8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 9, 1998 NATION/WORLD Wolverines shut out Penn State PENN ;STATE Continued from Page 1A fumble on its second. After the Lions were forced to punt on the first drive, the Michigan offense clicked on all cylinders. Quarterback Tom Brady hit fullback Aaron Shea, who was streaking down the sideline, for a 26-yard touchdown. "I can't believe we played the way we played," Michigan line- backer James Hall said. "It's unbelievable." The Wolverines racked up 20 more points, but the first six were the only points Michigan needed. Brady also connected with favorite target Tai Streets for a seven-yard touchdown on the all-too-familiar fade play in the first quarter. Tailback Anthony Thomas, although he didn't start the game, ran for a one-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter to hammer the final nail in Penn State's coffin with 3:03 left to play. Placekicker Jay Feely kicked two field goals, including a 49- yarder in the third quarter. The 27 points allowed by Penn State were the most yielded by the Lions this season. "That was real nice"' Brady said. "I think you saw a Michigan team really fired up. This was the most enthusiastic we've been in eight weeks." The game marked a series of other firsts for both the Lions and the Wolverines. The Lions were shut out for the first time since 1987. It was the first time Michigan beat Penn State in the Big House. The Michigan defense recorded its first shutout since last year's 37-0 blanking at Indiana. Michigan safety Marcus Ray played for the first time since being suspended by the University for improper association with a sports agent. Ray and the defense did everything to propel the Wolverines to a victory. They intercepted four passes, stopped therunning game, limited their mistakes and held firm on the goal line. At the end of the first quarter and the beginning of the second quarter, the Lions gained possession following a Clarence Williams fumble. In a first-and-goal situation on the td yard line, the Wolverines turned away Penn State's charge four times. "I remember telling Marcus Ray and Sam (Sword) that 'after we stop them, we're going to go crazy,"' Michigan safety Tommy Hendricks said. "So when we stopped them there, we went crazy' During the game, the entire Michigan team went crazy. Every aspect of Michigan's game seemed to be in full force. On special teams, Hall blocked a field goal and Rob Renes recovered a fum- bled punt for the Wolverines. On offense, Michigan rebounded from last week's negative- 23-yard effort with 136 yards on the ground against Penn State. But Brady, who was I 7-of-30 for two touchdowns and 224 yards passing, remained effective through the air. "This was totally a team effort' Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "We played with great emotion and intensity. I could go on and on about every player' BUST Continued from Page 1A charter after the fraternity was found guilty of serving alcohol to 18-year-old LSA first-year student Courtney Cantor, who died after falling from her Markley window. The fraternity violated its pledged to be alcohol free. Holeman said that kicking three fra- ternities off the campus is not an effec- tive solution to the campus drinking. "This is a nationwide problem. It's not going to take another fraternity getting kicked off to change,"she said. 'The solutions is to help us change"~ Jatczak said minors who violated the city code and were ticketed with the mis- demeanor offense must appear in district court in front of a judge. He added that the fines and offenses for the fraternities will most likely be harsher than for the individuals served with tickets. The minors could receive up to 90 days in jail and a $500 fine. Additionally, because of a Michigan law passed with- in the last year, the offense will go on the individual's permanent driving record. Hartford said that because of recent modifications to the Family Education Rights to Privacy Act, the University has permission to notify the parents of stu- dents under 21 if they are charged with an alcohol or drug offense. The University has not decided if it will notify parents about the events, Hartford said. "We are still discussing it" Hartford said. "We have permission from the feder- al government but as of now we are stick- ing with are policy of not contacting par- ents" Hartford said she is discouraged by the violations. "Given what has happened in the last year, that fraternities will continue to 01 house FLE PHOTO The Beta Theta PI fraternity house was one of three fraternities caught serving alcohol to minors in an undercover AAPD sting this past weekend. 01 dik IASA Continued from Page 1A from now and see this show still being performed in front of 4,000 people," Shah said. Carrying a rose for her daughter, Rekha Lall attended the show to watch her daughter, Neha, perform in a dance piece titled "Jugalbandi." "It's impressive; Lall said. "The children put a lot of effort into it". The cultural show blended Indian tra- ditions with contemporary Indian American culture. "It represents our culture and at the same time presents how they can min- gle both," Lall said. While the event showcased folk dances such as "Rass," other dances incorporated modern influences. In the dance "Bhangra Munde," U U half the performers dressed in black running pants and white jackets and the other half dressed in traditional clothing, but the dancers performed the same moves. LSA sophomore Sanjay Sharma, who searched for a cassette as "Uncle Asheesh" in the skit "At Home with the Ramachandrans,' said he hoped the show was able to teach the audience about the culture. "It's not just that the audience learns things that they don't know," Sharma said. "They are learning things that they should know" Sharma said that even little things, such as how the maternal character lov- ingly harassed the paternal character in the skit, portrayed aspects of the culture audience members might not know. "It shows how Indian families act and relate;" Sharma said. Muneera Rafiq, a junior at the University's Dearborn campus, attend- ed the show for the first time this week- end. Rafiq said one of the things that struck her the most was the ethnic diversity of the audience. "It's great that its bringing people together," Rafiq said. "You can see the variety of people here." Although the event started in the Green Lounge of East Quad in the early 1980s, Mujumdar said she has been delighted to see the show grow. "When I was in it, it was in the Michigan Theater," Mujumdar said. "Now it's selling out Hill Auditorium." serve alcohol to minors is distressing and worrisome," Hartford said. Holeman said these recent incidents, including drinking related deaths at Stanford University, Syracuse University ansi Rutgers University, do not help the reputation of the Greek community, but will force it to abide by drinking laws. "It enforces the stereotype that the Greek community is a place to get alco- hol and a drinking environment," Holeman said. He said FC and the Greek community are trying to move away from providing alcohol for partiers and make the individ- uals more responsible for their drinking. "The issue at hand is not to drink," Holeman said. Holeman said the Greek community is trying to provide a safe atmosphere for people who want to drink at parties and to continue to educate the community about alcohol abuse. "We are going to move to the next level," he said. "The focus is not on alco- hol but now on our scholarship, leader- ship and service" Despite Cantor's death and Thursday's alcohol-related death of a Michigan State University student, AAPD denies specu- lation that its recent activities having been spurred by these events. "It's something we do periodically Jatczak said. "There's no special reason for doing it." Jatczak said that because of the excite- ment of home football games, the AAPD will continue to have their normal party patrols on Fridays and Saturdays. The special undercover operations also will continue to be random, but Jatczak said "because of the amount of violations this weekend, this will contin- ue to catch their attention." MSA works on coursepack store EXTERNAL REvIEw PROCESS Please let us hear from you! Comments, suggestions, praise, complaints will help us evaluate the Code of Student Conduct. Contact us (Margaret Barr, Northwestern University, Mary Childers, Dartmouth and William Harmon, University of Virginia) at this address: Ecternalcode@umich.edu MSA Continued from Page 1A and schools have not been named as parties. The lawsuits concerning the statute, Morris said, had not involved profes- sors or school, but only commercial institutions, such as the case against Michigan Document Service, which wasn't charging adequate royalty fees. The fair use statue takes into consid- eration the intended purpose of the copying, she said. "The publishers argued that, in the hands of the copy shops, that 'purpose and character' was simply to make money," Morris said. "Of course, in the hands of the professor, who, after all, is the person who decides what material to copy, the purpose is educa- tion." "And the statute specifically men- tions nonprofit educational purposes as indicative of fair use" she said. Last winter, MSA arranged a con- tract with the Michigan Union Bookstore to run the operation out of the bookstore, but after a lawyer reviewed the contract, Elias said, assembly members decided not to carry through with the deal. "They still wanted to charge us for royalties" Elias said. The coursepack store may be operat- ed out of MSA offices, located in the Michigan Union, if MSA can't find a more permanent home and employees before the winter '99 term begins. "The (Michigan) League is the place we're really looking for," Elias said. "Our long-term goal is to hire a staff on workstudy." The assembly plans to "start small next semester" Elias said. Members working on the store idea created a worksheet to examine the degree of liability each coursepack would carry. The liability on each document varies depending on the age of the document and the publisher's policy on collecting royalty fees. "We're going to start out really co servatively," Elias said. "We're goingto make sure we can sell very legal and very cheap coursepacks.' One of the biggest challenges the store faces is gaining the trust of University professors, MSA Engineering Rep. and Student General Council Dave Burden said. "It's a lot easier for them to use a ser- vice they're familiar with," said Burden, an Engineering senior. LSA senior Geoff Connors said 10 welcomes the idea of a store that can reduce coursepack prices. "I think the prices are excessively high for the service of merely photo- copying and binding a piece of paper," Connors said. Now if you don't know the anders on the test, you can call someone who does. -'i M no(.2 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 rates to Michigan college students. Student Prepaid Cellular, you purchase So even if you're already the whatever airtime you want in advance. smartest person in class, you can There are no contracts, no monthly bills, look even smarter with AirTouch. I U ANNOUNCING A SET OF COURSE OFFERINGS IN MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY FOR WINTER TERM 1999 Microbiology 301 Lectures are designed to introduce students to the fundamentals of microbiology and immunology applicable to the health professions. Topics include structure, function, genetics and general biology of microorganisms, immunology, virology, medical microbiology, and organ-based infectious diseases. It is recommended that students also take the accompanying laboratory course, Micro. 350. Micro. 301 and the accompanying laboratory course Micro. 350 are the required courses for pre-pharmacy students and are open to all students in the health professions with ermission of the Director. This course will be offered MWF from 9-10 AM in 5623 Medical Science Building 11. The Department of Microbiology and Immunology and the Department of Biology will be continuing a series of courses set in a modular format. Each one credit module runs for one third of a semester. In some cases multiple modules can be combined to make up a traditional course. Students may choose from the various modules to create a program that best fits their educational objectives and interests. Microbiology 607, 608, and 609 are three modules focusing on mechanisms of microbioal pathogenesis. They are designed for graduate students and advanced 4 undergraduates. These modules will be offered consecutively and will meet TTH from 10- 11:30 AM in 5623 Medical Science Building 11. Prerequisites for the modules - Introduction to Microbiology (Biology 207 or Micro 301) and introduction to Immunology (Micro 502) and first year Biochemistry and Genetics or permission of course director. Module 1(1/7-2/4) Microbiology 607- Host-Pathogen Interactions (1 credit) Module 11 (2/9-3/16) Microbiology 608 - echanisms of Extracellular Pathogenesis (1 credit) Module Ill (3/18-4/20 Microbiology 609- Mechanisms of Intracellular Pathogenesis (1 credit) The first module addresses the effects of microbes on the infected human host at both the individual and population levels. The second module explores the mechanisms of pathogenesis caused by mucosal and toxin producing pathogens. The third module focuses on host pathogen interactions in infections caused by intracellular pathogens. Microbiology 641 and 642 are two modules focusing on molecular and cellular events in the immune response. They are designed for upper-class advanced undergraduates and graduate students interested in the health sciences. These modules will be offered 4 consecutively and will meet TTH from 1-2:30 PM in 5631 Medical Science Building II. Prerequisite for the two modules - first year Biochemistry and Genetics; permission of instructor for undergraduates or NCFD. Module 1(1(7-2/4) Microbiology 641- Molecular and Cellular Immunology I o 0 } For more details, call 1-800-AIRTOUCH or E-mail us at mistudentprepaid@airtouch.com I