LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 12, 1998 - 3A CAMPUS Public forum to address assisted suicide, Prop. B The University's Office of Equity and iversity is scheduled to host a forum on ssisted suicide and disability today from 1:15 to 3:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union Ballroom. It will be free and open to the public. The forum will focus on Proposal B, the proposal on the November state bal- lot to legalize physician-assisted suicide. Speaking at the event will be Diane Coleman, founder of Not Dead Yet - a group that opposes assisted suicide. Also speaking will be Edward Pierce, chair of &erian's Friends, a group that advocates e legalization of assisted suicide, and Bob Liston of the Washtenaw Association for Community Advocacy. Students discuss ASB program Students interested in Alternative Spring Break can attend mass meetings tomorrow, Wednesday, and Thursday. *morrow's meeting is scheduled to be held from 7-9 p.m. in Angell Hall Auditorium B. Wednesday's meeting is planned for 6-8 p.m. in Angell Hall Auditorium D, and Thursday's is sched- uled to take place from 7-9 p.m. in the center room of the Pierpont Commons. Alternative Spring Break is a commu- nity service program that gives students the opportunity to volunteer in a com- munity during spring break. The pro- ram operates more than 40 sites roughout the nation. Applications for the program are due on Oct. 26 at the Project Serve office at 1024 Hill Street. Engineering students receive scholarships * The 1931 Engineering Class announced the award of $66,000 in scholarships to engineering students for the 1998-99 school year. The scholar- ships are renewable up to four years. This years recipients were Kacy Beitel, A. John Hart, Katherine Poloasek and Ryan Proud. The 1931 Engineering Class has been awarding the scholarships since 1981. Applicants are interviewed each spring the Scholarship Selection Committee, d awards are based on merit. Andrew Leutheuser, Jennifer MunFakh and Kimberly Segasser were among 14 students whose scholarships were renewed. Group to show movie on Palestine The Palestine Catastrophe Committee ill be showing a movie followed by an open microphone discussion on Palestinian rights tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Angell Hall Auditorium D. The film, titled "Checkpoint," will last approxi- mately I hour. The PCC reported that 300 people attended their last discussion in September. For more information, contact the Palestine Catastrophe Committee at palesine@umich.edu. Mentorship posts *vailable to 'U' Students who would like to mentor elementary or high school students in math or science can contact Reach Out! at 647-0764. Participants in the program volunteer one hour per week. University students can either mentor a single student or bring hands-on experiments to students science clubs. Applications are available at http://www.eecs.umich. edu/math- science/reachout/PHSguide.html. Phone conference to promote MBAs John Holleman, director of MBA Administration at the University of Mississippi, will be leading a free tele- phone conference for graduating liberal s concentrators interested in obtaining MBA degree. The conference will take place on Tuesday, Oct. 20 at 2 p.m. The conference will focus on the opportunities that are available to these students in the business world. To participate in the conference, call (904) 357-8702. For more information, contact Holleman at (601) 232-5483. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Josh Kroot. Rival ryignites fight between fraternities By Nikita Easley Daily Staff Reporter A fight between the campus chapters of two fra- ternities - Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Phi Delta Theta - transpired early Saturday morning, leaving both groups looking for a way to end a long-stand- ing rivalry. According to the Ann Arbor Police Department, four lanes of Washtenaw Avenue on the corner of South University Avenue were blocked by between 100 and 150 people fighting in the street at about I a.m. Saturday. No one was fined, but one person from one of the fraternities was arrested for interfering while the police attempted to dissolve the brawl, AAPD offi- cials said. A wheelbarrow was thrown into the win- dow of the Phi Delt house Saturday night and is believed to be an act of retaliation by SAE members, AAPD officials said.. "There have been other incidents from both fra- ternities that are now under police investigation," said Phi Delt President Michael Novick, an LSA sophomore. Members from the two fraternities have differing accounts of what prompted the fight and who was involved. Jamie Whetzel, food manager of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, said SAE had just started its traditional party for the new pledges when he and two of the pledges heard yelling from the Phi Delt house. "It was about 20 or 30 Phi Delta Theta's yelling at us from across the street," said Whetzel, an LSA junior. "They were basically trying to egg us on to fight." Whetzel added that when the fight started, it involved only him, the two pledges and 20 Phi Delt members. But Adam Feldheim, social chair for Phi Delt, said: "We were definitely not the aggressors." Feldheim said 15 members from both fraternities were screaming at each other across the street, but once the SAE members walked across the street, the Phi Delt's felt they had to protect their property. "We are not going to sit there and let someone vandalize our property" Feldheim said. Novick said he was in his room during the event and does not know what started the "scuffle" Members of both fraternities said the majority of the people on the street were not fighting, but were spectators "I was the one getting punched and was not doing the punching," Whetzel said. Sean Etheridge, president of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, said members from his house ran outside because they heard it was "three on 20." "I ran outside and started grabbing members of my house to break up the fight," Etheridge said. "I noticed people from Phi Delta doing the same" SAE and Phi Delt have been on the University's campus for more than 100 years, fraternity members said. Phi Delt currently has more than 100 members and SAE has 80 members. Twenty-three new pledges from SAE were about to take their traditional walk into the house when the fight began, Whetzel said. "This incident does not give new pledges a very good impression of the house," Etheridge said. Both fraternities acknowledge the tensions between them and attribute most of it to their partic- ipation in Mud Bowl. For 65 years, SAE and Phi Delt have played against each other in this annual football game during homecoming weekend. Novick said the rivalry between his fraternity and SAE began before he came to the University. But Whetzel said he thinks Phi Delt members are angry because they have lost the Mud Bowl for the past four years. "It is becoming so bitter that we are looking to play another frat in the Mud Bowl," Whetzel said. The break in tradition is not an appealing idea to Feldheim. "I think we should avoid each other outside of Mud Bowl, but I think the tradition should contin- ue," he said. Whetzel added that he thinks the tensions between the two fraternities have decreased during the last year. But because Mud Bowl is approaching, things have heated up in the past couple weeks. The fight is allegedly the second incident involv- ing the two rivals. Whetzel said a Phi Delt member called an SAE member a racial slur. Feldheim disagreed: "Any tension we have against SAE is not racial, but Mud Bow1 related." The fight between the t wo fraternities is just one of a few such incidents that have occurred during the past couple of years. Interfraternity Council President Bradley Holcman said the fight "does not set forth a good example for the Greek community." Holeman said the fight hetween the fraternities was the worst he has seen during his presidency, which began last yea. Both fraternity presidents and Holeman plan to meet and discuss the issues involving the rivalry. "I hope to be a third party and mediate between the two parties, he said. "It's been a long-standing rivalry and a meeting is long overdue." Holeman added that because this is not the first incident between SAE and Phi Delt, the national organizations may get involved in reviewing this incident and past ones. SAE held a meeting yesterday to discuss internal- ly how the fraternity can prevent incidents, such as Saturday's, from happening again. Feldheim said the next time a fight is brewing between the two, Phi Delt will try to "keep the peace and solve things in a non-violent manner." Etheridge also said the next time a fight is about to occur, he wants members of SAE to not get involved and "walk back into the house:' Memorial honors former Latin prof. By Sarah Lewis For the Daily Friends, family, colleagues and stu- dents gathered to reminisce about former Latin Prof. Glenn Knudsvig during a memorial service Saturday afternoon. Knudsvig died in a boating accident in Key Largo, Fla. on July 24. He was 57 years old. Prof. Sharon Herbert, a close friend and colleague of Knudsvig, said the pur- pose of the service was to remember the way Knudsvig touched the lives of those who knew him. "What we want to do today is not so much to mourn our loss, but to enumer- ate and take comfort in what Glenn has left to all of us,' Herbert said. Knudsvig began teaching Latin in the department of classical studies in 1963. Some of his students said they remember him as someone who was deeply dedi- cated to teaching. University alumnus Jennifer Maher, who took Knudsvig's Latin classes as an undergraduate student, said he gave stu- dents individual attention. "He was interested in learning for the sake of learning and teaching for the sake of learning," Maher said. "That's what his whole philosophy of teaching was based on. "He gave you his attention and his focus, and he cared," she said. Knudsvig encouraged student ath- letes to take advantage of educational opportunities. Classical studies Prof. David Potter said Knudsvig couldn't be satisfied with a sys- tem if it had the potential to work better. "Glenn was concerned with education in all aspects and at all levels," Potter said. As president of the American Classical League, Knudsvig always looked for ways to improve the organization, said Kendra Ettenhofer, a high school Latin instructor from Colorado currently serv- ing as the organization's vice-president. Ettenhofer said Knudsvig, like the lan- guage of Latin, is still alive in many ways. Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr knew Knudsvig through his work with student athletes. "His greatest legacy was his ability to see the potential in every student," Carr said. More than a dozen people spoke at the memorial, and all of them emphasized Knudsvig's unique combination of humor, intelligence and generosity. Timothy Walter, dean of Academic and Student Affairs at Oakland Community College and a close friend of Knudsvig, spoke about a conversation the two had regarding how they would want to be eulogized. Knudsvig is survived by his wife Shirley and two children. Survery: AZ best place for women Women of Michigan You are invited to: By Lauren Gibbs Daily Staff Reporter The time has come for the rest of the country to know what the women of Ann Arbor have known all along. Ann Arbor is a great place to live. A Ladies' Home Journal survey released Thursday ranked Ann Arbor as the best city for women. Women reader's were asked to rank the 200 largest cities in the nation on the qualities of a city that are most important to women. Some of the most important fac- tors for women included average salaries, crime rates, quality of life, health care, public schools and the number of women in government. The survey measured the salary gap between the sexes, the number of dis- crimination suits women file, the number of women's health special- ists, divorce rates and the influence of spirituality on the city. The survey also included some less significant factors, such as complexion kindness based on UV radiation levels, affordable shopping and good hair days. "I think it is a wonderful recognition of the excellent quality of life that we have here" Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid Sheldon said. "The categories judged are important to women. They are issues that we work on seriously as a community." Besides topping the overall list, Ann Arbor earned a perfect score of 100 regarding child care. Factors affecting that category's score included in-home emergency care for children and child- care scholarship opportunities. Ann Arbor also was extremely high in the politics category with a score of 94, reflecting a strong presence of women in local government. Sheldon said the attitude of men in Ann Arbor toward women is part of the reason it is such a women-friendly town. "I feel men respect the contributions women make, and as a result we are able to be a community that truly works together,"Sheldon said. "I love Ann Arbor," LSA junior Christy Johnson said. "It offers some- thing for everyone, in every walk of life. What ever your interest, you can find it here." Ladies' Home Journal deemed it "appropriate that America's best city for women bears the name of the two pio- neering females who helped settle the place:' The city was named for the Ann Allen and Mary Ann Rumsey, whose husbands planted an arbor of oaks in 1824. The Journal concluded that with everything that Ann Arbor has to offer, "it all adds up to a small city with big city qualities." DISCOVER ALPHA GAMMA DELTA DISCOVER YOURSELF Open House Coffee Hour Monday October 12 8:00 pm Murder Mystery party Tuesday October 13 7:00-10:00 pm 1322 Hill St For more information call Karyn 995-4386 i-1 lf....wi... w.t.: A-8--l- n- A.I. A Iftot I CEm * r Auitoriuim ID. 7:30in.m. 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