LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 19, 2001- 3 HIGHER ED Louisiana U. uPs athlete grad rate The Louisiana Tigers were one of 28 football teams that earned The American Football Coaches Associa- tion Academic Achievement Award for having a graduation rate higher than 70 percent. The number of players on the team who stay until graduation has increased significantly since it was last tallied in 1994, when the grad- uation rate was at 42 percent. Second-year head football coach Nick Saban, said the improvement was necessary for the program and has helped the school's recruitment statistics. "I think that it is definitely detri- mental to a program not to have a good graduation rate, because that's a statistic that people will use against you in recruiting - as if you're not committed to having a good academic support group to help your players graduate," he said. In order to ensure the graduation rate remains high, Saban and the Tiger Athletic Association are funding a $10 million renovation to the Academic Center for Athletes. The new center will include two computer labs with more than 80 work stations, a 1,000 seat auditori- um, 30 tutorial rooms and five classrooms. Saban came to Louisiana after leav- ing Michigan State University, where he also helped fund an academic facil- ity for student athletes. Washington, D.C. campus receives terrorist threats Bomb threats and false alarms at George Washington University have kept students fearing for their safety and out of classes throughout the last week. Students evacuated a class last Thursday afternoon after a man wear- ing a large black backpack entered and walked to the front of the classroom while the professor lectured. The man asked the professor sev- eral questions, and the 70-person class became silent. Two students, worried that the bag might contain a bomb, grabbed their belongings and left quickly, and the rest of the class followed. Some students called the university's police department as the professor talked with the man. The man was taken into custody and later released after telling officers he only wanted to add the class to his schedule. In addition, George Washington students were forced to evacuate three other buildings on Tuesday, two because of a bomb threat and the other after two "suspicious" packages arrived at a campus build- ing. UNC students have to pay higher bills Some students at the University of North Carolina who thought they had paid their tuition will be receiving a second bill. This second bill is a result of a legislature-mandated 5 percent tuition increase for students across the state to aid in offsetting the state's financial shortfall this year. Administrators at the university sent the first stack of bills out to students at the standard time and had expected to send out a second bill when agreement was finally reached in the legislature. The total tuition increases are the result of second installment of the campus-initiated increase, which came to about an additional $115 for in-state and about $200 for out- of-state students; a 4 percent Board of Governors approved increase and the newly approved 5 percent legislative increase applied across the state. In-state undergraduate students will feel the lightest hit to their wallets, as their bills will only total $28, with in- state graduate students bearing only a $29 hit. Out-of-state undergraduate students will be forced to pay an addi- tional $359 and out-of-state graduate students will be charged $433 on their second tuition bill. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Maria Sprow. Commuters trade high rent for long drive By Shabina S. Khatri Daily Staff Reporter While most University students enjoy the luxury of simply rolling out of bed 10 minutes before class begins, there are many among us whose morning routine involves a lit- tle more effort and a lot more time. One example is LSA junior Damian Manire, whose daily com- mute consists of the hour-plus drive from Grosse Pointe Farms to Cen- tral Campus. "For my 9 a.m. class, I have to get up at a quarter to seven and be out the door by 7:30," Manire said. A former resident of East Quad, Manire, who said he prefers the quiet life, is still searching for off- campus housing. "It takes a while to find off-campus housing, and when you do, it's generally over- priced and falling apart." Another reason students com- mute from their homes is to stay close to their families. "Your roommate is your family, and if you love your family, then I'd defi- nitely call that a plus," Manire said. LSA senior Fatina Abdrabboh, a Dearborn resident who makes the 35- minute commute to Ann Arbor every Tuesday and Thursday, agreed. "Being a student on campus is stressful enough. It's nice to go to your car, get away and come home ... and when you're home the dis- cussion is not constantly (focused upon) the University. Then again, I often feel out of the loop." Other students choose to live off- campus for the sake of conve- nience. LSA sophomore Halim Naeem cites "saving money on rent" as one of the top reasons he commutes to his classes from his home in northwestern Ann Arbor. But Abdrabboh, who has been commuting to campus since her freshman year, said she has proba- bly "spent more money on gas, tickets, and parking in the last three years than what most people spend on rent." Both Abdrabboh and Manire park in the Maynard Street parking structure, and both agree that pay- ing 90 cents an hour there really adds up. Next month, commuters and oth- ers who park their cars in city- owned lots and structures will face an increase in prices. Effective Oct. 1, hourly rates will increase by a nickel from 90 to 95 cents, said General Manager Jim Corbett, who works for Republic Parking in Ann Arbor, the company that handles the Maynard structure along with nine others. Monthly rent will also increase, from $100 to $105, Corbett said. Despite the price increase, park- ing is still in high demand. Abdrab- boh said she's on the waitlist to obtain a parking permit for the Maynard structure. "One of my friends has been on it for over a year." Abdrabboh added. Though commuting students find issues like parking and waking up early irritating, Manire has cited "home-cooked meals and listening to NPR" as definite plusses of liv- ing at home. But he is still desper- ate for off-campus housing. "If anybody that reads this has anything, call me!" he said, only half joking. JOHN PRATT/Daily Two students lounge on the grass surrounding the State Street commuter parking lot. Many students who commute from outside Ann Arbor cite cheaper rent and cost of living as reasons for enduring extra travel time. Regents to approve plans for $220 million building Rock-a-bye baby By Elizabeth Kassab Daily Staff Reporter At it's September meeting tomorrow, the Universi- ty's Board of Regents will be asked to approve the schematic design and revised budget for a new $220 million Biomedical Science Research Building that is to be one of the main buildings on the Medical School campus. The building's design will offer the most efficient way to conduct research while allowing the University to remain on the cutting edge of medical science, said Gilbert Omenn, the University's executive vice president for medical affairs. The 470,000-square-foot building was designed by New York City-based Polshek Partnership Architects. "Interdisciplinary scientific programs rather than traditional departments will be the basis for allocation of space," Omenn said. The building is not scheduled to open until 2005, allowing the University time and flexibility in identify- ing the areas of scientific research in which it wants to focus, Omenn said. The areas of interest most likely to be housed in the building are geriatrics and biogeron- tol6gy, immunology, cardiovascular science, cellular and molecular therapeutics, organogenesis and neuro- science. The Cancer and Geriatrics Center Building is already laid out according to this theory, and Omenn said it seems to be working well. In addition to being organized according to research interests, the building will also be other "There will be the opportunity for faculty and stu- dents to have the opportunity to interact," said Hank Baier, associate vice president for facilities and opera- tions. There will be open spaces where colleagues can bump into each other, offering the opportunity to talk about similar research projects, which may not happen in a traditionally-designed building, Baier said. The building is designed to allow more light to enter, espe- cially in office areas. The intent is to make "people fell like they're in a space where they can be comfortable and not feel iso- lated," Baier said. The building will allow maximum flexibility to change as the fast-paced world of science changes, Baier added. One of the features of the building is an under- ground auditorium, of which only the top will be visi- ble from the street. The building is also expected to house 240 laboratories and 1,000 people. The building will span the northern half of the block between Glen Avenue and Zina Pitcher Place, just south of Ann Street. It will serve as "a symbolic and physical link to the central campus and especially the Life Sciences Insti- tute-associated buildings," Omenn said. The building will be an integral part of the Life Sci- ences Initiative and the medical campus, Omenn said. It will replace some of the oldest buildings on the medical campus, including the Neuroscience Building, which used to be the Food and Services Building and was converted into a laboratory in 1969. "It's going to be architecturally stunning building," Omenn said. YENA RYU/Daily Suzanne Perkins-Hart, a doctoral candidate in Education and pyschology, rocks her baby in the Michigan Union last night. FBI call for Arabic, Farsi speakers gets superb response DEARBORN (AP) - An appeal for Arabic speakers to assist in the investigation of last week's terrorist attacks was drawing a good response, the FBI said yesterday. "There's been just an outpouring of people who want to help," said Special Agent Dawn Clenney of the FBI office in Detroit. The FBI issued the nationwide request via its Web site on Monday. But it was repeated by U.S. Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.), whose dis- trict includes one of the nation's highest concentrations of Arab- Americans. The FBI also is seeking people flu- ent in reading, writing, speaking and listening to Farsi, which is spoken in Iran and parts of Afghanistan, and in Pashto, which is spoken in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Speakers would provide transla- tion during interviews or would read written materials. The FBI was looking for people fluent in Arabic, Farsi and Pashto because the inves- tigation of last week's attacks was focusing on the nations where those languages are spoken. The FBI employed so-called con- tract linguists in Detroit and else- where before the attacks in New York and Washington. But the bureau was receiving offers of assistance from other Arab-Ameri- cans in the Detroit area even before its nationwide appeal went out Monday, Clenney said. Jordan native Luma Mufleh was waiting to hear from the federal government after applying online for work as a linguist. "It makes sense. It's what they need," said Mufleh, 26, a free-lance Web designer from Decatur, Ga. "They need someone to understand the language, understand the cul- ture-that's where the gap is." In the Detroit area, Bushra Iskan- der of Warren was among those try- ing to get through to the FBI tf offer her services. The Detroit area is home to an estimated 300,000 people of Arab descent. "I think it would be really impor- tant to all of us," she said. "I won't give up hope." Iskander, a middle school lan- guage teacher in Southfield, is a native of Iraq who has lived the past 23 years in the United States. THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor today. EVENTS A Call For Peace; A peaceful procession fea- .ni.(nnf-m-'cnnl p.m., University of Michi- gan Museum of Art Orientation and Inter- view for volunteering at the SOS Crisis Center: er Defibrillator Patients; Seminar featuring Samuel Sears, associate profes- sor in the department of clinical and health psy- SERVICES Campus Information Centers, 764-INFO, info@umich.edu, or i m m s