V GI e rrran~ail Iftff vveater Today: Partly cloudy. High 51. Low 18. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy. 'High 49. Low 28. One hundred eirhtyears ofeditorialfreedom Tuesday March 23, 1999 -O. 10 At . A M a 0999Te..l nOi On~in guide gets good j.views By Eny Barber Daily Staff Reporter "Welcome to the University of Michigan telephone registration sys- tem. Please press one now." Beginning April 5, University stu- dents will be greeted once again by the infamous CRISP lady as they register for spring, summer and fall classes. nd for the third time, their course se ections will be made primarily from the online course guide - saving the University the approximately $8 per guide it would cost in its printed version. Since its move to the World Wide Web, the guide has grown to 10 times its original size, increasing the price for a printed copy, Michigan Student Assembly Academic Affairs Chair Vikram Sarma said. The fall course guide went online lay and the spring/summer course guide appeared on the Internet about three weeks ago, said Director of Academic Information and Publication for LSA Robert Wallin, adding that the guides are available more than a week earlier than they have been in previous years. "In the old days we had to send a copy to the printer," said Wallin. "Now th t the course guide is online, it can be ry earlier." When the course guide first went online last year, many students com- plained about the elimination of the printed version. "Last year we had a flurry of nega- tive reactions to the change," Wallin said. "But this past fall we've received a lot more positive feedback." Wallin said he attributes this change in opinion partially to improvements that been made on the online course e since it began last year - includ- ing an enhanced online search engine. "You could type in the word 'holo- caust' and find every class in every See CLASSES, Page 7 Running down a dream Greeks set to decide By Asma Rafeeq Daily Staff Reporter policy KELLY MCKINNELL/Daily LSA senior Sara Avery runs across a bridge in Gallup Park yesterday. March 21 officially marked the start of spring, bringing optimistic students outside to enjoy the warmer weather. Awareness molnth to highWight prevention After seven months of evaluating alcohol use at University fraternities and sororities, members of the Greek Social Environment Task Force said they hope to finalize a new alcohol pol- icy by the end of this week. "This is a complete overhaul - not just the current alcohol policy polished over," Interfraternity Council President Rohith Reddy said. The new policy, which the task force may finish writing at a meeting Thursday, could be presented to frater- nity presidents and sorority delegates as early as next week. After the sorority delegates and frater- nity presidents review the new policy with members of their chapters, they will make a final vote on the policy - possi- bly within the next two weeks. Task force co-chair Sarah Sarosi said if the policy is passed by the Panhellenic Association and the IFC, it will be put in place as soon as possible. "We definitely want to have this policy implemented at least one weekend before the end of this year," said Sarosi, an LSA junior. Several times during the past month, the task force - comprised of 14 stu- dents in the Greek community - dis- cussed with fraternity and sorority pres- idents the recommendations it made in a 13-page report of its findings. Among other recommendations, the report suggests making party guest lists mandatory, limiting the number of guests and supplementing the number of sober monitors at parties. The report also recommends pro- hibiting "friends" parties - those which non-Greek students can attend - from the beginning of the semester through the end of Fall Rush. Sarosi said that in the past, fraternities and sororities have used friends parties as a way to attract potential rushees. But the task force wants friends parties to be used not as recruitment tools, Sarosi said, but as parties for actual friends of Greek community members. "A lot of fresh- men end up coming and it just gets out of control," Sarosi said. "It actually is the friends the parties should be for, not for trying to impress rushees." The report also outlines ways to enhance event management, enforce- ment and education of alcohol safety. Sarosi said the task force is working to change the present culture of alcohol abuse, not impose external regulation. "We're very interested in keeping ourselves self-governed," Sarosi said. The Greek community did not form the task force in response to pressures by the University administration or police, Reddy said. "This was a com- pletely internal process," said Reddy, an LSA senior. Panhel President Cindy Faulk said the task force consulted with University administrators, as well as police officers and lawyers, as part of its research., But she added that the See ALCOHOL, Page 7 Month-long program will feature speakers and discussions on sexual assault prevention By Yae lKohen Daily Staff Reporter Bringing awareness of sexual assault to the University and educating students about the dangers of sexual assault facing society is the focus of the Sexual Assault Prevention Awareness Month which will run through April 9. The purpose of the month is to make people more aware of the problems of sexual violence, said LSA sophomore Sarah Lessem, a Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center volunteer. Throughout the month there will be a range of events sponsored by SAPAC - including lectures on "Sexual Assault in the Latino/a Community" scheduled for March 24 and "Sexual Assault in the African American Community" sched- uled for April 7. The program also includes a self-defense workshop for women April 5. Other activities include a con- test to choose the most sexist media advertisement and the annual Take Back the Night march and rally. The march and rally, whose location and time have not yet See ASSAULT, Page 7 BATTLING FOR VOTES Candidates debate key MSA issues By Jewel Gopwani Daily Staff Reporter Last night, WOLV-TV provided this year's Michigan Student Assembly executive slates with the chance to air their platforms to the student body. Candidates kicked-off the evening with introductory remarks and later addressed topics as varied as binge drink- ing and electronic lobbying. Students' Party Presidential candidate Sarah Chopp dis- cussed the party's "three tier" platform - what the party has accomplished, what it is working on and what it wants to tackle during the next year. Presenting the Blue Party's top four objectives, the party's Presidential candidate Brain Elias addressed plans to expand the Student Coursepack Service, fight the Code of Student Conduct, form a direct constituency with the student body and achieve student representation on the See DEBATE, Page 2 U.S. Rep. Debbie Stabenow (D-Lansing), who is considering a run for the U.S. Senate spoke yesterday about social work in the University Hospitals' Ford *hitheatre Stab enow leanmg toward rn for Abritaham'.Ls seat MSA president and vice president candidates Sarah Chopp, Sumeet Kamik, Bram Elias, Andy Coulouris, Jessica'Curtin and Erika Dowdeil gather for a debate in West Quad's Ostafin Room last night. By Nick Bunkley 'Daily Staff Reporter U.S. Rep. Debbie Stabenow (D- Lansing) has been in the center of a political tug-of-war lately, as the Democratic leadership in both the House'and the Senate have been trying sway her to their wing of the itol. After a speech on campus yesterday, Stabenow said she will announce soon whether she plans to make a run next year for the Senate seat currently held by first-term Sen. Spencer Abraham (R- Mich.). Hospitals' Ford Amphitheatre about her specialty field of, social work, Stabenow received applause from the crowd of more than 60 people in sup- port of a Senate bid. "I've been getting a lot of encourage- ment," Stabenow said. First elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1996, Stabenow also is a veteran of both chambers of the Michigan Legislature. She said her top, priorities are education and accessibili- ty to colleges - issues she could push further in the Senate. "It's a question of where I can be Thompson: Code should still be priority By Jewel Gopwanl Daily Staff Reporter Claiming that the Michigan Student Assembly has made progress in its effort to reform the Code of Student Conduct, MSA President Trent Thompson said the Code should remain at the forefront of the assembly's agenda. In December, MSA's Student Rights Commission released a report and a set of recommended amend- ments of the Code that the commission presented to the University Board of Regents in January. Although the regents did not vote on the SRC's I The amendment altered the process by which the Code can be changed.. Previously, Code changes M S required a vote by the regents. { °-The amendment adds student representation to the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs' Students' Relations Committee. All proposed code changes art three of are presented to this committee, three-part which offers its recommenda- In this new process, the president makes the final decision on all proposals. "We've made the process of amending the code a lot more accessible to stu- dents,".former Students Rights Commission Chair Olga Savic said, explaining that it would be easier to influence one person, rather than nine regents. Thompson added that because students don't seem to care about the Code, the assembly should try to inform the campus through forums about stu- dents' rights under the document. "MSA has to be that watchdog and catalyst for change' 'said former SRC Public Relations Director F a I 14 I