LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 5, 2002 - 3 Former regents mixe Harassing activity 0 rampant in Couzens A male opened the shower cur- tain of a female resident of Couzens Residence Hall, Depart- ment of Public Safety reports state. The suspect was seen by several people. Also, a resident of Couzens reported that someone had drawn a swastika and written a racial slur on his door. DPS has no suspects for the graffiti. Wallets stolen from a number of campus locations Nine people reported stolen wal- lets in the past week, according to DPS reports. All were left unat- tended. Wallets were stolen from a backpack in Angel Hall, a South Quad Residence Hall men's room, the Shapiro Undergraduate Library, the reading room of the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library, the Kresge Library, the Coliseum Building and the School of Den- tistry. Student assaults a Dental School professor A student assaulted a professor at the Dental School after the student was told he might be expelled, DPS 'reports state. The professor was not hurt. Vacuums stolen from intramural sports building Two vacuums were stolen from a closet in the Intramural Sports Build- ing, according to DPS reports. DPS has no suspects. Windshield broke from piece of ice A car parked in a University lot was damaged when someone threw a piece of ice the size of a basket- ball through the back window, DPS reports state. DPS has no suspects. Fire in Northwood Housing started by two children Two children started a fire in North- wood V on North Campus, according to DPS reports. The Ann Arbor Fire Department responded and extin- guished the fire. DPS took the chil- dren home. Disturbance in South Quad leads to MIP citation Two people were reported run- ning through South Quad knocking on doors and yelling, DPS reports state. They were arrested for minor in possession. Microwave starts fire in Alice Lloyd A caller reported to DPS that a microwave in Alice Lloyd had caught fire. DPS instructed the caller to pull the fire alarm and use a fire extinguisher on the microwave. A DPS officer respond- ed and put out the fire. Firecracker found in Couzens Hall A DPS officer found a firecracker in the stairwell in Couzens residence hall, DPS reports state. The fire- cracker was taken as evidence. Vehicle keyed after * parking dispute A car was keyed in a University parking lot, DPS reports state. The owner of the car had previously engaged in an argument over the parking space. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Rob Goodspeed. By Kr Wenzel Daily Staff Reporter The University Board of Regents is current- ly the only public university governing body in the state that operates without committees or chairs. Regent David Brandon (R-Ann Arbor) plans to propose changes to the bylaws at next week's meeting to add chair, vice chair and committee positions. Due to the vacancies in the presidential and provost positions, the University may be in need of some structure on the Board of Regents. "They're somewhat rudderless ... it would be difficult to pick a new president when he has this sort of unrest in front of him or her," former regent Gertrude Huebner said. Former regent Philip Power said he thinks, "it is probably wiser to elect a chair who has the confi- dence of the board than merely rotating the posi- tion arbitrarily." Powers said that in his experience, committees tend to make a board work better. "They allow people who know a lot about some- thing to consider the issue and speed things up," Power said. Former regent Deane Baker said he thinks these proposals are interesting, but not new. "We did discuss it probably back in the mid '70s and it was brought up again some time in the late "80s," Baker said. "In both cases, the majority of regents said no." During Baker's tenure, he said the creation of a chair would have changed the way voices were heard on the board. "The basis for logic was that there are eight regents and the vote of each regent has the same value of any other regent. At least in the terms when we served, the Board didn't want to lessen the input of each regent. There was really no poli- tics involved," he said. i on self-governance At most large public universities, the governing Laro said he does not remember the board consid boards have had some type of chair structure ering designating chairs or committees during th implemented for years, time he served. At Michigan State University, the Board of "It seemed to work just fine," Laro said. "One Trustees has a rotating chair position and of the virtues of not designating chairs is tha committees that members say works effec- there is no hierarchy, and that kind of equality tively. seemed to make for good harmony among mem "The chair is the lead spokesperson for the bers of the board." board, appoints the committees and of course Huebner said she did not think a chairperson o works closely with the president," said Don committees were necessary when she was on th Nugent, chair of the Michigan State Board of board. Current problems confronting member Trustees. "I believe the system works really quite may warrant structural changes, she said. well. With a board made up of all elected leaders "In my experience, committees usually slow such as ours, the rotation system does serve a use- down the process, but this board is facing a totally ful means of each having an opportunity regardless different political and economic situation," Hueb of political affiliation." ner said. "We had a board that never voted politi University regents have not seen the need to cally and never divided between Republicans an create these types of positions until now. Democrats." "During the time I served, the attitude and spirit Huebner said she thinks the current' boar of the regents was a congenial one," Baker said. is "a great board and very diversified." U.S. Tax Court Judge and former regent David l- ie ie t y i- r e s y i- d d New MSA allocation process makes funding more efficient By Tomislav Ladika Daily Staff Reporter David Godman,, chair of the Michigan Student Assembly Budget Priorities Committee, said the BPC hoped last semester's change in budget allocation would discourage student groups from asking for unreasonable amounts of money. Goldman said under the new sys- tem, which allows student organiza- tions to apply for money three times a semester instead of just once, groups have begun to meet those expectations - making the allocation process easi- er. The average student group request last semester was $1,583 - with some groups asking for upwards of $8,000 - but MSA was only able to hand out an average of $314. While some groups continue to ask for more money than MSA can provide, Goldman said the first cycle, approved on Jan. 23, was successful because the average request declined significantly. "We had groups apply with the specific costs they wanted," Gold- man said. "They had receipts all ready, they had everything planned out perfectly, and when we see that, we say, 'Wow, that's what we like to see. That's organization, that's spe- cific costs. We have no reason not to give them that money."' Goldman held a presentation for student organizations, asking them to avoid petitioning for too much money. He said the presentation accounts for part of the more precise requests. years past Due.atoschaliasti/gonsth B wier 201 The average request request was$1,861/grup.The average mlo etion was $7/o up V Winter 2000: Th verage... request was $1.7S2/roup. The average allocationwas.$499- Due to such applications the BPC, which reviews their requests and recommends allocations before MSA votes on them, was able to grant a larger portion of the requests. Goldman said all 94 groups that applied during the first cycle received money, and 23 received full funding. Anne Kennedy, the finance co-chair of Dance Marathon, said her group asked for the exact amount of aid they hoped to obtain from MSA. The equipment and rental costs of Dance Marathon, a charity event where par- ticipants dance for 30 consecutive hours, can run as high as $20,000, Kennedy said, but the group asked MSA for only $2,000. "If you ask for a ridiculous amount, you're less likely to get how much you want," she said. MSA Vice President Jessica Cash said because groups can apply for aid three times a semester instead of once, they will not run into problems if their budget changes throughout the semes- ter. "Last semester, groups were able to secure funding very early in the year, but many of their program- ming initiatives changed after the developments following September 11," Cash said. She added that new groups unfamil- iar with the funding process can apply for money later in the semester. As a result, MSA can use the money it receives from student fees to more efficiently fund students' activities. Goldman said under the old system, MSA took into account the unexpected changes in the orga- nizations' budgets by over-allocat- ing money. "Last semester we had a significant amount of money that groups didn't use because, for whatever reasons, they didn't put on certain events or projects. That was money that was wasted that could have been given to other groups that would have used the money," Goldman said. He added that despite the benefits of the new system, holding three funding cycles requires more dedication from the BPC because the committee has more applications to review. MSA President Matt Nolan said stu- dent groups have praised the new allo- cation system. "We've gotten very positive feed- back from groups regarding the new funding cycles, and hopefully it will continue to prove to be easier for stu- dent groups,"he said. Applications for the next funding cycle are due on Feb. 7. JONATHON TRIEST/Daily Despite the chilly temperature, some people opted to walk down State Street rather than drive. Party-goingattitude decreases as students enter the work force By April Effort Daily Staff Reporter Memories of keg parties, dancing, drugs, drinking games and loud music become distant memories upon gradua- tion, according to a new University study. Results of this year's Monitoring the Future study, conducted by the Institute for Social Research, showed that partying, drinking and drug use declined among students when they reach 30 years old. The study states that 52 percent of men and 48 percent of women at age 18 went out in the evening three or more times a week. But by the age of 31 or 32, only 15 percent of men and 11 per- cent of women still go out that often. The decrease in partying as well as drug and alcohol consumption is corre- lated with age and adult responsibili- ties, such as marriage and children. While participants in the study demon- strated sharp decline in substance use after marriage, parenthood proved to have an even greater effect. The study also indicates that high school students who frequently go out in the evening are more likely to abuse drugs. This period also proved to be an important time for setting values dur- ing the college years. ISR social psychologist Jerald Bach- man said he hopes the study's findings will be used to develop drug and alcohol prevention programs for young adults. He said students should have something else to do other than just hang-out. "Implications for prevention may be to continue the quest for youth to spend their time tutoring younger chil- dren, being care-givers for the dis- abled, and volunteers in the community," Bachman said. Tom Hedrick, vice chairman and co- founder of Partnership for a Drug-Free America, said the results from the study are invaluable. "I can say without equivocation that Monitoring the Future is the most important benchmark in terms of what trends are happening in substance abuse and why they are occurring," Hedrick said. "(It) gives us a bench- mark and a report card on how we are doing in the substance abuse field." Since the Monitoring the Future study began in 1975, it has provided 25 years of data on more than 38,000 stu- dents in public and private secondary schools throughout the United States. Bachman and his co-authors ana- lyzed and published the data in their book, "Decline of Substance Use in Young Adulthood: Changes.in Social Activities, Roles, and Beliefs." The challenge is sorting through a number of explanatory pathways for substance abuse, Bachman said. "Part of it is simply the teaching. Most religions discourage substance abuse and encourage other religious activities," Bachman said. "I hope that our results help to inform a broad range of people in society - including parents and policy makers - about what Amer- ican young people are like and how they are changing," said University social scientist Lloyd Johnson in a written statement. Johnson also is a co-author of Bachman's book. "I particularly hope that our results assist educators, professionals, and legisla- tors to develop more effective pro- grams and policies," he added. Correction: Yesterday's Daily should have reported that the Graduate Employee Organization extended its contract for another two weeks. THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor today EVENTS Fraternity Recruitment; Sponsored by the Inter- fraternity Council, 7:00- 10:00 p.m., For more "Killing Indians: Myths, Lies, and Exaggerations"; Lecture by screenwriter, author and poet Sherman Alexie, A book signing 1636 International Insti- tute, School of Social Work Building "A Guide to the Bod- hisattva Wav of Life": SERVICES Campus Information Centers, 764-INFO, info@umich.edu, or www. umich. edu/-info S.A.F.E. Walk, 763-WALK, 11 U m