LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 14, 1 School of Education celebrates 75th year 997 --A 'U' College Bowl de en s national title *The University's College Bowl team ranks among the best academic teams in the nation. This weekend it compet- ed at the Academic Competition Federation tournament to win another national title. With its affinity for trivia, some members of the team traveled to London, where they won the interna- tional champions title for the team at Imperial College in London. OTeam members who competed last weekend include Steve Knowlton, Benoy Chacko, Ravin Garg and Rory Molinari. In the past, the College Bowl members have appeared on "Jeopardy!", which has a format much like College Bowl toumnaments. 'U' to offer many mini-courses *The University will be offering sev- eral mini-courses this summer with a large variety of topics. The programs are for students and non-students alike, and target audiences ranging from preschool to professionals. Topics for the courses include under- graduate courses, athletic camps, music technology camps, computers and sev- eral continuing education sessions. The catalog is at the University's fice of Academic Outreach. German program to bridge gap with high schools University lecturer Monika Dresser is helping high school students adjust to college through the Whitaker Articulation Project. The project is an tiative designed to help high school erman classes align more accurately with the University's German courses. The project began with a workshop that included University faculty and high school teachers who discussed necessary changes. They hoped to decrease difficulty for students who are placed into review classes and encour- age continued language study. The group intends to make curricu- m changes and increase communica- n between high schools and the University with a website, newsletter, resource book and guest instructors. Alumni records may be viewed Necrology files pertaining to the lives of deceased members of the University community are now avail- le to the general public at the niversity's Bentley Historical Library. The files consist of newspaper clip- pings, biographical data, photographs, obituaries and personal letters. The files are used for research on the history of students and groups. The contents of the files vary among individuals depending upon the per- son's prominence as well as the time period in which the person lived. J' Prof. teaches worldly dialects University assistant Prof. Annette Masson learns dialects from native speakers and teaches them, after study- ing the culture and origin of the dialect Masson said speech is influenced by region and history, citing the long, deliberate sounds of a Southern speak- in the hot climate as an example. In Uder to learn dialects accurately, she studies how the sounds are made by the mouth as well as the patterns of pitches used in speaking. Masson teaches actors several dialects, the most popular being British, Cockney, Irish, French, Spanish, New York, African American and Southern. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Marla Hackett. By Matt Weller Daily Staff Reporter Education pundit and author David Berliner joined University professors and educators yester- day in commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the School of Education. Berliner's speech elicited nods of agreement from many audience members. "It gives new hope for the future," said Education junior Lisa Montes. "You get tired of hearing how education is going down the tubes. This kind of gives inspiration." Berliner, who is a professor at Arizona State University, co-wrote a book defending public edu- cation called "The Manufactured Crisis: Myths, Fraud and the Attack on America's Public Schools.' The majority of his speech echoed the tune of his book's title and covered many of the arguments that bash public schools. "In 1983, the Nation at Risk report charged America was experiencing a 'rising tide of medi- ocrity,"' Berliner said, referring to past criticism heaped on public school education. "In reality, it has been a rising tide of achievement." Berliner said a primary problem with education today is inequality in school systems. "My school system has one school spending $3,000 a student and one spending $14,000;' he said. Ann Arbor Public Schools Superintendent John Simpson agreed that disparity is a problem in edu- cation. "Right on target"he said. "(Berliner) gives a point of view that it is more than just school, it's culture. We need to address the pockets of poverty." Berliner also questioned the techniques used to assess public schools. He emphasized the view that test scores and other data have been twisted for pur- poses of negative propaganda by politicians. "When President Clinton claimed in his last campaign that 40 percent of third-grade students read below grade level, we should be happy, not horrified," he said. Berliner also expressed his disdain for former Secretary of Education William Bennett, who was famous for criticizing public school systems in the United States. "I consider it a good day when I can start it off with a cup of Puerto Rican coffee and say some- thing nasty about Billy Bennett," Berliner said. Berliner said that Bennett and other detractors fail to recognize many factors that account for slumping test scores. He said that changes in soci- ety, such as the advent of television, are causing the drop, not only schools. "I call this Berliner's Law: If you've just spent 20,000 hours watching television, you've probably read fewer books." Berliner said public schools cannot be a disaster because students today are more intelligent than their parents and grandparents. He pointed to the trend of rising Intelligence Quotient scores and the effects of the Information Age. He said results of studies and surveys pointing to the downfall in intgl- ligence of Generation X may merely be sour grapes. "The people interviewing students on college campuses are not nearly as smart as those students they're interviewing," he said. Lawyers work to correct their public image, reputation By Greg Cox Daily Staff Reporter Did you hear the one about the three lawyers who walked into a bar? Lawyer jokes, and lawyer bashing in general, have become a common practice for Michigan residents, according to a recent survey. Conducted by the State Bar of Michigan, the survey showed that many Michigan residents hold barris- ters in less than high esteem. That fact, along with the general public's ignorance of prominent legal figures, seems to point to public rela- tions shortfalls for Michigan's attor- neys. Misconceptions of lawyers and the legal system are a primary source of many of the anti-lawyer opinions float- ing around, said Law Prof. Donald Duquette, director of the University's Child Advocacy Center. "Most people don't understand what lawyers do," Duquette said. "They only see lawyers when they're in the midst of serious trouble." Law third-year student Steven Alerding agreed that a misunderstand- ing of lawyers is a major cause of the distorted public image. "It takes three years of law school to understand the issues," Alerding said. "When outside of law, you don't have the big picture, so to speak." About 85 percent of the 470 state res- idents questioned believe lawyers file frivolous lawsuits, and 83 percent believe defense attorneys get their clients off on technicalities. Of even more concern to lawyers is that about 23 percent believe lawyers are dishon- est and 46 percent believe they are greedy. "The misperceptions are quite striking," said Tom Oren, a spokesperson for the State Bar of Michigan. "Lawyers have to do a better job educating the public about what lawyers do." Law students said the media often portrays attorneys in a negative light. "Some of itsis that they only hear bad things about lawyers - the good things aren't publicized," said Rebecca Ardoline, a Law third-year student. Alerding said the most defendants will be convicted by criminal trial juries. "People often don't realize that defendants are convicted three-fourths of the time in criminal trials," Alerding said. Headline-grabbing cases, like the O.J. Simpson trials, sometimes portray the legal system as frivolous and filled with obstructive technicalities, Alerding said. "Many of the alleged technicalities are there to protect all of us that are innocent," Alerding said. Another source of negative stereo- types against lawyers is the nature of the justice system itself, Duquette said. "Because of the nature of our system, one side always walks away unhappy," Duquette said. Michigan's 32,000 attorneys are perceived better among citizens who have actually worked with lawyers than those who have not. Seventy-six percent of people who hired lawyers rated their services as good or excel- lent. "Most people think that lawyers are competent, skilled and courte- ous," Oren said. "The negativism that exists is directed toward the behavior of lawyers, not lawyers themselves." JOSTHNNSUMM Rob Gelardi, an instructor and program coordinator at the Specialty Vehicle Design Program poses, in front of some students' current projects in the Media Union's Design Lab 2. 'U' students develop vehice By Marissa Kim-Shapiro For the Daily Four University students and an off- road vehicle helped put the University's Michigan Integrated Design and Initiative program in the international spotlight. Last spring, industrial designers Mark Borus, Darren Wolfberg and Robert Gelardi joined Art and Architecture student Scott Howe to win the First International Audi Design Competition for their vehicle, named the Qamel. "Winning the Audi competition for the design of the Qamel validates our thinking that MIDI is on the right track with its platform design approach," said Gelardi, who now teaches a MIDI class in the School of Art and Architecture. The four designers began planning the Qamel, a modular commercial off- road vehicle, in May 1996, and devel- oped it for the Audi Design Competition in the summer. The Qamel was chosen from submissions from more than 34 teams and 50 coun- tries to win honors in the competition. This February, the team members were notified that they had received honors and a cash prize for their design. MIDI has been getting a lot of attention from the automotive design industry for its unique structure. Gelardi said the program has given students a chance to participate in a multi-disciplinary design team. "MIDI's goal is to provide a more accurate representation, for engineers and designers, of the experience (of) working on a platform team," Gelardi said. "It gives students a chance to practice dealing with the conflicts and challenges of teamwork?' Howe agreed that the experience with MIDI has allowed him to appre- ciate the platform approach to design. "The parallels in the design process- es have always intrigued me and as we have shown with our Qamel project, interdisciplinary design teams can pro- duce award-winning work," Howe said "One of the keys to this is the fact that each designer brings a perspective from their own field that can be refreshing to the other members of the team." Gelardi said the MIDI program trains its designers unlike any other college design program. "There is no other transportation design program like this," Gelardi said. "(Top schools) normally school designers in how to draw cars, then they hand them off to the engineers to make them. Things would have to be changed, (the car) is not going to look like the drawing whenit is made?' Gelardi said this gap in the creative process and the actual production Of the car has resulted in many substaq dard cars. "All concerns are addressed in the beginning and there are no surprises. You still have design freedom; the end result is just realized quicker." The team was advised by architec- ture and urban planning Prof. Colin Clipson and Rick Franco, chief engi- neer at AM General, the company th~t designed the Hummer vehicle. Gelardi said the design of the Qamel will be completed using the prize money and displayed in an Audi- sponsored exhibit. Archer to aid Detroit Institute of Arts DETROIT (AP) - The financially strapped Detroit Institute of Arts is expected to receive a substantial boost in city spending when Mayor Dennis Archer makes his annual budget address to City Council today. Mayor's spokesperson Anthony Neely declined to discuss Archer's bud- get proposal, but said his boss is deter- mined to save the DIA - one of the country's largest museums. "The mayor has made it clear for many months now that something needed to be done to make the DIA more financially viable," Neely told The Detroit News in a story pub- lished yesterday. "We do have to deal with the DIA one way or anoth- er." According to museum executives, the DIA is $1.4 million in the red for this year, and the debts could approach $8 million in its 1998-99 budget year. "Ultimately, it is a question of whether the museum stands or fails," DIA Director Samuel Sachs II said. "There has to be some solution for this museum to survive. The state's contribution to the art institute has shrunk by $40 million since 1991. Of its nearly $33 million annual budget, the museum receives $400,000 - less than 2 percent - from Detroit. "The mayor has been extremely supportive, and we anxiously await his budget inessage," Sachs said. "If the mayor is able to give us some help in the next year or two, that's great. But we also need to look for- ward." e OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE Oakland County Students Coming Home for the Spring or Summer? Why not enroll in a class or two as a guest student at Oakland Community College? At $46 per credit for district residents day and evening classes at OCC's five campuses are convenient and affordable. See your university academic advisor for a Michigan Undergraduate Guest application, and to make sure your classes transfer. 15-week and 7 1/2-week classes available GRouP MEETINGS sponsored by Hillel, Rackham www.umich.edu/-info on the Aud., 7:30 p.m. World Wide Web Q Bible Study, 741-1913, Angell Hall ' Q "Health Heart Screening," spon- Q Engiish Composition Board Peer G-144, 7 p.m. ' sored by The Washtenaw County Tutoring, Angell Hall, Room 444C, Qi Biomedical Engineering Student Health Services Group, 7-11 p.m. AsocdainH.H. Dow Building, Washtenaw County Service QNorthwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley AsoitoCenter, Hogback Road, 1-3 p.m. Lobby,8 pm.- 1:30 am. oomE1013, 7 p n Hm. 1ob PA d Advising, LiERonmentalWorksopsptmAre Q"New Developments In Drug Therapy" Li PsychologyPeer AcademicAding Schoviromenals Morsshoe atiAnal sponsored by The Alliance for the 647-3711, East Hall, Room 1346, Meeting, 997-6Org4niana Mentally Ill of Washtenaw County. lla.m.-4 pm. 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However, we can only print announcements the day of the event. Announcements for events that charge admission will not be run. All items for THE CALENDAR must be mailed or delivered to the Daily at least three days before publication. Events on riday, Saturday or Sunday must be submitted by 5 p.m. Wednesday prior to the event. We can not accept requests over the telephone, and we can not guarantee that an announcement turned in within three days of the event will be run. Spring Semester Final Registration: Thursday.... May 1 Friday... ... May 2 Classes Begin: Monday.. . . . May 5 Summer Semester Final Registration: Thursday..... June 26 Friday . . . . . . June 27 Classes Begin: Monday.... June 30 Auburn Hills Campus " Highland Lakes Campus " Orchard Ridge Campus e Royal Oak Campus *Southfield Campus For further information call (810) 540-1549 I OCCis an affirmative action/equal opportunity institution. J 4 f,