NEWS V experts weigh in on BP oil spill Professors discuss the spill's ecological, economic, and business implications. >> SEE PAGE2 OPIN iON A 3% rate increase? What gives? E. Royster Harper, vice presi- dent for student affairs, explains her recommendation for a housing rate increase. >> SEE PAGE 4 Metro Detroit needs better mass transit Carolyn Lusch explains how new plans could link the city and suburbs like never before. >>SEE PAGE 5 ARTS Dreaming in the Arboretum Shakespeare returns to the Arb a 10th time with "A Mid- summer Night's Dream." >> SEE PAGE9 Actress and singer Zooey Deschanel of She & Him performs at the Royal Oak Music Theatre in Royal Oak on Sunday, June 6. ADMINISTRATION Faculty disagree over FHC report adoption TEACH FOR AMERICA Education majors not TFA target Four percent of new corps members have education background By CAITLIN HUSTON Daily StaffReporter As Teach for America welcomes its largest incoming corps, its prospec- tive members are finding an alterna- tive pathway to the field of education. Though the TFA members will be working as teachers in urban and rural schools, the majority of the corps does not have a background in education. Instead, for some of the more than 4,500 new corps members, the orga- nization is used as a stepping-stone for careers in other diverse fields. Teach for America is a non-profit organization, in which recent college graduates apply to teach for two years in often low-income school districts. With 46,000 applications received this year and a 12-percent admission rate, this year's TFA members came through the most selective applica- tion process in the organization's his- tory, according to a Teach for America press release. According to a spokesperson from TFA, the most common undergradu- ate majors for the incoming members are social sciences. Following the 34 percent of corps members in that field, the most common majors were government or public policy, math, sciences and engineering. Approxi- mately four percent of the new corps members majored in education. Deborah Ball, dean of the School of Education, said that though TFA devi- See TFA, Page 7 INDEX n0 xl . C , o139 2 21ooTeMichigan Daily NEW S ................................ 2 OPINION ...............................4 CLASSIFIEDS ........................... 6 CROSSW ORD .............................6 ARTS .....................................8 SPORTS ................................10 Varying accounts given for Hearing Cmte.'s vote on Borisov report By KYLE SWANSON Daily NewsEditor Members of a sub-committee of the University's leading faculty gov- ernance body are at odds with each other after questions were raised about a report that may or may not have been formally approved by the committee earlier this year. The controversy involving the Faculty Hearing Committee of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs centers around a report meant to investigate a situ- ation between University adminis- trators and a former medical school researcher, Andrei Borisov. According to the FHC's report, Borisov was forced to resign by his department chair in a meeting where University Police were pres- ent. That incident came after Borisov alleged scientific misconduct against a fellow researcher. The report states the situation escalated to the point where University Police injured Bor- isovand arrestedhim fortrespassing in his office. And while the FHC's report does exist and does recount many of the events surrounding Borisov's ultimate dismissal from the Univer- sity, there is disagreement within the three-person committee over whether the report was ever accept- ed by the committee in a final form. At the center of the controversy is an argument between Engineer- ing Prof. Wayne Stark, chairman of the committee at the time the report was produced, and Statistics Prof. Ed Rothman, who served on the com- See FHC REPORT, Page 3