NEWS The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 14, 2005 - 3A ON CAMPUS Michigan Theater to screen landmark movie musical The Michigan Theater will be showing "An American in Paris" at 7 p.m. tonight. The 1951 film, part of the theater's American Musical Series, is best known for its 17-minute ballet set to the George Gershwin composition that shares its name with the film. The movie stars Gene Kelly and Les- lie Caron, with a supporting cast that includes Oscar Levant and Nina Foch. Symposium will address post-Sept. 11 research Scientists and government offi- cials will discuss how to continue making advances in biology while minimizing the risk that terrorists could use new discoveries to cause public health disasters. The Jerome Wiesner Symposium is being held from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. today in the Great Lakes Room of Palm- er Commons on 100 Washtenaw Ave. Law prof to speak on women's rights across cultures University of Toronto Law School Prof. Ayelet Shachar will discuss the conflict between women's citizen- ship rights and the limited rights granted by the cultural and religious groups to which they belong. The talk, Religion and Gender: The Global Clash, will be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today in Room 132 of Hutchins Hall. CRIME NOTES Baby formula stolen from children's hospital A caller reported to the Depart- ment of Public Safety Friday that a case of infant formula had been sto- len from a room at C.S. Mott Chil- dren's Hospital. :Taxi driver robbed and assaulted A cab driver was assaulted and robbed Saturday, DPS reported. The suspect - located and identified in Mary Markley Residence Hall - is now in custody at the county jail, according to DPS. Subject arrested for marijuana possession in Arb DPS officers responded to a noise complaint in the Nichols Arboretum early Friday morning. A subject was arrested for marijuana possession. THIS DAY In Daily History Prof seeks to develop musical tendencies in mice Feb. 14, 1928 - Do mice sing? This is not an examination question from freshman zoology class nor even a subject of investigation, for mice do sing - and what is more, the University, in the laboratory of Prof. Lee D. Dice, pos- sesses some of the operatic little beasts. Of course not every mouse sings, and even in the most exclusive fami- lies of singing mice, only a few reach vocal heights. It was a very plain little mouse in Detroit, nev- ertheless, that originated the strain, and because his descendants have been reared in the laboratories here, large numbers of them have exhib- ited musical tendencies. About three years ago, a man by the name of Clark, in Detroit, sought to exterminate a certain mouse which Relationships 101 joins university curriculum MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Scott Hall wants to spark a discussion, so he asks his students some- thing bound to provoke a reaction: Do women want more out of marriage than men? It's just the sort of conversation starter that's heard more often in college classrooms these days. Affairs of the heart - love, rela- tionships and marriage - have gone from being an obsession outside class to the reason for class. The students in Hall's course on marriage at Ball State University - many of them women - laugh and nod at his question. Most of them agree with research he cites stating that men are most interested in a partner who's attrac- tive and good in bed. But not Mike Toscano, a 21-year-old senior: "It's not 'Oh she looks cute and she cooked a pot pie,' " he says. "I want to be held once in a while too, y'all." The comment draws more laughter, as Toscano blushes and smiles. "I'm glad he feels that way," Anitra Montgom- ery, a 22-year-old junior, responds to the class. "But he is rare!" Over the last 30 years, academics have been developing the study of "close relationships," as they call it, forming the International Association for Relationship Research to share resources and data. Such research is "not just about what makes people happy but how relationships can affect other things - for instance, someone's health," says Lisa Baker, an assistant professor of psy- chology at Purchase College, part of the State University of New York. In recent years, though, some professors have moved beyond theory, making the dis- cussion more personal to students by teach- ing relationship skills they can use outside the classroom. Some call it Relationships 101 - a concept that has proven wildly popular on campuses across the country. Toscano, the Ball State senior, says he and his girlfriend, Bethany Ringrose, decided to take the class together this term to see if they want to take their relationship to the next level. "It helps me understand my actions and his, too," says Ringrose, a 20-year-old junior at the school in central Indiana. With divorce as common as it is in this "It's not 'Oh she looks cute and she cooked a pot pie.' I want to be held once in a while too, y'all." - Mike Toscano Ball State University senior country, experts say young couples are wise to do their marriage homework. "The thinking is, the earlier people learn those skills, the better off they'll be," says Dennis Lowe, psychology professor at Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif., who team teaches a freshman seminar called "Developing Healthy Relation- ships" with his wife, Emily Scott-Lowe. Among other things, students in the Lowes' classes practice listening - namely giving the other person a chance to speak his or her mind without interruption. And if students are con- sidering long-term, committed relationships, they're asked to consider questions such as whose job it would be to buy a car, discipline a child or cook dinner. Leslie Parrot, a professor at Seattle Pacific University, says surveys at her university and others regularly show that relationships are a priority for students. "They're often more focussed on relationship quality than their careers," says Parrott, a mar- riage and family therapist who teaches relation- ships courses with her husband, Les Parrott. Lecture topics include "Falling in Love With- out Losing Your Mind" and "How to Break Up Without Falling Apart." The latter class includes discussion on how to end a relation- ship cleanly and taking time after a breakup to avoid a rebound relationship. Parrott says that session regularly draws students who aren't even enrolled in the class. Gov pushes for tougher classes in state high schools LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Future hairdressers need to know math and science to safely mix chemical hair dye and high school students looking to be auto mechanics have to be able to read complicated manuals. Those are some of the reasons cited by Gov. Jennifer Granholm in her new push to have all Michigan high schools have more students take tougher cours- es before graduating. In her budget proposal last week, she laid out a plan that would give schools incentive payments starting in the 2006-07 academic year if they encourage more students to follow her "Michigan Scholar Curriculum." The curriculum mirrors what most students on a college preparation path already take: four. years of English, three each of math and science, three and a half of social sciences and two years of foreign language. Chuck Wilbur, Granholm's deputy chief of staff for policy and planning, said more students need to be on that path because the line is blurring between the skills required for college and those needed to enter the work force. "Those distinctions are not relevant anymore," he said. "If you don't need a difference in skill sets, you don't need to separate the curriculum." A few high school principals said they like the idea, but are worried that using a curriculum intended to prepare students for college could be too much for some students and may limit the school districts' flexibility to offer stu- dents a wide variety of courses. Escanaba High School Principal James Hansen said a safety net should be provided for students who cannot keep up with a rigorous college prep curriculum. He also pointed out that upper-level courses would require highly qualified teachers. Both would cost more money. "Whether you like it or not, it gets tied to dollars," he said. "If we move into a (tougher) curriculum for every- one, we better have a mechanism that helps kids when they fall." Granholm promised she'd give incen- tive payments in 2006-07 to schools that encourage more students to follow the "Michigan Scholar Curriculum." But she didn't offer any details on how much money that might be. "If we move into a (tougher) curriculum for everyone, we better have a mechanism that helps kids when they fall." -James Hansen Escanaba High School principal By 2011, under Granholm's plan, the payments would be based solely on the number of graduates who complete the curriculum. The "Michigan Scholar Curriculum" was recommended in a report by the Commission on Higher Education and Economic Growth headed by Lt. Gov. John Cherry. Granholm created the panel last year to come up with ways to double the number of Michigan resi- dents with college degrees. Jim Ballard, executive director of the Michigan Association of Second- ary School Principals, said the pro- posed change appears to be aimed at the wrong problem. Most schools already offer advanced math and sci- ence classes, but some students refuse to take them. "You have the horsepower to do it, but you don't have the bodies," Ballard said. "We've got to get everybody con- vinced that it is important, not to just get an A, but just to take the class." The Democratic governor included the change in her nearly $12.8 billion school aid fund proposal for the budget year that begins Oct. 1. If it's approved by Republicans who control the House and Senate, it would be first change in the high school curriculum since 1995, said Michigan Department of Educa- tion spokesman Martin Ackley. Local school districts set their own curriculum, often closely in line with guidelines from the state Education Department. It's unclear how many high schools already have a curriculum similar to the one needed for incen- tive payments because districts do not report their course offerings to the state, Ackley said. I __ ~b'~ I ~ U ova