U'studi By SAM T. DUDEK Daily Staff Reporter Every semester, students take part in a challenging and aggravating ritual, spending hours painfully preparing for one fateful moment. *No, it's not finals that cause such strife. It's CRISPing. One student, however, is trying to ease this burden. LSA senior Daniel Abrams has developed a computer program he said will save students from wasting endless hours as they manipulate lecture and discussion Widow crusades for truth in sentencing 0 r Petition to be distributed to more than 21,000 convenience stores WASHINGTON (AP) - A Michigan woman whose husband was killed during a convenience store rob- helped kick off a national peti- t n drive yesterday to get "truth in sentencing" laws on the books in ev- ery state. The effort is aimed at ensuring that criminals serve at least 85 per- cent of their sentences instead of be- ing released early due to prison over- crowding or good behavior. The petitions are available in more t an 21,000 convenience stores na- wide now until Sept. 25, organiz- rs said at a press conference near the Capitol. Participants include the National ssociation of Convenience Stores, he Fraternal Order of Police and the afe Streets Coalition, a grassroots rganization that is pushing "truth in entencing" laws like those in place n states like Michigan, Missouri and . zona. Linda Clark, who lives near Flint, jch., began her crusade to get a law Splace there after her husband, Kevin, as killed May 10, 1993. The law as enacted June 24 of this year, but n't been implemented in this state et. Clark said she got involved when he couldn't assure her two children, w five and seven years old, that the ple who killed their father would ebehind bars for a specific period of ime. "How many chances can we give hese violent criminals when they've mly given their victims no chances?" park said. Also on hand to persuade the pub- n to sign the petitions was Marc lass, father of Polly, who captured national spotlight when she was dnapped from her slumber party in alifornia and killed by a repeat of- ender. He has since been tried and con- icted for her murder. "Go to a convenience store. Buy a jnt of milk. Don't buy a pint of milk. ut certainly sign this truth in sen- encing petition," Klass said. The groups say violent criminals serving only 37 percent of their entence, which is unacceptable to lim and many of their supporters 'und the country. Rep. Bill Baker (R-Calif.) said eterrence would offset the cost of xtra prison time. "The goal is to eliminate the crime self," Baker said. The Michigan Dailv -- Thursdav. September 15. 1994 -- 3 Thet cirneavtes rogapr-tre hzR IaV4S'ntGr caosI I - rnt creates program to pre uvent CRISP chaos j times to create the perfect schedule. "When I was CRISPing for my second semester freshman year," Abrams explained, "I thought, 'Heck, a computer should be able to do this."' He was right. After two years and more than 1,400 hours, Abrams, with the help of University alum Timothy Sharp, cre- ated "Course Scheduling Made Easy" (CSME). The program works similar to CRISP-INFO. Students type in the classes they want and CSME informs the user how many possible sched- ules can be made. Users can make special requests, such as no classes before 10 a.m., the omission of closed classes and the removal of classes taught by certain professors. The program then recalculates the number of possible schedules. This process can be continued until the student finds their perfect schedule. Abrams did not stop there. He founded his own company, Collegiate Insight, and set up meet- ings to sell his product to the Univer- sity. He says the administrators he has talked with have shown enthusiasm toward his product. "(Administrators) have been very good to me," Abrams said. "They've been very coopera- tive." Chuck Judge, an LSA adviser, was not as impressed. "It's a nice little program," he said about an earlier version of the program, but he contin- ued, "I do not think it's needed." Abrams' concern is now whether the University is willing to buy his program. "They've been really busy lately (with registration). It's under- standable that these past three weeks they haven't returned any ofmy phone calls, but it doesn't make me feel warm and fuzzy inside," he joked. Where does Abrams go from here? If he can successfully sell CSME to the University, Abrams said he would like to move on to other schools, such as Michigan State University and the University of Texas, to sell his product. But he said he wants the Univer- sity to have it first, and will sacrifice some profit to let his alma mater gain first rights. "I want it up at Michigan first," he said. "I want people five years from now seeing my name and saying, 'Oh, you're the Dan Abrams!"' Besides CSME, Abrams is cur- rently working on 19 other inven- tions, including a patent-pending three-dimensional computer mouse. "I'd like to think I'm a creative renaissance type of guy," he said. DUST BUSTER Senate leaders si ll battling to pass health care The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Senate Ma- jority Leader George J. Mitchell (D- Maine) said yesterday that he and a small bipartisan group of senators had made "a great deal of progress" to- ward agreement on a modest health care bill, but he acknowledged the obstacles to passing any legislation are profound. "We remain committed to this ef- fort and united in the belief it is both possible and desirable to get a bill passed this year," Mitchell said after an hour-long meeting with four sena- tors in a self-styled "mainstream" coalition. Many once-supportive members of the Senate are now eager to drop health reform permanently, and want to do it well before the November elections. A simpler proposal could pass, senators estimate. The so-called mainstream pro- posal is a package of insurance regu- lations that would prohibit insurers from denying coverage to sick people or to individuals when they change jobs. It also includes Medicare and Medicaid cuts that would be used to fund subsidies for low-income people and to help reduce the deficit. It is a largely voluntary program, with no requirement that employers provide coverage to employees. Aides to Sen. John H. Chafee (R- R.I.) said the Congressional Budget Office's preliminary estimate is that the bill would cover 94 percent of the population by the year 2000. Other than the pressure of time, the "mainstream" plan faces a num- ber of other obstacles: The White House and health analysts have suc- cessfully argued that insurance mar- ket reform without universal cover- age will drive up the cost of premiums for some insured people. A recent study backed by the in- surance industry found that premi- ums for small business could jump as much as 30 percent if Congress en- acts insurance reforms without re- quiring that everyone to buy insur- ance. Secondly, the bill is nearly 900 pages long and will give ammunition to Republicans who have argued that all pending legislation is too complex to be considered at the last minute. As the "Pizza House" restaurant goes under reconstruction, Tim Smith helps keep the mess under control by spraying water on the dust that flies up as a bulldozer makes a pile of rubble. Teachers urge lawmakers to expel students with guns LANSING (AP) -- Carol Powell once talked a seventh-grade boy into putting down the loaded semiauto- matic gun he was pointing at her and a classroom full of children. She doesn't want to have to do it again. Powell, a seventh grade litera- ture teacher in West Branch, joined Gov. John Engler yesterday in urging lawmakers to pass a measure requir- ing expulsion of students who bring weapons to school. "It would keep this child from doing it again," she said. The measure already has passed the Senate. It faces action Tuesday in the House Education Committee. The co-chairman of that panel, Rep. Wil- liam Bryant, said some changes might be made to prevent ridiculous situa- tions. "We need to provide a little bit of flexibility so that if a five-year-old kid in total innocence wanders into school to turn a gun in, that they don't have to kick the kid out because he's a carrying a weapon," said Bryant (R- Grosse Point Farms). The bill would require expulsion of any student bringing a weapon to school and would bar him or her from being admitted to any other public school. A student in fifth grade or below could petition for reinstatement after 60 school days and the school board could reinstate the child after 90 school days. Older students would have to wait 150 school days to petition and school boards couldn't reinstate them for 180 school days. That's a full school year. Michigan schools already do ex- pel students in such cases. In the first three months of 1994, 73 were ex- pelled for gun use or possession, the governor's office said. Engler said special schools could be set up for such offenders. Without changers, Bryant said, the bill would require the permanent ex- pulsion of even small children. Bryant said a compromise worked out with the governor's office would still require such children to be imme- diately expelled. But they could avoid permanent expulsion by showing that the item wasn't brought with the in- tention of using it as a weapon. They also could try to show that they didn't knowingly possess it or that they did not know it was a dan- gerous weapon, such as a knife with a blade longer than three inches. Students couls also try to show that they brought the weapon as part of a handgun amnesty program. "If the community and police are trumping it up and the school is talk- ing about it and some little third grader decides to take Daddy's gun out of the drawer because that's what they are supposed to do and walk into school to turn it in ... we need to allow a school board to say, 'Wait a minute,"' Bryant said. Engler is up for re-election in No- vember. His opponent, Democrat Howard Wolpe, said he called for similar legislation a year ago. "Of course students who come to school with guns should be expelled from school," he said, adding he sup- ports putting them in alternative pro- grams. George Burns, 98, recovering well Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES - Beloved co- median George Burns was conscious and in stable condition at Cedars- Sinai Medical Center Tuesday fol- lowing a two-hour operation to re- move fluid from his brain, a hospital spokesman said. Burns, 98, entered the hospital Monday afternoon and entered sur- gery at about 6 p.m., spokesman Ron Wise said. "I have no sense of impending disaster," Wise said, adding that Burns "tolerated the surgery well.... With any kind of luck he'll be out of here in a week." Burns was flown to Cedars-Sinai for observation July 13 immediately after a fall in a bathtub in his Las Vegas home, which required two stitches for a cut. He was released from the hospital then, but his speech was slurred as a result of the accident and the slurring worsened recently, according to Burns' manager, Irving Fein. The fluid had gathered above Burns' brain as a direct result of the fall, Wise said, and the surgery was designed to relieve pressure on the brain. Fein said Burns has canceled en- gagements in Foxport, Conn., from Sept. 30 to Oct. 2, and a luncheon at the Plaza Hotel in New York, as a result of the surgery. Earlier this year, Burns celebrated his 98th birthday with a sellout show where he received several standing ovations as he traced his 91-year ca- reer. Burns, with his trademark cigar, has been a fixture in comedy since vaudeville and moved later into ra- dio, motion pictures and television. Mass Meeting Wednesday, Sept. 21 The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard 70#30 p.m. Join the Navy, see the world Join the Daily, see the Batcave. rrection MUSKET will be performing "Hair," not "Little Shop of Horrors," this year. This was incorrectly reported in the ew Student Edition of the Daily. 5~ 5 Ale To The Victi roup Meetings Q Alcoholics Anonynmous, group meeting, 3200Michigan Union, 7 p.m. U Haiti Solidarity Group, First United Methodist Church, 120 S. State, 7:30 p.m.--_ Events 0 "Feminist Heterosexuality and Its Politically Incorrect Plea- sures," sponsored by the Woman's Studies Department Michigan League, 4-6 p.m. U Poetry Reading, sponsored by ham Amphitheatre, 5 p.m. U Hillel, Yom Kippur Break Fast Meal, 1429 Hill, Stdntserices U 76-GUIDE, peer counseling phone line, call 76-GUIDE, 7 or Tiv; Ann Iuhaw'o Wt'1 Pwrdirnfrnm ME= r