1i r ' '.rri' ir 'wi1 r' +.rir, " y+a r The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 8, 1995 - 3 MSA questions Wainess' code spokesperson role Ohio State gets artificial wetlands ,Nearly seven acres of wetlands will be added to Ohio State University's Olentangy River Wetlands Research Park come spring, more than doubling the size of the current park. ' Due to the construction of a solid waste plant in the county of Fairfield, OSU is gaining the land. Developers -are constructing the Pine Grove Re- "-gional Solid Waste Facility on wet- lands that need to be drained. State law requires that drained wetlands be re- placed elsewhere. °" OSU will maintain its man-made wetlands by pumping water into them from the Olentangy River. Bill Mitsch, a professor of natural re- sources andenvironmental science atOSU, said the project will cost about $500,000 ajid is completely funded from private "sources. urdue restricts rollerblading The Parking and Traffic Committee of Purdue University has passed aregu- lation that prohibits the use of in-line skates in any campus building or on any surface where damage may occur, ac- cOrding to The Purdue Exponent. * Violations ofthe regulation will result in.$15 fines. Violations involving the ; use of skateboards also will result in the contiscation or the sKateboard until te fine is paid. These sanctions come after Sdamage to various parts of the campus as a result of reckless Rollerblading. Marijuana at Delta Campus police recently discovered two marijuana plants growing in the southwestern fields of Delta College 'in Mid-Michigan. A Delta student is suspected of in- volvement with the cultivation of the pjants. Sgt. Kim Beckel told The Delta Collegiate that the suspect could face charges of manufacturing and cultivat- ing marijuana, which is a four-year felony. The suspect may either be sus- pended or put on probation by Delta. Bucknell gets Calvin and Hobbes house This fall, students at Bucknell Univer- sity have a new living option located on fraternity row - the C.A.L.V.I.N. and H.O.B.B.E.S. house. The house is spon- sored by a group of students who have promised to abstain from drugs and alco- liol. The name stands for "creating a lively, valuable, ingenious new habit of being at Bucknell andenjoying sobriety." job fair in Livonia Wayne State and Eastern Michigan universities will be co-sponsoring the 16th Michigan Collegiate Job Fair for graduating seniors Friday from 9 a.m. to 3p.m., Burton Manor, 27777 Schoolcraft Rd. in Livonia. The fair will provide opportunities for students to meet with more than 100 employers who are looking to fill entry- level positions. For further information call Nannette McCleary at (313) 577- 3390 or Ken Meyer at (313) 487-0400. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Lisa Poris from staff and wire reports By Michelle Lee Thompson Daily Staff Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly considered a motion last night that would have lessened MSA President Flint Wainess' power to lobby the Uni- versity Board of Regents on a draft of the Code for Student Conduct. L SA Rep. Jonathan Freeman's proposal, which comesjust two weeks before the regents are sched- uled to vote on the Code, called for Student Rights Commission Chair Anne Marie Ellison to serve as the assembly's spokesperson on the Code, rather than Wainess. Ellison asserted that Wainess supported the current draft of the Code, written by the Office of Student Affairs. Wainess, who spoke as a student representative to the regents earlier this year on the current interim code, denied accusations that he has not represented the assembly's views. "I thought I was representing MSA consistently with the platform I ran on and consistent with what the assembly stood for," Wainess said last night. After the assembly voted to postpone Freeman's motion indefinitely, Ellison said she would not have wanted the spokesperson position. "I wouldn't do it if it were given me," Ellison said, adding that "I'm not interested in their titles - I'm interested in furthering students' rights." Ellison said, "I'm convinced that the president is giving up on this issue to score victories on other issues." Wainess said Monday that he did not approve of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs' decision to urge the regents not to approve the Code. Last night, Wainess defended his decision, be- cause the regents said in April that if they do not adopt a Code from the Office of Student Affairs, they will adopt the code of another college, such as Stanford University. But Ellison viewed the situation differently. "SACUA had the guts to come out in support of student rights and our leader didn't," Ellison told the assembly last night. Pharmacy Rep. Matt Curin said he did not approve of the way Wainess represented the assembly's position on the Code. "I don't like what Flint's doing, but I don't want to look like jerks to the regents," Curin said. Freeman said, "We need to have the most knowl- edgeable person speaking to administrators and whomever," adding that Ellison has 1 1/2 years of experience with previous versions of the Code. LSA Rep. Scott Sandler said, "I believe that as MSA, our president should be our spokesman on everything'," adding that the timing of Freeman's resolution could hurt the assembly's credibility with the regents. "For us, two weeks before they're going to vote on (the Code) - to give a vote of no confidence would be extremely damaging," Sandler said. Student General Counsel Paul Scublinski told Ellison and Wainess that they should resolve their differences and work to fight for students' rights. Death, exinction focuses of LSA. theme semester AP PHOTO Thanksgiving elf State Rep. Michael Bennane (D-Detroit) is pictured with an elf figurehead on his desk on the floor of the state House in Lansing. The 50-year-old elf will be featured in Detroit's Thanksgiving Day parade. Study: Men, women don't differ m Ji 0 a0 * By Jeff Eldridge Daily Staff Reporter Men and women might not be too different after all - at least where politics is concerned. According to a recent study by Nancy Burns, University assistant professor ofpolitical science, publishedin the Ameri- can Journal of Political Science, the similarities in the political habits of men and women far outweigh the differences. "There's a set of 'common knowledge' that says women's motivations for activity are different than men's," Burns said. "By and large, there's been a lot of theoretical work. People have had a lot of conversations about these different issues. But the data has not existed, so nobody has been able to know." The results of their study debunk many common political assumptions. In results that contradicted the researchers' initial expectations, the study foundno statistically notable differences in how major issues like the environment, crime, drugs, children and basic human needs affected voting patterns. There are also few differences in reasons and motivations for activity. "The biggest difference between gender activity is that men give more money than women do," Burns said. Despite this distinction, women activists are just as likely as men to work on campaigns, attend protests and serve on govern- ing boards. Categories generally considered "women's issues" were found to hold little interest in members of either gender. Burns said few women concentrate their political activity on women's issues like sexual assault and harassment.. The study also found that differences in income affect the issues of concern for women. "When we do studies of elite women involved in politics, a lot of women said it's their job to help other women," Burns said. "We are likely for along time to see this difference between elite politics and ordinary citizen activity, mostly driven by the fact that elite women really see it as their job to do this." There were some slight differences nonetheless. Men are more likely to mention taxes (15 percent of men vs. 12 percent of women) and foreign policy (8 percent of men vs. 5 percent of women) as important reasons for participating in politics, while women are more likely to include education (20 percent of women vs. 13 percent ofmen) and abortion (14 percent of women vs. 7 percent of men) as their chief concerns. The difference in reasons men and women cite for involvement are numerically small. Eighty-five percent of women and 84 percentof men cited civic gratification from working on apolitical campaign, whereas 25 percent of women and 24 percent of men listed material benefits as the impetus of their involvement. Burns and colleagues Kay Lehman Schlozman and Jesse Donahue of Boston College and Sidney Varba of Harvard University studied 2,500 Americans nationwide. Peter Harbage, Rackham student and president of the College Democrats, and Angela Jerkatis, LSA junior and president of the College Republicans, said the study accu- rately portrayed their organizations. Both said their groups were evenly split between male and female members. "I think women tend to be slightly more active in a lot of the grassroots activities," Jerkatis said. She noted that women hold two of her organization's five executive positions. Harbage said he thinks his group's members are drawn to participate for ideological reasons more than material gains. "I think it's safe to say most of the people who are involved are doing so because they're Democrats and want to help the Democratic Party," he said. By Kiran Chaudhri Daily Staff Reporter As students plan their schedules for next term, they may come across some interesting classes listed in the course guide. Don't be surprised to find "The Black Death," "Death in Shake- speare," or "The Impact of Techno- logical Disasters on Human Commu- nities." These are among the 36 courses of- fered next term as a part of LSA's Theme Semester, sponsored by the Pro- gram on Studies in Religion. The 1996 winter term theme is "Death, Extinc- tion, and the Future of Humanity: Ap- proaching the Millennium." "This is what your education is for," anthropology Prof. Roy Rappaport said of the purpose of theme semesters. "The theme has to transcend any discipline's expertise - it has to pro- pose some sort ofgeneral problem which our students and other audiences will be living with over the next decades or century," said Rappaport, the program's director. "They have to have some sort of living meaning," he said. Past theme semesters have included "The Theory and Practice of Evil," "Working in a Multicultural Society: the Changing- Face of Labor in the United States," ."Comedy," and "The Americas: Beyond 1492." Political science Prof. David Singer, who will teach "U.S. Foreign Policy in Global Context: Death Defying and Death Dealing," said he hopes to ap- proach the material in a more exciting manner than the usual "cut-and-dried" format. "It's foreign policy with a twist," Singer said. In the School of Natural Resources and Environment, Prof. David Allan will instruct the class "Conservation of Bio- logical Diversity and Species Extinc- tion." Allan said that he believes the course ties right into the theme semester. "The subject is crucial to humanity - it represents the loss of the biologi- cal capitol of the earth," Allan said. "There's a linkage of that life support system to our own mortality." In addition to courses, the theme se- mester includes a film series, a special event at the Matthaei Botanical Gar- dens, a play, a children's drama, an art exhibit and a public lecture series. En- glish Prof. Ralph Williams will head the lecture series, which will feature several visiting speakers, including Some Theme Semester Courses ® Cultural Anthropology 448: Ritual, Sanctity, and Adaptation - Responses to Personal and Cultural Crisis U Classical Civilization 453: Magic and Magicians in the Greco-Roman World ® Classical Civilization 480: Death and Memory in the Ancient World English 240: Poetry, Loss and Mourning * English 317: Bigotry & Maturity in the Literature of Several Cultures English 317: Literature and Homicide ®3 English 317: P~erspectives on Death in Literature and Film e Film-Video 413/English 413: The Future in Cinema: Other Worlds, Other Visions * History of Art 1.94: The Black Death History of Art 484: The Art of Indonesia and Cambodia, From Apogee to Extinction: The Disappearance of Great Civilization 9 Humanities 102: The Face of War: Emotion and Armed Conflict 0 Ancient Civilizations and Biblical Studies 281: Ancient Egypt and its World U Ancient Civilizations and Biblical Studies 393/APTIS 393/ Religion 393: The Religion of Zoroaster Hebrew and Jewish Cultural Studies 577/Judaic Studies 467. "A Time to Mourn, A Time to Dance": On Emotion and the Senses in Judaism * Religion 402: Life, Death, and Spiritual Development Religion 404: Death, Extinction and the Future of Humanity: A pproaching the Millennium University Courses 150: The Books of the Dead theologians Hans Kung and Martin Marty and Caroline Bynum, president of the American Historical Associa- tion. Rappaport emphasized that this winter's theme "deals with issues that threaten humanity - not only about biological extinction, but what it means to be human." correction Mike Newman, an SNRE senior and group leader of the Progressive Jewish Committee, said he was thankfulYitzhak Rabin's --assassin was not an Arab. This was incorrectly reported in Monday's Daily. Pres. search forums delayed until December i c c Suit filed against accused rapist SALINE (AP) - Nineteen-year-old Muysenberg says she lost all sense of Amanda Muysenberg says her life was security, leading her to buy a shotgun shattered after five young men sexually and a Rottweiler and get an unlisted assaulted her at a party nearly two years phone number. GRour MEETINGS Q American Baptist Student Fellow- ship, free meal, meeting, 663- 9367, First Baptist Church, Cam- pusCenter, 512 East Huron, 5:30- 7 p.m. Q AIESEC Michigan, general member meeting, 662-1690, Business Administration Building, Room 1276, 6 p.m. Q Archery Club, 930-0189, Sports Coliseum, Hill Street, 7-9 p.m. Q Conference on the Holocaust, 769- 0500, Hillel Building, 7:30 p.m. Q Hindu Students Council, firing line, 764-2671, Michigan Union, Pond Room, 8 p.m. Q La Voz Mexicana, meeting, 994- 9139, Michigan League, Room D, 7 p.m. Q Ninjutsu Club, beginners welcome, 761-8251, intramural Sports Building, Room G-21, 7:30-9 p.m. Q Reform Chavurah, weekly meeting, anyone welcome, Hillel Building, Hill Street, 7 p.m. Q Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, men and women, beginners welcome, 994- location, 8 p.m. EvE.NTs U "After the 'Storm' in Krajina: Whither Croatia?" Vesna Pusic, brown bag lecture series, spon- sored by Center for Russian and East European Studies, Lane Hall Commons Room, 12 noon U "Bonnie Brereton Celebrating Pub- lication of Her Book," sponsored by Shaman Drum, Shaman Drum Bookshop, 315 South State, 4-6 p.m. U "Careers in Consulting," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, Michigan Union, Pendleton Room, 7:10-8:30 p.m. U "Career Opportunities With a Lib- eral Arts Degree," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, Michigan Union, Pendleton Room, 5:10-6:30 p.m. U "Law Placement: Facts, Trends, Options," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, 3200 Student Activities Building, 4:10- 5 p.m. rt lea i%-l tiwa~i+ ~witl Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room, 6:10-7:30 p.m. Q "TheComprachlos," sponsoredby Students of Objectivism, Michi- gan League, Conference Room 6, 7 p.m. Q "Through the Wire - Lexington Women's Control Unit," sponsored by The Revolu- tionary Anti-Imperialist League and The Maoist Internationalist Movement, East Quad, Room 126, 7:15 p.m STUDENT SERVICES U Campus information Centers, Michigan Union and North Cam- pus Commons, 763-INFO, info@umich.edu, UM*Events on GOpherBLUE, and http:// www.umich.edu/~info on the World Wide Web U English Composition Board Peer Tutoring, 741-8958, Mason Hall, Room 444C, 7-11 p.m. Q Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley, 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter The public forums designed to col- lect campus input on the criteria for selecting the next president will not begin until at least December, said Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison saidyesterday. Harrison said at last month'sUniversity Board of Regents' meeting that the forums were. tenta- tively scheduled to coincide with next week's regents meeting in Ann Arbor. The board announced in October that Provost J. Bernard Machen, Secretary Roberta Palmer and Harrison would plan the series of public forums to gather opinions from faculty, staffand students. Harrison said the group has not yet completed its recommendation, which is scheduled to be presented next week. "We haven't even finished our rec- ommendations to the regents, so it's nremature to say when (the forums) ago. In the aftermath of the attack, she didn't go to the prom at Saline High School or graduate with her class. Her friends in the town of 6,700 south of Ann Arbor turned on her, accusing her of promiscuity and being out to get one of the men, she said. Now, she says she has decided to stop being a victim. "It's not fair they took all that ftom me," said Muysenberg, who agreet to be interviewed and photographed by the Detroit Free Press as part of her recovery. "It's time to get some of what I went through back." UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN M- wp- - '. aw.. - I .. .... . .-_- :\. . r. r :;- 2 PERFORMANCES ! ien' Cfiz -16 ... .. _ / { . { 136th ANNUAL FALL CONCERT Jerry Blackstone, Director I