news@michigandaily.com NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - 3 Dinner will be held with CNN correspondent CNN Health Correspondent Sanjay Gupta will speak about his career and experiences 7 p.m. Thursday in the West Lounge of Alice Lloyd Hall. Sponsored by the Lloyd Hall Scholars Program, the presentation will include a dinner with students. Gupta is the senior correspondent for the medical and health unit at CNN. He formerly worked as a neuro- surgeon at the University Hospital. Gupta joined the network team cover- ing the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and reported on the anthrax outbreak last month. Lecture will address research on depression, women Psychology and psychiatry Prof. Susan Nolen-Hoeksema will discuss her research, on gender differences in depression today at noon in the Michi- gan Room of the Michigan League. In her recent book "Women Who Think Too Much," Nolan-Hoeksema exam- ines the strategy of rumination, or the concept that a passive focus on nega- tive emotions can lead to greater rates of depression among women. Nolan-Hoeksema is also the director of the University's Institute for Research on Women and Gender. She has researched cognition and emotion- regulation strategies for depression. This event is sponsored by the Univer- sity's Center for the Education of Women. Museum to focus on discrimination Boxes and Walls, an interactive museum focusing on different types of existing oppression and discrimination, will be available for tours today at 5 p.m. at Hillel at 1429 Hill Street. The museum has nine rooms related to blacks, Asian Pacific Americans, clas- sism, disabilities, Jews, Latinos, the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender * community, Native Americans and Muslims. The rooms are decorated with different facts about each group. Author will address Jewish women's memoirs The Women's Studies and the Frankel Center for Judaic Studies will sponsor a discussion with author Helen Epstein tomorrow at noon in room 2239 of Lane Hall. The title of the program is "What and Why Do Jewish Women Write When They Write Memoir?" Epstein is the author of the memoir "Children of the Holocaust," which examines post-traumatic stress syn- drome in children of Holocaust con- centration camp survivors. She has also written "Where She Came From," a family memoir and social history of 200 years of Czech Jewish life. Author and alum to speak on racism in his books Children's author Christopher Paul Curtis will talk tomorrow at 3:15 p.m. in the RC Auditorium of East Quad. Curtis will speak about his award-win- ning book "The Watsons Go to Birm- ingham" and issues related to racism in his subsequent books. The book is about an eccentric black family from Flint and mixes autobiographical elements with historical fact in its retelling of the 1963 bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala. Curtis was born in Flint and he won both the Avery Hopwood award for his essays and the Jules Hopwood Prize for an early draft of his book while attending the University's campus there. "The Watsons Go to Birming- ham" was awarded a 1996 Newberry Medal, a Coretta Scott King Honor and was listed as Best Book of 1995 by The New York Times Book Review. The Brown v. Board of Education Commemoration Committee will spon- sor this event. Sociology prof to explain theory of terrorism The Sociology department will sponsor the Social Movement Schol- ars Network's inaugural lecture at 4 p.m. Thursday in room 283 of the Sociology building at 1225 South University St. New York University sociology Prof. Jeff Goodwin will Businesses propose rezoning South U By Adrdan Chwn Daily Staff Reporter A new rezoning proposal could have a significant impact on the look and focus of the South University Avenue area. Introduced last month by the South University Area Association, a consor- tium of businesses, the proposal aims to increase the amount of usable space for property owners in the area. If passed by the Planning Commission and the City Council, it could lead to more housing options and a greater variety of business- es located on the avenue, city planner Alexis Marcarello said. The proposal was prompted by area business's desires to develop beyond current regulations, Marcarello said. "Right now, a lot of sites are already built out or are close to being as devel- oped as possible under current ordi- nances;' she said. "They think they can handle more development" Currently, businesses are allowed a 200- to 300-percent ratio of floor space to land space. This means that a business with a 1,000- "CD ristmas s qu a r e - foot plot time, when of land e on 'scan have evryones 2,000 to happyand 3,000 square feet making money, of floor we're dead area in its ,,r."building. here. T h e - Yercho S U A A Owner, YCI Clothing proposal sets a new floor-area- ratio limit of 400 to 600 percent, effec- tively doubling the amount of usable space for each building. This increase would most likely lead to larger buildings with more stories, Marcarello said. "If (businesses) are allowed to have bigger buildings, they will have bigger buildings," she said. But, Marcarello added, it is too early to know the exact aesthetic affect of the proposal on the South University area. The proposal also includes floor area bonuses for businesses that offer hous- ing amenities such as courtyards, which would most likely lead to more housing options near campus, Marcarello said, adding that this move would lead to an influx of new businesses. "With more housing or even more office space, this creates a consumer pool so a larger vari- ety of stores can be supported." The added housing on South University could bring down housing prices, Mar- carello said. In addition, the close prox- imity of South University to Central Campus makes it an attractive location for students. "It would be cool to have more apart- ments on South University" LSA sopho- more John Pargament said. "It's right near restaurants and bars and really close to campus. I think it would give a more urban feel to a suburban campus" South University businesses said they hope that the additional housing will bring more pedestrians to the area even when students are on break or home for the summer. Yercho, the owner of YCI clothing store and SUAA member who declined to give her last name, said that business suffers when students are away. "Christ- mas time, when everyone's happy and making money, we're dead here. Some days we come in half a day and some days we don't even show up" Yercho said an increase in housing around the South University area would probably lead to an increase in business during these typically slow times. Despite prospects for growth, Mar- carello and her colleagues have some reservations about the proposal. Primari- ly, more businesses and housing could put more pressure on the road system. This could lead to traffic congestion and parking shortages, Marcarello said. Another concern is with preserving the unique "look and feel" of the area. Taller buildings would change the feel of the avenue, and Marcarello said some might be uncomfortable with the shift. The proposal has a long way to go before it becomes instituted, Marcarello said. After her office reviews the pro- posal, it will go to the planning commis- sion. The commission will take into consideration any recommendations made by Marcarello and the city plan- ners when deciding whether to approve the proposal. If approved, the proposal will go to the City Council, which will either vote the proposal down or chose Prof focuses on Kuwaiti gender mnequalitie s By Farayha Arrine Daily Staff Reporter When a Kuwaiti female journalist clad in blue jeans and a head scarf asked Peter Berkowitz if he had come to her country to tamper with the elec- tion system, he could do, nothing but laugh. For the American journalist and pro- fessor who had only barely arrived in the country to understand women's suffrage, she represented an unexpect- ed duality in Kuwait's female popula- tion: Most women enjoy lifestyles and freedoms that women of no other Arab states experience, but they still lacked the right to vote. Berkowitz presented observations and analysis of his two visits to Kuwait in the Law School yesterday. He visit- ed the country once in July 2003 and then again in January 2004. For most of his speech, Berkowitz laid out the dichotomy that exists in the rights of Kuwaiti woman. Women in Kuwait have no dress restrictions, said Berkowitz, who saw a variety of dress codes on his trip, ranging from women in headscarves to those dressed in "jeans, blouses and high heels." He added that Kuwait's ambassador to the United Nations is a woman and that 70 percent of university students are women, as are 50 percent of the medical and engineering faculty. Berkowitz credited Kuwait's geogra- phy as a leading factor in the inde- pendence of its women. "Because it is a (port), it is unusually open to outside influence as trading ports tend to be," he said. Berkowitz's goal in the country was to understand how women had not yet fought for the right to vote and have representation in Kuwait's National Assembly. He said one reason for this paradox is Islam. With a population that is 85 percent Muslim, Islamists in the country - those who want a strict application of Islamic law there - have power to block suffrage. In addition, some liberal men, not necessarily Islamists, feel that the boring and dirty nature of politics and suffrage is not a place for women because they know better than to get involved. What was surprising to Berkowitz was the number of modern women who did not strongly oppose the gov- ernment's inability to provide them with the right to vote. But due to the number of educated women he encountered during his visit, Berkowitz said he does not think it will be long before women's suffrage comes to Kuwait. "In a place where people already enjoy a level of freedom, the vote and demands for fuller forms of equality couldn't be far behind," he said. Prof. Ellen Katz attended the lec- ture and commented on Berkowitz's optimism in speaking of Kuwaiti suf- frage. "I'm a lot more pessimistic;" she said. "It'll take a while for women to affect policies." She cited movements of early 20th century in the United States as an example of how long it can take for women to achieve political goals. Other audience members, includ- ing political science Prof. Jennifer Widner, said Berkowitz could have talked in person with more women in the country. CHfRnITINESIAFFRUL/Uildy Journalist and professor Peter Berkowitz speaks on the political situation of Kuwalti women in the Law School yesterday. Berkowitz traveled to the country twice in that last two years. His discussion focused largely on female suffrage. 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