LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 5, 1998 - 3A .CAMPUS Bollnger to serve on national panel University President Lee Bollinger is scheduled to participate in a national ress conference Tuesday in Washington D.C. The results of a national poll on the country's attitudes toward diversity in higher education are scheduled to be released during the conference. UMTV, Channel 12, and its Website at http.//wwwitdumich.edu/umtv will broadcast the conference live at 10 a.m. The poll was conducted by the Ford Foundation Campus Diversity nitiative in conjunction with the facial Legacies and Learning Project of the Association of American Colleges and Universities. Students to mix with community organizations The School of Public Heath plans I sponsor the 5th Annual Community Service-Learning Fair today. Students from all heath pro- fessions at the University are invited to participate. Forty community-based organiza- tions will be at the fair to meet with faculty and staff. Community service and learning opportunities are available to all students who attend. Keynote speaker Lana Pollack, pres- *dent of Michigan Environmental Council, will begin the fair at 3 p.m. in the auditorium of the Henry Vaughn Building at the School of Public Heath I building. , The fair will take place following Pollack's address on the third floor of the School of Public Heath I building. 'U'prof. to speak on property competition Katherine Verdery, newly appointed professor to the Eric R. Wolf collegiate professorship in anthropology, is scheduled to give a lecture titled "The Political Life of a Dead Body: Re- burying Transylvanian Bishop Inochentie Micu." * Verdery plans to discuss the compe- tition among churches for property. The presentation is scheduled to take place Monday, Oct. 12 at 4:10 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater. A reception will follow in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Both the lecture and the reception are open to the public. diabitat for Humanity seeking student volunteers Habitat for Humanity is encouraging students in the residence hall students to give up a meal for charity. For each student who gives up their dinner on Nov. 5, the organization will donate a designated amount of money to a University-sponsored Habitat for {umanity house. Students can register to partici- pate in the meal sacrifice by provid- ing their name, e-mail address and student identification number to .volunteers who will be working at tables outside residence hall cafete- rias. For more information, see Habitat for Humanity's Website at: wwwumich.edu/~habitat. UMEC to sponsor rubber duck race to benefit charity The University of Michigan's Engineering Council is planning to hold a faculty and student picnic at 1 .m. tomorrow near the North Campus deflecting pool. At the event, UMEC also will sponsor a rubber duck race. Students may adopt one of the 500 ducks for $1. Winners will receive prizes from the Michigan Union Bookstore. The proceeds from the event will benefit charity. - Compiled for the Daily by Lauren Gibbs. Anti-Han ralliers agree to trial date Klan protesters question motives for counter-rally arrest By Karn Chopra For the Daily Five of the 21 people arrested for protesting a Ku Klux Klan rally on the steps of the Ann Arbor City Hall this past May agreed to go to trial at a pre-trial this past Friday. The five defendants - Thomas Doxey Jr., Philip Vandevoorde, Zachary Thomas, Robin Alvarez and Michael Faqua - reported to the Washtenaw County Courthouse on Friday for a pre- trial. In brief proceedings, District Judge Kurtis Wilder set trial dates for next year between March and July for each defendant. Following the KKK rally in May, nine protesters were charged with the felony of rioting, punishable by up to 10 years in prison. One woman, charged with the felony of inciting to riot faces the same penalty. Jessica Curtin, a Rackham student, was the only student arrested. The remaining 12 individuals were charged with misdemeanors, 10 for malicious destruction of property valued at less than $100, and two for assault and battery. Luke Massie, one of the defen- dants, set up a modest picket line in front of the courthouse before the hearing. The defendants are seeking sig- natures of support on a petition, which asks for all charges to be dropped. Nearly 7,000 people have signed it, including Democratic gubernatorial candi- date Geoffrey Fieger. Massie said everyone charged is innocent, and they are being used as puppets in the city's political agenda. "We make no apologies for what happened that day," Massie Cliffs Notes crutch 'U' P love tio hate - a rofs. AWSON CANTER/Daily Diana Wood and her son Tommy Doxey wait outside the Washtenaw County Courtroom on Friday for his hearing on charges of rioting against a KKK rally in Ann Arbor this past summer. said. "It is outrageous in the con- text of that kind of (incident at Kalamazoo College) - so close to home - that the city spent 137,000 dollars to defend the KKK and to witch hunt the anti- racist. This is a political case, and we are being used as scape- goats by the city." Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid Sheldon said the city is not acting out of political vengeance. "We as a city said we would be against violence. That was a very clear warning," Sheldon said. "The city is not acting in a con- spiracy. "We have people (who) have been arrested for breaking the law ... We can't abide breaking the law," she said. Two years ago, the KKK also held a rally in Ann Arbor, where arrests were made. Russ Stewart, arrested after the 1996 rally, attend- ed the hearing on Friday to support the defendants. He supported Massie's views on the city and the KKK. "The cases are no different than mine; these are all made-up charges," Stewart said. "If you give a hate-group royal treatment, you are going to have to cover it up." Vandevoorde said his life com- pletely changed aflter the rally this past summer, but he does not regret attending it because his actions were not illegal. "I have to think about it everday. I am facing 10 years in jail, and that scares me to death. I am young, and they are trying to make examples of us by ruining our lives," Vandevoorde said. Protesting the event, he said, actually may have fed the KKK's hatred and gave the rally unneeded exposure. "I know that you can't protest hate with hate," Vandevoorde said. Robin Alvarez, an Ann Arbor resident for almost 20 years, said the city government specifically targeted her because they thought she was a political leader. She went to the rally to make her opinions public. "This is the only chance I will get to tell them my feelings on the recruitment in Ann Arbor. I don't want my children affiliated with this group. I have a personal invested interest," Alvarez said. Alvarez's lawyer Miranda Massie said she believes the defendants will all be acquitted, and she said the case will be an embarrassment to the city. Massie said one of the reasons she took the case is her own agreement with the protest, claiming the government is solely at fault. "The crazed Republican govern- ment is responsible for this witch hunting," Massie said. 0 Bookstore employees say Cliffs Notes are not big sellers on campus By DxielWeiss For the Daily Ask English professors what irritates them most, and somewhere near the top, among Websites distributing criti- cal essays, would be the yellow-and- black plot summaries known as Cliffs Notes. English Prof. Michael Schoenfeldt is among those whose dander is up. Before giving a lecture on Chaucer last week, Schoenfeldt reviewed common forms of plagiarism, then turned his attention to Cliffs Notes. He told students to avoid them, saying the University of Nebraska, where some Cliffs Notes are written, is not an authority like Oxford or Cambridge universities. When pressed by a student, Schoenfeldt acknowledged he didn't have the power to prohibit students from reading Cliffs Notes. But later, he said, "If I had that power, I probably would." Prof. Tobin Siebers, chair of the English department, said that as far as he knows, there department has no policy regarding the use of Cliffs Notes. Siebers questioned why professors would want to regulate the use of mate- rials like Cliffs Notes, saying freedom in the classroom is valuable. According to the company's Website, Cliffs Notes founder Clifton Hillegas created the notes to increase literary knowledge, not impede it. Hillegas founded the company in 1958 when he was an employee of the Nebraska Book Co., after learn- ing of a successful outfit in Canada called Coles Notes, which was sell- ing literary guides similar to Cliffs Notes. Local bookstore managers said that despite their student clientel, they do not sell many Cliffs Notes. RORY MICHAELS/Daily LSA first-year student Dana Perlman scans over Cliffs Notes yesterday. "It's not a big seller," said Dave Richard, general manager at Ulrich's Book Store. John Battaglino, general manager of the Michigan Union Bookstore. said his bookstore neither promotes Cliffs Notes, nor sells many of them. "I've been at many institutions where they've sold better, Battaglino said. Michigan Book & Supply and Borders Books & Music also report ed low Cliffs Notes sales. Shaman Drum Bookshop, which primarily sells books required for English courses, doesn't even sell Cliffs Notes. Some students acknowledged having used Cliffs Notes in high school, but few admit to using them in college. "I get more out of reading the book itself than I would reading the Cliffs Notes' said LSA sophomore Chris Elsworth, an English major. Mimi-courses offer students new classes, alternative activities r u F t ! By Kathedne Hobruck For the Daily Ballroom dancing, holistic health and bartending are just some of the sub-r jects available to students this term through the University Activities Center's mini-courses. UAC mini-courses coordinators student budgets in mind, Shah said. "Most of the instructors under- stand that student face tight budgets and agree to lower their rates so money doesn't discourage students from taking classes," Shah said. Student reaction to the course offer- ings tends to be positive. Now if you don't know the answers on the test, you can call someone who does. added new classes this t e r m including resistance training and holistic health to the old favorites. "These course are an 'Most of the popular classes.. fill up fairly quickly." - Tejas Shah Mini-courses Coordinator "I have a friend who took bartending before. She said it was cool, said Sara Bernal, an Engineering sophomore. While the idea of mini- courses may attempt to target the portion of the stu- dent body that desires to integrate stay- ing fit into their hectic lifestyles,"mini- courses Coordinator Tejas Shah said. "Most of the popular classes - ball- room dancing, pool, bartending - fill up fairly quickly, while the newer ones are harder to fill up,"said Shah, an LSA senior. As of this past Thursday, all classes still had spots available. Anyone inter- ested in the courses may register at the Michigan Union Ticket Office until Oct. 14. The classes, which begin Oct. 19 and run through Dec. 3, are all held in the Michigan Union. Costs for the classes range from $30 to $58 and are taught by certified instructors with experience in their fields. The prices for the classes are set with sound appealing, some students said they don't have the time for the extra two hours of class per week. "I feel like I'm pretty busy now with classes. If I had time, I would at least check it out," said Sarah Mann, an LSA first-year student. Extra classes, even just for fun, do not hold interest for everyone. "It sounds kind of interesting, but I wouldn't put it that high on my priority list," said Matt Herman, an LSA first- year student. Next term, UAC plans to add swing dancing, self defense and aerobics to the mini-course curriculum. Shah pre- dicts that swing dancing will be very popular. More information on mini-courses is available at the UAC Website at http://wwwumich.edu/~uac. Okay, so maybe you're no credit checks, one of those Einsteins who and no long-term commitments. Plus, knows all the answers. Well, AirTouch is offering special discounted what you may not know is, with AirTouch Student Prepaid Cellular, you purchase whatever airtime you want in advance. There are no contracts, no monthly bills, rates to Michigan college students. So even if you're already the smartest person in class, you can look even smarter with AirTouch. For more details, call 1-800-AIRTOUCH or E-mail us at mistudentprepaid@airtouch.com ~wu5~u. ~ it --s I . q