*A One hundred ten years' of editon-dlfreedom *rn NEWS: 76-DAILY CLASSIFIED: 764-0557 www.michigandaily.com Monday February 5, 2001. f J11 IN I '2 admit to gambling i nrng run Jby Martin No new information on booster's involvement with University released From staff and wire reports Two people have pleaded guilty federal charges of interstate aid f racketeering in connection with the gambling investigation into banned University booster Ed Mar- tin and his son Carlton Martin. Lenon Thompson of Detroit admitted last week to receiving bets of $100,000 a week as part of the illegal gambling ring Martin is accused of running at the Ford Motor Company River Rouge plant in Dearborn. JudithSmith of Dearborn also Odmitted to illegal gambling - tak- ing 200 bets a day over the phone from a person at an Alabama beau- ty shop. Both face up to 10 to 16 months in prison and could be charged $250,000 in fines. Martin, a retired Ford electrician, was banned from associating with University athletics in March 1997 fter the University and the NCAA began investigating whether he had violated NCAA rules. Martin is suspected of giving large sums of money and other gifts to former University players. The investigation of Martin began in February of 1996 after a new Ford Explorer driven by for- mer basketball player Maurice Tay- lor crashed while driving from *etroit to Ann Arbor. Also in the vehicle were former basketball players Robert Traylor and Louis Bullock, as well as then- prospect Mateen Cleaves. Officials found that the four had all visited Martin's home that night. An FBI raid in April 1999 uncov- ered evidence linking Martin to at least five former players, as well as arge sums of cash and weapons. In May, Martin and his son pulled out of a plea bargain agree- ment which would have forced them to disclose all the details of their involvement with the Michi- gan men's basketball program. Louis Bullock, Jalen Rose, Mau- rice Taylor, Robert Traylor, Chris Webber and Albert White have all been associated with Martin. This past summer, Bullock and Traylor both admitted in Detroit #deral court that they had actually taken money from Martin. University spokeswoman Julie Peterson said the University has no new information on any develop- ments in the University's case with Martin. Because Martin is being investi- gated by the FBI and other govern- ment law enforcement agencies and * ot the University, it is unknown if and when Martin will disclose any more details about his involvement with University athletics. "Grand jury investigations and federal investigations are by law confidential. "We don't have any new informa- tion on the proceedings," Peterson said. By Jacquelyn Nixon Daily StaffReporter nearing e a1i with AATA A partnership between the University bus sys- tem and the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority will likely be solidified within the next two Ti months, Transportation and Parking Services Director Patrick Cun- ningham said yesterday. "There is a potential of saving $4 million and the purchase of future buses and up to $150,000 a year in operational savings," Cunningham said. "Any bus service that AATA does for us will not result in any increased cost to students, faculty, and staff." Bus service for the University community would remain free, he said. Cunningham and Administrative Manager David Miller met with University bus drivers Sat- urday afternoon to discuss integrating services with AATA. "We wanted to inform our staff of the talks we are having with AATA and tell them how this might affect them individually," Cunningham said. Scott Burkhardt, who has been a University dri- ver for four years and is a member of the bus dri- vers' union, said his concerns on the issue relate to trust. The drivers' suggestions for improving ser- vice have not been considered, he said. "They refuse to put into writing that union jobs will be lost or what jobs will be lost to AATA," he said. Cunningham said current negotiations do not call for the elimination of student drivers - who are not union members - or union jobs. "We have about 30 percent of student bus dri- vers leave in any given year due to graduation and new jobs," Cunningham said. "So any loss of hours that we take, we believe we can do that without affecting the number of student positions we have. That is our goal, to do this in away that doesn't affect the current staff." An internal transportation department memo from Miller obtained by The Michigan Daily rec- ommends AATA begin by running little-used Nite Owl, late-night and weekend routes. The daytime Bursley-Baits route should be the first high-volume route to transfer service to AATA, the memo suggests. Cunningham said an article in this month's issue of Mass Transit magazine contained inac- curate information from AATA Executive Direc- tor Greg Cook stating that as many as 90,000 annual service hours would be transferred from the University to AATA The University actually would lose a total of 30,000 hours over a period of three years, Cun- ningham said. "We made it very clear to the staff this was inaccurate," he said of the article. The University ran 105,715 hours of service during the last fiscal year, according to the memo. Student drivers accounted for nearly 29,000 of those hours. ' Some drivers said they were concerned about Cook's record while working for a Columbus, Ohio, transportation company. The drivers said that after integrating his transportation system with the Ohio State University transportation sys- tem, the level of service decreased significantly. See AATA, Page 7A Trial by ice Site aims- to register more organ donors By Carrie Thorson Daily Staff Reporter Every 14 minutes, another name is added to the National Organ Trans- plant waiting list. In an effort to meet this demand, TransWeb, a University organization aiming to register more people for organ donation, has- launched a new web site aimed at stu- dents called "Give Life: The Trans- plant Journey." TransWeb.org is targeting students because "this is the time when teenagers and young people are making moral decisions about their lives and values," said University Health Services spokeswoman Kara Gavin. "The Transplant Journey" aims to educate uninformed students, Gavin said. Many students, like SNRE freshman Molly Walsh, are not clear on the process by which organs are donated. "If my mom was dying and she needed a kidney or something, I'd do it, but not in any other case," said Walsh, who has an organ donor sticker on the back of her driver's license. In actuality, those who fill out the organ donor stickers are agreeing to donate their organs upon death. Other students do not understand that filling out the sticker does not mean a doctor is less likely to save them in the case of a serious acci- dent, Gavin said. TransWeb wants to make the deci- sion of organ donation easier for stu- dents through the website and to make it easier to tell family and loved ones of their decisions, Gavin said. The website stresses the fact that telling the family is a crucial step to making sure the donation wishes are carried out. "Organ donation has to be some- thing someone decides themselves," she said. "The family can't decide for them when a person is near death, so they need to know ahead of time what the person wanted." The site debuts at a time when organ donation has recently been brought to national attention. "We will move in the first 100 days to launch a national campaign to raise awareness of organ dona- See DONORS, Page 7A ELLIE WITE uaily LSA sophomore Jack Evans films a scene from an adaptation of Franz Kafka's "The Trial" in the Law Quad on Saturday afternoon. Duderstadt blasts Nike deal By Courtney Crimmins Daily Staff Reporter The athletic apparel deal with Nike recently signed by University President Lee Bollinger has drawn fire from vari- ous critics, but none have as great an understanding of Bollinger's pressures than his predecessor, James Duderstadt. "We are not in the busi- ness of creating a commer- cially viable institution. We are educators. Nike is not buying a football team, Dudertadt it is buying a university," Duderstadt said in an interview. Duderstadt, who served as University pres- ident from 1988 to 1996, wrote on the issue in his first book, "Intercollegiate Athletics and the American University: A University's President's Perspective," which came out in October of last year. He has written other books on subjects ranging from higher education to nuclear reactors and is currently working on another book due out within a year. "A University for the Twenty-First Cen- tury," another book of Duderstadt's released in August 2000, warns of trouble in the future of public universities as they move into the digital age. "The University will change more in the next decade than in the past 200 years," Dud- erstadt said. "There is great difficulty when leading during changing times." The book deals with the changes higher education institutions will have to make to keep up with the times. His nextbook, "The Future of the Public University," will deal specifically with large public universities that have a diverse curriculum - the kind Duder- stadt said he thinks will have the most trouble adjusting. "Schools have to strike a balance between characteristics that have served society in the past and those that will benefit it in the future;' Duderstadt said. As a former president and a current Uni- versity professor, Duderstadt has always been committed to making sure the University is not left behind in its job of meeting the needs of society. "He got Michigan started on a program to get ready to respond to the information age See DUDERSTADT, Page 7A .Yale University decides to offer RU-486 By Ahmed Hamid Daily Staff Reporter Yale University set a precedent last week by deciding to offer the new abortion drug, RU-486, to all recipients of its standard health plan. "It is a legal and approved treatment and there may be ome members of the Yale community that may choose to e it," Yale spokesman Thomas Conroy said. Also known as mifepristone, RU-486 was approved by the Food and Drug Administration last September. It had been tested previously in Europe. The University of Michigan Health Services announced in November it would not offer the drug. UHS interim Director Robert Winfield said UHS does not "Wve honor the administration's policy to offer all ranges of health services." - Thomas Conroy Yale University spokesman The drug also carries numerous risks including "hemor- rhage and incomplete abortion;' Winfield said. The decision at Yale has resulted in questions about stu- dent tuition covering the treatment. "Students receive health care as a condition of enroll- Yale misunderstands his group's stance on the issue; "The university says that just because you're a guy you can say you don't want to pay for the drug because you won't use it. Yet there are a lot of women in the Pro-Life League. We do not want to pay for what over 50 percent of America's population thinks is murder," he said. Caroline Barber, a Yale junior and president of the Repro- ductive Rights Action League of Yale saw the decision as pos- itive. "We honor the administration's policy to offer all ranges of health services," she said. Barber said "a student could go through four years at Yale and not use any of the UHS services," yet still be pay- ing for them. Anoth'rersue sthe 'he"alth riks associated with RU -486. ELLIE WHITE/Daily Engineering freshmen Bobby Owens and Andika Powell make calls for Michigan Telefund yesterday. e0 Rivals face off for biggecrr gift By Kelly Trahan For the Daily The University's Class of 2001 faces stiff competition from Michigan State University seniors this week as the intrastate rivals duke it out to raise the larger senior gift. While every senior class since the early 1980s has con- tribuited a gift to the U niversity this is the first time Michi-