2,20 f, OLSA works to st engthen AP dept. Labor committee appointed RRRwdw By Jen Fish Daily Staff Reporter Attempting practices and manufacturin versity Pres announced the By Rachel Green Committee on Daily StaffReporter Rights. The new, pe With the addition of four new facul- mended by an ty members to the Asian Pacific Amer- June 1999 to ican Studies division this academic year, the University is working to ecome a prominent institutional fig- Happy e in APA studies. After four years of revamping the entire department, American Culture Prof. Amy Stillman, director of APA studies, said the hard work finally paid off. "It was a long time, but the good thing about it was that both the Uni- versity, more specifically LSA and the program in American Culture, main- tained it's commitment to Asian Pacif- American Studies' Stillman said. In the last year, the University appointed a search committee to bring professors focusing on APA studies to the University, she said. "APA studies is a very competitive field. We were competing with many other universities also trying to hire faculty for Asian Pacific American studies, Stillman said. No formal concentration exists in PA studies at the University, but stu- dents can concentrate in American Culture and choose classes in the eth- nic studies track. The APA division of the American Culture department began in 1990 with professors Stephen Sumida and Gail Nomura. Since its inception, the couple left the University to pursue careers at the University of Washington, and the pro- am has waned in size and in staff embers, leaving the department with little influence in higher education. Students also helped to rejuvenate the division. LSA senior Rupal Patel, chair Daane DeVrle for the student group United Asian American Organizations, formed a coalition group called Ethnic and Black Studies Initiative to help recruit faculty. EBSI, a group of black, Hispanic sian Pacific American, Native Amer-t C01 n and Arah students, worked with the American Culture department to bring related faculty to the University. By Lizzie Ehrle "Basically we were concerned with For the Daily the lack of faculty teaching our studies and the lack of tenure given to faculty The maze of teaching these classes," Patel said. tral Campus ha "We met with the dean of LSA several phere for stude times and the director of American class. Culture, to discuss how we can make DPS spokesw this program grow and keep the facul- fences aid the tv here," Patel said. Haven halls. American Culture Director Alan The renovati Wald said the effort to advance the APA Haven Hall tow studies division is part ofa larger project Fishbowl eigh to advance Latino/a, Native American Brown said, are and African American studies as well. of both pedestria "We're focusing on building all of The project is these studies up with in American Cul- to complete, Bri ture," Wald said. "It's really at the "It makes oi See APA, Page 2A junior Lisa Grab 4A ..ei A ai to continuously monitor labor I other issues relating to the g of University apparel, Uni- sident Lee Bollinger has e appointment of the Standing Labor Standards and Human rmanent committee was recom- advisory committee charged in study the University's existing practices and help form new policies for monitoring labor practices and other licens- ing issues. The committee will be chaired by Social Work Prof. Larry Root, director of the Insti- tute of Labor and Industrial Relations. Root was also a member of the advisory commit- tee. "I'm looking forward to working with the committee," he said. "I think it's a great composi- tion - there are a variety of views representing different perspectives on the issue." The committee will be composed of three rep- resentatives from faculty, staff and the student body. This equal representation is especially important to student activists, who complained that the last committee was unfairly balanced toward faculty and staff members. LSA junior Scott Trudeau said he is also look- ing forward to working with the committee, but would be careful to ensure that student concerns would be heard. "I'm not overly optimistic that it's going to be the best of processes, but I'm certainly willing to work with the committee to make sure the University lives up to its obliga- tions," Trudeau said. Root said that the committee will be working with both the WRC and FLA this year. "We should be exploring all possibilities. The solution is going to have to involve a number of approaches." The report from the advisory committee was released in August. It also recommended that the University establish a stronger code of conduct for licensees. The committee split on the issue to have the University join the Fair Labor Association, a See LABOR, Page 7A landings Colegecosts concern voters By Yael Kohen As Congress continues to meddle Daily StfReporter through the budget, Pell Grants could receive the biggest increase ever in a As higher education becomes more single year. Before its August recess accessible, the cost of colleges and Congress discussed a $350 increase in universities have many Americans the Pell Grant. The maximum amount is concerned about monetary access to $3,300. institutions of higher learning. But now some members of Con- The hefty prices of college tuition and gress have recommended an increase the availability of student of$500. loans have left many worried In the last 10 years, fed- about accessibility to institu- eral student funding tions of higher education. increased from $20 billion "Most families don't start to $44 billion, said Laura early enough saving for col- Wilcox, assistant director lege' said Tony Pals, public of public affairs at the information director for the American Council on National Association of Education, adding that Independent Colleges and Part two in a since 1990 tax benefits Universities, adding that six-partseries for higher education have "it's reay in middle school un ectloun Days gone from nearly nothing that families need to start HIGHER EDUCATION to $5 billion. planning, and not only Despite increases in financially but academically." funding for higher education, repaying But many enrolled students rely student loans has become a concern heavily on available financial aid, for many who worry about life after including University, state and federal- college - their future occupation may ly funded aid. hinge on incurred debt, Wilcox said. Some candidates running in the In the past, 60 percent of financial November election have announced aid has taken the form of grants, which plans for making college more are not repaid and 40 percent were affordable. See ISSUES, Page 7A s of Ann Arbor prepares to land while skydiving yesterday afternoon at Skydive Tecumseh. nstruction reroutes students fences running through Cen- ve created a cage-like atmos- nts trying make their way to woman Diane Brown said the construction of Mason and ons will add an extension to ward the Diag and make the t stories high. The fences, intended to ensure the safety ans and construction workers. scheduled to take three years own said. ur campus look ugly," LSA ham said about the fences. "I can't believe they're going to be here for my last two years of school" The fences have forced students to find alternate routes to destinations on Central Campus, creating an inconvenience for pedes- trians. "The biggest problem is having to walk all the way around and deal with extra people everywhere " Graham said. LSA junior Aaron Adelman said he has run into similar problems. "The only time it really bothers me is between classes because everyone's crammed into smaller spaces," he said. But Brown said the project management team in charge of putting up the fences kept the convenience of pedestrians in mind. "The fences that cross walkways were built with gates that can open for pedestrians;' Brown said. "It is an acknowledgement that we still need to meet the needs of pedestri- ans." LSA junior Jodi Siskind acknowledges the importance of the fences for safety during such extensive renovation. "I definitely hate them, but it's for our pro- tection" she said. Brown said that further concerns exist about possible disruption the construction may cause during classes, although there are no specific plans to schedule around them. "We're going to try to work around it as best we can," said Janet Sawyer, senior pro- ject engineer. isBasts Brown stressed the importance of keeping Biology graduate students Stephanie Pfeffer and Brody See FENCES, Page 2A DeYoung walk past the Museum of Art yesterday. 'U' prof talks about teaching Gore, Bus ifr 13 bamrooms burglarized in s By Caitlin Nish Daily Staff Reporter Department of Public Safety crime logs show that 15 coin oper- ated feminine-supply machines have been burglarized in the past week. While the break-ins began on Central Campus in the Institute of Social Research, Fleming Administration Building, Horace Rack- ham School of Graduate Studies and the School of Dentistry, they have reached as far as the Media Union and the Industrial Opera- tions Engineering Building on North Campus. In each incident, the tampon machines were broken into and the money - totalling between $15-$20 -- stolen. "It is apparently not uncommon for this sort of thing to happen. Break-ins of these machines have happened in other college set- tings," DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said. DPS has not yet named any suspects. Nathan Norman, director of Building Services, which installs and maintains the machines, agreed that this is a common problem for universities. "This is nothing new. The fact that someone is doing it in this time frame is new, that means that there is probably one person I By Anand Giridharadas For the Daily When Business School Prof. Jim Reece votes for president this November, he will be forced to break a cardinal rule of his craft: Never pick a favorite student: On Election Day, Reece - an accounting professor at the University of Michi- gan who taught three decades ago at the St. Albans prep school in Wash- ington and later at Harvard Business School - will be choosing between two of his former pupils, Vice Presi- dent Al Gore and Texas Gov. Reece George W. Bush. "Based on my knowing 'them as students, I wouldn't have any qualms about either of them being president," he said. Reece came to know the budding politicians early in his career. In his first job out of college, he taught calculus to Gore and a dozen other high school seniors at St. Albans. Some years later, he was Bush's professor at Harvard in an introductory course on management accounting. This fall, as voters sift through a blitz of televi- sion spots and news reports to choose their next president, Reece offers a unique perspective on two former students who just happened to run for president. Reece describes Gore as a "parent pleaser" and a diligent student, "well organized but very struc- tured," who was polite, worked hard and mingled as easily with his father's Senate colleagues as his own classmates. "The Al Gore I knew wouldn't blow off any- thing," he recalled. "You knew if you called on him, he would have done the homework." Bush was a cooler, more relaxed student, Reece said, calling the Texan "free-form," cre- ative and "a leader among leaders," though not so much for his intellectual gifts as his social skills. "Unless it was political pull, that's how he got in' to Harvard, Reece said of Bush's leadership traits. Reece's reflections echo the themes of a cam- paign that has placed considerable focus on the candidates' personality types - with perceptions of Bush as the well-liked slacker, and Gore the steady overachiever. See PROFESSOR, Page 7A A tampon machine at the Media Union is out of order after being robbed Monday night, one of 15 such robberies on campus. going around doing this," Norman said. Ann Arbor Police Department Sgt. Michael Logghe said that the wave of break-ins may constitute larceny charges. "If they steal money, it would be a larceny," Logghe said. The largest rash of machine break-ins occurred last Wednesday when money was stolen from four machines. Reports of the bro- ken machines were made between 4:34 p.m. to 10:56 p.m. Three machines were broken into Thursday, again in the late afternoon to See BURGLARIES, Page 7A v WEATHER Tonight Partly cloudy. 59o"ow 43. Tomorrow *ily C d y Sunny. High 70. NEWS New catheters tested A recent University study shows that silver coated catheters may prevent urinary tract infections and are cost-effective alternatives to the ones in use. PAGE 3A. WEEKEND Environmentally friendly Green group EnAct asks the 'U' Information Technology Division to switch to recycled paper. PAGE 1B. !j III I *