Monday, June 4, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 3 Female pro Study shows gap between salaries for men and women By KATHRYN VAN LONKHUYZEN Daily StaffReporter Female faculty members at the University make less money than male faculty members on average, according to a study released by the Office of the Provost on May 18. The study used statistical mod- els to predict faculty salaries. One analysis revealed that female fac- ulty members make 2.5 percent less than their male counterparts. The pay gap based on gender reflects a national trend of lower salaries for women at universities across the country. The American Association of University Profes- sors released data in 2006 showing that women in academia generally earn 81 percent of what men earn. The University survey of faculty members in 19 of the 20 University schools included 565 women and 1,248 men who have or are apply- ing for tenure. The medical school was excluded because it uses a more complex model to determine salaries, the study said. The report looked at how factors like gender, race, ethnicity, level of BUDGET From page 1 Boulus said reducing funding to higher education to avoid rais- ing taxes has been the recourse of state lawmakers for the last sev- eral years. "The right thing was to raise revenue and avoid cutting higher education for the sixth consecutive year," he said. Appropriations cuts to the state's public universities since 2001 amount to $2,500 per student, Bou- lus said. Boulus said last week's decision contradicts Granholm'splan to revi- talize the state with young trained professionals by doubling the num- ber of college graduates in the next 10 years. "(State lawmakers) like to give lip service to education,"he said. "They went home on Friday saying educa- tion was spared when really only K through 12 was spared." This year's budget cuts will leave universities unable to accommodate more students and will lead many students burdened by the high costs of college to drop out, Boulus said. fs paid less degree and years at the University correlate to pay. How faculty members rank in professorship - assistant, associ- ate or full professor - determines their salary at the University, and was included as a control in one analysis. However, another analysis was conducted without considering differences in rank because the researchers hypothesized that factors contributingto the gender- based gap in pay might be com- pounded by women being in lower positions which could be because they aren't chosen as often for pro- motion. When control variables did not include rank, males made 3.8 percent more than females. The study indicated that men are more likely to be full profes- sors than women, with only 36 percent of women in full profes- sorship positions compared to 57% of men. An article published in Ms. Maga- See PAY, Page 8 Congress questions 'U' about illegal downloading on campus By AMINA FARHA which should be devoted to edu- letter with a several-hundred-pag Daily StaffReporter cational purposes," said the com- explanation of how it deals wit e th A congressional committee has asked 19 universities, including the University of Michigan, for information on how they approach the issue of internet piracy by stu- dents. The committee sent a letter in late April to the 19 universities most frequently cited for illegal downloading activity asking for descriptions of the measures being taken to deter such activity, said Beth McGinn, a spokesperson for the House Judiciary Committee minority staff. The universities had until May 31 to respond. "Beyond the obvious ethical and moral problems, student piracy imposes extraordinary costs on the economy and wastes expensive university computing resources, mittee, led by Rep. Lamar Smith (R - Texas) and four Judiciary and Education Committee leaders in a statement. The statement said a loss of $6.1 billion by the movie industry as a result of illegal downloading means a loss of $20 billion in gross domestic product, $835 million in tax revenue and 141,000 jobs. Congress's interest in this issue stems from concerns about the economy and protecting jobs for future graduates, McGinn said. "The fact that copyright piracy is not unique to college and univer- sity campuses is not an excuse for higher education officials to fail to take reasonable steps to eliminate such activity nor to appropriately sanction such conduct when dis- covered," the letter said. The University responded to the copyright infringement on cam- pus, said Jack Bernard, assistant general counsel for the University's Office of the Vice President and General Counsel. "While we may have users who engage in unlawful behavior, this does not make the institution an offender," said the University in a letter responding to the congres- sional inquiry. The reply also said the Univer- sity does more to discourage piracy than most Internet service provid- ers by informing students of the consequences of downloading or uploading copyrighted material. See PIRACY, Page 8 CORRECTIONS Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michigandaily.com. RANDOLPH COURT APARTMENTS ~ E 2 Bedroom Apartment Homes-~ Ground Floor Ranch Style! RP*AE Private Entrance! Patio! ;cuss o a Spacious Kitchen! Air Conditioning!. Outdoor dasses Laundry Facilities! June/July 24-Hour Emergency Maintenance! PetsWelcmelcall for details Pets Welcome! And much, much more! 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