Wednesday, November 23, 2005 1L-e# 1. i l t . _ .t o A r i Kit S T C 8,.S J ®m a 17, 8 News 3 Hendrix calls for recount of mayoral election Opinion 4 Emily Beam: Get off the bus Sports 21 Cagers muzzle Terriers .el ir igaui . ai g One-hundredfifteen years ofeditorialfreedom www.mkchiandatly.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 36 ©2005 The Michigan Daily cIDON'T KNOW ANYONE THAT'S NOT GOING BACK." Displaced, students head home - Tulane students at the 'U' required to pay Tulane tuition fee of $16,673 a semester By Christina Hildreth Daily Staff Reporter When Walker Hines goes home for Thanksgiving, the guest student and fifth- generation New Orleanian must decide what to do if he cannot return to the Uni- versity next semester. After being rescued by boat from his flooded New Orleans neighborhood in September, the third-year political sci- ence major was accepted to the Univer- sity as a nondegree student. Now, he and 73 other displaced stu- dents from the four universities hardest- hit by Hurricane Katrina must choose whether to try to remain Wolverines or fly south to their original universities for the winter semester. Hines has applied for re-admission to the University of Michigan and has with- drawn from Tulane University. He is wait- ing for the admissions office to decide his academic fate. But among the displaced students, Hines is in the minority. Sally Lindsley, associate director of undergraduate admissions, said that though New Orleans universities have encouraged displaced students to come back for the winter semester, her office has received only five or six inquiries from displaced students wishing to stay at the University of Michigan. "I don't know anybody that's not goingF back," said Andrew Pridjian, a displaced r' student who along with 46 others was admitted under nondegree status from Tulane, which cancelled its fall semester after sustaining more than $100 million in property damage from the storm. Tulane spokesman Mike Strecker confirmed Pridjian's guess, saying the Louisiana university expects most of its 13,000 students to return in the winter. "The registration for (next) semester is still going on, so we don't have exact figures yet, but the early numbers are encouraging," he said. The University of New Orleans, which will re-open its central campus Jan. 29, STE suffered $103 million in property dam- Sophomore mathematics major Andrew Pridjian from Tulane University at South Quad yesterday. age but retained more than 7,000 students during the fall term through online class- es and satellite campuses. W here are tht f Spokeswoman Sharon Gruber said Yft the school is expecting 12,000 students Seventy-fbur displaced students found ther next semester, 5,000 short of normal at the University of Michigan fall semester. enrollment. The low estimate reflects the high number of UNO students who LMI cannot return because they lost their 1. Xavier University homes, she said. Undergraduate: 3 students Twenty-one of the displaced stu- dents at the University of Michigan 2. University of Now Orleans hail from UNO. Undergraduate: 6astudents Though maintaining daily opera- Graduate: 15 students tions for these two New Orleans schools has been a logistical night- 3. Tulane University mare, both have promised to allow Undergraduate: 23 students displaced students to transfer credits Graduate: 23 students from any accredited university that took them in for fall semester. 4. Loyola University New Orleani But there is a catch. Undergraduate: 2 students To earn Tulane credit, each of the 46 Graduate:2 students See DISPLACED, Page 7 GPi:uc A Tenants return after apt blaze Fire official says cause of fire may be related to a faulty power strip By Neil Tambe Daily Staff Reporter After a fire burned through half of their apart- ment complex at 12:52 Monday morning, some lucky residents are already moving back in. The Ann Arbor Fire Department respond- ed to the fire immediately, which blazed through half of the building, located on 1611 South State Street, a few blocks south of Michigan Stadium. Judy Paron, a representative for Oppenheimer Properties, which owns the complex, said some of the residents who lived in an unscathed sec- tion of the 12-unit apartment building were allowed to return to their apartments by 5 p.m. Monday, less than 24 hours after the fire bar- reled through half of their building. All residents, mostly young adults and Uni- versity students, evacuated the building safely. A sure cause of the fire is unknown, but Ann Arbor Fire Marshal Ron Heemstra said that the fire might be connected to a faulty power strip or appliances that were plugged into it. "Make sure you aren't overloading (the power strips) ... and make sure your smoke detectors are working," Heemstra said. Sylvie Khajuria, a Rackham student and building resident, did not hear an alarm alert- ing her to the fire, but evacuated at the heed of a neighbor. She said she did not receive an explanation why there was no warning from the smoke detectors, but intends to find out. Paron said construction workers spent Mon- day repairing various wiring systems housed in the damaged front of the building, including telephone and electrical lines. See FIRE, Page 7 Former 'U' . trovers, Controversy surrounding Univer Deborah Bacon's position elimine "She punctuated the tide of change views facing the 'U' in the '60s the no Margai her Ch By Donn M. Fresard Bac Daily News Editor energy dean of women dies at 98 y that would end in an upheaval of the sity's relationship with students and the ation of her office. e was a person of very conservative at a time when that was the norm, but rm was changing," University historian ret Steneck said of Bacon, who died in elsea apartment at 98 Friday. on's life was marked by conviction and . Born in 1906, she worked at a women's and served as a nurse at a missionary al in Alaska. During World War II, she d as an Army nurse, landing at Omaha six weeks after D-Day and tending to 3eorge Patton's army in frontline hospi- ross Europe. After the war, she earned ctorate in English at Columbia Universi- at age 44 was appointed dean of women University of Michigan. "She was a person of very conservative views at a time when that was the norm, but the norm was changing." - Margaret Steneck University historian Deborah Bacon served as the University's dean of women in the 1950s, at the end of an era when University officials acted as parents to female students - enforcing dress codes and curfews and discouraging interracial dating. When students revolted against that system as the '50s gave way to the more tumultuous '60s, Bacon became the lightning rod in a con- prison hospita enliste Beach Gen. G tals ac her do ty and at the L The controversy When Bacon took over the Office of the Dean of Women in 1950, the University tasked her with carrying out its traditional philosophy: to act in loco parentis - in the place of a par- ent. That meant doing as most traditional 1950s parents would do with young daughters: con- trolling where they lived, how they dressed and whom they dated. Bacon took to the job with characteristic vigor. "She believed in the social structure as it was at that time, and she believed in enforcing it," Steneck said. Enforcing that social structure meant keep- ing a close watch on female students to protect See BACON, Page 3 SMUBRA UKI/Daily Deborah Bacon, the University's last dean of women. Institute to unite environmental * researchers at'U' New institute to facilitate collaboration of seven University schools on environmental sustainability By Gabe Nelson Daily Staff Reporter With an energy crisis, global warming and escalating pollution threatening populations worldwide, the University recently announced the "Captain Planet" of research groups: the Graham Environmental Sustainability Institute. With the combined powers of more than 300 professors from seven University schools, the GESI aims to uncover w io ..rntwi ihe envrnmant anA devise strateges tn THE SOPRANO & THE TENOR Hillel votes to ban all Coke products 'U' chapter of Hillel votes to ban Coca-Cola products at Hillel- sponsored events By Jeremy Davidson Daily Staff Reporter For the past year, Coca-Cola's bev- erages have not been the only aspect of the company under pressure - the soft-drink giant has fought allegations of human rights violations in Colombia and India and is now preparing to con- front critics in court. Pre-trial tension has built between Coca-Cola allegations Company is accused of complicity in the intimidation, murder and torture of workers in Colombian bottling plants. Coke has also drawn ire for its inadequate internal investigations of their alleged human rights violations. voted last week to ban all Coke products at Hillel-sponsored events, saying Coke's labor practices in India and Colombia are " ' .,