2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 30, 1994 GIES Continued from page 1 But when their hiding place was discovered in 1944, the Franks and their Jewish friends were sent to Germanconcentration campus. Only Frank's father, Otto, survived the war. Months after the war ended, Otto Frank returned to Amsterdam, where Gies gave him Frank's diary and other papers left behind in the hiding place. In 1947, "The Secret Annexe," was first published. It later appeared in the United States as "Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl." "If it wasn't for her, the diary would have never been published. When she went back to the attic, she. found the notebook, which was the diary, and she kept it," Iutter said. Gies, who was born in Austria in 1909 but moved to the Netherlands in 1920, still lives in Amsterdam. Butter lived in the same neighbor- hood as the Franks and also fled Ger- many for Amsterdam like the Franks. Butter also knew Anne Frank, but Frank was older than her. Like Frank, Butter also went to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. "It is unfortunate that contrary to my own survival, her destiny did not permit that," Butter said. Established in 1985, the Wallenberg Endowment funds the University's annual lecture and medal presentation, and provides support each year for doctoral students whose scholarly work is related to the goals and values of the lectureship. Previous Wallenberg lecturers have included Nobel-laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel; Jan Karski, courier for the Polish un- derground resistance during World War II and an early witness to the Holocaust; Helen Suzman, a long- time South African legislator and crusader against apartheid; and Bud- dhist leader Tenzin Gyatso, 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet and Nobel Peace Prize winner. Interviews with over fifty law school admissions officers reveal: How the admissions process really works - How to write an effective personal statement What makes a strong recommendation Where to apply to maximize your chances for acceptance How to prepare for the first year of law school - and beyond Join Pat Harris Leading Expert in the Nation on Law School Admissions either day: Saturday, October 1st 1pm - 4pm or Sunday, October 2nd 4pm " 8pm Saturday - Kaplan Educational Center, 337 E. Liberty St., Ann Arbor, Ml 48104 Sunday - Michigan Union, Pendleton Room Limited Seating Available Call 313/662-3149 to reserve your place and get an edge on the competition Sponsored by: Uindergraduate Law Club & Haplail Educatioijal Cepters UNDERGRADUATE LAW CLUB MASS MEETING IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING SEMINAR SUNDAY OCT.2ND, 7PM Pat Harris will be available for questions following the meeting. TUITION Continued from page 1 According to the College Board, average tuition across the country is $11,709 at four-year private schools and $2,686 at four-yearpublic schools, both 6-percent increases over last year. Although the increase was twice the inflation rate, it was also the small- est since 1989. The University's rate is $5,457 for lower-division in-state LSA students. David Warren, president of the Na- tional Association of Independent Col- leges and Universities, said health-care benefits for members and staff account for much of the tuition increases around the country. Peterson echoed similar sentiments about the University. "The University is very labor-inten- sive," Peterson said. "Costs in human labor increase faster than other costs." She said rising costs for tuition are in part driven by health-care rate in- creases for University employees. Peterson asserted that University tuition also rises faster than the national average because the University has many more programs and provides a higher quality of education than most schools around the country. Since the University is a public in- stitution, it depends on state appropria- tions to supplement tuition income. This year, state appropriations to Religious AVAVAVAVA Episcopal Church at U of M CANTERBURY HOUSE 518 E. Washington St. (behind Laura Ashley) SUNDAY: 5 p.m. Holy Eucharist Followed by informal supper All Welcome 665-0606 The Rev'd Virginia Peacock, Chaplain CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER CHURCH Worship: 11 a.m. & 7 p.m. 2146 Moeller Ave. Ypsilanti 4854670 Pastor Henry J. Healey CORNERSTONE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 971-9150. Michael Caulk, pastor. Child and adult Sunday School class at 9:30 a.m. Forsythe Middle School, 1655 Newport Rd. SUNDAY: 10:30 a.m. worship service. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS MINISTRY 1423 Washtenaw (between South U. & Hill) WORSHIP SUNDAY: 9:45 am. Faith, Exploration Discussions in French Room over coffee and bagels Worship: 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Brunch: 12 noon (Students Free) THURSDAY: 5:30 p.m. Campus Worship (casual) in Curtis Room suppers following Rev. Amy M. Heinrich, Campus Pastor 662-4466 HURON VALLEY COMMUNITY CHURCH Gay-Lesbian Ministry 741-1174 KOREAN CHURCH OF ANN ARBOR 3301 Creek Dr. 971-9777 SUNDAY: 9:30 a.m. English, 11 a.m. & 8 p.m. Korean NORTHSIDE COMMUNITY CHURCH 929 Barton Drive Between Plymouth Rd. and Pontiac Trail SUNDAY: Worship - 11 a.m. Christian Education - 9:45 a.m. A particular welcome to North Campus students Episcopal and Presbyterian Worship on North Campus (Broadway at Baits Dr.) NORTHSIDE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ST. AIDAN'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 1679 Broadway (at Baits Dr.) 663-5503 Two congregations committed to inclusive welcoming community SUNDAY : 8:30 Episcopal Holy Eucharist 9:30 Church School & Adult Education 11:00 Presbyterian Community Worship 11:00 Episcopal Holy Eucharist Nursery Provided PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH 2580 Packard Road, Ann Arbor The Largest Student Group in Town SUNDAY: Bible Study 9:30 a.m. Contemporary Worship at 11 a.m. Kevin Richardson, Campus Minister For Transportation Call 971-0773 ST. CLARE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 2309 Packard Rd. 662-2449. Est. 1953. Membership: 500. Ven. Douglas Evett & Rev. Susan Bock. SUNDAY 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. ST. MARY STUDENT VIARISH (A Roman Catholic Community at U-M) 331 Thompson * 663-0557 (Corner of William and Thompson) Weekend Liturgies SATUjRAY: 5 p.m. SUNDAY: 8:30 p.m., 10 a.m., 12 noon, 5 p.m., and 7 p.m. FRIDAY: Confessions 4-5 p.m. Curious about Neopagan Druidism? Join us for workshops, rituals, etc. Call SHINING LAKES GROVE,ADF 665-8428 UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL, LCMS 1511 Washtenaw, near Hill SATURDAY: Worship 6:30 p.m. SU.NDAY:~ Worship 10:30 a.m. the University rose 2.3 percent, which helped keep the annual tuition in- creaseremain lower than in past years. Over the past five years, a typical student's tuition at the University has risen 10.1 percent - the highest in- crease in the Big Ten Conference. During the previous two years, the University received almost no in- crease in state appropriations. "In the early '80s, private college tuition was going up at twice the rate of inflation," King said. King said state appropriations around the country dropped in the late 1980s due to the recession. Then pub- lic schools saw dramatic tuition hikes. Peterson said since the University is a research institution, the cost of tech- nology puts it at a disadvantage when the tuition is compared to other schools. Yet some critics are not sympa- thetic. "We're paying more and getting less than we got 10 years ago," said Stephanie Arelonio, president of the U.S. StudentAssociation. "We'relearn- ing from videotapes in some instances. Class sizes have grown.... It would be nice to see the professor sometime." The proportion of their budgets that colleges spent on instruction fell within the last year from 32.4 percent to 30.7 percent, according to the U.S. Department of Education. Government statistics also report that the proportion of money used by colleges for instruction, libraries and maintenance is shrinking, and the amount spent on public relations, mar- keting and fund-raising is increasing. "It raises the question of what edu- cational institutions are here for," said James Perley, a biology professor at the College of Wooster in Ohio and president of the American Associa- tion of University Professors. Warren said many of the increased administrative costs are going to coun- seling and job placement services, which he said college students are demanding. Colleges must spend to promote themselves in a competitive market, said David Breneman, former presi- dent of Kalamazoo College. HEALTH Continued from page 1 of Powell as president. "It might take a Republican president to overcome the opposition in his own party to something like universal healthcare." Associate Prof. Richard Lichtenstein of the Department of Health Services Management teaches a course on the history of health care in America. He said Clinton is not the first press dent to attempt to change the health delivery system. Jimmy Carter, Rich- ard Nixon and Harry Truman have all tackled the issue. "It (is) very evident that we have known about the problems which were articulated by the Clinton administra- tion for 60 years," Lichtenstein said. Lichtenstein compared the prob- lems of America's health system to- cancer and said, "That cancer doesn go away; it keeps growing. "What I'm referring to is not only cost of care, but also inequalities in health status between different seg- ments of the population. We have the wrong types of physicians practicing these days." Lichtenstein accused the GOP of scaring Congress from taking action. Campbell agreed, saying Repub* cans lacked the "burning desire" nec- essary to make changes in the face of entrenched interests. "There are very, very heavy eco- nomic stakes for some very powerful institutions in American society on this issue," Campbell said. Despite those interests, the prob- lems continue to fester. And piece-meal efforts to solve the problem could more harm than good, the experts say. Lichtenstein said America cannot simply expand coverage to the unin- sured working poor without changing the way health care is delivered. "(A) lot of employers who employ those low-income people and do give them benefits now will cut them off (saying) 'You might as well get it from the Feds. Why should I pay fe it?"' he said. "You wind up with mo people at the public trough." (uteria, as iC was called, had (n N3 F E- C dU C3 rI x U- }L 03 L 0 0- ~0 C J~ '! I four electric washing machines which could be rented by the hour ! " " " ! f " ! ! E0 0 " 0 " yg y \0 4 f 0 ! RC) 0'wft~h j~~fi0 r.)A~0 ! ,,a~.'~ f ! ! " 0 " ! ! 0 p '\ e q0 ! 0 0 " 0 " ! f " __ 0 " 0 0 0 ~Ay~c Th~h ~r~Th~6e 0 ! r " " ! f f 00 6 0" " 0 0 -~ 0 0 b IfC pmomm N a .0 FUTURE Continued from page 1 "The effect that we've observed so far was that grades did go up, and people felt that they were getting much more involved with the material." One of the key benefits ofmultime- dia software is interaction, allowing the student to learn at their own pace, to skip material that is familiar or repeat confusing topics. Edna Coffin, professor of modern Hebrew and director of Project FLAME (Foreign Language Appli- cations in aMultimediaEnvironment), believes interactive software, espe- cially for large classes, allows for a more personal instruction. "If you engage somebody for 50 minutes - a classroom hour - if there are 20 to 25 people in the class - maybe each person gets a chance of active participation one, two min- utes of class," Coffin said. "In a mul- timediaenvironment- which is com- puter driven - you can engage them actively for the 50 minutes. It's multisensory, multichannel. You en- gage all the senses." Despite the praises course-related software has received, the role of teach- ers will still be an important one. Lec- tures provide an outline of the material while teachers and the software focus on specific areas, Potter said. Multimedia programs are not with- out their share of problems. Demands placed on the computer server by nu- merous students can overload the sys- tem. If there are computer troubles, frustration and delays result. Social Work Prof. Frank Maple dis- covered that while he could teach con- cepts, techniques and role-playing sce- narios in his class, there is a greater impact when students are present with real-life situations. "Once you get in an actual therapy session, it's very different. The level of emotional content is much more real and pressing," Saunders said. "So what he's done is taken video of actual therapy sessions and brought it into a computing environment," Saunders said. "Students watch those video sessions on the screen and whe the session stops at a particular poir they are asked to give their intervention - 'What would they say?' And some of these sessions are so emotionally packed. It's a way that they can sensi- tize themselves to the real power of what goes on in these therapy sessions." But professors are not the only ones developing and experimenting. "Students are beginning to incor- porate things other than the print word in their work," Saunders said. "Instead ofjustwritingapaperof words, we're beginning to see animation, 3D modeling, video and audio coming into their work ... the 'multimedia term paper' if you will." The office is continuing to look at ways instructors can improve the class- room experience and the use of technol- ogy in enhancing student performan L 0 i 11S 12 mTe Michian Daily (ISSN U0459O) is pubilshed Monday tnrougn Fnay during the faiiana winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $160. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109-1327. 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