One hundred ten years ofeditoradlfreedom U 41 i4 lh r NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 wwwmichigandaily.com Wedneday October 11, 2000 -- - - -- -- - -- -- - -- -- - - End ,, 4, iY Tye ' ;i , z for AVR ograms SNRE may nix undergraduates By AnnaClark aily Staff Reporter A committee charged with exploring the possibility of creating a joint program between the School of Natural Resources and the Environment and the College of Literature, Science and the Arts proposed the elimination of SNRE undergraduate programs yesterday. Interim SNRE Dean Barry Rabe said- ndergraduate programs will most likely be iminated and SNRE will no longer accept new undergraduate applicants. A committee comprised of SNRE and LSA faculty is expected to submit a proposal for an environmental studies program that involves both schools by the end of this month. The proposal recommends "a meaningful partnership between LS&A and SNRE," offering a centralized office, a director that reports to the deans of both schools, faculty from various schools, increased curriculum breadth and a joint LSA/SNRE degree. LSA Dean Shirley Neuman formed the Environmental Sciences/Studies Committee last spring in response to a request from Uni- versity Provost Nancy Cantor. "Committee members joined with the sense that this is an opportunity to expand environmental education at the University - to broaden our curriculum, increase student numbers, get more money, bring in more fac- ulty," said the committee's chairman, English Prof. John Knott. Knott quoted Neuman's letter to the com- mittee as saying SNRE will no longer admit undergraduates once a joint environmental studies program is formulated. "We assumed from the start that we were to come up with a program and see if people were willing to support it,"Knott said. Rabe said the final decision on the proposal will involve faculty from both schools. "The decision is going to be a result of a process of deliberation, Rabe said. "We will be discussing this until there is a sense of fac- ulty resolution." He added that it will take "some time" for a See SNRE, Page 7 School of Natural Resources and the Environment Founded in 1927 as the School of Forestry and Conservation First school of its kind in the nation Proposal: Integrate undergraduate SNRE programs into LSA Organizational Studies Sixth most popular concentration in LSA Fastest growing concentration * Created in the 1970s Plan: Organizational studies is no longer an option for students LSA dean ends organizational studies option By Jen Fish Daily StaffReporter When organizational studies concentrator Julie Herzfeld went to the LSA Academic Advising office yesterday to pick up a list of courses that fulfill the program's requirements, she instead found a single-page letter from LSA Dean Shirley Neuman announcing its demise. In the letter, dated last Tuesday, Neuman states that the See ICP, Page 7 Study: Many can't name the candidates Study shows that few young people is running forI know who president And although many students on this campus can name both presi- dential candidates, they could not name the vice-presidential candi- dates, often referring to Joe Lieber- man as "the Jewish guy" and completely forgetting Dick By Yael Kohen Daily Staff Reporter Undecided voters have the poten- Cheney's name. "All I know is tial to swing this year's presiden- tial election, but while many stu- dents are grap- pling with which candidate to vote for, others are left wondering who is even on the ballot. According to a study released yes- terday by the Close Up Founda- tion, one-third of 16- to 21-year-olds the Republican and Round two Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Vice, President Al Gore face off in their second debate tonight at 9 p.m. The final debate before the election is scheduled for 9 p.m. next Tuesday. Gore's running mate is Jewish," Engi- neering freshman Drew Bahner said. "The cam- paigns are not made relevant to young people at all," said Jon Isaacs, program director for Youth Vote 2000. Isaacs said both Republi- can Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Democratic Vice President Al NORMAN NG/Daily University President Lee Bollinger speaks at a legislative forum in Southgate yesterday as Michigan State President M. Peter McPherson looks on. WORKI WTH THE ENE Rival presidenSspeak on education1 do not know who Democratic presi- dential candidates are and 75 percent cannot name either of the two vice- presidential candidates. Gore have focused most of their attention on senior citizens and par- ents with small children. Isaacs said the most prominent health See STUDY, Page 3 Dy JSn Fish Dly Staff Reporter SOUTHGATE - Although the two will be bitter rivals when the Spartans come to Ann Arbor next Saturday, University President Lee Bollinger and Michigan State University Presi- dent M. Peter McPherson found plenty to agree about on higher education yesterday. At a legislative forum titled "Education for the Future," hosted by the Southern Wayne County Chamber of Commerce, both university presidents discussed the projects their schools were involved in and the impact. their schools would have on the workforce of the future. McPherson opened the forum by saying that although it is true the schools are rivals on the playing fields, "it is also true that the two uni- versities have worked very closely on a num- ber of things." Both presidents named life sciences as the field that will transform education, science and the economy. "The life science corridor is at the top of everything for us," McPherson said. "Technol- ogy will come out of this that will save lives and broaden the economic composition of our economy." "This is the most exciting intellectual devel- opment in our lifetime," Bollinger said. "This is a joint effort. We'll be stronger at U of M when Michigan State is stronger and vice versa." McPherson said his school will "enhance the science component of the curriculum for non- science students." "They don't have to do all the formulas, but the students need to understand the broad concepts ... See PRESIDENTS, Page 2 Students rally against fighting in Middle East By Jacquelyn Nixon student Amer Zahr said. Daily Staff Reporter LSA sophomore Michael Gold, a Jewish studen t The past two weeks of turmoil for students with family affected by the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis came to a head yesterday during a rally for Palestine Day of Action. Yesterday afternoon, members of the Muslim Students Association, Arab-American Anti-dis- crimination committee, International Action Center, Palestine Committee and Secular Humanist Jews rallied together on the steps of the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library. Some speakers compared the conflict to the struggles of Native Americans and the intoler- ance of the Klu Klux Klan. Speakers also stressed that the problem extends across the three and member of the American Movement for Israel, said it is unfortunate there have been deaths on both sides, but "the U.S. doesn't give the weapons to Israel for the specific purpose of oppressing the Palestinian people." Gold has been talking to friends and family about the conflict. "I have gotten the sense that there is a fearful atmosphere on the side of Palestinians, the Israeli Arabs and Israeli Jews," Gold said. LSA senior Ahmad Nassar said he is not sur- prised by the violence in the Middle East because of the history between Israelis and Palestinians. The violence "seems to flare up every couple of years," Nassar said. "ThP I IS,' nd II nitpA N tinc nd a bahnda..idIand JOYCE LEE/Daily Erica Kubersky, an LSA senior, dressed in a chicken costume yesterday to prove a point during World Farm Animals Day. Farmani-mals join students on DiagO' By Maria Sprow For the Daily With a TV, a VCR, a chicken suit and a table full of vegan food, the Michigan Animal Rights Society host- ed a rally for World Day for Farm Ani- mals on the Diag yesterday. The dav which fis orga~nzed nation- contacted the group and helped orga- nize the event along with MARS Pres- ident Kristie Stoick, an LSA senior. "Many people have the idea that their meat, eggs and dairy products come from the idyllic family farm, with animals trouncing around in the sun, eating grass and mooing," Stoick said "It lus~t doesn't hannen that wav I