r t+ Weather Tonight: Mostly cloudy, sprinkles, low 62°. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy, high around 76%. w e' .71" IM IRTIM 7v-7,77771, One hundred four years offeditorialfreedom Engineering gets1 Proportion of women Burchattributedamuch ofthe increase in entering class hits to the creation of several educational pro- grams aimed at female high school stu- all-time high dents interested in engineering. "The more women that are in the By Zachary M. Raimi field of engineering, the more appeal- Daily Staff Reporter ing it will be," Burch said. The class entering the University's The college hopes to increase the num- College of Engineering this fall contains ber of women per entering class to 40 the highest percentage of undergraduate percent by the year 2000, she said, female students in the college's history University estimates show 40 per- - at slightly more than 30 percent. cent of the engineering workforce will About 310 ofthe students in the enter- be women by the year 2020. ing class ofmore than 1,000 are females. "Typically, in terms of graduation The increased enrollment is the result rates, they've been about the same as of an active effort over the last few years males," Burch said. "It's been more of by the University to attract qualified an issue of students selecting engineer- female students, said Sharon Burch, di- ing. The women's graduation rate is rector oftransferadmissions andrecruit- practically the same as males." ment in the College of Engineering. Last fall, the Engineering Workforce lip influx of women Tuesday September 12, 1995 Commission reported that the Univer- sity ranked third in the country in fe- male percentage of the engineering un- dergraduates, closely behind the Uni- versity of Puerto Rico and the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology. At that time, 25 percent of the University's more than 4,500 engineer- ing undergraduates were female, while the national average was 18.6 percent. Jennifer Reppa, a first-year engineer- ing student, said she is glad to hear of the increase. While Reppa said she did not consider the percentage of female enrollment when she decided to attend the University, she said the increased enrollment might make other women feel more comfortable. "I think that it would open more doors to females who aren't as confi- dent," Reppa said. "It will make them feel more confident in a male-domi- nated field." C. William Kauffman, professor of aerospace engineering, said the increased enrollment will benefit everyone. "I think it will have little to do with technical aspect of teaching," he said. "It will make it (better) represent our society." Several programs were recently be- gun at the University to reach out to middle- and high-school females to en- courage them to study engineering. For example, the Summer Engineering Ex- ploration Program, run by the Society of Women Engineers, attracts high school students into engineering. "They of course serve as role models and provide direct exposure to the field of engineering," Burch said. JOE WESTRATE/Daily Erica White, a first-year Engineering student, weighs vials filled with compound samples. She is part of the class with the highest percentage of women in the University's history. Clinton: GOP loan plans hurt students Los Angeles Times CARBONDALE, Ill. - Launching a week of events designed to highlight the differences between the administra- tion and the Republicans on education spending, President Clinton told sev- eral thousand students at Southern Illi- nois University that the GOP majority wanted to rob them of their futures. President Clinton cited proposed re- ductions in the rate of spending on student loans, grants and work-study programs as evidence that the Republican majority in Congress was "short-cutting the future" in its efforts to bal- ance the budget. "Do not be fooled by the smoke screen Y of balancing the 'a budget," Clinton told the students at V ?an outdoor rally. "We don't have to cut education to bal- ancethe budget. We. don'thavetoandwe Clinton shouldn't." He said that the Republican budget would cut $36 billion over seven years from spending on education and training, eliminate the Americorps volunteer pro- gram and raise the cost of student loans. Republicans immediately responded, branding Clinton's assertions "a big lie" and "cheap politics" designed to scare students. Clinton added little substan- tively new yesterday to previous attacks on Republican budget priorities, most recently a week ago. Concurrently, 47 top administration officials left Wash- ington for political appearances around the country this week to try to bolster Clinton's education message in a blitz dubbed "back-to-school week." In the SIU appearance and in an earlier roundtable with a dozen students, Clinton laid particular stress on what he considers his most importAnt educational innova- tion - the 1993 creation of a direct student loan program, which bypasses commercial banks and other middlemen to speed disbursement of funds. Code writers deadline By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter For many students, September marks a return to campus, a whirlwind of fa- miliar faces and a slow re-entry into classes. For the workgroup compiling recommendations on the University's code of non-academic conduct, this month is crunch time. The six students, graduates and con- sultants who were hired over the sum- mer to research and review the new code are preparing to make their final recommendations to the Office of Stu- dent Affairs by the Sept. 27 deadline. But the process is far from complete. Throughout the summer, the workgroup has attempted to solicit stu- dent input through focus groups, drop boxes and e-mail. Each member of the group is being paid $7 an hour by the Office of Student Affairs, which gets part of its budget from student tuition. This week the group is scheduled to hold their first open forums with Maureen A. Hartford, the vice presi- dent for student affairs . "It hasn't been smooth sailing this summer; it's been a difficult job," said Emi Nakazato, a workgroup member and recent University graduate. "It's difficult to hear and incorporate so many different opinions." The forums will address two of the four sections of the new code-values and violations. "When we talk about values, we're talking about what values we see in the community as important values and standards," said Sean McCabe-Plius, a workgroup member and Rackham stu- dent. "I'd like the members to find the values of the community. I think this moves beyond (the federally mandated alcohol and sexual assault policies)." Some students, however, say they object to the summertime revisions, which occured after many students left campus. Open Forum Meetings Today: North Campus Commons, East Room Tomorrow: Michigan League, Koessler Room Both at 7:30 p.m., What the Regents Waint A concise, fair, less legalistic code. More student input. A document that defends students' First Amendrnent rights. A code that meets federal mandates for alcohol and sexual assault policies. Anne Marie Ellison, chair of the Stu- dents Rights Commission and a former member of the workgroup, said she objected to the composition ofthe group. "It's really important to remember that while they may be getting feed- back, they're not really accountable or representative students, like (the Michi- gan Student Assembly)," she said. The workgroup also plans to intro- duce their homepage on the World Wide Web this week, which is designed to allow students to access past versions of the University's code, as well as to see the workgroup's progress. "I look at it like we can't have too much input," McCabe-Plius said. "We've been looking for a broad input from faculty, students and othergroups." The workgroup was created after an anti-code rally at the April Board of Regents meeting prompted the board to direct Hartford to write a less legalistic code with more student input. Hartford responded by hiring an ini- tial group of students, graduates and outside consultants to recommend a code that included violations, values, sanctions and procedures. The regents intend to adopt a new code at the October meeting. MSA pres.: Put students on schools' boards By Stephanie Jo Klein Daily Staff Reporter- Students would have a voice in cur- riculum and personnel changes under a proposal by Michigan Student Assem- bly President Flint Wainess. At yesterday's meeting of the Senate Advisory Committee for University Af- fairs, Wainess proposed adding students to the executive committees for each of the University's schools and colleges. The executive committees have final authority over each school's curriculum and faculty hirings and promotions. "At least one student should be on Wrapped u in her work A University employee works at her desk in the Chemistry Building as Stretch, a 7-foot-long Burmeese python, checks out the rest of the office. posion kills 5 at Maryland ml * Bomb rips apart van outside Baltimore; children among dead ESSEX, Md. (AP)- A bomb blew up a van in the parking lot of a suburban shopping mall Monday, killing five people and shaking homes for blocks.' The 6 p.m. explosion in the parking lot of the Middlesex Shopping Center, blew the van's glove compartment a half mile away, Officer J.L. Taylor said. "Investigators found some explosive material around the car," said Baltimore County Police Capt. Brian Uppercue. They know it wasn't a gas tank explosion." Body parts were scattered around the area and a victim's head was severed .sid Albert Kellner who lives near the __ - _ - r