Monday, April 17, 2006 Opinion 4A Mara Gay on Duke's lacrosse team Arts 8A Unnecessary sequel painful, not 'Scary' Sports 1B 'M'-Nine sweeps Buckeyes for first time since 1987 k..e_.fAJ r r, Y3 "V A rn A 14., n-ty w - g . e One-hundred-sixteen years of editorialfreedom www.michiganday.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 114 62006 The Michigan Daily Alum got her start in U' writing program Elizabeth Kostova won $7,000 Hopwood award for novel in progress that would become "The Historian," a New York Times bestseller By Anne VanderMey Daily News Editor When Elizabeth Kostova came to the University in 2002, she didn't tell anyone about the "little project" she had been working on for nearly eight years. After finishing the University's two-year master's in fine arts program in creative writing, she received both her degree and something even more valuable: a $2-million book deal. But a decade's work doesn't seem that long considering the epic feat that is "The Historian." More than 600 pages long, it is a hybrid between a vampire thriller and a Vic- torian travelogue. Shortly after the copyright was sold to Little Brown and Co. at an auction between eight publish- ing companies, Sony swept up the movie rights for an addi- tional $1.5 million. The film is slated to be produced by Douglas Wicks, who also produced "Gladiator." In the past year, Kostova has toured the world to promote her novel, which has been published in 37 languages. It was also number one on the New York Times bestseller's list. When Kostova came to the University, she uprooted from a A L U M N I comfortable home in Philadel- phia and moved her family into a small one-bedroom apartment not far from campus. She and her husband, whom she met while traveling in Bul- garia with folk-singing anthro- pologists from Yale University, P R O F I L E S sacrificed stable, well-paying Tenth in a jobs to make the move to the semester-long University. series Kostova didn't come to the University in hopes of someday securing a multimillion-dollar book deal. She came because the program offered her the best financial aid and the people in it seemed "to like each other, and that's not always true in writing programs," she said. The aid package let her to focus her energy on her writing. In 2003, Kostova won a $7,000 Hopwood Award for a novel in progress, which turned into "The Historian." The cash from her Hopwood award allowed her to work on the novel almost full-time in the summer months and was instrumental to her finishing the book. "For the first time, I had a lot of time to write," she said. Kostova worked closely with professors at the University during the writing process. She rewrote it twice before she actually submitted it to an agent. English Prof. Nick Delbanco, the director of the Hop- wood program, said his involvement was chiefly to "reduce the book from 1,100 pages to the mere 900 pages it is." Today, Kostova, who is lives in Ann Arbor, is working on another long travelogue, part of which is set in the town. At a reading in the Rackham Auditorium in January, she said the book was sure to involve "a lot of bodily fluids." And true to her word, in a short reading, she incorporated blood, sweat, vomit and saliva into a few short passages. Kostova is hesitant to expound on details of the new novel for fear of "jinxing it," but she said it also involves a lot of travel and research, though not as much as "The Historian." With her busy schedule, it's a marvel she has any time for writing novels. She estimates she's given over 100 interviews in the past year, not counting book signings and readings. English Prof. Jeremy Chamberlin said Kostova has always had a gift for multi-tasking. Kostova herself says she writes whenever she can, including in the car at stoplights. "I try to only do it at the red ones," she said. "She once told me she works in five-minute increments, See ALUM, page 7A Students blow whistle on crime Hillel, Greek system, SAPAC team up to distribute whistles as part of broader campaign to decrease campus crime By Anne VanderMey Daily News Editor LSA junior Joey DeBartolo was walking down Hill Street at about 2 pm. on a Sunday last month when a white van pulled into a driveway, cutting her off. She tried walking around the car when a man got out and demanded her purse. He forcibly took her bag and sped away. DeBartolo said she tried to run after him, but "you can't catch a car going 40 miles per hour." When she tried to approach people on the street to ask if they'd seen the van, they shook her off and kept walking. "I didn't necessarily lose anything valuable," she said. "But I feel like I lost something invaluable in the sense that I don't feel safe on campus." DeBartolo now carries a small blue metal whistle embla- zoned with the words "M All Together." The whistle is part of a campaign by the University chapter of Hillel, the campus Greek system and the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Cen- ter to promote safety and awareness of crime. "We don't believe that this is the end all, be all to making campus a safer place, but rather it is a part of a broader cam- paign to create a better and safer environment on campus," said Perry Teicher, chair of Hillel's governing board. Teicher, an LSA junior who organized the event in conjunc- tion with the Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic Asso- ciation, said the whistles are a "symbolic gesture" intended to indirectly prevent street crime by promoting awareness. The idea behind the whistles is that if people carry them, they're more likely to come to help someone who's distressed in their time of need. LSA senior Melissa Weston, education co-coordinator for SAPAC, said the campaign is a departure from the traditional idea that it's a woman's responsibility to drive a predator away with a loud noise, placing the emphasis instead on the commu- nity to take action. "Traditionally it's just women's responsibility, and what this is doing it turning it around and saying this is all together our responsibility," Weston said. "(The campaign will) kind of reclaim that metaphor." The recent rash of armed robberies on campus has caused some students to feel uneasy walking around on campus. Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Diane Brown said the increased danger may be perceived instead of real. "It's hard for people your age to think of all the crimes of the '60s and all the crimes of the '80s, but those had their peaks too'Brown said. "If you look on a chart, it doesn't just keep on going up over the decades:' DeBartolo said she doesn't think she would have blown her whistle had she had it when she was accosted last month, but- that it helps people understand they need to self-police. "I think it's just a good idea in the sense that it shows, 'Hey, we are we all supposed to be here together: " she said. "Maybe if someone comes up to you says, 'Hey did you see a white van go by,' maybe you should stop." . . .. .. , . . . . . .... ... . .*.. ....... Where to get whistles Whistles are available at the offices of the University's chapter of Hillel and at the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center. Organizers will distribute a batch of whistles to sororities, most likely sometime later this week. EUGENE ROBERTSON/Daily Ricky Robinson, an graduate of the University's MBA program, is photographed behind his book, "Money Brains," which was written to help college students become financially literate. MBA grad aims to educate students in personal finance College students woefully uninformed about how to handle personal finances By Walter Nowinski For the Daily If you don't know what your credit rating is, you're not alone. According to a recent study, 68 percent of college students rarely or never budget, half don't pay their credit card bills regularly or in full, and only 40 percent know what the interest rates on their credit cards are. Ricky Robinson hopes to change that. Robinson, who earned an MBA from the Stephen M. Ross School of Business and taught account- ing at the University's Dearborn campus last year, said many col- lege students are risking their futures by not understanding the basics of personal finance. "What you don't want to do is become the working poor, anda credit rating. "In five or 10 years, when you go to buy a new car or a house, the decisions you made at college are going to affect the interest rate you'll get," Robinson said. The average undergraduate has $2,200 and the average gradu- ate student $5,800 in credit card debt, according to Nellie Mae, the nation's largest issuer of stu- dent loans. Robinson said the most impor- tant thing college students can do to improve life after graduation is to take a course in personal finance. "Right now kids are learn- ing personal finance by chance," Robinson said. "You don't want to learn by chance, because that can be painful." Currently the University does not offer any courses in person- al finance, although many other universities do, including Michi- gan State University. According to administrators, the economics department has no plans to offer an introductory course in personal finance. "Matters of personal finance are not part of the field of eco- nomics," said Lutz Killian, asso- ciate chair for student affairs in the economics department. LSA junior Jeremy Smoot, who admitted to having a "fair amount" of credit card debt, said he thinks the University should offer a mini-course in personal finance. "If they had personal finance See MONEY BRAINS, page 7A CAAS celebrates 35th anmversary with conference Almost all residents back in West Quad after flood Three students housed in Wenley House have not been let back into their water-damaged rooms By Leah Graboski Daily Staff Reporter will be ready, or if they'll be ready by the end of the semester. Of the rooms affected by the flood, those on the first floor saw the most damage. Kyle Zimmerman, a first floor resident, said a four-person room on his floor was hit the hard- est. Most of the paint on its ceiling peeled off as a result of the leakage. 'U' had one of the first African-American Qi-A,, nrn-.,.,m c ies celebrated its 35th anniversary. The center sponsored a confer- ence called "The Future of Black Studies" last Thursday and Friday at I "I'll t