2A - Thursday, September 27, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2A - Thursday, September 27, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com MONDAY: TUESDAY: WEDNESDAY: THURSDAY: FRIDAY: In Other Ivory Towers This Week in History Campus Clubs Professor Profiles Photos of the Week GOODNIGHT, MARKET Man, this class is 'Psycho' (14t1idicligan ail 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com JOSEPH LICHTERMAN RACHEL GREINETZ Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1252 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 lichterman@michigandaily.com rmgrein@michigandaily.com Which course are you my interaction with students. teaching this semester and They enhance my own under- what does it cover? standing of media cultures through their consistently This term I'm teaching The sharp and thoughtful engage- History of the Animated Film. ment with course material. It begins with the early pio- neers of the form, such as Win- What is your favorite sor McCay, movies through the movie genre and film? classical period - Disney, War- ner Brothers - and ends with My favorite film genre is an overview of Pixar Produc- horror. I teach a class called tions and digital animation. The Horror Film After Psycho which I absolutely love. My What is your favorite thing favorite film is Bride of Fran- about teaching at the Univer- kenstein. sity? What's something unique The thing that I love most about, yourself that no one about teaching at Michigan is knows CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES CRIME NOTES Hot meal WHERE: Northwood Apartments WHEN: Tuesday at 4:30 p.m WHAT: The Ann Arbor Fire Department extin- guished a kitchen fire caused from cooking in a resident's apartment, Uni- versity Police reported. An oven and cabinets were damaged. There were no injuries. Call to arms WHERE: Palmer Parking Structure WHEN: Tuesday at about 7:45 a.m. WHAT: An entrance gate was broken after a Jeep drove through it, University Police reported. Police are attempting to contact the vehicle owner. Financial aid Herman 122690117 WHERE: University Hos- Cain pital WHEN: Tuesday at about WHAT: Former Presiden- 3:00 p.m. tial candidate Herman Cain WHAT: $90 was stolen will lead a discussion on key from an unattended purse social and political issues. in a restroom, University WHO: Students for Health- Police reported. The bag care Fredom was returned without the WHEN: Tonight at 6 p.m. money. There are no sus- WHERE: Power Center for pects. the Performing Arts Ouch! WHERE: 900 block of Washington Street WHEN: Wednesday at about 1:15 a.m. WHAT: A moving Acura struck a pedestrian, Uni- versity Police reported. The pedestrian was taken to the hospital for minor injuries. The driver did not see the pedestrian until it was too late. Deep throat talk. WHAT: Author Max Hol- land discusses his book, LEAK. The book delves into the life of Mark Felt, more commonly known as "Deep Throat" from the Watergate scandal, and examines his role in the FBI investigation of the incident. WHO: Gerald R. Ford Presi- dential Library WHEN: Tonight at 7:30 p.m WHERE: Gerald Ford Library 'Secret Garden' WHAT: Watch the 1993 film "The Secret Garden," which follows a young girl who moves to England after the death of her parents. WHO: Center for Russian, East European and Eur- asian Studies WHEN: Tonight at 7:30 p.m. WHERE: Michigan The- ater CORRECTIONS . An article in the Sept. 26 edition of the Michi- gan Daily ("Former Fifth Ave. club to be converted into office space")misat- tributed who wrote the story. Daily Staff Reporter Molly Block wrote the story. * Please report any error inthe Daily to corrections@michi- gandaily.com. I'm not sure it's that interest- ing, but when I was a kid I used to show Super 8mm cartoons and "Three Stooges" shorts at neighborhood birthday parties. I charged 5 bucks even though projector bulbs cost $20. How do you like to spend your free time? I'm working on a screenplay in my spare time about a young guy whose first date is placed in dramatic counterpoint to the Manson Famil's first rampage in August 1969. It's a coming of age story with a downbeat vibe. ' - KA TIE SZYMANSKI Research by University Prof. Aradhna Krishna revealed that people are likely to eat more when a label on food reads "medi- um" rather than "large," NPR reported. Drinking a large drink at McDonald's, how- ever, is a medium at Wendy's. From "The Cube" that adorns University pamphlets and bro- churesto the "Wave Field" on North Campus, the Universi- ty is home to many works of public art. See what students have to say about them. FOR MORE, SEE THE B-SIDE, PAGE 4 A new study by Mis- sion: Readiness revealed that "one in four young adults are too overweight to join the U.S. military," CNN reported. The study added the weight issue doesn't occur in the militar- ies of other major countries. 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Subscriptions for fall term, starting in Septembervia U.mail are $110. Winter term(January through April)>is $115, yearlong (Septemberthrough April) is $195. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscriptionrate.On-campussubscriptionsfor falltermare$35.Subscriptionsmustbeprepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated CollegiatePress 0 0 I Student debt stretches to record 1 in 5 households 4 4 A result of higher tuition costs, rising college enrollment economic resources, the low- est-income fifth of households are the ones experiencing the greatest stresses," said Richard Fry, a senior economist at Pew who analyzed the numbers. day is based on the Survey of Consumer Finances, conducted every three years and spon- sored by the Federal Reserve. The numbers are as of 2010, the latest available for that survey. Japan and China enter talks over bitter island dispute Leaders meet at U.N. and in Beijing as tensions rise TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - Japan and China are taking small steps to dampen a bitter dispute over a group of small islands in the East China Sea following an intense but seemingly controlled confrontation over the islands' sovereignty that introduced wildcard Taiwan in the fray. Foreign ministers from Tokyo and Beijing met late Tuesday on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in New York to discuss the issue, two weeks after the Japanese government's purchase of some of the islands from pri- vate owners sparked bitter anti- Japanese protests in China and raised tensions between the two Asian giants to their highest level in years. Vice foreign ministers from the two countries met the same day in Beijing. Despite the promise of the meetings, it is still too early to conclude that the crisis has passed. China is almost certainto send its own vessels to challenge Japanese control of the islands, raising the possibility of armed conflict arising from mistake or miscalculation. Tuesday's Japan-China meet- ings came just hours after Japa- nese and Taiwanese coast guard cutters exchanged water cannon blasts just off the islands, known as the Senkakus in Japan and the Diaoyu or Diaoyuitai in China and Taiwan. Taiwan also claims the islands, which sit astride rich fishing waters and potentially large reserves of natural gas. Taiwan, which split from China amid civil war in 1949 but has been drawing ever closer to Beijing in the 4 /a years since Ma Ying-jeou became president, has become a wild card in the Japan- China dispute, staking out what it claims is an independent stance to assert its sovereignty over the islands. But reflecting its claim that Taiwan is part of its territory, China has gone out of its way to suggest that Taipei's interest in the islands is identical with its own. Following Tuesday's con- frontation between the two coast guards, China's state-controlled media offered clear validation of the Taiwanese actions, pre- senting detailed coverage of the presence of some 50 Taiwanese fishing boats and 12 coast guard vessels in the disputed island area. During the confrontation, the two sides used water cannon for the first time, an apparent*esca- lation in their previously low-key tactics. But the almost ritualis- tic nature of the exchange - the sides separated after only a few minutes, and the Taiwanese flo- tilla returned to Taiwan - sug- gested that Tokyo and Taipei were operating within carefully prescribed parameters and they had no interest in letting things get out of hand. Neither Tokyo nor Beijing has released a full account of the New York meeting, though the mere fact it occurred raises hopes of a peaceful solution to the crisis between an ascendant China, flush with tens of billions of dol- lars of foreign exchange reserves and a rapidly expanding military, and a Japan that seems eager to prove that despite long years of economic drift it still remains a power to be reckoned with. China's official Xinhua News Agency reported that Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told Japanese counterpart Koi- chiro Gemba that the Japanese government's island purchase constituted "a serious challenge to the post-war international order." WASHINGTON (AP) - With Noting that college enroll- Separate Fed data have point- college enrollment growing, ment has continued to climb ed to subsequent increases in student debt has stretched to a since 2010, Fry added: "Until student loans since 2010 that record number of U.S. house- college enrollment peaks, I totaled $914 billion in the April- holds -- nearly 1 in 5 - with the would not expect the amount June quarter, but don't provide biggest burdens falling on the of outstanding student debt to demographic breakdowns on young and poor. level off." who shoulders the biggest bur- The analysis by the Pew The study released Wednes- dens. Research Center found that 22.4 million households, or 19 percent, had college debt in 2010. That is double the share fnqY in 1989, and up from 15 percent in 2007, just prior to the reces- The Department oiatry sion - representing the biggest at the University of Michigan is conducting a We are looking for: three-year increase in student Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) Men and women aged 18-51 debt in more than two decades. study that inudes receiving one dose ' a Adults diagnosed with AND The increase was driven by r higher tuition costs as well as ADHnD thsawe tooassaeawthy individualsswithoutsAoDH D. P'rrigcpeeosnti-l rb i rising college enrollment dur- ''p'std $10fr hi ing the economic downturn.;1inese1 p to $7m The biggest jumps occurred in households at the two extremes of the income distribution. More well-off families are dig- ging deeper into their pockets to pay for costly private colleg- es, while lower-income people in search of higher-wage jobs are enrolling in community col- leges, public universities and 8 1. 5 4 other schools as a wayrto boost their resumes. Because of the sluggish econ- 8 3 9 2 omy, fewer college. students than before are able to settle 1 98 3 into full-time careers immedi- ately upon graduation, contrib- T 8 3 uting to a jump in debt among lower-income households as 2 3 95 the young adults take on part- time jobs or attend graduate T- - -- school, according to Pew..6 As a share of household income, the debt burden was 5 6 3 1 the greatest for the poorest 20 percent of households, or those315 making less than $21,044. In 3 9 all, 40 percent of U.S. house- T- holds headed by someone younger than age 35 owed col- lege debt, the highest share of" **" *". any age group. "Comparing the debt to their I I 4 4