Friday, February 3, 2006 News 3 State treasurer quits Opinion 4 Former Detroiter Imran Syed on the Super Bowl Arts 5 Russell Peters brings laughs to the Michigan Theater AST ! S'cn\r'i NOT l EN IO 131 FO W(" DA 1S One-hundredfifteen years ofeditorialfredom www.michaganday.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 68 @2006 The Michigan Daily "IN OU MEMORIES, IHE WLL AL.AYS BE SINGING, LAUGHING, DEBATING, ANALYZING, LISTENING ...®" SOLE launches new campaign to combat sweatshops Group claims apparel with University's logo is produced using unfair labor practices By Molly Bowen For the Daily According to Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality, wearing certain maize-and-blue apparel is not just a fashion choice. It's a moral dilemma. SOLE claims many of the millions of hats, t-shirts and other clothing bear- ing the University's logo are produced in sweatshops in countries with little or no enforcement of labor regulations. About 10 students gathered in the Union on Wednesday night to launch a new anti-sweatshop initiative to change the standard to which the University holds big brands that produce Michigan attire. "Universities have a monopoly over their logo;' said LSA sophomore Art Reyes, a member of SOLE. "No one can produce a University shirt without the University's permission." The campaign submitted to the Uni- versity last fall a proposal to require brands to only use factories that meet the requirements of the Designated Sup- pliers Program - a program under the watchdog group United Students Against Sweatshops, which maintains a list of factories with good labor practices. The proposal is still under consider- ation, said RC sophomore Adri Miller, a SOLE member. Members of the Committee on Labor Standards and Human Rights could not be reached for comment. According to the USAS website, the factories that meet the requirements of the Designated Suppliers Program have been "determined by universities to have affir- matively demonstrated full and consistent respect for the rights of their employees." Two other main stipulations regard rights of association and livable wages. This is not the first time SOLE has campaigned on Michigan apparel. In March.2001, the University imple- mented a supplier code of conduct that required all factories producing licensed University attire to enforce a set of labor standards, including a limit on work hours and fair pay. Members of SOLE agreed that the code was a step in the right direction, but said the measure did little to improve working conditions because it doesn't hold brands responsible for conditions in factories to which they outsource labor. "Brands say that they can't force (their suppliers) to enact fair labor practices," Miller said. She said brands can break with facto- ries if they do not approve of a factory's labor methods. University products constitute a con- siderable percentage of sales for big- name brands, so universities carry a lot of leverage, Miller said. If standards are raised, people on the street probably won't notice a significant price increase, she said "We can't be exact about these num- bers, because brands aren't forced to disclose wages, but we do know for sure that they're low" she said. SOLE plans to employ similar tactics as the campaign that forced the University and other colleges to cut their contracts with Coca-Cola, such as pressuring the administration and working as a coali- tion with other student groups. Jeff Druchniak (left) performs in a dress rehearsal for the 2004 production of A Winter's Tale as photographed in a dress rehearsal at the Lydia Mendellsohn Theater. Friends and family remember Druchniak Longtime tennis coach moves to administration Bit Ritt women's tennis coach, becomes associate athletic director By Nate Sandals Daily Sports Writer Fellow Public Policy students mourn actor, writer, thinker By Ashlea Surles Daily Staff Reporter Among students at the School of Pub- lic Policy, Jeff Druchniak was known for breaking from the narrow focus of aca- demic life and prodding others to do the same. In the days since learning of his death, Druchniak's friends and family continue to mourn the dual public policy and Law student. "In our memories, he will always be singing, laughing, debating, analyzing, listening ... and above all loving the peo- ple and the world around him," Druchni- ak's family said in a written statement to the Daily. Druchniak, who earned his bachelor's degree at the University in 2000, died after a fall from a campus parking struc- ture earlier this week in what police have called an apparent suicide. As those close to him reflect on his Read full statements from friends and family members, and leave your own memories of Druchniak, on The Wire news blog at michlgandally.com. life, they say he was one of a kind. "His final decision deprives us all of one of the most talented, creative, intel- ligent and loving men I have ever met," said girlfriend Kathy Gelhausen. Public Policy student Josh Rosenfeld, a close friend of Druchniak's, remembered his infamous classroom behavior. "You would find Jeff in the back of the room doing a crossword puzzle, sleeping, leaving to check his e-mail in his public policy classes, only to return and offer a deeply intellectual, thought-provoking question that challenged professors and academia;' Rosenfeld said "He" was incredibly intelligent and would pick things up very quickly," said friend Steven Ochoa, a Public Pol- icy student. "Most people would say he would get sidetracked by the mundane, but I think it was a sign of a brilliant mind." Druchniak was well-known among his classmates for initiating thought provoking conversations on topics such as the value of the British monarchy whether Conan O'Brien will have to tone down his show when he takes over for Jay Leno on "The Tonight Show, Rosenfeld said. "Whenever something caught his attention - politics, sports, books, mov- ies, history - he shared it with a burning passion and vitality," she said. Ochoa remembered Druchniak's com- petitive spirit. While speaking about the first time the two met at orientation for the Ford School of Public Policy, he chuckled sen- timentally. Ochoa said they had to do a series of icebreakers. When Druchniak saw that one of the tasks was to find the price of a book at the Michigan Bookstore in the Union, he called the store to ask the price. They wouldn't tell him over the phone, so he mobilized the three-person group to exchange phone numbers and took off running from South University to the Union bookstore. "He called me when he got there and See DRUCHNIAK, page 7 Over the past 22 years, a lot has changed in Michigan athletics. There have been three football coaches, eight national championships and a boost- er scandal. Through it all, Bitsy Ritt has been the steady, guiding force for the Michigan women's tennis program. That will all change on June 1, when Ritt steps into her new role as associate athletic director, placing her in charge of overseeing 22 non-revenue sports. Ritt's move, which the Athletic Depart- ment announced last month, came as a shock to the members of the women's ten- nis team. While the players were congrat- ulatory and recognized the importance of the new opportunity, but they were also quiet and surprised, Ritt said. The coach admittedly got emotional See RITT, page 7 Bitsy Rltt, second from left, talks with her team during the Michigan Invitational on at the Varsity Tennis Center last month. IT'S ALL A BLUR Kennedy s Peace Classic TV director attributes success to 'U' Corps vision lives on at 'U' Seventy-six students entered the Peace Corps last year By Joolle Dodge Daily StaffReporter The legacy then-Sen. John F. Kennedy set in place by proposing the Peace Corps on the steps of the Michigan Union 45 years ago con- tinues at the University. The University had more of its graduate students join the 7,810- member corps in 2005 than any other school in the country. Counting both graduate and undergraduate students, the Uni- versity sent the sixth most into the corps. Seventy-six students entered the corns - nine less than the 85 "At first, I didn't think it was something I could do because I wasn't an undergrad;' she said. When she discovered the corps needed students with higher degrees as well, she said, she jumped at the chance. Since 1961, more than 2,145 University students have joined the Peace Corps, fourth among all schools. Wisconsin sent 28 more alumni than the University of Michigan in 2005, taking the top spot for the 20th year in a row. Scott Roskelley, spokesman for the Chicago region Peace Corps, said he believes the University could win the number one spot if it pro- moted the corps more. "Any time the University of Michigan would like to overtake the Alum John Rich directed "Dick Van Dyke Show," "The Twilight Zone" By Christine Beamer Daily StaffReporter Turn on TV Land and there is a good chance you'll be watching an episode of University alum John Rich's work. In the era of the 1960s classic sitcom, Rich was right in the thick of things. "The Twilight Zone," "The Dick Van L U Dyke Show," "Gilligan's Island" and "All in the Family" are just a few shows he's directed. - Yet when talking to Rich, it's not his impressive resume or his . brushes with celebrities - he directed two movies that starred Elvis Presley - that come up. It's r his ties with the University. "I hadn't known John for an hour before he credited Michi- Thir gan with everything good that semes University of Michigan. Working as a soda jerk at a drug store pouring fountain drinks, Rich earned just enough money to take the train to Ann Arbor in the fall of 1943 and enroll himself. "I had $105 in my pocket and tuition was $100 a semester;' Rich said, chuckling. . But Rich's experience at the University was cut short by summons to join the Air Force. But as soon as World War II ended in 1945, Rich found his way back to campus. "I took an enormous amount of credits because I was eager to get back to civilian life. I signed up instantly for every class I i N I could take,"he said. Rich still had to put himself through college, so he took on three jobs: waiting tables at the Michigan Union for 40 cents per hour, wash- ing dishes at Kappa Sigma for a free lunch, then driving a cab in the evenings. Even with three jobs, Rich was constantly on the lookout for more ways to pay for college. iIn a When a new radio station in town, er-long WHRV, sent out an ad offering I rd t { ..,_ i:g;a. ;, ... .. Js. } $x wS d I