LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 26, 1998-- 3A CAPUS j". Shapiro Library to hold foreign book sale The Shapiro Undergraduate Library is scheduled to hold its sec- ond annual foreign language book sale Friday, Oct. 30, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The library is expected to have hundreds of titles in German, Spanish, Italian, Greek, Yiddish, Russian and Armenian and more than 10 other languages. Most prices will range from 50 cents to $1. *Group to raise money forchildren Tau Beta Pi, the University's chap- ter of a national engineering honor society, is accepting donations to help the children of Mott Children's Hospital. On Oct. 26-27, between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m., students plan to collect dona- #ions outside the Michigan Union, Ulrich's Bookstore, Kresge Medical Research Building II, and various locations throughout North Campus. Members of Tau Beta Pi organize a party for the hospital each semester. Campus Pals seeks mentors * Campus Pals, a new program attempting to match college students with local children for mentorship through the Athletic Department and the local Big Brother/Big Sister pro- gram, currently are looking for interns. Interns will helpcoordinate the pro- gram and screen students - big broth- ers and sisters - to work in pairs with a local child who currently is waiting or a mentor. For more information ontact April or Ed at 637-1258. Volunteers needed to tutor homeless The volunteer program of the Education Project for Homeless Youth and SOS Community Services is in need of students interested in tutoring *omeless children. Tutors work with one child or a small group and assist with whatever subject the students find difficult. Tutors will be trained. To get started, applicants must attend the group interview on Oct. 27 from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at Ann Arbor Time for Tots; located at 1128 White St. Potential tutors will be subject to a police background check. Speakers to share German life tales Two speakers sponsored by the University's International Institute and Center for European Studies are sched- uled to speak on life in Germany. The two lectures: "Germany after Kohl: The European Union and the Euro after the Elections of September 07," on Nov. 3 at 4 p.m. and "Contemporary Jewish Life in Berlin," on Nov. 9 at 4 p.m., will be in room 1636 of the International Institute located in the School of Social Work building. Admission is free to all stu- " dents. .Group offers - , terships abroad The University's chapter of International Association for the Exchange of Students for Technical Sxperience currently is looking for enthusiastic science and Engineering students to establish and arrange internships across the world. Joining IAESTE will help estab- lish career skills and create industry ontacts. Those interested in working abroad with the work-exchange pro- gram, or interested in more informa- tion, should attend a meeting tomor- row at 7 p.m. in Room 1333 of the Chrysler Building on North Campus. - ompiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jaimie Winkler Long-time radio host relays experiences By Nick Falzon. Daily Staff Reporter Terry Gross, the popular host of National Public Radio's program "Fresh Air," spoke to a crowd of nearly 800 people last night at Rackham Auditorium. During the event, sponsored by Hillel and Michigan Radio, Gross spoke extensively about her 25 years of radio experience, 23 of which she has spent hosting "Fresh Air," an interview and music program. Gross' dedication to the show has impressed many of her radio contemporaries. "Radio is a business where people tend to move around, but Terry never left 'Fresh Air,"' said Todd Mundt, a local radio personality. "She was a great interviewer from the start." Gross got her start in radio in Buffalo, NY, in 1973. She moved to Philadelphia to host "Fresh Air" in 1975 and has not stopped interviewing since. Others also frequently compliment Gross on her interviewing style. "It's a gentle probing. She gets information from guests you can't get normally," Mundt said. Gross credits this to her personal, and some- times candid, questions. "I always tell guests to let me know if I get too personal," Gross said. "I respect their privacy. It also gives me license to ask them anything." Some of Gross' guests are celebrities who want to sell their newest book, CD or video on her show. "Sometimes guests want to do an infomercial," Gross said. "That's when the interview becomes a tug-of-war." Celebrities who come on the show to sell are often disturbed that Gross asks questions that don't just concentrate on their product, Gross said. But she feels such questions are important in finding out who her subjects really are. "There's no point in doing an interview if I can't ask real questions," Gross said. Her interviews even have provoked some guests to cut the session short. Though these usually aren't aired, Gross played excerpts from some of them last night. Gross said she does extensive preparation before interviewing her guests, gathering as much information as possible so she can write intelligent questions. "I fear that if I ask generic questions, I'll receive generic answers." Gross said. She aims to address her guests compassionately, Gross said. "The reason I prepare is so I'll hopefully care about people;" Gross said. "That's why I'm careful about who I select. I don't want to have to fake" caring. Gross' speech seemed to thoroughly entertain the audience, eliciting a standing ovation. "I really enjoyed it," LSA senior Cristine Cunningham said. "I liked her humor, the self-dep- recation, the inside information, what we don't really hear on the air." "Fresh Air" is broadcast on 89.1 or 101.9 FM weekdays at 3 p.m. Big Ten universities discuss their campus alcohol, safety policies MSA Continued from Page 1A Dolin explained the B.Y.O.B. system limits the number of beers and other alcoholic drinks a student can con- sume by issuing tickets that students exchange for alcohol during fraterni- ty parties. Purdue University has a similar system within their Greek communi- ty involving wrist-bands and hole- punches for alcohol, said Shelly Thompson, executive officer of rev- enue for Purdue Student Government. She added the system has made unregulated co-operative house par- ties more attractive to students. "There is a 20-kegger kick-off at one of the co-ops at the beginning of the year," Thompson said. Jack van Dyle, student rights direc- tor for the Indiana Undergraduate Student Association, said Indiana University has few "problems with alcohol" because the campus, includ- ing the Greek community, is desig- nated as dry. The IUSA is examining the possi- bility of a "bar bus" to transport stu- dents from a popular strip of bars located off campus during weekends, van Dyle said. "It's purpose is to transport drunk- en students and keep drivers off the road," van Dyle said. Students at Northwestern are in a "There isn't much in the way of alcohol in Evanston,,--TfayFri - Tiffany Farriss Northwestern Associated Student Government similar situation. The campus became dry in 1993, following an incident in which an intoxicated fraternity member sus- tained injuries after falling out a win- dow. "There isn't much in the way of alcohol in Evanston," said Tiffany Farriss, ABTS director for Northwestern's Associated Student Government. "They cracked down a lot on alco- hol, and it's been that way ever since." The delegates also discussed police presence on campus and the use of student officers. "I've never seen a better solution than student officers," said Pennsylvania State University Undergraduate Student Government President Caroline Casagrande. "It's excellent for rape prevention and safety." Casagrande said the student offi- cers are less intimidating than regular public safety or state police officers. In another session, delegates dis- cussed fundraising and distribution of funds to student groups. "We've been doing student group funding all wrong," said Joe Bernstein, MSA communications chair. "Relatively speaking, we don't have any money." Several Big Ten schools' budgets are near the million dollar mark, including the University of Iowa. Other student governments, such as Indiana University, receive "kick- backs" from corporate sponsors to increase their budgets The University should "pay the students back for their support" of corporations such as First of America Bank and AT&T who advertise on the student MCard, Bernstein said. Other governments at the ABTS were impressed by the services MSA provides for University students, Bernstein said, but the problem fac- ing the assembly is that students at the University aren't informed about those services. At other Big Ten schools, "there aren't a lot of other student groups to put on programs,; Bernstein said. "We have a lot of groups who do .a lot of the programming that student governments at other universitieG do." SARA SCHENCK~/Daily LSA senior Janeece Freeman, who recently won the Miss Washtenaw County Pageant, poses in her living room yesterday. 'U' senior handles crownschool By Marta Brill Daily Staff Reporter For Music senior Janeece Freeman, this month has deviated from the typical path of a University student. Besides balancing the standard midterm overload of preparing for three exams and a paper, she had a more unique task on her schedule - to win a pageant. She succeeded in being crowned Miss Washtenaw County on Saturday, Oct. 17 at Saline High School. "Janeece is very.determined along with her great skills and talents in music. She has an outgoing personal- ity and tremendous talent," said friend Monte Arnold. Preparing for the pageant included a rigorous work-out schedule for the physical fitness portion, studying current events to be well informed for the interview and developing a platform, an issue the contestant chooses to focus on if she is crowned. Freeman said the title Miss Washtenaw County provides a "great opportunity to actively work on my platform, 'Enriching the Youth of the Inner City."' She said it also enables her to become a more visible leader in the community. "She is a wonder role model of young women today. She has a fan- tastic talent, strong platform, speaks well in her interview and is beautiful inside and out," Pageant Executive Director Laura Bloomensaat said. Her platform aims to increase the graduation rate among inner city high school students. In Lansing, her home town, Freeman tutored and mentored students in the Lansing public high schools. "You can see that she is drawn to kids and kids really respond to her," Arnold said. Freeman is a vocal performance and music education major. Currently, she uses her musical tal- ents to interact with local youths by teaching voice lessons through the Ann Arbor Community and Recreation Program. She does not, however, consider this volunteer work part of her platform because it is not specifically geared towards raising the graduation rate of high school students. In the near future, she plans to par- ticipate in a weekly mentoring pro- gram called Youth Philanthropies that works with children in the Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti area. As well as gaining leadership opportunities, "participating in Miss Washtenaw County was great experi- ence for future pageants," Freeman said. Freeman said she wants to contin- ue the pageant circuit because at each progressing level she has a chance to make a difference on a larger scale. If she is able to succeed in winning the Miss Michigan pageant this summer, she will be able to actively work on her platform across the state, Freeman said. Her ultimate goal is to win the Miss America Pageant and affect the lives of inner city youth nationwide, she said. Until she became involved in pageants, Freeman said she had the wrong impression of "beauty pageants." She encourages others to disregard the common stereotypes and consider how the pageants can help females through scholarships and leadership opportunities. The Miss America Pageant is the largest single source of scholarships for women in the United States. * a * I *1 *I :1 The,998 1999 ,- . 5ludnt DkCJor is herels Students who do not live in a Residence Hall can pick up their FREE telephone hook on the following dates: Wed., Oct. 28 Thur., Oct. 29 Fri., Oct. 30 Fishbowl 12-4pm Michigan Union 12-4pm hiag 12-4pm South U/East U 12-4pM Fishbowl 10-2pm hiag 12-4pm What's happening in Ann Arbor today Eastern and North African Studies, Angell Hall, Auditorium World Wide Web U 1998 Winter Commencement I FVvNTc. i I K ~w hITC I -- - I