One hundred ten years of edtori°lfreedom ; , ''; x a a ' . fi ' . ,, a_ d = - , u , ° L - NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED. 764-0557 wwwmichigandaily.com Thursday January 25, 2001 imill A 'Heating prces to nse this espnng By Whitney Elliott Daily Staff Reporter In the next several months, some Michigan energy companies are expected to significantly raise natural gas rates. The increase comes at the end of a *hree-year pilot program to freeze gas prices, a program adopted in 1998 by all Michigan natural gas companies. Consumers Energy spokesman Charles Maclnnis said the price freez- ing programs were implemented to retain competition among natural gas companies and keep gas prices low in Michigan as rates nationwide were increasing. Consumers Energy will charge new prices beginning April 1. Currently, -onsumers charges $2.84 per 1,000 cubic feet for gas, plus $1.20 for distrib- ution costs. The new rate will be no more than $5.69 per 1,000 cubic feet for gas, plus $1.20 for distribution costs. Michigan Consolidated Gas Co., which services Washtenaw County, currently charges $2.95 per 1,000 cubic feet for gas, plus $1.45 for distri- bution. The new rate will be no more Jhan $5.17 per 1,000 cubic feet for gas, plus $1.45 for distribution. MichCon is scheduled to end its frozen prices program in December. But because "$2.95 is not realistic," MichCon spokesman Rich Steketee said and because MichCon does not want to wait until December to raise rates, the company has filed a request to the Michigan Public Service Com- mission to raise rates beginning in i Steketee said MichCon customers will not see a tremendous increase in natural gas bills, in contrast to reports in several newspapers yesterday. "We don't believe our customers will pay any additional charge for gas in 2001," Steketee said. "With this change, our customers will continue to pay some of the best prices in the Mid- west and in the country."' * Steketee said that an apparent 50 percent increase in MichCon prices does not include a credit that will be given back to each customer. "MichCon will sell gas contracts. We'll take that money and credit our customers," Steketee said. "The bot- tom line is (consumers) aren't going te pay anything more. " "If (the plan to credit customers) is See GAS, Page 2A Mock n' roll istorian. Pro ess By Jen Fish Daily Staff Reporter DETROIT - Forty-five years after working for integration in education in the landmark Brown v. Board ofIEduca- tion decision, John Hope Franklin yes- terday testified that ending affirmative action would nullify the "miraculous" progress American society has made toward racial equality since 1 that ruling. Called to tes- 'N IRIAL tify on the histo- ry of educationaln segregation, Franklin held most of the courtroom spellbound as he talked extensively about his own personal experiences with racism. Recalling an incident from his college years in which he was told he could not study in the same room as the white scholars in the National Archives, Franklin made the observation that racism is an "improvisational" process full of "ingenuity." Franklin, a professor emeritus at Duke University, testified in defense of the University's Law School admissions policies on behalf of the intervening defendants. A noted historian and recip- ient of 128 honorary degrees, Franklin told U.S. District Judge Bernard Fried- man about the many obstacles he faced in his academic career. "His life exemplifies both how far we've come and how far we have to go to achieve racial equality," said Miranda Massie, lead counsel for the intervenors. This, she said, is crucial to understand- ing the need for affirmative action. Through his work as chair of the Advisory Board of the President's Initia- tive on Race, Franklin said he found a definite difference among blacks and whites in perceptions of race problem Many white people but no black people thought the race problem "was solving itself,"he said. While Franklin said he did not believe questions of race have been answered, he was careful to stress that tremendous progress has been made. "They're almost miraculous to me See TRIAL, Page 7A BRANDON SEDLOFF/Daily Football players Emmanuel Casseus (left) and Deltan Dubuc (center) entertain the audience with volleyball players Katrina Lehman and Nicole Kacor at Mock Rock last night in the Michigan Theater. Inside: The event raises $100,000 to endow the Jeff Reese Scholarship Fund. Page 9A. OmmitteeS orme to CUSS U re, o, By Anna Clark Daily Staff Reporter SNRE interim Dean Barry Rabe and LSA Dean Shirley Neuman launched two commit- tees yesterday to examine the possibility of developing a joint environmental studies/sci- ences program for undergraduates. The program, if approved by curriculum committees and faculty of both schools and the University Board of Regents, would replace the existing School of Natural Resources and the Environment undergraduate programs. Rabe said stagnant enrollment in SNRE prompted the school to investigate a joint degree. The program would be the first col- laboration between the College of Literature, Science an4 the Arts and a professional school on campus. "I'm not sure if this is going to work or not," Rabe said yesterday. The proposal in its initial form calls for SNRE to stop admitting new undergraduate students independent of LSA, but Rabe stressed that the school is not shutting down. About 560 students, including 360 undergrad- uates, are enrolled in SNRE. Rabe said students admitted prior to the implementation of any changes would not be affected. "SNRE is open for busine'ss, will stay open for business and will continue to offer the full range of programs," Rabe said. While Rabe said the new program can open new opportunities for students, such as a bache- lor of arts option, he also noted possible disad- vantages. "One of the strongest aspects of the SNRE is the small college feel," he said. "That the biggest, most likely loss, that sense of com- munity." But Rabe said he hopes to maintain some of that small college feel through acade- mic advising, centering the program in the Dana Building and establishing strong connec- tions between students and faculty. Rabe and Neuman formed the Curriculum Implementation Committee and the Gover- nance and Structure Committee. They include faculty members from both schools as well as a student representative. "What we're doing is looking at what sort of issues need to be addressed to move from a proposal to implementation," said English See SNRE, Page 2A 'Rabbi exp alansHum is C aalsm By Courtney Crimmins I )aily Staff Reporter "Add the name of Sherwin Wine to the list of great names for our decade," said Greg Epstein, co-leader of the University d1umanistic Havurah, when he introduced Rabbi Wine at Hillel last night. Wine spoke to a group of about 100 stu- dents and community members on the for- mation of Humanistic Judaism. Humanistic Judaism involves the cultural and social history of the Jewish people without relying on many of the formal tradi- tions of religious Judaism. "It is a philosophy of life with a strong Jewish base shared by millions of Jews all over the world. It is about what do you as an ndividual believe without settling for a for- mal answer," Wine said. Wine was raised as a conservative Jew but said he did not connect with all parts of his religion. "Once services started, I had trouble say- ing the words. They were Jewish words but they were not what I b believed," he said. Wine pursued his interests in theology, graduating from the University with a mas- ters in philosophy. After earning his degree Wine joined the Wine Reformed Congregate and later left to form the first congregation of Humanistic Judaism in 1963. He began with a community of eight families and steadily grew from there. "It is about what do you as an individual believe without settling for a formal answer." - Rabbi Sherwin Wine Founding member of Humanistic Judaism "We developed what it was that we shared, we chose the name Humanistic Judaism," Wine said. "Humanistic Judaism is a response to the seven important events in Judaism: The emancipation of the Jews 2,000 years ago, enlightenment, democracy, secularization, inter-cultural marriages, Zionism and the Holocaust," he said. The community that grew from these eight families has aroused curiosity as the beliefs stressed by Wine are divergent from most organized religions. "The three most respected words in Humanistic Judaism are 'I don't know,"' Wine said. Epstein said Humanistic Jews are still "waiting for a response" from others. "Most don't yet know what it is, they know it is out there but they think it is something with no God in it," Epstein said. Wine's teachings stress that power is not with God but within people and those See WINE, Page 7A SM MLLLINSH EtAU/ Daily Doctoral candidate Uluc Saranli controls the RHex robot, By Karen Schwartz Daily Staff Reporter Some researchers believe finding songs on the Internet could one day require nothing more than singing into a computer microphone and waiting for the machine to make the match. Electrical engineering and computer science Prof. Grego- ry Wakefield is working through his department's Artificial Intelligence Lab on a project to do just that. The multimedia project, dubbed "MusEn," is an effort that incorporates engineering and music to examine problems related to thd analysis and synthesis of music. MusEn is funded by a recent grant in information tech- nology provided by the National Science Foundation. The grant consists of $1.7 million over three years. "When computer games alone are beginning to produce as much monetary value as movies, it means that engineer- ing is front-and-center in the technology of music and art," Wakefield said. "Part of where the industry is going is this interaction between music, art and engineering:' Wakefield also said because the next generation of wire- less devices will be built with audio, video and art demands in mind, it is important for engineers to understand what needs to be transmitted in art and music, and vice versa. Ed Durfee. director of the Artifieial Intelligence Lab. said Campus buil ings nc with Aarror stor By Andrew D. Kim For the Daily Hundreds of students attend class in the Frieze Building every day, but it is likely that few of them know its history. Originally built in 1905 to serve as a high school for Ann Arbor students it is one Culver added that all of central campus located between North University and South University avenues has been designated as historic. The oldest University building still pd by stu- dents is Tappan Hall, located on South University. This building was completed in 1894 with Angell Hall following in 1911 --w A. -.~U I