i LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 30,1996-3 Council passes SU enhanced powers bill The Syracuse Common Council assed a controversial bill on enhanced powers Monday, giving the Syracuse University Department of Public Safety new latitude in dealing with on- campus crime, the Daily Orange reported. By a seven-to-one vote, the council approved a bill granting Public Safety the right to carry pepper spray and batons, use physical or deadly force when necessary, make warrantless Trrests and pursue suspects to public places off campus. SU proposed the bill after New York state law changed in 1995 to allow security officers at private colleges and universities to have such powers. However, the bill has met significant opposition from student groups on campus. id-off library mployee sues UC Berkeley A UC Berkeley library employee laid off last year has filed a case against the university in Alameda County Superior Court, charging she was 'wrongfully terminated by a supervisor 'who intimidated her and other employ- ees in her department. Campus administrators have con- etided that the employee's dismissal - 'later reversed by an internal university review - was part of a larger reorgani- zation program, the Daily Californian reported. Iowa employee. caims4 discrimination The manager of Iowa State's -Education Student Services, Mary Lee Vance, will'be dismissed Jan. 1 if Asian Pacific American Awareness Coalition and Minority Student Affairs officials don't get their way, the Iowa State Daily reported. 'lanager of Education Student 'Services is a position within the 'College of Education that assists stu- ents in career planning and placement, verall orientation and student sched- ule classifications. The position has a salary of about $48,000 per year. Larry Ebbers, professor of education and program leader for higher educa- tion, created and held the position in the 1970s. Cadet clears 4orps of hazing ..harges The alleged hazing incident in the 'Corps of Cadets at Texas A&M last Sunday has been passed off as a misun- 'derstanding, the Battalion reported. The alleged victim and his father were discussing his decision to with- draw from the Corps. The student told his father he was 'going to be "visited and taken care of" *y his upperclassmen that night. The father contacted the University Police Department when his son failed to call him the following day informing Shim what had happened. The UPD subsequently initiated an investigation of the incident and found the ,episode to be the result of a misunder- standing between the cadet and his father. The cadet signed a written statement hat he had never been hazed and would ;ave the Corps as originally intended. No charges were filed following the investigation. - Compiled fiom the University Wire by Daily Staff Reporter Janet Adamy. Police expose nationwide exam scandal WdARREN ZINN/Daily Sign away University history Prof. Fredrick Cooper signed copies of his recently published study, titled, "Decolonization and African Society: The Labor Question in French and British Africa." [ *O Barbour, Newberryresidents speak against coed proposal By Janet Adamy Daily Staf Reporter The operator of a company that advertised a "unique method" of preparing students for graduate entrance exams was arrested in California on Saturday after allegedly helping students cheat on the tests. George Kobayashi, a 45-year-old Californian, was charged with fraud in connection with an elaborate scam that took advantage of time zones to send standardized graduate entrance exam answers from New York to Los Angeles. Kobayashi had a team of experts take each exam in New York City under false names, according to the New York U.S. District Attorney's office. Test tak- ers who hired the company were required to fly to Los Angeles to We c4 take the exam. A "Relying on people the three-hour time difference. a I1L the expert test takers telephoned F the correct answers to Kobayashi's office in Los Angeles, - I By Ajit K. Thavarajah Daily Staff Reporter With the threat of traditionally all-female residence halls becoming coed, more than 60 students met last night to voice their frustations. "We got several complaints from Barbour-Newberry res- idents. We thought that this would be the proper place for both cases to be made," said Randy Juip, president of the Residence Halls Association. Residents of Betsey Barbour and Helen Newberry, which are both all-female residence halls, made up a large part of last night's attendance at a special RHA forum to get input on the possible change. The University-comissioned Living Learning Task Force last month released a proposal recommending that either the Honors Program or the Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program - both coed - be housed in both Barbour and Newberry. Lisa Keyser, president of Newberry House Council, said the University should honor the original intent of the founders of the two halls. "The University has went out of their way to keep agree- ments with other buildings that specfically stated to follow the instructions by the donator," she said. "The original donation stipulated that the money was to be used for the sole purpose to provide a women's residence hall." Richard Lourde, a great-nephew of Helen Newberry, agreed with Keyser. "The money that was donated in my great aunt's name was to give the University a place for women to live," he said. "Making it coed would destroy something very spe- cial that my family started." Many of the female residents said they enjoy the family atmosphere that Barbour and Newberry provide. LSA junior and former Newberry resident Jennifer Lewis said she finds the all-female atmosphere crucial. "For some women, living in a coed dorm would mean having to live with a conflict ... in the privacy issue," she said. "I personally would have gone to an all female uni- versity if U-M had not offered this option." William Zeller, director of University Housing, said that recent statistics show a decrease in the need for all-female housing. "The recent number of women who have applied for the all-female dorms has gone down over the past 5-10 years," Zeller said. "We've also talked to several students who found that single-sex dorms isolated them from other students and found the experience generally unpleasant. "We think that Newberry and Barbour would provide a perfect setting for the Honors Program or the Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program," he said. LSA first-year student Erin Rogers said she disagrees with Zeller's assement of single-sex dorms. "We're here to try and show that this all-female dorm works," Rogers said. "I don't think I'd be able to walk with- out being scared in larger dorms like West Quad or South Quad. We feel safe here and we have a family-type envi- ronment, which we think is better than the living-learning programs could ever produce." Last-night's forum was the third of a four-part series sponsored by RHA. "We can't give people tests at 3 a.m., Gonzales said. Gonzales said that cheater's scores have been invalidated and will not affect the scores of others who took the test at the same time. Seppy Basili, a spokesperson for Kaplan Education Centers, said Rolling Stone magazine reported a time-zone cheating scam involving the SAT in 1991. "What's so shocking to us at Kaplan is that this is such an obvious way of cheating that can be easily remedied," Basili said. "This has happened before, and we should make sure that this loop- hole is closed" Basili said ETS could easily prevent this type of cheating by jumbling ques- tion positions and answer give ;choices and as F t well as syn- chronizing test t + timing. Lieberthal, Kevin Gonzales assistant direc- tor of admis- Spokesperson sions for the Univerity's MBA program said the School of Business will rely on ETS'judgment. "ETS has had a great deal of experi- ence and has been quite successful in prosecuting cheaters,' Lieberthal said. "I think they would err on the side of the integrity of the test rather than let- ting scores go through that were suspi- cious." Sid Kansara, a Business junior, said he "just didn't understand" how Kobayashi's company found people to participate in the scam. "1 think if you participate in an activ- ity like that, you're setting yourself up for failure," Kansara said. "There's a lot of people who get scholarships from these scores and it's unfair to those that study a lot because these losers take their place:' U.S. District Attorney Mark Godsey said Kobayashi is scheduled to be arraigned in Los Angeles federal court tomorrow and is expected to be brought to New York to face charges. If convict- ed, Kobayashi faces a maximum sen- tence of five years in prison on each of the two counts of mail and wire fraud and a maximum fine of $250,000 or twice his gross gain from the scheme. where the answers were quickly coded onto pencils by Koboyashi's employees and then provided to test-takers," the office reported in a statement. Exams included the Graduate Management Admissions Test, Graduate Record Exam and Test of English as a Foreign Language. Kobayashi's company, "American Testing Services," charged $6,000 for its services, the statement reported. According to the statement, Kobayashi's company "divided the test- takers into small groups and transport- ed them to test sites around the Los Angeles area so that their high scores in one test site wouldn't raise suspicions of cheating." The district attorney's office said in the statement that the scam was wit- nessed by an undercover federal inves- tigator who employed Kobayashi's ser- vices and flew to Los Angeles for the GMAT administered on Oct. 19. Kevin Gonzales, a spokesperson for the Educational Testing Service, said that ETS is still investigating the inci- dent and has not yet made changes in testing procedure. MSA backs affirmative action rally By Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly again came out in support of affirma- tive action last night - but it did so with a little more than one-half of its members present. Two weeks ago more than 150 stu- dents and MSA members packed the Michigan Union Ballroom to show their support for affirmative action dur- ing the MSA meeting - last night's meeting was a different story. Twenty-four of MSA's 46 members passed a resolution endorsing a campus march and rally in support of affirma- tive action on Nov. 4 as a handful of National Women's Rights Organizing Coalition members looked on. "I think this is certainly a step in the right direction," said LSA Rep. Srinu Vourganti. "In light of the political environment right now with the upcom- ing elections, it's important the assem- bly take a stand and show its support for affirmative action." NWROC members said that by pass- ing this resolution, MSA was taking a stand on the most important issue on campus. "We think it's good that MSA is tak- ing a stand on affirmative action instead of just saying they support it," said NWROC member and LSA senior Jessica Curtin. "This rally will be an opportunity for students to come out and demonstrate and raise hell and send a message to people in California and around the nation that we support affir- mative action:' The NWROC-sponsored march and rally, which are scheduled to begin at noon on Nov. 4 on the Diag, coincide with national rallies aimed at influenc- ing California voters who will vote on whether to eliminate affirmative action from all state public policies. But some members questioned why the assembly would endorse a rally that to influence out-of-state voters. "This vote is in California - why are we doing this for California?" asked LSA Rep. Jonathan Winick. "If we want to debate something, why don't we debate something that has to do with our state?" Other members said a strong University rally was important nationally. "I think what we do can have an effect on what goes on around the coun- try," said LSA Rep. Amer Zahr. LSA Rep. Dan Serota, who chaired most of the meeting because MSA President Fiona Rose was absent and Vice President Probir Mehta left early, said this week's sparsely attended meet- ing would not set a precedent. "This low turnout is not severe;' Serota said "The problem today was we had a heavy case of midterm blues:' But other members said school work was no excuse. As mayor, Sheldon will continue to provide a balance on council and a * ,force for consensus. Her moderate points of view are needed, and she should be re-elected. ""-The Ann Arbor News 11-3-94 In 1993, the Daily supported Sheldon as a moderate Republican who would restore credibility to local govern- " ment. Sheldon acted on and still .DUemphasizes community involvement, open and fair government and unity with the University. For these reasons she should continue as Mayor of Ann Arbor. -The Michigan Daily 11-4-94 Paid for by the Ingrid Sheldon for Mayor Committee Doug F. Ziesemer, Treasurer, 122 S. Main, Ann Arbor 48104 " A t A " Only KAPLAN offers: The "Best of Ann Arbor in Test Prep" Voted by your peers In the 1996 Michigan Daily Readership Poll Corrections * The Democratic Voter Guide was distributed by the College Democrats. This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. Srinu Vourganti moderated the mayoral debate last night. This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. Whal GROUP MEETINGS D Caribbean Peoples Association," meeting, Michigan Union, Crofoot ">- Room, 7 p.m. U East Quad Social Group For Uncertain Gay/Lesbian 'sexu als, 763- 79 , EastQuad, 9 p.m. U Lutheran Campus Ministry, evening prayer and choir, 668-7622, Lord of Light Lutheran Church, 801 South Forest Ave., 6 p.m. bible study, 7 p.m. prayer U Reform Chavurah, weekly meeting, i's happening in Ann Arbor today Room 1017, 12-1 p.m. O "Handleman Company: Information Session," sponsored by CP&P, Patton Accounting Center, Room 1018, 4:30-6 p.m. O "Information Meeting About Study Abroad in Englan and Ireland," sponsored byOffice of International Programs, Mason Hall, Room 1408, 5-6 p.m. O "Leam About GOP Candidates From Someone in Your District," spon- sored by College Republicans, Angell Hall Fishbowl, 9 a.m:-2 p.m. O "The internship and Summer Job Caarrh ,, " rnnc'rar- kb y D INFO, info@umich.edu, UM"Events on GOpherBLUE, and www.umich.edu/~info on the World Wide Web Q English Composition Board Peer Tutoring, Angell Hall, Room 444C, 7-11 p.m. 0 Northwalk, 764-WALK, Bursley Lobby, 8 p.m.-1 a.m. 0 New Student Survey, 764-6413, first- year students can win free books for filling out survey in residence halls, see building CORE for information U Psychology Peer Academic Advising, 647-3711, sponsored by PGmrhlns o }na nt. at STA Travel NoW OFFERS student discounts on domesilC .. Great teachers Personal attentIon is a KAPLAN hallmark. You will never have a difficult time getting a trained MCAT expert to work with you. All of our instructors have scored in the 95th percentile or above n a eMAT. I I e U U