The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 24, 1993 - 3 Entree Plus worries students By ADAM ANGER DAILY STAFF REPORTER More than 16,000 students use 'Entree Plus - the convenient form of "cashless" payment for purchases at on-campus stores and restaurants. Andwhile users seem satisfied with the service, many students are skepti- cal about the security of their Entree Plus debit cards. Students may think Entree Plus money is more secure than cash or credit cards. However, some subscrib- ers to Entree Plus worry it is too easy for others to use their card to charge purchases on their account. University Law student Luis Fuentes-Rohwer said he has stopped carrying his Entree Plus card because he does not want it to get stolen. "I don't keep (my Entree Plus card) in my wallet because (the vendors) don't check the picture," he said. "People start thinking of Entree Plus as a credit card," said Fuentes- Rohwer. Keith Thomas, manager of the Little Caesar's restaurant in the Michi- gan Union, admitted his cashiers sometimes forget to check the photo- graphs on students' Entree Plus card. "We see people using others' cards a lot," Thomas said. Although many students use their friends' Entree Plus cards, Thomas said, Ilittle Caesars has only seen one incidence of someone charging on a stolen card. Many students said they voluntar- ily let others use their Entree Plus card and have no problem. "My roommate uses mine, and I use hers. I know (vendors) don't check the picture ID," said Birdie Goynes, an LSA junior. 'People start thinking of Entree Plus as a credit card,' - Luis Fuentes-Rohwer Law student University officials said they put Entree Plus money directly on stu- dents' ID cards for two reasons: to provide students with the convenience of carrying only one card, and to en- sure that a photograph is included on the Entree Plus card. "If the merchant checks the photo there, shouldn't be a problem," said Lynn Colbert, office manager of the University Housing Office. She said the office has only had a few incidences out of 16,000 Entree Plus accounts where problems have arisen with stolen cards used for charg- ing purchases. "If (the student) makes a police report, we can print the transaction to find the locations," she said. "We will charge back the vendor and reimburse the student for those charges." Students do not have access to money once they have put it in their Entree Plus accounts. It can be used only for charging on Entree Plus. CHALK OUTLINE Work study students find financial opportunities By NADIA CHOWHAN FOR THE DAILY In addition to tying educational expense and academics together, the University attests federal work study options provide an outlet to under- graduate and graduate students in need of financial aid. "The program is an excellent form of financial assistance," said Vicki Crupper, a senior Financial Aid of- ficer at the University. All University departments sup- port federal work study students. Ap- proximately 3,000 students currently participate in the program. Eligibility for work study is based on each student's financial need. "Stu- dents must meet criterion established through the federal need analysis methodology," Crupper said in a writ- ten statement, without detailing the specific guidelines. Most work study students who live in one of the residence halls work for the University. Students who live off campus are usually employed by a private nonprofit organization or a local, state or federal public agency. Most federal work study jobs re- late to the student's course of study, a benefit many students enjoy. 'Many first-year students think working is unrealistic when added to their academic workload. ... We have found the opposite is actually true, and students who work tend to be as academically successful as their nonworking classmates,' - Vicki Crupper senior financial aid officer "Besiders paying my bills, (federal work study) gives me an opportunity to work in the area of my concentra- tion," said LSA sophomore Nerissa Marbury. But Marbury added, "Studying comes first, work is second." Unlike a regular paying job, work study jobs have flexible hours, which allow students to schedule work around studies. "Many first-year students think working is unrealistic when added to their academic workload," Crupper said. -"We have found the opposite is actually true, and students who work tend to be as academically successful as their nonworking classmates." The flexibility, expense-aid and educational benefits add up to a prof- itable experience, said some federal work study students. "At least I know the money I'm making is going somewhere useful," said LSA first-year student Kate Baldridge. Federal work study students re- ceive at least minimum wage, but the pay varies according to the type of work and the skills needed. Crupper explained, "Wage rates are established by the University Compensation Office and are based upon the tasks normally required of the position. Each job classification has a wage range approved by the University." The program asks interested stu- dents to fill out a work study applica- tion at the Office of Financial Aid. Students who receive work study in their Financial Aid Package then locate listings of available positions in the Student Employment Office, the Comprehensive Studies Office or at any residence hall library. SUSAN ISAAK/Daily EMU student Todd Chaplin chalks on State Street as LSA senior June Han watches. 'U' presidential assistant moves to director position By RONNIE GLASSBERG FOR THE DAILY Less than three months after she wrote an article in the Chronicle for Higher Education describing the re- sponsibilities of an executive assis- tant to a university president, Constance Cook has left that position for "an opportunity too good to pass up." Beginning Nov. 1, Cook ~u will become the director of the University's Center for Re- search on V Learning and (CRLT).\ Cook said that in Presi- dent James Cook Duderstadt's office, she had influence on many policy decisions and activities. But her new job will entail more in-depth decision mak- ing. "In the CRLT position, I have more influence on a smaller number of ac- tivities and policies. It is a question of focused efforts versus diffused ef- forts," she said. CRLT, which was organized in 1962, is "designed to foster the im- provement of teaching in the Univer- sity," said Donald Brown, who has served as director of CRLT since 1983. CRLT sponsors many programs, including hosting a program two times each summer to help train interna- tional teaching assistants (TAs) in English. The center also runs regular series of workshops for faculty and TAs, and provides a media laboratory for faculty use. CRLT also videotapes classrooms and then reviews these tapes with instructors. Before coming to the University in 1990, Cook served as director of the U.S. Department of Education's Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE) Comprehensive Program. She said her experiences make her uniquely qualified for the CRLT job. "People have been suggesting that I take this position ever since I arrived at U of M because my background is so obviously appropriate, but I did not want to leave the president's office too quickly," said Cook. "The CRLT directorship is a very interesting and appropriate way to use my own back- ground and training." She added, "The overwhelming reason for me to take the CRLT posi- tion is that I feel so strongly about good teaching and student learning. Those are topics I care deeply about." Cook has been doing business from a base in Cafe Fino in the Michigan Union because her new position hasn't started yet. She is on leave from her position as executive assistant. University President James Duderstadt said in the University Record that Cook "brought the rare combination of having been chair of the political science department at Albion College and director of a ma- jor funding program to this position, and she will bring the same sort of understanding of complex educational issues to this new assignment. "We will all miss her greatly here, but we'll all benefit from her eager- ness to take on this important new assignment," he said. In the Chronicle, Cook described the risk and burnout involved in the executive assistant position, which she has held for three years. "I'm certainly not leaving because of the risk," said Cook. "I am leaving because I feel that the pressures and workload of the president's office are sufficient so that people should not stay there forever." She said she learned a great deal working in the president's office and "particularly enjoyed working with President Duderstadt." In her article, Cook wrote presi- dential assistants have"tremendous power - lots more than most observ- ers realize." Cook said she is proud of the role she played in filling vacant positions at the University, and of "the quality of the people chosen for positions in searches that I staffed - especially Maureen Hartford, the vice president for student affairs, and Chancellor James Renick at the University of Michigan-Dearborn." The University has implemented an advisory task force to review the center's current activities and suggest future priorities. William Stebbins, Rackham associate dean for faculty programs, will chair the task force. Cook said the task force will help her think through the future priorities for CRLT. "One of the issues being discussed by the task force and one that I feel strongly about is more effort on the part of CRLT to train faculty and TAs to deal with our diverse student body and to infuse diversity into the cur' riculum," said Cook. Cook wants CRLT to do a careful analysis of campus needs and try to prioritize its tasks in order to meet those needs as effectively as pos- sible. "Clearly, undergraduate educa- tion is at the top of the list of priori- ties and both (Provost and Vice Presi- dent for Academic Affairs Gilbert Whitaker) and President Duderstadt care deeply about good teaching and high quality undergraduate educa- tion," she said. Cook said she has begun to devisO a strategy to solve campus problems; "Specifically, I plan to work with deans and department chairs to help them customize their own training program," she said. Former CRLT Director Brown will continue teaching at the University before retiring. Cook holds a Ph.D. from Boston Unversity, an M.A. from Pennsylva- nia State University and a B.A. frobn Barnard University - all in political science. , Michigan's tax cut leads to higher. private school enrollment BIRMINGHAM (AP) - As Michigan public schools wonder who is going to pay the bills with the slash- ing of property taxes next year, reli- gious and other private schools say their enrollments are rising this fall. Most private schools declined to attribute the increased enrollment to the financial uncertainty facing pub- lic education, citing other reasons. Detroit Country Day Schools in Birmingham have about 100 new stu- dents this year and have hired several new teachers to handle the growth. "Our admissions department al- ways does a little survey of parents," said spokesperson Pat Hochstein. "And we've found people are looking for challenging education in a safe environment. And some students are even coming from other independent schools." Friday Q Africa Proconsularis: The Changing Use of A Roman Landscape Around the Municipium Segermes in Tu- nisia, lecture, speaker: Soren Dietz, Tappan Building, room 180, 7:30 p.m. U Amnesty International, benefit concert with The Springgans, Dominick's, 812 Monroe, 8 p.m. Q Arab American Students' As- sociation, mass meeting, Michi- gan Union, Wolverine Room, 8:30 p.m. U Chinese Christian Fellowship, meeting, Dana Building, 1040, 7:30 p.m. Q Japan Student Association, general meeting, Michigan Union, Pond Rooms ABC, 7:30 p.m. Q Korean Campus Crusade for Christ, fellowship meeting, Campus Chapel, 1236 103, 11 a.m-4 p.m. Q Saint Mary Student Parish, campus prayer group, 7 p.m., rosary group, 7:30 p.m., 331 Thompson. Q Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, everyone welcome, CCRB, room 2275, 6-7 p.m. Q Tae Kwon Do Club, everyone welcome, CCRB, room 2275, 7-9 p.m. Q Tenant Control in Public Hous- ing, Michigan Union, Pond Room, 12-2 p.m. Q Yankee Dawg You Die!, play, Residential College Audito- rium, 8 p.m. Q Yom Kippur Services, Conser- vative services at the Power Center, all others at Hillel, 1429 Hill St., students are asked to bring I.D., 7:10 p.m. U Weekly Bridge Game, Dupli- cate Bridge Club, Michigan Union, Tap Room, 7:30 p.m. Q Yom Kippur Services, Conser- vative and Orthodox services, 9 a.m., Reform services, 10 a.m., Conservative services at the Power Center, all others at Hillel, 1429 Hill St., students are asked to bring I.D. Sunday Q Alpha Phi Omega, pledge meet- ing, 6 p.m., chapter meeting, 7 p.m., Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room. Q Christian Life Church Sunday Service, School of Education, Schorling Auditorium, 11 a.m. Q Safewalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service, UGLi, lobby, 936-1000, 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Q United Reform Church, discus- sion on prayer, 9 a.m., worship, 10:30 a.m., free lunchon 12 p.m., 1001 E. Huron, 12 p.m. Q Video on Sexual Orientation, Guild House Campus Ministry, Memorial Christian Church, Parochial schools reporting higher enrollments say spiritual reasons, rather than financial, generally moti- vate parents who enroll their children. St. Stephen Lutheran School in Oakland County's Waterford Town- ship has about 10 new students this year. Officials tell parents the school is a parochial, not a private one, said spokesperson Linda Oswald. "We hope their motivation is be- REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE. KEEP OUR PLANET CLEAN AND FREE OF WASTE. (THE JANITORS IN THE FISHBOWL WILL TIA NJT[ yAiIkeE DAW$ yo k by opula demand!' cause we're aparochial school ... rather than just escaping the public sector," Oswald said. Holy Name preschool and elemen- tary school in Birmingham has added 40 to 50 students this year. Parents who enroll their children often cite educational deficiencies in the public schools, said spokesperson Joanne Durham. "They have not mentioned cut- backs too much,"she said. Gov. John Engler this summer signed a bill eliminating local prop= erty taxes as a source of funding fol public school operations. His admin istration and legislators are discuss- ing how to make up for the $6.3 bil- lion in lost revenues and whether to link the financing to other educational changes, such as schools of choice and teacher tenure-law revisions. 9r I 1 UgU!JUE~ M *,a -Nmm