The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, September 26, 1989 - Paoe3 Service fraternity .Seeks new proj ects !y Jennifer Miller Paily Staff Writer Pledges at Alpha Phi Omega don't have to go through a formal rish system to become a member - but they must be dedicated to helping others and volunteering their (ine for community service. APO members met last night Wvith more than 30 leaders of Ann Zrbor community service o'rganizations - including kafehouse and the Red Cross - at the Michigan League to offer their Delp and demonstrate the kinds of community service they perform. " "I don't think there is a project we have turned down," said tngineering Sophomore Helen fellanca, APO's vice president of $ervice. "Whatever this community teeds, we are here to offer." *APO members are required to do i0 hours of community service per emester. The non-Greek co-ed trternity performs more than 5,000 * ours of service every semester. The annual Ohio State rniversity-Michigan blood battle is ope of APO's largest service projects. APO started coordinating the blood drive in 1971 and has won the championship six years in a row. "It is a friendly rivalry, and when the esult is over 13,000 pints of blood between two schools, we are all *winners," said University alumna Maggie Katz, a chapter advisor and tectional chair responsible for nine PO chapters in Michigan. :k The group's national chapters collected more than 250,000 pints of blood in less than a year and received the American Association of Blood Banks President's Award at the National Red Cross Convention last rThe award is given to only one * rvice group a year. Community leaders last night praised APO's past outstanding community service. "You can just not imagine how great they have Made some seniors feel in this bmmunity," Peggy Hinchey, executive director of the local Senior titizens Guild; told the audience. Michigan's APO membership *hs surged in the past 10 years. "I've seen this chapter come from 15 Mdembers up to the largest chapter i (he region, and if they continue, they re going to be the largest in the Pnited States," said Bobby Hainline, te group's regional director. College offers rebates on tuition incr by Mary Anne Chase To help students in the struggle to afford a college education, one state college has come up with a new idea - rebates on tuition in- creases. All first-year students pursuing a degree this fall at Dearborn's Henry Ford Community College will be el- igible to participate in the school's new tuition increase rebate program. The program, the first of its kind in the nation, will enable .future graduates to receive a rebate on all tuition increases assessed after the term in which he or she initially en- rolls. To obtain the rebate, the stu- dent must earn a degree within four years, and all courses must be taken at Henry Ford. "The goal is to respond to our student's needs," said Randall Miller, vice president of college relations at the community college. To remain competitive, he said, the college had to find a way to fight consistently rising tuition rates, which have re- cently outpaced inflation. Miller said the program would be much harder to implement at other colleges and universities. He stressed that many other costs, besides educa- tion, are factored into the tuition in- creases. "The pressure is all the way around," he said. Besides academic expenditures, colleges and universi- ties are "expected to provide a more complex system of services," such as student services, development studies, counseling and health ser- vices. "The variables considered in the cost function are very different for a A eases community college," than a college like the University of Michigah, Miller added. Richard Kennedy, the University of Michigan's vice president of gav ernment relations, agreed. "Th4 complex nature of programs that go on here would make such a program' (in the immediate sense) cost-prq- hibitive," he said. "Under the right circumstances, a tuition freeze could work, but no one has figured out ,a way to make up for revenues else- where." Associate Vice President of Academic Affairs Robert Holbrook said it would be difficult to imple- ment a tuition freeze in four years. For example, Holbrook said, many students take longer than four years to complete their undergraduate de- grees. Archaeologists work to save Indian bones from destruction ConstructionJONATHAN USS/Dailv Though the new chemistry building has been completed, signs of construction still remain. Prisoner continues to be force fed Associated Press Major museums are returning their collections of Indian bones to tribes for reburial, but Michigan ar- chaeologists say many remain in private hands or, worse, are being destroyed rather than reported. "The biggest problem is development. Bones are found by contractors and developers and their discovery is hushed up," state archaeologist John Halsey said yesterday in Lansing. State law requires anyone who finds human remains to report the discovery to the police, who in turn must inform Halsey's office of Indian finds. Yet Halsey said he receives fewer than one or two calls a year. Most people, he said, don't want the hassle of con- struction delays while archaeologists survey their land. And most police departments don't think the finds are important enough to report, he said. "It's very frustrating," he said. Michigan Indian tribes continually have pressed for the return or reburial of the bones and relics of their ancestors. Most Michigan institutions have complied, although some, such as the University of Michigan, have held onto skeletons pre-dating 1650, arguing that they are "pre-history" and therefore valuable for re- search. "A trained archaeologist looks at a human skeleton as a form of data," said Gordon Grosscup, acting chairman of anthropology at Wayne State University. "As an archaeologist, my concern is the preservation of data. Burying in the ground is not a good way ©f preserving data." Earlier this month, the Smithsonian Institution an- nounced it will turn over 18,600 American Indian re- mains to tribes that want their ancestors reburied. To the outrage of some, Indian remains still find their way into Michigan museum displays. A Detrit woman said she was angry when she opened a woven basket at a Mackinac Island museum last monthie find a skull, presumably Indian. "I took it kind of personally," said Rene Rochester, a Cherokee. The skull was kept at the John Stuart House, a museum rum by the village of Mackinl i Island. Curator Dan Seeley said he found the skull two years ago in a muddy ditch where village workers were replacing sewer lines. "I simply cleaned him off and forgot about it," Seeley said yesterday. Since Rochester's unhappy en- counter, Seeley said, he has buried the skull in the museum backyard. "There was nothing disrespectful about this," he said. "The respectful thing was to pick him out of he mud in the first place." Human skeletons on Mackinac Island are nothing new, Seeley added, because the island was a ceremonial burial ground for Indian tribes who believed it was in, habited by the Great Spirit. JACKSON, Mich. (AP) - A prisoner who says God wants him to fast to prove his innocence continued to be force-fed yesterday after agree- ing to have his live-in companion named as his guardian. Rene Acuna, serving a life sen- tence at the State Prison of Southern Michigan for conspiracy to deliver, and delivery of, more than two pounds of cocaine, consented to the naming of Anna Acuna as his guardian at a hearing before Jackson County Probate Judge Fred Sill. The tube feeding began after his weight decreased to 107- pounds, dropping from 190 because of the fast, which has lasted longer than any other in the state of Michigan, according to Department of Correc- tions officials. Anna Acuna said after the hearing that she has agreed to continue the LIST force-feeding because he looked weak, despite having gained six pounds since receiving nourishment. Prison officials refused to let re- porters attend the hearing, which was held inside the prison hospital, "because they felt it would draw addi- tional publicity to him and force him to maintain a behavior that wasn't in his long-term interest," said Gail Light, spokesperson for the Department of Corrections THE What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Michigan Student Assembly Meeting - The student gov't meets at 7:30 in room 3909 of the Union Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry - 6:30 p.m. at Hillel Indian & Pakistani-American Students' Council - Weekly meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the Welker Room of the Union Recycling advocates training meeting - 7-9 p.m. in the Pond koom of the Union Speakers 4'A View from the Top: The Corporate Manager" - with Dr. Thomas Cannon; Sponsored by the Society of Minority Engineering Students at 6:30 p.m. in 1500 EECS "Utilization of Sigmatrophy for Expedient Synthesis of Natural Products" - the 29th. annual Bachmann Memorial Lecture with Prof. Leo Paquette of Ohio State University; 3:30 p.m. in Room 1800 of the Dow Lab "Perfect Order Versus Imperfections in the Early History of Solid State Physics" - W. Conyers Herring, professor emeritus at Stanford University, will speak at 4 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater Furthermore Webb; noon to 1 p.m. in 1524 Rackham Career Planning & Placement Programming - Resume Lecture from 4:10 to 5 p.m. at the Union Wolverine Room; Writing Cover Letters form 5:10 to 6 p.m. in the Union Wolverine Room; Job Search Lecture from 4:10 to 5 p.m. in 1040 Dana Building Senior Portraits - portraits will be taken from 8:30 to 5 p.m. on the 2d floor of the UGLi Spark Revolutionary History Series - A fight for freedom: Working people fight for a better life; the charist movement of 1838-1848; from 7 to 8 p.m. in 118 MLB Michigan Student Assembly/Palestine Solidarity Committee Delegation - mem- bers of the delegation will speak in a panel discussion at 7:0 p.m. at the Guild House "Higher Education for Southern Women after the Civil War: The Curriculum as a Tool of Socialization" -a speech by Johnetta Brazzell (Ph. D. candidate) in the research Luncheon Series of CEW's Black Women in Transition Series; from noon to 1:30 p.m. in the conference room above the Comerica Bank at the Corner of N. University and S. Thayer Streets English Composition Board peer tutors available; Angell-Haven and 611 Computing Centers; a Ca Take econdsanddde We're noIjsae fnnilsrie ooain er lnnrd how to spend the rest of your l ife J/"- s / the bbtanthrbsnes Beunttedoyet, ouldou?aet oi aoe orsces sors ed eeryTht'oaeit hpus. Atitth e'idry'sokinesortaenand edteatinal o spportAndits wh. the est n th busnes .",. Counttedit, oulou? aet oi aoe orsces sors ed everythat'stokaykeithpus.ttinde'reyookinstforaentnand otential o ofupportu ni ltiso onspott owt t marketng repesenttives ork riht alng ih riss itrirdeinrsnurss P!l 4