NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 12, 2005 - 3 . ON CAMPUS Researcher to give talk on Medicaid Julia Seng, a research investigator in the Department of Obstetrics and Gyne- cology and an assistant research scientist in the School of Nursing, will present her recent research on female Medicaid recipi- ents today from noon to 1:30 p.m. in room 1840 at the School of Social Work. Seng studies the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder on childbearing and on women's general health. 'Motorcycle Diaries' to be screened tonight The University Unions Arts and Pro- grams is holding a free screening of "The Motorcycle Diaries" tonight at 7 0 p.m. at Pierpont Commons. This criti- cally acclaimed film, adapted from the journal of Cuban revolutionary leader Che Guevara, tells the story of two friends who cross South America on motorcycle in the 1950s. MSA commission chairs up for grabs Commission chairs for the Michi- gan Student Assembly will be elected tonight at 7:30 p.m. in room 3909 of the Michigan Union. Commissions that are available include LGBT, North Campus Affairs, Women's Issues, Academic Affairs, Peace and Justice, Students' Rights, Environmental Issues, Health Issues, Campus Safety, Voice Your Vote, Cam- pus Improvement and Housing. All Uni- versity students are eligible to run. CRI1E NOTES Subject beats man with tiki torch Ann Arbor Police Department offi- cers said they were in the 1600 block of Washtenaw Avenue at about 1:25 a.m. on Saturday when they saw two men arguing. Police said one man pushed the other to the ground and struck him several times with a tiki torch. When he saw police, he began to run and jumped a fence. Moments later, police said they heard him talking on the phone, telling someone that he had just ran from the police and lost his shoe. The attacker tried to run again, but to no avail. Police said he was tackled and arrested on a resisting charge. * Student and girlfriend arrested After breaking up a block party in the 600 block of Mary Court at about 1:30 a.m. Sunday, the AAPD reported that two arrests were made for disorderly conduct. Officers said they were called to the area because of a number of house parties, but upon arrival found 300 to 400 people in the street. Police said many of the people left immediately, but one man yelled at the officers and insisted that he did not have to leave. The man, who was later identi- fied as a 21-year old University student, fought with police for several minutes and was arrested. The man's girlfriend was also arrest- ed for disorderly conduct after trying several times to climb into the patrol car with her boyfriend. THIS DAY In Daily History Law School starts recruiting blacks April 12, 1966 - The University Law School admitted eight black stu- dents after its first year of actively recruiting blacks. Before this, blacks did attend the school, but "(this) has always been by chance, however, and there has never before been an active attempt to recruit Negroes into our student body," said Prof. Roy Stein- heimer. The Law School felt the need to start recruiting blacks after realizing that the cost to attend the school is very high for many students. Stein- heimer said other factors that cause low black application rates include heavy recruitment of blacks by busi- nesses - which offer high pay and prestige right out of college - and that many blacks hold the law profes- sion in low regard. " The University provided black stu- dents un to $2.500 a year in scholar- Alleged liberal bias in academia debated New study shows that 75 percent of university faculty are liberal; some say political views are irrelevant in most fields By Talia Selitsky Daily Staff Reporter Debate over the causes and consequences of the liberal majority in American academia has been re-ignited by a recent study that shows a leftward shift in academia over the last 20 years. The study shows that in 1999, about three- fourths of people teaching at American uni- versities and colleges were self-described liberals. This is in striking contrast to surveys from 1984, which showed a figure closer to 40 percent. Released on March 29, the study was con- ducted by several professors at George Mason University, Smith College and University of Toronto, and was sponsored by the Randolph Foundation - a conservative philanthropic organization. Engineering junior John Kelly said the Trotter House rG political makeup of the University's faculty is consistentwith the study. He added that the University's support of diversity is inconsis- tent with the lack of political diversity among the faculty. "Based on my experience, the University makes few efforts to hire faculty members with different political ideologies," Kelly said. "The diversity of the University would benefit from individuals with differing political ide- ologies." University Provost Paul Courant said the University does not discriminate, nor does it make an effort to hire faculty based on their ideology. "Political ideology is not an element of scholarship or teaching or service," Courant said. "It would be a terrible mistake for the University to use political ideology as a factor for (selecting) faculty." Political science Prof. John Campbell said that, in most academic fields, political affili- ation does not play an important role in the research of faculty members. He said it is usually impossible to determine whether the author of an academic work is a Democrat or a Republican. Sociology Prof. Howard Kimeldorf said he enovations to be g disagrees with the notion that a lack of politi- cal variation detracts from students' educa- tion. "Even if there is an overrepresentation of registered Democrats among faculty in some fields, as recent survey data indicates, it does not follow that teachers are therefore func- tioning as liberal propagandists or that they are somehow incapable of providing critical thinking skills to their students," Kimeldorf said. Few studies have been conducted on the ori- gins of the political imbalance in academia. Some have speculated that the conservative void is a result of the tenure process and unfair hiring. Sara Dogan, national campus director for the David Horowitz-backed conservative group Students for Academic Freedom, said conservatives are often discriminated against in academia. "Some studies show that in the humanities, there is a seven-to-one ratio of liberals to con- servatives, and in some schools it's as high as 30-to-one. These are the kind of ratios you get when totalitarian regimes hold elections, in the sense that the disparity is so huge," Dogan said. rin next month TROTTER Continued from page 1 and Trotter staff - has been assessing the needs of the facility and giving feedback on proposed changes, while also deciding the mission and vision of Trotter in future years, said council member Brittany Marino. Marino, an LSA sophomore and Native American Student Association member, said the advisory council played a key role in the renovation process because it was essential to give students a voice throughout the pro- cess. "The building was made for students, it was put in place because of students and it's being renovated because of students. If they don't have a say in what goes on, it's not going to be their building," Marino said. LSA junior and La Voz Latina member Sashai Alvarez, an MSA representative, said the need for renovations was a reflection of the University's deficient multicultural facil- ities. "Schools like Princeton, Yale and Har- vard have diversity centers and multicul- tural houses that are beautiful and kept up," Alvarez said. "Why can't Michigan be like that?" "(Trotter House) should be a safe place structurally and it should be a comfortable place," she added. Marino shared this sentiment, saying that bringing speakers from around the country to Trotter House can be embarrassing because of the building's condition and that students of color need a place where they can feel at home, whether they are relaxing or holding a group meeting. "The Trotter House offers community that other places can't, and with all the work that we do here, I think we deserve a space that's adequate," Marino said. "I mean, basic safety regulations and aes- thetic (appeal) aren't too much to ask for from a university that has so much money and spends it in so many other places." "The goals of academia haven't changed, but the faculty makeup is much more left- winged then it was a couple of decades ago, which points to discrimination," she added. However, Campbell said he disagrees with the discrimination claims. "Tenure reviews are the most intense, thought-through processes in the University," he said. "Faculty members take their roles very seriously. It would go against their values to be anything but fair in the tenure review." Others argue that a number of factors have led to a selection process that has caused more liberals to choose to go into academia. What these factors are has been widely speculated. Exit polls from the 2004 election have indi- cated that people with post-graduate degrees were more likely to vote for Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) "It is a very interesting question," Courant said. "My speculation for the phenomena is that in order to be a successful academic, one has to be an inquiring thinker and not accept any answers as a given, which is usually asso- ciated with liberals - though I've met a lot of unquestioning liberals." He added that he believes it is a question that should be studied by social scientists. Detroit plans bright Super Bowl DETROIT (AP) - The host committee for Super Bowl 2006 at Ford Field is planning to shine a light on some of the downtown's architectural treasures in an effort to make it as attractive as possible for the 100,000-plus visitors. Special lighting for the historic Detroit Athletic Club, as well as the Renaissance Center and other downtown skyscrapers will illuminate the area the week of the NFL championship game. Organizers also are considering using giant screens to show the game to those on the outside. Planners also are designing permanent kiosks to help visitors find their way around the downtown, the Detroit Free Press said yesterday. Organizers say they know it would be counter- productive to cover up the downtown's dead zones and areas of vacant and abandoned structures. "It's got to be not only authentically Detroit, but we also want to be authentic," said Bob Buckler, president of DTE Energy Distribution and head of a subcommittee of the Detroit Super Bowl XL Host Committee that is planning the lighting effects. "We're pushing for things that are real, that will last, that are not insubstantial. "We want to use this as a catalyst for change." Details of the plan are being released today at a meeting of the civic group Detroit Downtown Inc. Detroit Super Bowl organizers are planning an $11-million preparation program leading up to the Feb. 5, 2006 game. The Detroit Super Bowl host committee sent about 120 people to Jacksonville, Fla., to observe the 2005 Super Bowl. The Detroit-area's Tourism Economic Develop- ment Council in January unveiled an ad campaign, which features the slogan, "The world is coming - get in the game." EUGENE ROBERTSON/Daily Robert Arevalo, a Kinesiology junior, works as a student manager at the Trotter House yesterday. GRADUATING? Moving to Metro Detroit? Live at the 2004 Property of the Year! ...but can't get out?'.) CALL THE DELIVERY BUTLER! 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