The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 14, 1987 -Page 3
Ed. students may work
in low-income areas
By SCOTT BOWLES
Students in the School of Education may be
teaching and doing field work in urban and rural low-
income areas if a new proposal receives sufficient
funding.
The Undergraduate School of Education Student
Organization (USESO) and Dean Carl Berger
submitted the Individualized Teacher Certification
Program to Vice President James Duderstadt's office.
The proposal may be eligible for support under
Duderstadt's Undergraduate Initiatives Fund. The fund,
established in January, is designed to provide money
for new academic programs.
The purpose of the proposal is twofold: to prepare
students for teaching in low-income communites, and
to emphasize collaboration and integration with
educational leaders, such as administrators and
parents, in those communities.
PROGRAM COORDINATOR Jessica Good -
man, an LSA junior, said her group went before the
School of Education executive committee with the
proposal in early March and, after the committee's
approval and a budget revision, submitted the plan
April 1.
Berger said funding of the proposal, which asks for
an annual budget of about $86,000, would add a new
dimension to the School of Education.
"Under our current organization, we can't place
some students in certain areas to teach," Berger said.
"They can't go to Saginaw or Detroit, or even small
farm communities. We don't have the transportation.
To keep costs down, we have to keep most of the
students centered around Ann Arbor schools."
According to the nine-page proposal, $16,200
would pay to transport students to the schools via
carpool and University vehicles.
BERGER said he expects a decision around May
1. He said if the project is approved, he will imple-
ment it by next fall.
"We're quite proud of our undergraduates who
carried this through," Berger said. "It's going to
provide more individualized programs. It's going to
provide better teachers."
The benefits, however, may extend beyond
improved instructors; one of the project's goals is to
change the structure of education in poor areas.
"The challenges of education in low-income
communities require new solutions," the proposal
said. "A lack of community resources, racism and
class-ism... too often result in student alienation from
academic endeavor, rejection of one's cultural and
historical heritage, and students' view of themselves
as objects in the world rather than as actors."
Goodman, who helped write the proposal, said
training teachers in other communities could also
have an impact on a recent sensitive issue at the
University.
"The project could develop a better rapport with
schools in Detroit, which could aid in minority
enrollment here," she said.
Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY
Under the dock
Frank Williams and Walt Jamieson paint the underside of the LSA building loading dock. Williams has been
employed by the Plant Department for 26 years and Jamieson for 6 weeks, but Williams said, "He's teaching
me. There's not much to teach Frank, he's a journeyman."
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MSA plans network
for peace efforts
(Continued from Page1) tary research - it's all part of the
beings," she said. same thing," Victor said. "It's the
The committee has focused on exact same struggle. We're working
the proposed change in the clas- for equality - a higher ideal."
sified research guidelines during the
last year. The committee sponsored SHE PROPOSED a weekend
teach-ins on the end-use clause and conference in the fall on racism,
participated in University-sponsored sexism, and the arms race, invol -
forums. ving groups such as UCAR and
"If the regents vote to keep the FSACC. Victor also wants to
end-use clause, I'd call that a big establish'a "sister university" with
accomplishment," said former chair the University of San Salvador, to
Gus Teschke. However, he regretted learn more about the problems faced
not being able to direct the com - by students in El Salvador.
Wallace made racist remarks in '82
(Continued from Page 1)
Clarence Pendelton, chair of the
U.S. Civil Rights Commission,
led the demand for a full and public
apology. Pendelton maintains that
no nationally relevant apology has
been made, though CBS has
apologizied.
"An apology at the University of
Pennsylvania doesn't do much good
to people in L.A. unless it was
made available nationally," said
Pendelton's press secretary, Tom
Olson.
Wallace's objectivity has also
been questioned over a proposed "60
Minutes" expose of the deplorable
conditions in Haiti.
Wallace asked that the Haiti
story be cancelled, fearing pressure
might be put on his wife, who was
living there. Wallace also owned a
house and business in Haiti at the
time.
MORLEY SAFER, the
reporter who initiated the story,
reportedly said Wallace had "leaned
on him very hard" to stop the
investigation.
Wallace said in an interview
yesterday that it would be impos-
sible for him to influence his col-
leagues to suppress a story.
Wallace said anyone familiar
with his life and work for the past
35 years would not call him a
racist.
Wallace
... will speak on racism
F mittee's resources toward other
issues, such as U.S. involvement
in Central America.
Victor wants to see the
committee organize many groups
dealing with issues of peace and
justice. She said groups such as
Greeks for Peace, the Free South
Africa Coordinating Committee
(FSACC), the United Coalition
Against Racism (UCAR), and
MSA's military research advisors
could share knowledge and re -
sources.
"I want to see a connection made
really clearly between peace and
justice, racism, sexism, and mili -
"There is a problem of lack of
communication, leading to mis -
understanding and fear," Victor said.
"I think if people work together we
can dispel a lot of the fear."
Engineering sophomore Terry
Young, co-chair of the committee,
agrees that conferences and com-
munication are needed on campus.
"I came to the University pretty
naive to the world and conservative
in. my views," Young said. "I was
shocked to find out some of the
things that were going on, espe -
cially in the case of Central
America."
iTH LIST
What's happening in Ann Arbor today
p11 u s
The pregnancy test for your
eyes only. x
Private, portable, and easy to read, e.p.t. Plus '
can tell you if you're pregnant in as fast as
JO minutes. And in 30 minutes if you're not.
You can use it as soon as one day after a E
missed period. e.p.t. Plus, a fast and easy
way to know for sure. O
i
R
t
9:00 a.m.-10:40 a.m.+
or 11:00 a.m.-12:40 p.m.
CHILDREN'S SPORTS-O-RAMA
sponsored by
UM Department of Recreational Sports
SK
Designed for children 4-10 -
Provides structured and
supervised recreational
activities with an emphasis
on b0o motor mnovement,
aerobic fitness, tum bling, 'y" ,
groups activities and
swimming.
Saturday mornings : May 9 - June 20
Register in person at the
North Campus Recreation Building
2375 Hubbard, beginning April 21, 1987
Mon. - Fri., 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
and Wed. evening, 4:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
For cost/information, call 763-4560
Campus Cinema
Repo Man (Alex Cox, 1984),
MTF, 7 & 9 p.m., Mich.
Emilio Estevez is a punk who
signs on with a car repossession
outfit and gets caught up in a plot
involving convienience store
robberies, the FBI, and the corpse of
an alien creature. All this and Harry
Dean Stanton, too.
Rome 78 (James Nares, 1978),
Eyemediae, 8 p.m., 214 North
Fourth St.
A modern version of I, Claudius
(sort of) starring Lydia Lunch and
Eric Mitchell).
Performances
Tracy Lee and the Leonards-
9 p.m., Michigan Union Ballroom.
Early Music Ensemble- 8
p.m., School of Music, Blanche
Anderson Moore Hall, (763-4726).
Speakers
Ernst Katz- "The Legend of
Parcifal and the Holy Grail According
to W. von Eschenbach," 8 p.m., The
Rudolf Steiner Institute, 1923
Geddes Ave.
Robert Hinde- "Limits of
Evolutionary Approaches to Human
Behavior," 1 p.m., 35 Angell Hall.
Baldemar Velasquez- "The
Farmworker Struggle," 7 p.m.,
Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room.
Meetings
TARDAA/Dr. Who Fan
Club- 8 p.m., 296 Dennison.
Union of Students for Isreal-
7 p.m., Hillel.
Campus Bible Study- 7 p.m.,
Michigan League Room C.
Alpha Kappa Psi, Prof-
essional Business Fraternity-
5:15 p.m., 1320 Kresge.
Amnesty International Chap-
ter of Ann Arbor- 7:30 p.m.,
Michigan Union.
Furthermore
Rugby Football Club- 8 p.m.,
The Coliseum, Corner of Hill and
Fifth, (996-4529).
Revolutionary History
Series- "The Cuban Revolution:
The Limits of Nationalism," 7 p.m.,
439 Mason Hall.
Introduction to Disaster
Services- American Red Cross
Training Course, 7 p.m., 2729
Packard, (971-5300).
Vespers of Holy Week- 7
p.m., Lord of Light Lutheran
Church, 801 South Forest.
STUDENT S
do you need
SUMMER
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