Friday, September 24, 2004 Weather Opinion 4 Coleman should help MSA get out the vote Arts 5 This is what happens when Daily Arts stops being polite and starts getting real. e IcaugY ti H!: 83 LOW: 52 TOMORROW- 76/48 One-hundred-thirteen years of editorialfreedom www.michikandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXIII, No. 168 ®2004 The Michigan Daily ' ' to renovate Stockwell, MoJo Housing Overhaul 1. Construction of new hall to last from 2006 to 2008 2. During year-long renovations to Stockwell and Mosher-Jordan, stu- dents relocated to North Campus 3. Dining hall improvements include new cafeterias with marketplace set- ting and cafes with flexible hours By Aymar Jean Daily Staff Reporter University Housing officials detailed plans yesterday to significantly improve on-campus housing, including plans for at least one new residence hall, renovations to two existing dorms and an overhaul to dining services. The proposals, part of the Residential Life Initiatives, have been in development for months. They result from years of University research signaling the relatively poor condition of on-campus housing. For more than 30 years, the University has not built a new residence hall, even as the incoming classes have increased. The University expects to begin building the new residence hall - whose location remains undetermined - in 2006, and it will not be fin- ished until 2008. The University plans to renovate Mosher- Jordan Hall or Stockwell Hall in 2006, and the other in 2007, so that both are completed by 2008. During that time some students will have to relocate to North Campus. The University also plans to begin construct- ing two new dining cafeterias in 2006. At the same time, the University will make fire and other safety improvements on existing dorms. Administrators estimate all the new plans will cost $250 to $280 million, but said that these numbers are just preliminary. No additional housing rate increases are expected beyond the typical 5 percent annual increases. "Our efforts tie very closely to the president's initiative to reconnect, renovate and expand residential life on campus," University Housing Director Carole Henry said at yesterday's Uni- versity Board of Regents meeting. University President Mary Sue Coleman has, administrators say, staked her presidency on improving residen- tial life, believing it essential to recruit the best students and create small living communities. Despite the comprehensive nature of the hous- ing plan, several regents at yesterday's meeting were skeptical of its impact. At least two presenta- tions proposing radical changes to housing have been made in the past decade, but progress was stalled when key administrators like former Presi- dent Lee Bollinger left for other schools. Regents approved a resolution in 2001 giving direction to University Housing to build a new residence hall. When elected in 1994, University Regent Andrea Fischer Newman (R-Ann Arbor) made housing her personal priority. Before her term expires in 2008, she said she would like to see results. "We are putting significant pressure on the president to move this," she said. "You need to understand, and people here need to understand, See HOUSING, Page 3 Server crash cuts campus e-mail access By Alison Go and Tomislav Ladika Daily News Editors Students and faculty were left without e-mail access for much of yesterday and throughout the night due to a malfunction within the Uni- versity's e-mail servers. The University's IMAP servers - which control the mail.umich. edu website and e-mail accounts of most students and faculty - mal- functioned sometime before noon yesterday. E-mail for students in the College of Engineering was not affected. Teams from the University's Information Tech- nology Central Servicesmanaged University to briefly bring said they the servers backy up for sporadic not certain service shortly after 9 p.m. last specific cap night. However, the server{ further problems were discovered but they so and ITCS shut thewas not re] server down for the night, saying a compute: it expects to fix the problem by this morning. University officials said they were not certain of the specific cause of the server crash, but said it was not related to a computer virus. James Hilton, associate provost for academic, information and instruc- tional technology affairs, said a failure in a component of the IMAP servers was the cause of the e-mail malfunction yesterday. "We don't know exactly why the component failed," he said, add- ing, "It's not that we've been hit by a virus." Hilton said after the server is restored, ITCS will begin examining the service to determine the specific cause of the failure and to prevent future problems. . . That gives little comfort to stu- dents affected by the stoppage. LSA senior Emilio Dirlikov, whose study-abroad application is due today, said the e-mail failure hindered his ability to communicate with his adviser. Because they could not reach each other through email, Dirlikov was forced to skip class to converse. "I had to do the old-school thing," Dirlikov said. Other affected students had differ- ent kinds of deadlines to meet. LSA sophomore Alice Zheng said a research project that is due today would not be of the highest caliber. Without e-mail, Zheng was unable to have her project read and corrected by a professor. "College is a officials very minute-to- vere minute life, and it is important to use i of the (e-mail) to stay on uise of top of meetings and assignments," crash, she said. Hilton said id it ITCS would be Lated to unable to get the servers running r virus. during the night because most of the ITCS techni- cians were exhausted after working nonstop for about 12 hours to fix the server problem. He added that they were short-handed because half the staff was sick with strep throat. Hilton said if the technicians were not able to repair the servers and ensure that they were functioning properly, the University would go ahead and shut down the operation until the next morning. "I don't want (the technicians) to fix it when they're exhausted, 'cause that's when you make big mistakes," he said. Hilton added that if the server was left on while not functioning prop- erly, more problems could surface and would prolong the repair process. - Daily Staff Reporter Donn M. Fresard contributed to this report. SFaculty shrtage thr~eatens Nursing By Amber Colvin For the Daily Hospitals nationwide have had trouble finding qualified nurses for years, but now the shortage is seeping into the academic world - decreasing the number of faculty available to teach and therefore the number of students who can attend nursing schools. At the University's School of Nursing, 40 percent of tenure-track faculty is older than 60, Associate Dean Joanne Pohl said. "In five years many of them could be retired," she said. Part of the problem is that becoming a nursing professor requires years of study. At the University, 90 percent of tenure-track nursing faculty hold a doctoral degree. "It is more of an investment to become an educa- tor," said School of Nursing Dean Ada Sue Hinshaw, who herself plans to retire in two years. Hinshaw and Pohl also pinned the problem on the relatively low salaries nursing faculty receive com- pared to nurses working in the field. "After a student graduates, the clinical arena can offer a job starting at $55,000 to $70,000 a year. Nursing faculty would start at around $60,000 a year, and that is after four years in a doctoral pro- gram," Hinshaw said. Pohl added that numerous cuts to the University's budget by the state government have prevented the School of Nursing from being able to pay faculty what other jobs could offer. The shortage of nurses means that the University "Nationally, 16,000 qualified applicants have been turned away due to insufficient numbers of faculty." - Joanne Pohl Associate Dean, School of Nursing will not be able to carry out all of its programs, Pohl said. The shortage of nurses means that fewer enroll in graduate schools, and even fewer in the doctoral See NURSES, Page 3 Research center seeks cure for chronic fatigue I Brother Cam praises Kerry's personal side By Leslie Rott Daily Staff Reporter While voters know John Kerry for his sharp criticisms of President Bush and promises to repeal tax cuts for the wealthy, his brother sees an entirely different side of the Democratic presidential candidate. Cam Kerry, brother of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, arrived on campus yesterday to tell students why the Massachusetts senator deserves to be the next pres- ident of the United States. Beyond his stance on the issues, Cam Kerry told students By Kelly McDermott For the Daily Twenty percent of Americans suf- fer from chronic pain or fatigue but are never diagnosed, according a Univer- sity research center. Since little information is known about these chronic multi-symptom illnesses, diagnosis and treatment is E tvnicallv comnlicated. However, the researcher. Although many have joined the registry so far, Virginia Leone, one of the programs' research recruiters, said they need more volunteers. The research project consists of several individual studies focusing on effects of stress on memory and con- centration and also the effects of sleep and exercise on symptoms of the ill- ness. EM E ~