The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 11, 1994 - 3 Phone registration to replace CRISP, hassle of waiting in long lines Asian Americans unite in Diag rally By MICHELLE JOYCE DAILY STAFF REPORTER Attending the University not only requires a lot of work but also the patience to stand in lines. Thanks to technology, the number of lines are diminishing. Piloting this summer and begin- ning in November, the process of CRISP (Computerized Registration Involving Student Participation) will begin the switchover to touch-tone telephone format. Instead of waiting in line at Angell Hall at their respec- tive appointment times, students will be given the option of registering from remote locations by phone. However, this process is not unique for colleges. Many schools, including Michigan State University, have been using phone registration for some time. "It's a very popular way of regis- tering," said University Registrar Laura Patterson. The question has often arisen: Why has the University, which is usually on the brink of most technological advancements, waited so long to implement such a program? Tom McElvain, assistant Univer- sity registrar and project manager for the new phone registration process, saidnthere was never a tremendous need for the University to change. "The system we currently operate is actually quite efficient," he said. "And compared to most other non- telephone registration, it's quite con- venient." McElvain added that the pressure to have remote registration was less at the University since the majority of students live close to campus. The ongoing renovation of Angell Hall, which makes the current regis- tration area smaller, was the impetus for the new registration program. The University is also now willing to com- pletely back the project at this time. "Support for touchtone registra- tion is coming directly from the Of- fice of the Provost," Patterson said. Patterson and McElvain agreed _ that the new process should be quite simple to follow. After filling out an election worksheet, students will call into a computer voice-response system at their assigned time or any time after- ward. Copies of schedules can then be sent to e-mail addresses for students to print. McElvain said the real advantage to this new program is its conve- nience. Not only will students be able to register from anywhere on campus, but there will also be 18 hours each day in which the registration process can be completed. McElvain added that even more hours may be added in the future. Patterson said this new process will save the University money in the long run due to cutting costs for tem- porary employment used during CRISP. Most students seemed pleased with the University's decision to switch to the new format. "It's about time the University got such a program," said LSA senior Bill Huber, who is graduating later this month. "I regret that I will not be able to use it during my four years here." By LARA TAYLOR DAILY STAFF REPORTER Green, blue and yellow posterboard glistened in the noon- time sun during the Midwest Asian American Student Union (MAASU) rally Saturday. Attended by about 200 people, the rally was an extension of the MAASU conference this weekend, both of which attempted to promote aware- ness of prejudice against Asian Ameri- cans and show Asian American pride. "Rallies like this give us more confidence in ourselves," said LSA sophomore Sophois Sohkon. "All the people here have the same desire - to get the respect we deserve as Ameri- cans." The rally began on the Union steps with people yelling and holding signs with sayings such as "United Asian Americans" and "Asian American and Proud." The group then walked to the steps of the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library, where various speakers de- livered small, inspirational messages. The rally attracted students from, the University and schools across the country, including Notre Dame and Carleton College. "There are a ton of stereotypes from our physical appearance," said Andrea Yun, a member of the MAASU executive coordinating com- mittee at Indiana University. "People are surprised that we can speak En- glish without an accent, even though a lot of us were born in America." Vinh Bui, a junior at Michigan State University, said, "I hope this gets people more assertive. It's about time we get rid of some of the myths." He went on to criticize entrance quotas in colleges and the lack of financial aid available for Asian Americans. Scott Delacourte, a first-year Law student, observed from the Diag. "I think this is a positive develop- ment for Asian students," he said. "It shows a lot of solidarity and unity. It is great to have so many schools rep- resented." He said he wondered, however, why they were marching. "What's their agenda?" he asked. The group left the Grad steps and marched down South University Av- enue back to the Union, posterboard proclaiming, "I'm Asian American, So Bite Me" waving in the wind. JUDITH PERKINS/Daily An unidentified student marches to support Asian American rights. Association for Asian American studies holds 11th conference By DWIGHT DAVIS DAILY STAFF REPORTER The Association for Asian Ameri- can Studies descended on campus this weekend for its 11th national confer- ence. Centered around delivering sev- eral hundred academic papers, the conference included numerous work- shops on teaching and research meth- ods and several artistic exhibitions. A highlight was Friday night's multi-media songstory "A Grain of Sand," written and performed by singer-dancer-songwriter Nobuko Miyamoto. The autobiographical event traced her life from being forced into Japanese relocation camps to performing in the Broadway and movie versions of "West Side Story" to protesting with the Black Panthers. Miyamoto was rewarded with an en- thusiastic standing ovation from the Rackham Auditorium audience of about 300. As with most academic confer- ences, the focus of attention was the numerous scholarly papers read and discussed in nearly 100 sessions spread over three days and two ven- ues - Rackham and the League. Bringing together scholars from a wide range of academic disciplines, the paper topics ran the gamut from "Japanese American Women in the Kona Coffee Industry" to "A Perfect Christian: Rhetoric of Self in Chris- tian Narrative of Korean Americans." Grace Y. Pang, a University doc- toral student, announced before she began reading her paper - originally titled "Madame Butterfly and the Truth about Sex" - that anyone expecting to find the truth about sex would be disappointed. "I don't know the truth about sex, sorry," she said. She did discuss in a densely lay- ered academic response to some as- pects of David Mamet's play "Ma- dame Butterfly" that issues of race and sex did not "flow together easily" when put in a specific ethnic studies context. And that the assumption that the uplifting of a minority group cen- tered around the "numbers game" of "heterosexual production" - the more of us there are the better we will be - should be examined more care- fully. In a paper with perhaps more in- terest for the layperson, University scholar Cristine Noriko Paschild asked the question many have asked before: Why did Roman Polanski name his famous .film noir classic "Chinatown," when the actual Los Angeles Chinatown does not appear in the film until the final scene and then plays the role of nondescript backdrop to the climactic event of the film? In her paper "'A Chinatown of the Mind': The Metaphorization of a Ra- cial Ghetto," Paschild discussed how Polanski's "Chinatown" referred not to the physical place but to an idea in the Western mind. All that is dark; exotic, or sordid became associated with the idea of "Chinatown." Using travel narratives of the 19th and early 20th centuries, Paschild showed how this idea of a dark, mysterious Chinatown superseded the reality of a Chinatown in Western consciousness. In this sense all film noir movies could be called "Chinatown" in that they, by definition, center on the dark and mysterious side of the psyche. One participant in the conference, Imogene Lim an ethno-archeologist from Queen's College CUNY, said studying her own people was "a roots finding and a way for me to have a dialogue with my parents." A third- generation Chinese Canadian, Lim spoke highly of the conference. "There is an openness not com- mon at academic conferences," Lim said. "There is more discussion and a real sense of community here." Debate rages over flogging of teen in Singapore ® U.S. youth still faces sentence for vandalizing cars SINGAPORE (AP) - Singapore newspapers are strik- ing back at critics of a flogging sentence given to a U.S. teen-ager for vandalizing cars, pointing out that many Americans support the beating. Michael P. Fay, 18, of Dayton, Ohio, was sentenced to six strokes of a rattan cane, four months in jail and a $2,229 fine after he pleaded guilty to spraying paint and tossing eggs at cars. The sentence has not been carried out. "American politicians and commentators - stout champions of the rule of law - have been busy lashing out at Singapore," Warren Fernandez wrote in a column in The Sunday Times. "These commentators gloss over, or refuse to accept, the fact that many Americans appear to accept Singapore's decision." The Dayton Daily News reported last week that of about 3,000 people who called the newspaper about the flogging, nearly three out of four approved of the sentence. The real issue is whether "an American should be exempt from Singapore's tough laws because some Ameri- cans find these laws distasteful," Fernandez wrote. Fay has until April 20 to appeal for clemency from President Ong Teng Cheong. Ong has received a letter from President Clinton urg- ing that Fay be spared a beating. The contents of the letter have not been disclosed. Clinton earlier described the punishment as "extreme." In an editorial Friday, the Business Times said "It was to be expected that the American media would jump on the Fay case. "Small, parochial newspapers which would have prob- lems identifying Singapore on the map have carried the news reports, the major newspapers have run editorials which in essence call Singapore a barbaric place for daring to flog one of its wayward sons ... America's journalistic pundits would do far better to ponder ways in which their cities can pull back from the edge of the abyss of anarchy." Fay pleaded guilty to two charges each of vandalism and mischief and one of keeping stolen items. In dismissing his appeal, Chief Justice Yong Pung How said the vandalism "amounted to a calculated course of criminal conduct." National Science Foundation to give $11.1 million for computer upgrade The National Science Founda- tion (NSF) will give Michigan-based Merit Network Inc. an $11.1 mil- lion contract as part of its effort to upgrade the Internet computer net- work. With the money, Merit will con- tinue its role as "routing arbiter," something like an electronic post office. Merit will aid groups or or- ganizations that provide Internet service, such as the University. Merit, a non-profit company gov- erned by 11 of Michigan's public universities, has managed NSF's network for the past six years. Beyond its national routing re- sponsibilities, Merit operates the statewide network, MichNet, which links businesses, government and educational institutions. Also receiving contracts are MCI, which will provide a high- speed network, and the University of Southern California's Informa- tion Sciences Institute, which will Asseerob & serve a role similar to Merit Network's. Head Start kids lose edge by 8th grade Education Prof. Valerie E. Lee discovered that the reason children who were involved in the Head Start program lose their early edge is the low quality of the schools they sub- sequently attend. The study, presented last week in New Orleans to the American Educational Research Association, found that Head Start graduates gen- erally attend unsafe schools with poor educational climates and lim- ited resouces. "No matter how much early 'boost' these children receive from their Head Start experience, the sys- tematically lower quality of the schools they attend thereafter, and the inferior education they receive in those schools, is sure to under- mine any early advantage," Lee said. Lee and graduate student Susanna Loeb studied more than 15,000 students in 975 public and private schools. Fourteen percent had attended Head Start, 44 percent attended other preschools, and 42 percent did not attend preschool. Their research indicates that Head Start is a successful program, but students need to be afforded a quality education afterward, or the benefits diminish. The study apparently did not compare Head Start students who attended safe, well-funded schools to those who attended poor, unsafe schools. -By Daily Staff Reporter Scot Woods ,Gunmen kill top Egyptian anti-terrorist security chief CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Police believe five gunmen attacking from a motorcycle and a car carried out the assassination of Egypt's top anti-ter- rorist official as he left his home near the Giza Pyramids, security officials said yesterday. The killing Saturday night was the most daring operation carried out in Cairo in the two-year campaign by Muslim radicals to overthrow the secular government and turn Egypt into an Islamic state. The government had claimed to have curbed the extremists, but they were able to strike in the capital and kill the very man assigned to destroy them. The victim, Maj. Gen. Raouf Khayrat, was deputy chief of state security intelligence in charge of reli- gious terrorist activities. a .1 Financial Aid Applicants: The first priority deadline for applications for 1994-95 FinancialAid is: Friday, April 15, 1994 Group Meetings Q Advertising Club, 2050 Frieze Building, 5 p.m. Q Comedy Company Writers' Meeting, University Activities Center, Michigan Union, 7 p.m. Q Golden Key National Honor Society, induction ceremony, Michigan League, Ballroom, 7 p.m. Q Graduate Employees' Organi- zation, Rackham, East Confer- Events J "Beyond Centers and Borders: Reexamining Subjectivity and Power in International Rela- tions," Lily Ling, Haven Hall, Eldersveld Room, 5:45 p.m. U "China-Russian Relations: Les- sons from the Past, Prospects for the Future," Alexander V. Pantsov, sponsored the Center for Russian and East European Studies, Lane Hall Commons, 4 p.m. U Environmental Letter Writing, Stuaent services " 76-GUIDE, peer counseling line, call 76-GUIDE, 7 p.m.-8 a.m. " Campus Information Center, Michigan Union, 763-INFO; events info., 76-EVENT; film info., 763-FILM. U Free Tax Assistance, 3909 Michigan Union, noon-8 p.m. U North Campus Information Center, 763-NCIC, 7:30 a.m.- 5:30 p.m. U Peer Advising, sponsored by the .... . ...... ............. The Office of Financial Aid I I