i LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 3, 1996 - 3 Advice submission angers GEO members TWO juveniles arrested for vandalism Two male teen-agers were allegedly Freaking into cars on East Madison Street in front of South Quad on Sunday evening. 1PS officers caught the juveniles after a foot chase. Damage to the vehicles included one broken side window, and the owner was notified, DPS reports stated. Witnesses told DPS that the 18-year- old youth "kicked out the side window" d the 16-year-old youth "reached in and removed compact discs," DPS reports stated. The CDs were later recovered during the chase. The 18-year-old suspect was arrested for auto larceny, and he already had an outstanding warrant for impaired dri- ving. The 16-year-old suspect was processed but later released to relatives. Hit-and-run driver ."amages car An owner reported that her car received extensive damages last Wednesday when she parked it on Nichols Drive. The car was parked on the street between 1:30 and 8 a.m., according to Department of Public Safety reports. The corner of her bumper had been peeled away from the car's main frame, .nd there were several scratches on the ted section of the car, DPS reports stated. The owner said she noticed broken pieces of a turn signal light cover and a parking light cover on the pavement behind and under her damaged car. No other vehicles had any damage to the headlight area, DPS reports stated. DPS has no suspects in the case. t redit card used audulently A staff member of the economics department reported that a credit card was used and the bill was mailed to the department under the member's name last Tuesday. The card was used in California, Texas and Livonia, Mich., between Oct. 30 and Nov. 13. The caller told PS that more than $4,700 was Wharged during this time. DPS does not know how the credit card was obtained through the depart- ment, and it has no suspects in the case. Windows broken in the Union A Michigan Union manager report- d that someone broke some of the indows in Union lounges Sunday night. ivo window panes of the double doors to the Art Lounge were smashed with a metal sign post, according to DPS reports. DPS arrested no suspects in the case. Disorderly people disturb residents About five or six people allegedly ran down halls and knocked on resi- ..ents' doors in Couzens Hall early last wednesday morning. r ..:A caller told DPS that he saw some- :ne let the group of non-residents into he dorm, and he said they appeared to be intoxicated. The incident occurred at 2:28 a.m. Wednesday, according to DPS reports. ictim's finger stuck in sander A victim's finger became stuck in a disc sander last Monday afternoon in the G.G. Brown Building on North Campus. The victim was transported to the empergency room at the University Medical Center, according to DPS orts. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Anupama Reddy. 1y Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter Advice Magazine aims to provide students with information about their potential classes and pro- fessors each term - but this semester the publica- tion may have angered some of those same instructors. Members of the Graduate Employees Organization have protested an anonymous article that, among other things, likens an unnamed Architecture teaching assistant to a rat, brands him as a possible Nazi sympathizer and wishes for his murder. Advice Editor in Chief Suzanna Young said she did not think the submission would come off as offensive. "I made the decision to put it in because I didn't think it was offensive' she said. "I'm sorry if it offended anyone in any way." GEO Organizer Tamara Joseph said the submis- sion should not have made it onto the Advice pages. "We feel that it is extremely inappropriate for any University-sponsored publication to be print- ing homicidal fantasies about graduate assistants," Joseph said. "I find it honestly surprising that something like that was published - it seems like a huge oversight." The article also angered members of the Michigan Student Assembly, which funds the pub- lication. Rackham Rep. John Lopez said the article should not have appeared in an MSA-sponsored publication. "The more I thought about it, the more I realized that this is something the student gov- ernment shouldn't be paying for," Lopez said. "I appreciate all of the work that has been done on Advice, but this is one of those cases when power is concentrated in the hands of too few people." During last Tuesday's meeting, the assembly passed changes to the MSA Compiled Code that will create an Advice Magazine editorial board to discuss all submissions before they go to press. "There needs to be a mechanism in place that will make a diversity of opinions available,"Lopez said. "(MSA's) Academic Affairs committee and the rest of the assembly can find people who will want to be a part of (the editorial board), and who want to make sure journalistic integrity and responsibility is maintained." An Advice editorial board is scheduled to be in place for the next edition of the magazine, which is due out in the spring. Young said the establishment of the board is unrelated to the publishing of the article. "The board has nothing to do with the arti- cle that was published - they created it because my assistant and I had to tackle the whole project, which was too much work," Young said. "It's not going to be a censor board - there will just be more people to do the work." Joseph said the editorial board would ensure nothing like this was published again. "This was an oversight and I think the board will be a significant guard against this hap- pening again," Joseph said. "But I think Advice owes every GSI on campus an apolo- gy." Advice, which is published shortly before CRISP season begins, rates professors, teaching assistants and a variety of courses on numerical scales. The scales are based on data collected from past course and instructor evaluations. But some students said they had never heard of Advice. "It sounds like a good idea - I spent my first year at Michigan State and they had a guide which helped me a lot," said LSA junior Christine Renn. "I'd never heard of anything like that here and I was kind of bummed when I got here and there wasn't one available." Undergrad education still tops faculty list By David Rossman Daily Staff Reporter University interim President Homer Neal met with members of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs yesterday to discuss issues of faculty concern. Neal's discussion with the faculty governing body included comments on the University's continued dedica- tion to improving undergraduate education. This month, a committee consist- ing of faculty, administrators and one Michigan Student Assembly member will meet to study ways the University could improve relations between students and faculty in order to foster increased learning opportunities. "We have had many students who, after spending four years here, tell the world that they haven't devel- oped a close enough relationship with a faculty member to ask for a letter of recommendation," Neal said. With President-select Lee Bollinger arriving on campus Jan. 1, Neal said he will not be able to continue to face this challenge head-on. "This was an issue I intended to fol- low," Neal said. "But it will have to be passed to Bollinger." Some faculty members expressed concern about increasing attention to individual students in undergraduate 'U'Law students take their skills to Southeast Asia N Participants help to rebuild Cambodian legal system By Stephanie Powell Daily StaffReporter In an effort to rebuild Cambodia's faltering legal system, three University students traveled to Southeast Asia last summer through the Law School's new Cambodian Law and Development pro- gram. The students, who were involved in creating new legal standards for Cambodian elections, worked in Cambodia's public defender's office and with Legal Aid of Cambodia, a group that provides legal assistance to the poor. Law Prof. Peter Hammer, who runs the program, said the University's help is a necessary part of Cambodia's system. "The people are so incredibly resilient and willing to do new things,' Jaidi said. "It was surprising they would be so upbeat." Hammer also wants people to under- stand the complete trauma that occurred in Cambodia. "There was horrific, substantial genocide and a conscious effort to destroy all of the social institutions, such as banks and hospitals," Hammer said. Jaidi said it is important that students are trying to make a difference because the freedom of Cambodian people is at risk. "Given no real legal system it is important to go over and implement a law system so that people's rights can be protected," Jaidi said. Several students in the program did not go to Cambodia but partici- pated in research of the countrys legal system while studying at thkc University. Virgin ia our Gordan, direc- tor of the Law ,&&..S c h o o I 's JOHN KRAFT/Daily Interim President Homer Neal spoke to the members of SACUA yesterday on vari- ous issues, including the University's effort to improve undergraduate education. One main concern is about the student-professor relationship. education, citing time and financial constraints. "What are the resources we have to do this for our students?" asked SACUA member Don Deskins. "To give a student personalized attention is almost like preparing for another class." SACUA Chair Thomas Dunn agreed that there is a need for fur- ther discussion about the implemen- tation of programs that facilitate intimate student involvement with faculty. "These (programs) have costs," Dunn said. "Also, when you are talk- ing one-on-one, it is a time-consum- ing matter for both sides." Participants in the Undergraduate Initiatives Committee will discuss ways to reduce stereotypes of large research universities. Neal spoke of an environment he would like to see at the University - one where students in a large lec- ture hall would feel free to raise their hands and ask questions. "This committee will be able to explore what's possible," he said. However, Neal added that he is unsure what changes will result from such discussion. reconstruction. "The premise of the project is to try and provide a forum for peo- ple in Cambodia to the resources that they current- ly don't have," Hammer said. Beginning in 1975, the legal system of Cambodia was destroyed under Khmer Rouge, a C o m m u n i s t regime backed by the Viet Cong. The regime took power in Cambodia and destroyed libraries, banks and hospitals. Legislators, judges and lawyers were also leave the country. 61Throug - .e m - .w . resouus atu University we can make a contribution that's useful to different groups of people in Cambodia that make requests for uS'" Students do their homework to find college scholarships International G r a d u a t e Office, said Cambodia is in the process of building :a legal systei from the ground up. This program allows stu- dents the opportunity to participate in and learn about the legal system of Cambodila, she said.' "Through our resources at the University, -Virginia Gordan Director of Law School DETROIT (AP) - For high school students looking to go on to college, getting in is only part of the battle - finding a way to pay for it can be just as tough. For Ebony Reed, it wasn't easy. It took persistence, sacrifice and hours every Saturday morning in the Southfield library, looking up scholar- ships and writing letters of application. Now, as a first-year student at the University of Missouri, her college financial future is secure. She won $85,000 in scholarships to pay for near- ly all of her expenses for a four-year stint at an out-of-state school. Reed estimates she applied for 150 scholarships since she started research- ing them during her sophomore year. She mailed the bulk of them during the summer between her junior and senior years. "I knew I wouldn't get federal money;' she said, explaining that both her parents work. So she applied for private merit-based scholarships - money that students don't have to pay back. "You have to apply for a lot and do a lot of research. I never thought I'd get this much. I was hoping for enough for tuition." Reed, a Southfield-Lathrup High school graduate, earned a 3.6 grade- point average and what she describes as average test scores. But she won several journalism scholarships, including one suggested to her by a friend. She recommends net- working with other students to find out about scholarships. Alfredine Wiley, head of counseling at Detroit's Cass Technical High School, says that even students who won't qualify for student aid should fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. They should then send the FAFSA form to the financial aid office of the school the student will attend. Thinking she wouldn't qualify for federal aid, Wiley didn't file a form for her child. Later she ran into trouble applying for a loan, because a form wasn't on file. Other schools, such as Ivy League colleges and private schools, also will request a financial aid profile. "When tuition costs more than $20,000, people can have need based on serious incomes," Wiley said. "You can make a lot of money and still have need for a Harvard or a Yale." Most college counselors seem to agree the FAFSA is a crucial document for students to complete. That sole doc- ument, which will require tax returns from 1996, is the key to federal grants, loans and work-study programs. Judith Harper, director of financial aid for the University of Michigan, sug- gests comparing loans, grants and work-study with the cost of attending to understand the real costs. "High school counselors are good at understanding this," she said. International killed or forced to Graduate Office In addition to his role at the Law School, Hammer went to Cambodia and worked there for three years to develop a public defender system. "It is incredibly rewarding and ful- filling because the need is so great there," Hammer said. Law second-year student Myriam Jaidi, who went to Cambodia last sum- mer, said the people were positive despite their lack of a standard legal we can make a contribution that's use- ful to different groups of people in Cambodia that make requests for us," Gordan said. "And at the same time it creates a useful learning opportunity for our students." The program also aims to develop a directory that takes inventory of the legal work underway in Cambodia, to oversee the maiite- nance of the country's legal resources and to establish an archive of Cambodian legal materials. U .1-'S c u s: CI ;' 0 MULTI COLOR SPECIALISTS " ARTIST ON STAFF * RUSH ORDERS * NEAR U OF M CAMPUS 1217 PROSPECT, ANN ARBOR 665-1771 ISFr with this ad. }-GROUP MEETINGS EVENTS QAlianza, 995-6732, Michigan Union, Pond Room, 7:30 p.m. .0 Black Undergraduate Law Association, Michigan Union, Welker Room, 7 p.m. a Cleptomaniacs And Shoplifters Anonymous (CASA), self-help group, U "Centralized Selection Process for 97-98 Resident Staff Positions," sponsored by University Housing, Modern Languages Building, Auditorium 4, 5:30 p.m. J "Charles Baxter Reading From His Work," sponsored by Department Ambassador of Italy to the United States H.E. Ferdnando Salleo, sponsored by International Institute, Michigan Union, Welker Room, 4 p.m. SERVICES U Campus Information Centers, Michigan Union and Pierpont Commons,_763- t