LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 24, 2001 - 3 HIGHER ED Reich speaks on economy's toll on family Phony Internet degree providers grow in number Phony Internet degree companies are growing at the fastest rate ever according to internet degree watchdog John Bear. The 2000 edition of "Bears' Guide to Earning Degrees Nontraditionally," will include 481 phony schools, an increase from 320 listed in the 1998 edition. The phony diploma mill industry exceeds an estimated $200 .lion a year. According to The Chronicle of Higher Education, from 1983 to 1986 the FBI, through the DipScam project, shut down 39 so-called colleges that made false claims about degrees and offered them for high sums. The crackdown slowed down the appear- ance of new institutions for a few years, but now with Internet access, fake diploma industry has oed. Although DipScam no longer exists, the FBI, postal inspectors and some crusading state agencies are still actively working to keep fake schools from operating. There are several legitimate nontra- ditional universities that are trying to establish themselves on the Internet; but a university with a ".edu" Website address does not imply a college is credited because there are no pre- uisites to register for the address. Medical students fight hypochondria Medical Students and physicians at the University of Utah are noticing a phenomenon among second-year medical students becoming hypochon- driacs, a condition referred to as "sec- d-year syndrome" or "sophomoritis." Second-year medical students are exposed to disease, their principle thrust of study, for hours every day through classes and shadowing physi- cians. Through their studies, the stu- dents begin to believe that everything they learn is real in themselves or family members, one medical student said. When they see sick, bed-ridden ople, identify their symptoms, and learn how diseases start, medical stu- dents begin thinking they don't want to see themselves or anyone close to them in that situation, another medical student said. When students know how a disease could eventually progress, minor symptoms can assume a foreboding quality, scaring many of the students, the student ed. To one degree or another, sopho- moritis affects at least one half of sec- ond-year students, guessed another student. Students panicked by bomb threat A homeless man interrupted an exam at Harvard University on Jan. 11, when he entered the auditorium d threatened to blow it up. Stu- dents started a panicked stampede to leave the auditorium and police I ested the homeless man without ay altercations. A mandatory make-up exam is cur- grently scheduled for Feb. 3, the first $aturday of the new semester. Many students feel it would be unfair to take the exam after the trauma they experi- ced from the bomb threat and after ,eintersession between their fall and spring semesters. .Students have sent out a flurry of e- =rail messages voicing concerns about -the rescheduled final exam, and a peti- tion has been started that is currently signed by 50 of the 250 students in the class. The Registrar, Dean of the College id Core office has the power to decide whether the class can offer an tional final, but has not commented that option yet. The office has decided that the exam will not be held in the same room. Compiledfrom U-Wire reports by Daily Staff Reporter Jane Krull. By Loule Meizlish Daily Staff Reporter Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich made a stop yesterday at the Busi- ness School to tout his new book, "The Future of Success." Reich, who served from the beginning of former President Bill Clinton's administration until soon after his reelection in 1996, focused mainly on the effects of the modern, fast-paced economy on families. Reich opened his speech by describ- ing politics as a composite of two words: "poli," meaning "many"; and "tics," "small, blood-sucking insects." He later admitted, however, that his Cabinet post was "the best job I ever had and probably the best job I ever will have." He described an incident just prior to the 1996 presidential election when he had not been home in the previous five days. About to leave for his house, he received a phone call informing him of a meeting with the president that he could not get out of. When he called to tell his son that he would be home very late, his son asked him to "just wake me up," - even if it was very late. Reich said that he was reluctant to do so (it was a school night) and asked his son why he need- ed to be woken up. His son responded, "Because I just want to know you are home." "I knew at that moment I had to leave," Reich said. Situations such as his were common, he said, citing figures that showed some members of the working population spending 16 to 17 hours a day at work. The former secretary went on to ask rhetorical questions like, "If the econo- my grew so rapidly, why is it that a man and wife were putting in so much time at work?" He added that it what was almost being forgotten was the increased amount of time people now spend commuting to work and talking on cellular phones regarding work- related matters. "We, in our personal lives are discov- ering that there is less and less space for being human ... for having personal relationships." Asked about President Bush's nomi- nee to head his old department, Elaine Chao - who is widely expected to be confirmed by the Senate today - Reich said, "The question is whether or not she will vigorously enforce the labor laws." He predicted that, under the new administration, "there will be some relaxing of labor standards because the business community does not want to bear what it considers to be the high cost of regulations. I hope I'm wrong." JEFF HURVITZ/Daily Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich speaks yesterday at the Business School on his new book "The Future of Success." I Greek system sees high number of winter rushees ABBY ROSENBAUM/Daiy Natural History Museum exhibit designer Dan Erickson creates a work of art from a piece of wood. Studen1:8t finds art in wood, lathe By Susan Luth Daily News Reporter Local fraternities and sororities are seeing record numbers this week as winter rush draws to a close. LSA senior Justin Bright, executive vice president of the Interfraternity Council, said the number of potential rushees who attended the IFC's mass meeting last Thursday was high- er than the number who attended the past two years combined. "Lots of people wanted to get acclimated to the school first before they rushed," Bright said. IFC President Marc Hustvedt, an LSA senior, said he expects 50 to 100 more rushees than the usual 400. He thinks that the number of potential rushees is rising because of the Greek Community's participation in various campus activities, such as the K-Grams Kids Fair, the Detroit Project and Dance Marathon. "We've been working very hard as a Greek Community to bridge the connection across campus, engaging students who otherwise would not have gone Greek," Hustvedt said. "We've really seen positive results from this." LSA junior Don Santon, IFC vice president of recruitment, agreed the numbers are partially due to people wanting to first settle into the campus environment. He felt that the winter rush has become a "friends rush," because in winter rush students who were accepted into frater- nities and sororities during fall rush tend to recruit their friends into the chapters to which they were accepted. "We'd like to see more rushees check all the fraternities out instead of ju stthe ones they've heard of from their friends," Santon said:' Although IFC's rush will end tomorrow, Santon stressed that it is not too late for those interested to join. "Lots of chapters recruit year round," he said. "If people are interested they can stop by the chapter house or call the Office of Greek Life." Out of all chapters who are sponsoring a formal rush, 95 percent are fraternities. The Panhellenic Association itself is not holding a formal rush period, but three soror- ities - Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Gamma Delta and Gamma Phi Beta - will be holding an extra rushing period until the end of this month. The sororities are trying to make up for lost numbers and low recruitment counts from last fall. "So far we've had good numbers," said Pi Beta Phi President Dana Holeman, an LSA senior. "We had 20 people come through so far, which we're happy with. We are very confident and very excited." Santon said about 200 people usually attend the mass meet- ing, where fraternities sponsor tables to promote themselves among rushees. This year, 27 of the 29 fraternities were pre- sent. If numbers follow the trend from the past few years, San- ton expects just under 450 people to rush. "It's hard to tell right now because its still early" he said. "We feel the numbers are up this year, though, because of the large turnout at the mass meeting." By Samantha Ganey Daily Staff Reporter Firewood ignites Dan Erickson's passion for art. Erickson, the Exhibit Designer for the Universi- ty's Natural History Museum, knows that when trees are cut down on campus he will have the opportunity to hand-craft the wood into pieces of art. From a woodpile on North Cam- pus, Erickson selects a favorite piece to turn into bowls and furni- ture with his lathe. Erickson's woodturning career has generated 73 pieces of work now on display at the Ann Arbor Art Center, the Lansing Art Gallery and the Left Bank Gallery in Flint. Staci Kerman, a former student of Erickson's, admires his ability to create art from firewood. "His sensitivity for recycling and pre- serving has allowed him to main- tain the integrity of the inherent beauty in wood," she said. Encouraging students to take up hobbies like woodturning, Erick- son said students do not know what they are missing "unless you've seen wood chips fly off." A self-starter, Erickson is an inspira- tion to students. "I like to figure things out by myself. I like to work by myself," he said. After meeting Erickson in a museum methods course, Kerman recognized the value of Erickson's individualized-artistic perspectives and approaches. "His ability to envision and appreciate what most would view only as scrap wood has allowed him to transcend such pieces into sculptural objects with functional sensibilities," she said. Erickson occasionally has a special design or idea in mind for a piece of wood. He said his "Treasure Bowl" piece was named because "this partic- ular piece of wood had colors and pat- terns that I liked, and so I turned it into a form that I felt best displayed this character." "Upon completion I felt it deserved a special use: To hold and display the various small nat- ural objects I often pick up while on my travels," Erickson said. Although Erickson named "Treasure Bowl," he said he usual- ly refrains from titling the majority of his pieces due to the various meanings that different viewers may derive from his works. He chooses to write an explanatory paragraph about the piece instead of limiting its meaning with a title. Natural History Museum exhib- it preparator John Klausmeyer depends upon Erickson's ingenuity and resourcefulness to produce creative exhibit designs. "If you need some weird thing, he'll engi- neer it," he said. Erickson has relied on all aspects of his education while fur- thering his artistic career. "I have a background and interest in biolo- gy, so I find a lot of artistic appli- cations for it," he said. Extending education outside the classroom, Erickson has prepared various exhibits for student as well as public viewing. "We have on display now a cou- ple temporary exhibits which include objects and jewelry from a tropical rain forest, and pho- tographs of fossils. Some of which look more like abstract paintings. We also have many permanent exhibits on prehistoric life, Michi- gan wildlife, Native American cul- tures, geology, and even a planetarium," he said. While getting his doctorate in anthropology at the University, Jim Ahern is one of the former student assistants who worked on exhibits with Erickson. "With his woodturning and almost every other endeavor, I'm always impressed by Dan's ability to pick up a skill so quickly and not just excel at it but become the best there is," said Ahern, who is now a professor at the University of Wyoming, said. MSA debates funding By Carrie Thorson Daily Staff Reporter Last night the Michigan Student Assembly decided to split the pro- ceeds from the upcoming "Vagina Monologues" evenly between SAFEHouse and Planned Parent- hood with a vote of 24 - 2. This controversial decision was "a microcosm of what's happening nationally," said Nursing junior Elise Erickson, saying President Bush's administration's has a "fear of funding international groups that have anything to do with abortion." It was originally decided that proceeds from the "Vagina Mono- logues," an upcoming play to pro- mote awareness of the movement to end violence against women, would be split evenly between Planned Parenthood and SAFE House. LSA Rep. Doug Tietz and Engi- neering Rep. Greg Hayes proposed to give all the proceeds to SAFE House, citing that Planned Parent- hood performs abortions and MSA would get "the most bang for our buck" by forcing the Vagina Mono- logues to only donate to SAFE House, Tietz said. "If MSA (passes Tietz's resolu- tion), they are essentially forcing students to support something against their religion," LSA fresh- man Charles Wang said. "Have you ever been forced to give charity?" LSA Rep. Shari Katz responded. Several constituents argued that it was not MSA's job to tell their commissions - the Women's Issue Commission being the one sponsor- ing the "Vagina Monologues" - where and how they can spend their money. "It's extremely arrogant for peo- ple who have no part in the women's movement to come in and try to stop us from donating to a group that has been there for women for so long," said LSA junior Karen Soules, director of the "Vagina Monologues." She, along with other con- stituents, stressed the fact that no patron of the show will be required to donate and that the focus of the event was not abortion but "V-Day," a day of awareness of domestic vio-; lence. "This is not a life versus choice argument," self-declared pro-life supporter and LSA Rep. Matt Nolan said. "It is a pro-woman argument," he finished, eliciting applause from the assembly. New to the assembly this meeting was Kinesiology Rep. T.J. Wharry and School of Art and Design Rep. Brooke Gerber. THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor today EVENTS Group Meeting, 7:00 p.m., Individ- ing'" Sponsored by the Center ualized Home Care, 3003 Washte- for Russian and East European Community Service Commission naw, Suite 5, 677-3081 Studies, Michele Rivkin-Fish will Meeting, 6:30 p.m., Michigan U Ann Arbor Support Group, 6:30 speak, 4:00 p.m., 1636 SSWB, Union MSA Chambers, 615-5MSA .m., First Baptist Church; 512 1080 South University, 764- . Environmental Issues Commission E.Huron, Room 102, 973-0242 0351 A-4-e ?n U Meal and Discussion. 5:30 p.m.. ==