LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily -Monday, March 12, 2001-- 3A Conference looks at media role in racial stereotypes The University department of com- munications studies will host a confer- ence titled "Race and the Media: The Persistence of Stereotypes, The Prospects for Change" Friday to Sunday. Scholars from around the coun- try will discuss the media's role in shaping race relations, reinforcing stereotypes and bringing changes in media representations of African Americans in American society. Nearly two dozen people will present research on topics such as minorities on 0television, political advertising, media representations of Hispanics, African Americans and crime on television news, violent rap music and the stereo- typing of African American males, race and ethnicity in the 2000 Census, and cultural politics and network television. The conference will be held in ~the Erlicher Room, 411 West Hall from 3:30 to 6 p.m. Friday, from 9 *a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and from 10 a.m. to noon Sunday. There will be a film screening and discussion Saturday night at 8 p.m. For more information on the confer- ce schedule, call 764-0420. U.S. presidents remembered in portrait exhibit * The Ford Library will host "Ameri- can Presidents: Life Portraits," a free exhibit of presidential portraits, begin- ning this week through April 23. The exhibit represents the only complete collection of American pres- idential oil portraits completed by one E artist, Chas Fagan, a portraitist, land- scape painter and sculptor. More information about the exhibit and Fagan can be found at wwwamer- icanpresidents.org/gallery. The Ford Library, located at 1000 Beal Ave., is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Series gives perspective to 'Gendered World' The University department of *women's studies will hold a two part lecture series titled "Gendered Worlds: Women's Lives in Transnational Per- spective" today and March 23. Today American culture Prof. Magdelena Zaborowska will give a lecture at noon titled "The Best View is from the Top: Auto biographical Snapshots, Engendered Communist Movements, and (Post) Totalitarian *Feminisms." The lecture is free and held in 2230 Lane Hall. :Prof. discusses quarantine of typhoid victims "The Tragic Tale of Typhoid Mary" will be told at noon Wednesday in the Pendleton Room of the Union. Biology Prof. Robert Bender will Shold a free discussion on the life of Mary Mallon, an early 20th century Irish immigrant who spent most of her life on an island in the East liver. She was only one of hun- dreds of known typhoid carriers in New York City to be imprisoned as a threat to public health. The event includes a free lunch. * Domestic violence lecture remembers slain 'U' student Barbara Hart, legal director of the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Domestic Violence and associate director of the Battered Women's Jus- tice Project, will deliver the Tamara Williams Memorial Lecture at 7 p.m. March 12 in East Hall Auditorium. Hart's lecture is titled "Working Together to End Dating and Domestic Violence" and is the first in what will become an annual event. The lecture commemorates Tamara Williams, who was a senior at the University when she was stabbed to death by her boyfriend on Sept. 23, 1997. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter ;tW:hitney Elliott. CIO Griffiths takes post at U. Pittsburgh By Anna Clark Daily Staff Reporter The University's chief information officer, Jose- Marie Griffiths, will leave Ann Arbor at the end of the academic year for a posi- tion in research and teaching at the University of Pittsburgh after five years of work to } unite the University's informa- tion technology efforts. "I was made an offer that was difficult to refuse" Grif- fiths said. At Pittsburgh, she will hold an endowed chair in the G School of Information Sci- Griffiths ences and serve as director of the Sara Fine Insti- tute for Interpersonal Behavior and Technology. "The combination was extre Griffiths said, adding that her "he She emphasized the increase burgh as another draw to the new "I look forward to taking thet I've had here and actively testi said, highlighting the legal, s impacts of information technc interest. "While I've been involved here, I haven't been able to spe them in a scholarly manner,"Gri Griffiths, who is also the exe the University's Information Tec and a professor in the School o emerged as a national name in nology research. University Regent Larry Deii Hills) added that Griffiths' wo emely attractive," well-deserved recognition. .art is in research." "I think she's done a great job," he said. "I d freedom at Pitts- respect her." position. During her years in Ann Arbor, she has worked thoughts and ideas to encourage collaboration among the various tech- ng them out," she nology initiatives in the University's colleges and ocial and ethical schools. ology as areas of "If we don't come together, you'll find that every one will start going in different direc- with those issues tions," Griffiths said. "It's like railway tracks end time studying that don't meet." ffiths said. University Director for Strategic Technolo- ecutive director of gy Gavin Eadie noted a manifestation of this chnology Division goal in Griffiths' creation of a group for tech- if Information, has nology representatives from all schools and information tech- colleges to meet and discuss information issues. He also mentioned Griffiths involve- tch (D-Bloomfield ment on congressional commissions and other rk has earned her national groups. Granhoim enti "She's worked very hard for the University on the outside," Eadie said. "And that's always good for University exposure." Griffiths said that although she holds the top information technology title at the University, she has wanted to encourage the campus to understand that technology issues aren't the responsibility of one person. "I wanted to get people to see that I can't make decisions for them," she said. She recognized University President Lee Bollinger's Information Revolution Commission and Provost Nancy Cantor's recent announcement making technology a priority as two signs that the campus is beginning to see the widespread influ- ence of information technology. While there are no plans yet to replace Griffiths, Eadie said he hopes the outgoing CIO's influence on the campus will remain. ers b1or 2002 gubernatoral race By Louis Mlzsh Daily Staff Reporter The race for Michigan governor in 2002 officially became a little more crowded late last week with the news from state Attorney General Jennifer Granholm's office that she will seek the position. Melvin Butch Hollowell, the attorney general's cam- paign treasurer, said Granholm made the announcement to her staff Thursday morning. She then filed papers later that day with the Secretary of State's office estab- lishing the Jennifer Granholm for Governor candidate committee. "People all over Michigan have expressed enthusiasm for having Jennifer serve in the highest office of the state and she is very much looking forward to continuing to be of service to people of Michigan," Hollowell said. Although it was expected Granholm would make a gubernatorial bid, most expected her decision to come later this year, closer to the 2002 August Democratic pri- mary. But the statements of several other Michigan politi- cians that they were either considering a candidacy or definitely running may have forced her hand. So far, the only other candidate to officially declare her candidacy is state Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D-Salem Twp.), whose district includes Ann Arbor. But former Gov. James Blanchard and Sen. Gary Peters (D-Bloomfield Twp.) have filed papers establishing candidate committees and have said they are likely to run. U.S. Rep. David Bonior (D-Mt. Clemens) has been quoted as saying he is "90 percent" sure that he will run, although he has yet to file papers with the Secretary of State's office. Smith, along with Bonior spokeswoman Allison Rem- sen, said Granholm's announcement came as no surprise to them and added that the announcement meant little change for their campaigns. But Granholm, who is the highest elected Democratic official in the state's govern- ment, is very popular and has a recognizable name which may help her next year. But Smith said experience is what counts. "I think one of the things that have made Governor (John) Engler so successful is his experience ... and while I believe his vision is flawed it was that legislative 4nd budget knowledge and experience that has made him effective," she said. Engler served in the state Legislature for 20 years before being elected governor in 1990. Granholm "was never elected to office before 1998,' Smith said. Although some Democrats worry that a crowded - and possibly divisive -- primary could lessen the party's chances of retaking the governor's office in the general election, Dennis Denno, a spokesman for the Michigan Democratic Party, downplayed the likelihood of a bloody primary. "It's always a concern with a primary. The good side of a primary is that the Democratic candidates will get their names our earlier and their message out earlier." One thing that Granholm has going for her that most other candidates do not is job security. Should she make a bid for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination and lose, her party would most likely nominate her for re-election to her present post, even if she does not run in the primary for that office. Blanchard, for his part, is in the last leg of a 50-city tour around the state. He spoke yesterday at the First Unitarian Church in Ann Arbor and later on in the day visited with the students of Prof. Helen Graves who will be assuming internships in the Canadian parliament in May. Blanchard is a former U.S. ambassador to that country. The Democratic nominee will likely face Republican Lt. Gov. Dick Posthumus in the November general elec- tion. School of Education juniors Kristin Breil and Jenny Baggett keep in step with everyone else at Dance Marathon this weekend. D)ance Marathon n]'ets record $3,6 By MariaSprow Daily Staff Reporter If campus seemed a little quiet this weekend, it was because more than 1,300 students spent it at the Indoor Track Building volunteering for Dance Marathon, the culmination of 13 months of planning and fundraisers for C.S. Mott Children's Hospital and William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. The marathon raised $131,161.59 for the hospitals, up from the $120,000 raised last year, by having volunteers stand on their feet throughout its dura- tion. Thirty hours of standing was no small feat for most dancers, and some were forced to limp off the dance floor in pain while others danced to the sounds of Gloria Gain- or's "I Will Survive" and Van Morri- son's "Brown Eyed Girl." "The hardest part is just being enthu- siastic about it. There's a certain time when your body just gets tired. It's at the middle of the night when nobody is here," said dancer Brian Teller, an Engi- neering senior. "I'm getting psyched to finish, but my feet hurt. It's pretty easy to have a concept of time. It's been a long time. Maybe next week I'll feel really good about doing it, but right now, I just want to sit down," said LSA sophomore Erin Hayden after standing for 26 hours. "But in some way, I'll be back." Watches and clocks were not allowed in the building, but dancers still found ways to estimate how long they had left to go. "You can bribe people coming in if you really want to know what time it is, but really, time just passes" said Kelly Wilson, an LSA junior. She added that most students could judge the time based on the amount of sunlight coming from outdoors and the number of fami- lies present. Graduate student Danielle Stewart said she was definitely feeling the effects of time and exhaustion. "I tried to get a lot of sleep last night ... I mean, Friday night. It's been so long. Now that its almost over it doesn't feel so bad," she said. More than 1,000 of the 1,300 stu- dents were "moralers," students who volunteered for a couple hours to help keep the dancers up and moving. "I just graduated, but a lot of my friends are doing it, so I just came to make sure they weren't dying at the end. I'm just trying to keep them from falling on the floor, keep them awake," said University alum Jenny Chen, who has served as a moraler for the past two years. Many volunteers were students who had helped out on previous Dance Marathons and found they wanted to contribute further. "I saw the impact it had on the people who were in it. I wanted to take advan- tage of the opportunity to become more and more a part of it. I'm definitely glad I did it. I might not have said the same thing at 3 a.m., but I am sky high right now." said Bush Goal, an LSA senior and campus relations coordinator for the event. Throughout the marathon, families from Mott and Beaumont hospitals spoke about their experiences and thanked supporters for attending the event. David Fleming, whose son Tyler will benefit from the marathon, stood in front of students and thanked them for their support. "This is truly amazing. I remember the very first one, just a couple hundred moralers. Now there is just a sea of humanity out there,"he said. Thanks to the marathon, Tyler has been given horseback riding and water therapy sessions to help his balance and build muscle. "To say he enjoys it is an understate- ment;"his father said. Advertising Production Associates needed " Graphic Designer "Computerized layout assistant * Scanner coordinator " Archiving assistant THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor today . Salaried positions Iv.L ...I 7A A 0 E f". .. . MA . IF.ZlR.NT.,q son@umich.edu Lifetime, Sponsored by SERVICES 7-10 hours per week - t l A 1.aE.. . --u... . - A - - a j:, V l:1V 1 .°f. mk1 t.,rLi. esTndnfharfnCnA tha Rnnnr+rrtnnt of Klonr I i! i