LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 9,1997 - 3 r Student receiveS { .chemical bumns from explosion A student was burned by an nknown chemical in a University building Friday, according to Department of Public Safety reports. The student was conducting an experiment using hydrogen peroxide and sodium thiosulfate mixed with water in one beaker. A second beaker contained sodium hydroxide mixed with water. When the student mixed the two lutions, a small explosion occurred. e student received first degree burns on the face and right forearm by look- ing over the top of the beaker. The student was taken to the emer- gency room at University Hospitals to receive treatment for the burns. ' Students take out aggression en Markley bikes A student reported to DPS that he saw two or three men jumping up and down on bicycles attached to a bike rack located outside of the third wing of Mary Markley residence hail Saturday, DPS reports state. The student observed the destruction from his window and gave DPS offi- 'cials a brief description of the students. The description did not provide enough formation for police to identify the bike attackers. When DPS responded to the call, officers found several bikes that had been knocked over. There was no dam- age to any of the bikes, DPS reports state. Jacket stolen -mthe School f Dentistry A $300 jacket was reported stolen from the School of Dentistry on Friday, according to DPS reports. The owner of the coat did not report the incident to DPS himself. The call was made by the wife of the owner's employee. The caller informed DPS that she was calling on behalf on her hfusband's boss. DPS advised the woman that the owner needs to call the department himself to make a report. Biohazards found in campus trash A custodian who took out the trash from the Medical Science Building on Friday, found a biohazard bag in the ular trash, according to DPS reports. lnside the compactor was a lidded pail marked "biohazard - blood and sharps." The custodian said that it did not appear that anything had leaked or spilled. Rocks thrown at Law Quad window The night manager at the Law Quad reported that a person threw a rock at a resident's window Friday, according to DPS reports. A resident of the Law Club informed the night manager that an unseen per- ,son threw a rock through the window of her room. DPS followed up the call and met the resident and night manager at her room. %hicle spray painted; door ajar " A DPS unit reported Saturday that a vehicle looked like someone had bro- ken into it. The construction vehicle, parked near Kipke Road, was found with spray paint on it and with one door fully pen. 4 The DPS officer secured the door and reported that the inside of the cab looked undisturbed. There was no license plate on the vehicle. -Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Stephanie Hepburn. SACUA addresses compensation in letter By Chris Metinko Dail StaffRe xrter Citing policies of faculty governance bodies at other schools that allow members to receive addi- tional benefits for their service, the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs agreed yesterday to send a letter to the Office of the Provost express- ing interest in appropriate compensation. At the heart of the compensation debate is the fact that many members of SACUA, the faculty's main governing body at the University, feel release time - which reduces the professors' courseload - is appropriate compensation for serving on the nine-member board. "This is having a genuinely negative impact on my research," said Gordon MacAlpine, a professor of astronomy. MacAlpine said he loves teaching, but attending SACUA meetings, other faculty committee meetings, teaching two classes of 185 students and conducting research is extremely difficult. The University is "going to derive more value from you if you can keep up with your research," MacAlpine said. SACUA chair Louis D'Alecy, a physiology pro- fessor at the Medical School, wouldn't describe the letter to the provost as a formal request for SACUA members to receive compensation, but rather a "written clarification of the ongoing inter- est of SACUA of compensation for its members." The announcement that members of LSA's exec- utive committee will receive compensation and the realization that other universities compensate their members of faculty governance brought the issue of compensation to tle table. "If eve are going to do a service to the people that come after Us, we have to articulate this issue of release time for central faculty governance," D'Alecy said Presently, only the SACI.JA chair receives the ben- efit of possible additional release time. The chair's department, however, isn't required to grant the time off but still receives money from the Office of the Provost to counter the costs of the absent chair. At last week's SACUA meeting, University Provost Nancy Cantor expressed concern with the money's use if release time is not given. "The principle here is appropriate compensa- tion," said biology Prof. Lewis Kleinsmith, Besides discussing the issue of compensation for members. SAC A members also articulatcd changes about the faculty electronic forum That was organized earlier this month so thecultv could ex pres the i r op i nions about diversity on the Unis ersitvs camps, and its admissions pelicies on SACI A's Websit e. The site will nowx be open to faculty members and students. who can get a faculty member to sponsor them. All entries on the site mus be attrib- uted. "Ifyou're willing to make a statement, you must be willing to put your name on it;' said SACUA mem- ber Donald Deskins, a sociolkgy professor. T he address of S AC t s Web page is htt p:in un wch. eduA-sacuaornoments.htnl. N > N, , Rs c msot taerSe psycolo y co rse ~ '8' '~N"N N N 'k By Diba Rab Daily News Reporter When students living in residence halls encounter problems with campus life, they often tum to their resident advisers for help. A new University policy aims to make sure that RAs will be well trained to han- dle questions. The Office of University Housing is requiring RAs totake athree- credit psychology course during the win- ter semester. "The job has become increasingly demanding and we, as a professional staff, need to help prepare people for all kinds of situations;'said Mary Hummel, associate director of University Housing. While few students see the class as a benefit, many say it is a burden. "The whole thing is really inconve- nient" said an LSA junior and RA, who wanted to remain anonymous. "They're putting RAs in a bind. It's ambivalent because it's a new course, and you don't know what it's going to be like." Bursley RA Melinda Anderson said she doubts that the class will teach nec- essary practical skills. "I don't think the class will be very helpful to students,' said Anderson, an Architecture fifth-year student. "I don't think a class can teach you how to be an RA. I think you just need to get your feet wet." The course, listed as Psychology 404 for the winter semester, will consist of three basic components, said Jeanine Bessette, assistant director of residence education. "The emphasis of the course will be on community building, multicultural- ism, on campus and institutionally, and conflict communication," Bessette said. But a few RAs agree that the new course would be helpful. "I think it's a good idea. It should help RAs better prepare for situations that they may encounter," said LSA senior Harland Holman, an RA at Mary Markley residence hall. "I think the University is trying its best to help RAs and make them better." LSA senior Sama Faik, a Markley RA, said it's unfair to require students to take the class. "The course is going to hinder the pool of people that apply. Less, Engineering and Nursing students are going to apply because they can't afford the credits," Faik said. Despite this popular belief, an early application deadline and the new course requirement did not deter applicants, said Jacqueline H ickmon, assistant director of residence education. This year's number of applicants remains the same as last year, she said. Applicants, who are not guaranteed LSA junior and RC resident adviser Melissa Burton talks with RC first-year student Megan Saltzman. RA positions, must still take the class if they want to be eligible for an RA posi- tion next fall. But Hummel said the course will be helpful to potential RAs. "it has discussions and will teach skills that are really professional -skills of 2.5 and the completion of 48.credit , you need to know today," Hummel said. hours. "It will be a good blend of theory and For more information regarding the practice:' course, contact Bessette at 764-8515 or° Other prerequisites for resident staff jbesset@umich.edu or Hickmon at 764' include a minimum grade point average 1152 orjrnims(umich.edu. 'U', local students use art to unteach racism READ THE DAILY ONLINE By Kristin Wright Daily Staff Reporter Visual representations of the exis- tence of and solutions to racism lined the walls of the William Monroe Trotter House on Saturday. The "Expressions on Racism" exhib- it represented the enthusiasm and com- munity involvement of eight members of the Residential College course "Unteaching Racism." A sociology class assignment snow- balled into the initiation of an official MSA-funded campus student group whose aim is the same as that of the class project - unteaching racism. English Prof. Helen Fox, who teach- es the course, which was offered for the first time this fall, said she is impressed with the enthusiasm and creativity of the students. "They did this all on their own initia- tive," she said. "I gave them some ideas, but in fact they didn't go with any of them." The members of the group divided into three groups that each focused on the existence and effects of racism among various age groups in the Ann Arbor community. "They made their contacts with a real variety of people in the community,' Fox said. "And they didn't necessarily have experience with these age groups." Half of the group visited a second- grade classroom at Angell Elementary School on S. University Avenue once a week for four weeks to encourage open dialogues on racism. "I think you forget how young sec- ond-graders are;' said LSA junior Pratt Kumar, an Expression on Racism group member. "It's tedious for them to write a sentence, but they have so much to say." The second-graders designed artistic displays to express the importance of racial harmony and equality. Poster boards decorated with phrases such as "We have to stick together" and "People are people" cut out from maga- zines were placed around the room to support the theme of racial togetherness. Paragraphs written by the children expressing feelings about racism included thoughts such as "It doesn't matter how I look. Treating people badly is wrong." "They're a lot more involved than I thought they would be,"Kumar said. "It turned out really well." LSA junior Sara Porter visited the Tinkham Center, an alternative high school in Ann Arbor, and LSA junior Risa Buberniak and LSA senior Liz Budnitz went to Ann Arbor Community High School on N. Division Avenue to encour- age discussion about racial problems. LSA juniors Colleen Grady and Alexandra Reitzes encouraged involve- ment of senior citizens at the Jewish Community Center of Washtenaw County on Birch Hollow Drive. "The real thing that we're saying about senior citizens is that they have such a perspective on what's going on now,' Reitzes said. Grady and Reitzes visited the senior citizens once and taped a two-hour con- versation on their feelings about the existence of racism and what can be done to eliminate it. WAKE UP (When Action and Art Kindle Education to Undue Prejudice) is the name chosen by the group members to symbolize their efforts as an official student group beginning next semester. WAKE UP plans to arrange events for Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Jan. 19, and will have an information table at Winter Fest. IRE L4.LNLi R What's happening In Ann Arbor today GROUP MEETINGS U Affanza, 647-9621, Michigan Union, Room TBA, 7:30 p.m. Q Cieptomaniacs and Shopiffters Anonymous, 913-6990, First aRontist Church. 512 E. Huron St.. EVENTS Q "Ann Arbor Art Center's 19th Annual Holiday Gifts Show," Sponsored b the Ann Arbor Art Center, 117 East Liberty St., 10 a.m.-9 p.m. U "Annual Christmas tree sales" across from CIC desk. SERVICES Q Campus Information Centers, 763- INFO, info@umich.edu, and w ww umir-h ard/~info on the