LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 29, 2001- 3A W CAMPU S .SesS International law series to conclude The University Center for Interna- tional and Comparative Law will hold a discussion titled "Topics in Internation- al Law" today from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in 118 Hutchins Hall. Today's discussion is the second in a two-part series that focuses on contro- versial issues in international law. This afternoon's lecture will be given by Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto law Prof. Craig Scott. Scott will speak on "Torture, Translation, and Transna- tional Torts. The event is free and refreshments will be served. Japanese culture in film celebrated A two-day film symposium spon- sored by the University International Institute will be held Thursday and =Friday. The symposium, entitled, "The Latin Connection in Japanese Cine- ma: A Symposium with Filmmaker Masato Harada," will explore cultural issues that face Japanese emigrants returning from Latin America. On Thursday at 7 p.m., the Michigan Theater will show Harada's satirical 1994 movie, "Kamikaze Taxi." The movie exposes corruption ailing mod- ern Japanese society by depicting a novice yakusa gangster sickened with his organization's cruelty. The movie is free. On Friday, the film symposium con- tinues with a panel discussion with University and visiting scholars about S the film shown Thursday and its cul- tural context. The panel discussion will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. in 1636 School of Social Work Building and is free of charge and open to the public. Series to discuss Jewish culture The University Centers for Judaic, Latin and Caribbean Studies will begin a three-part lecture series, entitled "The Jewish Diaspora in Latin American and the Caribbean." this Friday at noon. Discussions this Friday and in the next two weeks will be given by local and visiting scholars. This week, Emory University histo- ry Prof. Jeffrey Lesser will discuss "(Re)Creating Brazilian National Identity: Jewish Ethnicity on the Brazilian Frontier." Lesser's lecture -will be held in 2609 School of Social Work Building and is free. Interpretations of the Holocaust in literature and .art Liliane Weissberg " Universityof Pennsylvania literature professor, will speak on the interpretation of litera- ture and art relating to the Holocaust this Friday at 2 p.m. . The University Center for Judaic ;Studies will host Weissberg as she presents "In Plain Sight: Can One Apply the Concept of 'Beauty' to the Literature and Visual Arts That Relate to the Holocaust?" in the third-floor conference room on the Modern Languages Building.This event is free. Fellowship given to Social Work prof. - School of Social Work professor :Deborah Schild Wilkinson has been 4 named a 2001 Primary Care Policy Fellow by the U.S. Public Health Service. The fellowship will provide Wilkinson, along with several other winners with intensive six-month training, in which she will study primary car policy, education and research to further advocation for the improvement of primary health care in government and in the pri- vate sector. The fellowship also includes sessions on leadership and media training. Wilkinson's work will specifical- ly focus on aspects of prevention and on practice and policies that support training in primary care t policy. Her work in these areas will relate to genetics and maternal- child health. Wilkinson holds a public hhealth masters degree in maternal and child health, in addition in doctoral and master's degrees in social work. -Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Students frustrated with waitlist glitches By Kelly Trahan For the Daily After registering for classes on Wolverine Access, LSA junior Jen Dakki said she didn't expect to have a problem getting into Econom- ics 323. "I was pretty confident because I was first on the waitlist," Dakki said. "But it turns out that there was glitch in Wolverine Access that told everyone on the waitlist they were first. "There were 120 people on the waitlist, all of whom assumed they would have a spot in the class. I ended up having to CRISP into a random class that doesn't count for any of my requirements because I couldn't get into the class;" she added. LSA freshman Julie Swistak said she was equally frustrated registering for the term. "There were more people on the waitlist for my freshman seminar than were enrolled in the class - it was ridiculous;' Swistak said. Dakki and Swistak are not alone. LSA junior Raphael Jackson is a communications major but said he has not been able to get into Com- munications 211 - a requirement for the con- centration. "The communications department says that concentrators should complete Comm 211 by the end of their sophomore year," Jackson said. "It is the end of my junior year now and I have been trying to get into the class since I was a sopho- more. There are so many people who want to take the classes and not enough spots." In fact, the communications department has more concentrators per faculty member than any other LSA department. But communications department Chairman Mike Traugott said the department is doing every- thing it can to accommodate students. "All of our courses have very high enrollment and very long wait lists. We reserve 50 percent of the spots in our upper-level classes for concentrators and we hold back spaces until later CRISP dates in our intro classes so that freshmen and sophomores "I was pretty confident because I was first on the waitlist. There was a glitch in Wolverine Access that told everyone on the waitlist they were first." - Jen Dakki LSA junior can enroll," Traugott said. Like the communications department, the psy- chology department has had problems placing students in the classes they need to complete their degree. Justine Altman, an LSA junior employed in the psychology department, said she receives "lots of complaints" from students who cannot get into their classes. "It is a problem for our 1,200 concentrators and non-concentrators alike," Altman said. "We never have enough spots. Rarely does a student call who has no other options; we can usually help them. But the only real way to fix the prob- lem is to hire more faculty and GSIs. The faculty just isn't there." Traugott said he also recognizes the necessi- ty to make additions to the 12-member com- munications department faculty, but the process of acquiring quality professors, he said, is long and tedious. "No department can hire many faculty at once," Traugott said, "It is important to hire quality professors. We are working on it." The science of music Area travel agencies pitch discounts for Spring Break By Ted Borden For the Daily With thoughts of sunglasses, tanning oil and swimsuits in mind, many stu- dents on campus have already arranged plans for Spring Break. "It's been very busy here;' said Carol Seymour, a travel agent at STA Travel. "I would say a fourth of the people com- ing in here are University students inter- ested in spring break." STA Travel, like most agencies, offers a number of packages geared towards cash-strapped students desiring a trip south for sun and sand. While most of these packages vary by destination and agency, most include airfare and lodging at rates much lower than those offered by commercial airlines. "If you're looking for airfare and lodging at a good price, a package is the best deal," Seymour said. Among the most popular packages are those for Cancun, Jamaica, Acapul- co and the Bahamas. But Europe is also a hot destination. "We've booked a lot of Europe trips here,' said Lindsay Adelsheim, a travel agent at Council Travel. "London, Paris, Italy, Spain and even Prague are very popular. This is the off-season over there, so prices are very good." And many students are booking packages that include upscale lodging and are not necessarily all-inclusive. "Students are doing this because they don't want to go where they know a lot of high school students will be," said Connie Pierce, owner of Travel Centre. "They do not want to be in the same area." Most packages start as low as $500 per person, without tax. Packages are always purchased by a group of people, usually starting with at least four. But packages cost a great deal less than buy- ing a ticket through a commercial air- line and making lodging reservations yourself Travelocity.com, a website that claims to offer the lowest fares available, showed the cheapest ticket to Cancun during the University's Spring Break to be $676.92. In contrast, STA Travel offers a package to Cancun including airfare and lodging for $499 per person with four people to a room, not including tax. For students not interested in getting a packaged deal, one alternative is the purchase of the International Student Identification card. Available at most travel agencies for $22, this card allows students to get deep discounts, and not just during the spring season. A single round trip ticket from Detroit Metropolitan Airport to Munich, Germany, for a one-week stay during the last week of July, via Delta Airlines, currently costs $1,462. Using the International Stu- dent Identification card, the same ticket would cost $841. Despite the savings, many stu- dents are not buying the card, nor are they going to agencies to make travel arrangements. "For Spring Break, I'm going to Los Angeles," said RC sophomore Taylor Simpson. "I found a very cheap ticket on the Internet and I thought it was pretty easy." Seymour said most students interest- ed in Spring Break packages began coming to STA Travel right after Thanksgiving. However, most agencies still have many packages available, to both Europe and the tropics. "There's still time, but I would urge students interested to come in as soon as possible," Adelsheim said. Pierce advises students to use caution with spring break packages. "Before leaving, I would call all the companies involved and verify the information," Pierce said. "If it really sounds too good to be true, it probably is." KHANG TRAN/ Daily Second-year University Hospitals pediatics resident Sarah Gelehrter and LSA sophomore Rebecca Horsch play at the debut of the University's Life Sciences Orchestra yesterday at the Michigan Theater. Author clims'U' eXpeml ents on animals ineffective 1 1 By Ahmed Hamid Daily Staff Reporter Despite the large role animal experi- mentation plays in medical research at the University, C. Ray Greek, a scien- tific advisor for the National Anti-vivi- section Society, argues such research is ineffective. "Scientifically it is not valid. You cannot extrapolate from one species to another," Greek said. Howard Rush, interim director of the University's Unit for Laboratory Animal Medicine, said the University performs research on approximately 150,000 animals per year. "Ninety-five percent of the animals are rats, mice, fish and frogs," he added. Greek cited various incidents in medical history when the application of animal data proved futile. "There are far too many examples of good medications like penicillin that were delayed from release due to harmful effects in animals," Greek said. Greek also blamed animal models for delaying the release of the polio vaccine as well as convincing early medical researchers that smoking was non-carcinogenic. While Greek finds animal testing to be ineffective, he has no ethical qualms about using animals in research.. "I am not opposed to it. What I am saying is that when the medical com- munity tells you that we use chimps because they share 99 percent of our genes, I say that is a fallacious argu- ment," Greek said. "We share 58 per- cent of our genes with bananas and no one is testing heart disease drugs on bananas. Very small differences in ani- mal systems can be of profound signif- icance." At a lecture last Thursday sponsored by the Michigan Animal Rights Soci- ety, some audience members expressed skepticism about Greek's contentions. In the question and answer session following the lecture, one audience member questioned whether Greek had any statistical evidence to support his claims, saying he had provided only anecdotal evidence. "Yes I do, but I changed my slides and won't bother to look for them right now," Greek said. Greek mentioned his book "Sacred Cows and Golden Geese - The Human Cost of Experiments on Animals," which he co-authored with his wife, as having "over a thousand references" to support his point. Greek further said that animal right's activists should not only "oppose animal experimentation on ethical grounds." Michigan Animal Rights Society, Kristie Stoick, LSA senior, agreed. "I think Dr. Greek is right in saying peo- ple aren't going to be reached just by saying animal experimentation is unethical. It is important to educate people about sound science as well," Stoick said. Rush said he sees animal experi- mentation as a viable research model among a variety of models. "Any investigator who is doing research is looking for the best model. You can use a cell culture, organ-cul- ture, computer simulations, or animals. Animals are just one form of models used in studying disease," Rush said. Get In SURVIVOR MODE with the Must-Have companion SURVIVOR II The Field Guide . a a a THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor today EVENTS "The Journey to Peace: and Transnational Torts," Sponsored by the Center for Interna- Auditorium B, asiacine- ma@umich.edu. Chime Concert. noon. SERVICES Campus information ON SALE NOW I