LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 6, 2001- 3 CRIME 100 Woman dragged out of bed by masked intruders *An Ann Arbor woman told police that two gunmen dragged her out of bed and robbed her last Tuesday, according to Department of Public Safety reports. The woman waited to report the incident until Thursday, saying she was too afraid to call the police. According to reports, two men wearing black clothing with bandanas over their faces knocked on the K man's door in the 300 block of th Division Street at 1:15 a.m. last Tuesday. A man visiting the apartment answered the door, and the two sus- pects allegedly held a gun to his head. The woman told police the suspects dragged her out of bed, demanded money and threatened her life. The woman told police she gave the suspects $500 and they then left. The woman was unable to give police a ailed description of the suspects, who remained at large. Missing person found at Big Ten hoops tournament A caller from West Quad Residence Hall reported a missing person to DPS officers Saturday. Authorities in Grand Rapids located the subject at g Big Ten Women's Basketball Tournament. Sofa stolen from Markley lounge DPS reports state a couch was stolen from a lounge in Mary Markley Residence Hall sometime Wednesdav night. DPS had no suspects. 1LB vandalized by graffiti on wall Graffiti was found Friday morn- ing in a basement level stairwell of the Modern Languages Building., DPS reports state. The word "ghet- to" was marked on the wall in red ink. JMW damaged parking lot A BMW was damaged Friday in a parking lot on Murfin Avenue, DPS reports state. The caller believes the damage, which was on the trunk, was caused by his girlfriend's ex- boyfriend. Driver cited for ttempting to flee parking structure DPS officers on Friday night issued a citation to a subject leaving the parking structure at 1600 E. Medical Center for refusing to pay the attendant. He drove over the lawn to avoid the booth and the gate arm. The subject was also cited for careless driving. 9PS seeks driver who fled crash DPS received reports of a hit-and-- rtn accident Sunday afternoon on South State Street. A caller notified DPS of the car-pedestrian accident. A vehicle description of a red car was given. The model or license plate number of the car was not 'tained. Man injured in fight with cousin DPS officers assisted AAPD after receiving reports of a fight Sunday night in the 700 block of Packard Street. Reports state that both the vic- tim and the perpetrator left the scene prior to the arrival.of the officers. The victim was located in the sment of the Michigan Union. 'was treated for a minor head wound and transported to the Uni- versity Hospitals' emergency room for further treatment. The victim told authorities he had been fighting with his cousin. - complied by Daily Staff Reporter Kristen Beaumont. Symposium to discuss technological issues By Jon Fish Daily Staff Reporter The growth of wireless communications and other forms of telecommunication technology and their legal, business and public policy impli- cations will be the focus of a three-day confer- ence beginning tomorrow. The conference, "Law, Policy and the Con- vergence of Telecommunications and Comput- ing Technologies," will feature a number of speakers from the telecommunications indus- try and law. Scheduled to kick off the conference is Joel Klein, former assistant attorney general for the Clinton administration. Klein, who direct- ed the government's prosecution of Microsoft, will deliver the 2001 William W. Cook Lec- ture on American Institutions, "The Role of Government in the Emerging High Tech Glob- al Economy." Law School Dean Jeffrey Lehman called the conference a great opportunity for discussion of technological issues and the formulation of new public policy. Technology law, he said, is a "booming area'" and one that University graduates are certainly moving toward. Adding that this is "one of the most ambi- tious conferences that I have seen the Univer- sity stage," Lehman said the conference will also be broadcast over the Internet. The conference will mainly consist of a number of panel discussions on the various issues facing a society that is becoming increasingly dependent on telecommunications and computer technology. Topics such as maintaining privacy in a con- nected world and bridging the digital divide will be discussed, as well as a session on intellectual property, scheduled to be led by Napster Chief Executive Officer Hank Barry. While the conference will take place at the Law School, the event is jointly sponsored by the. Law School, the College of Engineering, the School of Information, the Business School, the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy and the Michigan Telecommunications and Technology Law Review. The conference will begin at 1:30 p.m. at Honigman Auditorium, Room 100 Hutchins Hall, with a welcome from Lehman and Univer- sity President Lee Bollinger. The conference is open and free to the public. A large turnout is expected, so participants are encouraged to register or at least arrive early to ensure seating. For a full schedule of events and to register for the conference, visit www law umich.edu/Conver- genceConference or call 615-4535 for more information. Through the looking glass Lloyd Hall students visit civil fights sites in South MARJORIE MARSHALL/Daily These Gallop Park swans were alone in the park during several brief intervals of snow yesterday. Ne w dir;ctor of h u-ma n Ir es o ur:e s speaks to SACUA By Maria Sprow Daily Staff Reporter Twenty-one students in the Lloyd Hall Scholars Program 113 course par- ticipated in a week-long history lesson, returning late Sunday night from a 3,000-mile trip exploring famous civil rights sites throughout the South. "Students get to see and touch and listen to history. It makes it real to them. It's not history from a book, it's history from experience," said Joe Gonzalez, a graduate student who co- teaches the course. This is the second year the trip has taken place. "There is a contingency of students who are really interested in a challeng- ing spring break and a rewarding spring break. They aren't going to the beach, they are riding around in a van for 3,000 miles," said Teresa Buckwa- ter, a graduate student who helped organize the trip. The group's first destination was Washington, D.C, where the stu- dents met with Rep. John Louis (D- Ga.) and 1988 Pulitzer Prize winner Taylor Branch, who discussed with the class what it was like to be a part of the civil rights movement. The class also discussed the differ- ences in the social involvement of the generation of students associated with the civil rights movement and today's generation of students. "There are a lot of people who are trying to volunteer to do good things for people, but I don't think they believe they can change the world. They've been told it's impossible, that people who are idealists are people who are impractical and won't get jobs. The people who did the move- ment are very practical people who still believed they could make the world a better place," said Gonzalez. The journey continued as students made their way to Alabama. The group made several stops in Mont- gomery, one of which was the site where the 1955 bus boycott began. They also visited the church where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. preached. The students next traveled to Birm- ingham, site of the infamous assault on civil rights marchers by Police Commis- sioner Bull Connor and his men where marchers were attacked by dogs attd had firehoses used upon them. The students were even able to speak with Jean Jackson, one of the protesters who was assaulted. "The biggest thing that had an impact was that she said men and women had different experiences. Stu- dents got to see that not everyone was in the frontline singing 'We shall over- come.' ... There were people in the back too. This was before women's liberation," said Gonzalez. One of the most famous places visited was the scene of the Spike Lee movie "Four Little Girls," which told the story of the 1963 firebomb- ing by the Ku Klux Klan of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birming- ham which led to the death of four children. The church had been the headquarters of the movement to desegregate the city. Students then packed up and headed By Whitney Elliott Daily Staff Reporter Newly appointed Human Resources Director Barbara Butterfield met with the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs yesterday afternoon. New to the University as of Jan. 15, Butterfield discussed the role of the University Human Resources and her approach to the position. Butterfield said that through her graduate studies connected with the University, she has developed an understanding of some aspects of the University Human Resources that will aid her in her new posi- tion. "I have a deep history in faculty and staff resources," Butterfield said. SACUA member Jon Rush said the Human Resources department at the University seems to'be more and more "like a dumping ground" where issues that have no other place to be settled are put. Butterfield said she is "trying to get a sense of what works well and what needs attention." In order to understand what needs to be changed in the University Human Resources department, Butterfield said she will look at "what are the most important questions of the institution" and which of the questions are the most helpful to education at the insti- tution. Butterfield discussed the Pre- scription Drug Update - a commit- tee that will make recommendations regarding health care benefits of University employees - with SACUA briefly. "The real issue is the driving cost in pharmaceuticals to be sure that we have an early look at what's going on," Butterfield said. SACUA member SeonAe Yeo said the Prescription Drug Update recom- mended that the University policy be designed to make sure lower income graduate students, staff and faculty in a catastrophic medical event do not receive below-par treatment because of a lack of funds. "I see that the lower income side of the graduates, staff and faculty has a higher impact," Yeo said. Butterfield added that she is search- "It's not history from a book, it's history from experience" - Joe Gonzalez Graduate student instructor ing for a plan that would allow the University multiple alternatives. "From the report, a set of alterna- tives has to be developed. The report should suggest to us many alternatives. Not everything has to be one size fits all," Butterfield said. "I want to see the advice of the whole'"she said. Rush asked Butterfield whether the size of her office will allow the Human Resources department to operate as well as possible. "I'm going to look at the entire orga- nization," Butterfield said. She said she will look at other universities' human resource departments to see which sys- tems have worked and have not. "We have to think about the whole. About what should be the successful life of a student at the University of Michigan," Butterfield said. Jeff Frumkin, director of academ- ic human resources at the Universi- ty, also addressed SACUA members. He spoke of the role of his depart- ment in the faculty grievance proce- dure. "There is an increase in the uses of informal processes. I don't get the sense that we've had a spike one way of the other with respect to the number of grievances filed," Frumkin said. Yeo asked about the weaknesses and strengths of the grievance protocol. "There is a perception question as to what the grievance procedure can address," Frumkin said. "The grievance procedure is not a good vehicle to sort out whether a judg- ment is good. I don't know what the answer is to that. It's a process designed to make a recommendation to a decision maker"he added. Frumkin also said that while the revised grievance procedure has improved the timing of a grievance procedure, the role of the grievance committee still needs to be elaborated upon. "It's only a couple of years old and it's not that dissimilar in struc- ture. We have improved communi- cation factors - the dates are well spelled out - but the basic design of what is grievable and what is the role of the grievance committee is not that dissimilar in design," Frumkin said. for the Mississippi Delta to speak with Jeribu Hill, a civil rights attorney who is head of the Center for Constitutional Rights, a law firm dedicated to defend-: ing low-income people who have been' the victims of discrimination. "She really made everything that: we've learned about the civil rights: movement relevant to today. We left: feeling empowered," said LSA' freshman Sarah Kruman. Memphis, Tenn. - the site of. King's assassination - was the last; stop before the class returned to Ann Arbor. Students who went on the trip; said they didn't regret spending their breaks with their classmates. "It was an amazing experience. For; me, it was watching a half a semester's work materialize. It was a lot of self- exploration," said Kruman. Other students found that the expe- rience taught them a lot about Ameri- can culture. "We were forewarned that the trip, would be very exhausting because. of the long drive but I thought that it was worth it," said Engineering' senior Khan You. "Coming from Singapore, I'm not as familiar with, American history. What made it fun was that it was a road trip, and we were all sharing the experience. It- was all a part of immersing myself in American culture an American' history." ar.,' 4 ntt s expenses Am'l IF EXPENSES ONPERFORMANCE ions after 20 years based on initial investment hypothetical annual returns of 8%. Total returns lue o invstmets wil flctuae, an yied ma It's a simple calculation: T11IAA-CR?,EF's low c mean moreimone workin or you. The equation is easy. Lower expenses in managing a THE IMPACT 0 fund can equal better performance. $215,000 Low-Cost Accoun correction: A caption on Page IA of yesterday's Daily incorrectly identified the North American Free Trade Agreement. 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