The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 23, 1992 - Page 3 Students, faculty receive awards in convocation by Guillermo Pinzcuk More than 4,500 students and several faculty members were hon- ored at the 69th . inual Honors Convocation yesterday at Hill Auditorium. Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Gilbert Whitaker said the purpose of the Honors Convocation is to recognize the aca- demic excellence of undergraduate students. "It's the one time during the year where the University recognizes un- dergraduate honor students as a whole," he said. Many undergraduate students from the Flint, Ann Arbor and Dearborn campuses received class honors which recognizes their high academic achievement. First-year students who were in the top 5 per- cent of their class were awarded the William Branstrom Prizes. Also, students who have received all A's for two or more consecutive terms were recognized as James Angell Scholars. Engineering senior T.P. Bidigare, who was recognized as an Angell Scholar with seven straight semesters of straight A's said, "I thought that it was a positive experience." Reflecting on the quality of the undergraduate education at Michigan, he said, "I think that on the whole, they (the professors) try to do as much for you as they can given their time considerations." Five professors were named Thurnau Professors, in recognition of excellence in undergraduate teaching along with scholarship. The Thurnau Professors included: Don Cameron, professor of Greek and Latin; Patricia Gurin, professor of psychology; Philip Hanlon, profes- sor of mathematics; George Siedel, professor of business law; and Herbert Winful, associate professor of electrical engineering. The Thurnau Professors were chosen by a committee of faculty headed by Whitaker. Whitaker said the professors were chosen from a larger group which was selected by the deans of the undergraduate schools. Student input was a major con- sideration in selecting the professors, Whitaker added. "It shows that people can be both a strong scholar and teacher. It (The Trunau Award) is our major Universitywide undergraduate teaching award," he said. Whitaker added that "they are all very excellent teachers and scholars." Five professors a year are named Thurnau Professors, Whitaker said. The award gives the professors $20,000 grants each to support their teaching and research over a three- year period. Cameron said he was pleased with the Thurnau award. "I'm unabashedly tickled about it. It counters the notion that gradu- ate studies and research are only valued here," Cameron said. Winful, who is the faculty adviser of Eta Kappa Nu, the undergraduate electrical engineering society, said, "I'm incredibly honored. It's a reflection of how I feel about the undergraduate education. It goes back to my days with Professor Hermann Hause at MIT. He was my inspiration. Everything I've done I've striven to emulate him." Dirty laundry LSA senior Mark Sheldon uses the dryers Friday in West Quad. Sheldon's apartment building has only one washer/dryer. Focus Hope founder challenges leaders to help the poor by Shelle Morrison Daily Staff Reporter Students and faculty fell silent Friday as Focus Hope founder William Cunningham and local community leaders called on future politicians to rectify social problems that have created the socially-ordered "underclass." In the fifth annual conference on political affairs, sponsored by the Undergraduate Political Science Association (UPS A), speakers ad- dressed the politics of problems faced by the poverty-stricken, the unemployed, and the blue-collar worker - what political scientists call the underclass. State Rep. Kirk Profit (D- Ypsilanti), Ypsilanti United Auto Workers union leader Monica Kenny, keynote speaker Father Cunningham, and professors from around the country addressed these issues before a Michigan Union audience. Cunnigham called for future politicians to be "true leaders." "Too many politicians are afraid to upset things but the truth is things can only change if the order is upset," Cunningham said. "True leadership doesn't have a AAA triptik to follow, and unless the politicians of the future think they will be true leaders, they should think again," Cunningham said. Other speakers discussed proba- ble causes and possible solutions of the poverty problem in the United States. "Poverty is caused by social, po- litical and economic problems," said political science Professor Mary Corcoran. "And because the problem has many components, a solution must be found for each in order to solve the greater problem." University social work Professor Sheldon Danziger said political re- form is not enough. "Government cannot correct the problem of poverty," Danziger said, "but economic growth can eliminate it." Other speakers examined more specific issues of the underclass in- cluding unemployment, auto trade, and this month's closing of GM's Willow Run assembly plant. Monica Kenny argued that the underclass is more than just a matter for discussion. "I'm sick of hearing learned people talk about theories and fig- ures relating to situation of the blue-collar worker," Kenny said. "Figures don't tell the story, life does, and the story is no one will have jobs if they close the auto plants, and the middle-class will disappear," she added. Kenny also made an appeal to aspiring politicians of the future. "So you kids think you are going into politics to do something?" asked Kenny. "Do something. Save the middle class." Profit went even further in the discussion of the working under- class, and said Willow Run was "murdered" by GM and Bush. "A murder has motive and opportunity," Profit said. "(President) Bush needed the support of Texas politically because he had already lost Michigan, and he was in Texas with GM executives the Friday before the decision was made. "There was motive, there was opportunity, there was murder," Profit said. UPSA organizers called the four-hour event a success. Eric Stempein, president of the UPS A, said the conference achieved its goal of enlightening students and other members of the political science community. "The goal of this conference was to get people talking, and that has happened," Stempein said. "The is- sue of the underclass is often over- looked, and I'm glad we could have people like Father Cunningham and Monica Kenny to stir things up." The event marked the fifth annual conference of political affairs dedicated to the memory of the late Jack Walker. Walker, a former University po- litical science professor, wrote about the plight of the poverty- stricken, the unemployed, and the blue-collar worker. Cunningham advocates leadership, but not through political careers by Laura Adderley Daily Staff Reporter In order to halt the escalating problems of the "underclass" and the unemployed, there is a need for new leadership, Father William Cunningham, co-founder of Detroit's Focus Hope, said Friday. "The very essence of leadership is well captured in the series of Star Trek - going where no one has gone before. If anyone has been there before, you're not a leader - not by my standards," Cunningham said in his opening address for the Jack Walker Memorial Conference. Focus Hope is a community- based organization in Detroit that offers food banks, job training, and child care to help the underprivi- leged of the city to help themselves. Referring to the recent reorgani- zations of countries such as Germany and Russia, Cunningham emphasized the importance of being open to new opinions and ideas. "Change is such an intimate and es- sential part of our society today," he said. Citing politicians as major road- blocks to the recovery of the under- class and unemployed, Cunningham said, "It sickens my heart and my stomach when people tell me they're getting ready for a political career. "I listen to young people who want a political career and they're already saying 'we.' Assassinate them now, tell them what jackasses they are. "There's really not very much that your teachers or gurus in politi- cal science can begin to tell you what's going to happen tomorrow," he added. Cunningham's speech ended with an emotional plea with the audience to take the effort to make a difference: "I ask with you, plead with you to make up your minds where you're going." Correction Christine Foster was misidentified in a letter to the editor last Thursday. She is an Engineering sophomore. On Friday, the Daily reported that the English department wasn't included in the U.S. News and World Report top 15 in the nation. It was ranked 14. THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Michigan voters upset with new party preference record Meetings Undergraduate Philosophy Club, Angell Hall 2220 7-8 p.m. Ann Arbor Committee For Detroit Summer '92, weekly meeting 4318 Michigan Union 6:30 p.m. Dialogue between Asian American Men and Women, U of M Asian American Students Coalition MLB, rm. 2114,7:30 p.m. American Advertising Federation, 3040 Frieze 6:00 p.m. Environmental Action (ENACT), weekly mtg, 1040 School of Natural Resources, 7 p.m. Public Relations Student Society of America (PASSA), mandatory mtg, 2050 Frieze Building, 5:00. Society for the Advancement of Environmental Education, 1046 School of Natural Resources, 7:30 p.m. Take Back the Night, weekly mtg, Michigan League, check information gb desk for rm, 7 ,p.m. Undergraduate Psych Society, 2235 Angell Hall, 7:30 p.m. U of M Sorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, weekly meeting, CCRB Martial Arts rm, 8:30-9:30 p.m. Speakers "Israeli Elections & Israel's role inAmerican Politcs," Hillel 7:30 p.m. "Authority in Law and Religion," Religion, Nat Sci Aud, 7:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. "Applications ofEnvironmental Education inthe Policy Process," 1046 Dana 7:30 p.m. "How should the UIiversity of Michigan respond toJapan Bashing?" Hendeson room. 8 p.m. "MacrocyclicSchiff Base Complexes as Models for the Copper Protein." 1640 Chem, 4:00 p.m. Furthermore "Public Skating, Yost Ice Arena, 1:50 p.m. Safewalk, night-time walking service. Sun-Thurs 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m., Fri-Sat, 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Stop by 102 UGLi or call 936-1000. Also, extended hours: Sun-Thurs 1:30-3 a.m. Stop by Angell Hall Computing Center or call 763- 4246. Northwalk, North Campus nighttime team walking service. Sun-Thur 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m. Stop by 2333 Bursley or call 763-WALK. U-M Taekwondo Club, Monday workout. CCRB Martial Arts Rm. 2275, 6:30-8:30 p.m. U of M Ninjitsu Club, practice, I-M Bldg, wrestling rm, 7-8:30 p.m. ECB Peer Writing Tutors. Angell/Mason Computing Center, 7-11 p.m. Stress and Time Management, Consultations with peer counselors available, 3100 Michigan Union, 2-4 p.m. Undergraduate Psychology Department, Undergraduate psychology advising, walk-in or appointment, K-108 West Quad, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Guild House Campus Ministry, discussion group, Women's Book Group, open group to women who wish to discuss women's religious, social, and political issues, 802 Monroe St., noon. Career Planning and Placement, Making a major choie, 4:10 p.m.-5:00 LANSING, Mich (AP) - The presidential primary road show whirled through Michigan and moved on, but complaints from an- gry voters about the state's new election rules still linger. Most voter anger focused on the fact that elections records will show who voted Republican and who voted Democratic. Howard Simon, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, said his office got "a call about every 30 seconds on election day" from someone angry about that or who didn't vote because of it. "They felt they were confronted with the choice of sacrificing their privacy in exchange for their right to vote," Simon said. "I can't figure out any reason why there's a permanent record of party preference, other than to have the state serve the needs of the par- ties by compiling a mailing list for use by the parties." Despite heavy campaigning by the major candidates and saturation coverage by the media, fewer than one in five registered voters went to the polls for last week's primary. About 18 percent of the state's 5.9 million registered voters, or slightly more than a million, voted. That's only 15.2 percent of the state's voting age population. Rep. Ken Sikkema (R- Grandville) unveiled a bill last week that would remove the party prefer- ence from the voter records of Tuesday's primary. "That's 55 years ago. Voters in this state have a history of complete privacy in how they vote. This elec- tion did tremendous violation to that," he said. Sikkema said he and his wife voted at different times and both saw would-be voters walk away from polling places when told about the party preference requirement. "It was that permanent record more than anything else that caused people not to vote," he said. "I think it had a sizable impact on turnout. "Every state has its own history of politics, voting behavior and election laws. People in other states have closed primaries and they're used to that. That's not true in Michigan. "I guess if there's one fundamen- tal issue at stake here, the electoral system ought to encourage partici- pation," he said. Paint it blackHAEOMU LSA sophomore Mike McCants paints boards for the Mystic Fashion Show Saturday in the Michigan Union Ballroom. Underworld criminal Gotti brought to trial NEW YORK (AP) -- Once hailed as a criminal mastermind, John Gotti has emerged at his racke- teering trial as a goofy godfather who violated the underworld's basic Gotti may be intelligent - he's reported to have an I.Q. of around 140 - and even his critics gave him credit for a certain low cunning. What else would explain his rise $120 000 a deade ago to start an il- legal casino. But Gotti began to bet against the house, and after a few nights he was in debt for $55,000. The Wrong Friends Narcotics convictions mean long prison terms, which sorely temot