LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 31, 1999 - 3 NDUCATION 'Nude Olympics' runners may face suspension . The Committee on the Nude lympics submitted recommendations to Princeton University President Harold Shapiro this week detailing plans for disciplinary actions and the apprehension of nude runners. the recommendations call for stu- dents who perpetuate the activities asso- ciated with the event to be suspended from the university for one year. Dean of Student Life Janina Monturo said the disciplinary process " very different from standard discipli- ry measures. The proposed process would have accused students testify accompanied by an adviser and letters from character witnesses. The report also outlines plans for how public safety officials will prevent Ithe activities. Plans include teams of four pre-assigned officers who will have specialized training in apprehend- ing someone who is nude and knowl- #ge of treatments for hypothermia and "'toxicaion. If the report is approved by Shapiro and trustees, the recommendations for the sanctions and discipline will be .gluded in next year's edition of Ptinceton's Rights, Rules and .Responsibilities literature. Montana cashes on mistake Due to a computer error, the Montana University System has fallen into a windfall of several extra million dollars. Although the Montana Board of Regents admit the money could be used to lower tuition, it indicated the extra funds will probably go to school naintenance. .,The extra money was discovered hen a software program counted a 4.6 million expenditure twice. The regents won't have a list indicat- ing their priority for the money until May. ;other areas being considered for extra cash expenditure include technology costs and salaries for some University staff. Students set to onor Holy Week via live satellite Participating in the largest collegiate Christian event in the nation, more than 20,000 college students from 50 differ- ent campuses are joining in a week- long celebration of the Easter holiday. Organizers of "Rez Week" said the purpose of the event is to bring mem- rs of the Christian faith together for brship and prayer. ,uring the week, students at cam- 'puses nationwide will participate in -public worship and drama reenactment. Florida State University is one institu- ,ion, that has expressed interest in par- ticipation. Today, all involved campuses will come together via satellite for a solemn assembly to ask for forgiveness of their sins. Although this is the second annual 4ez Week," today marks the first time .the assembly has taken place, lucas donates to build USC studio Thanks to a $1.5 million donation from film director George Lucas, a new digital studio will be built at the fniversity of Southern California. ucas graduated from the university in 1966. The new studio will be an addition ,t1h. the Robert Zemeckis Center for Digital Arts and is expected to be com- pleted in 2001. The studio will be named after the late Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa. Additional costs of construction will be..covered in part by $5 million donat- ed by Zemeckis last year. 9The facility will include digital edit- stations with computer graphic interactive classrooms, suites for digital and sound picture editing. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Nika Schulte. Former Daily editor named student speaker By Jaimie Winkler Daily Staff Reporter Summing up four - or more - years of experiences in a few min- utes is a difficult thing to do. Summarizing the University experi- ence for thousands of classmates may be even harder, but LSA senior Janet Adamy has managed to do it. Inspiration for Adamy, an English major, came while perusing old copies of The Michigan Daily, where Adamy worked as a reporter and also served as managing news editor during her college career. One arti- cle she came across revealed that the class of 1999 was the largest ever when it entered the University in the fall of 1995. "I started thinking about memo- ries and how I wanted to convey those," Adamy said. But she refused to reveal the con- tent of her speech, saying she wished to protect its potential effect when delivered May 1 in Michigan Stadium. The process for selecting a student commencement speaker began with advertisements in early January. About 18 students submitted speech- es to the committee, which included University staff, faculty and stu- dents. Associate Director for University and Development Events Jackie Dunham said the committee used a blind selection process. "All names were removed from their speeches," Dunham said, adding that the speeches were then ranked by committee members. Those receiving the most votes were debated to select the speaker. Only four students before Adamy have spoken during the college-wide spring commencement exercises in Michigan Stadium, but it has been a tradition to have a student speaker at the LSA commencement. LSA senior Courtney Dwight, who sat on the selection committee, said Adamy's speech was one of her top two choices. "I felt I could relate to a lot of things in her speech," Dwight said. "Everybody could find something in her speech and say 'Yeah, I remember that."' Heather Kamins, editor in chief of the Daily, said it seems natural that Adamy would be chosen. "Janet is a fabulous writer and is very charismatic," said Kamins, an LSA junior. "I am sure she will inspire the departing seniors." Adamy said she was overwhelmed when a representative from the selection committee called her Monday afternoon and asked if she had been practicing her public speaking skills. "I wrote the speech and I liked the speech," Adamy said. "But I could- n't imagine anything I would have to say would be any more important than what anyone else would." Adamy's speech went through some minor alterations before being DANA LINNANE/Daily LSA senior Janet Adamy sits on a bench in the Law Quadrangle yesterday. Adamy was chosen to deliver the spring commencement address. selected by the committee, but retained its intent. "It would speak to the feelings of students, the feeling students have as they leave the University and how much the University meant to them," said Mary Jo Frank, coordi- nator of executive communication in the vice president for communi- cation office. The keynote speaker for the spring commencement is scheduled to be United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Stand on your man 'U'narrows focus of self stud By Jaimie Winkler moved in a direction that forces them to do interdisciplinay Daily Staff Reporter work or to create tunnel vision and ignore other interests. Instead of considering university re-accreditation a The self-study will be facilitated through five distinct worl- "headache," the University and others in the Committee for ing groups focusing on different perspectives of interdiscipli- Institutional Cooperation have decided to narrow the focus of nary studies. the required self-study to be more productive. Mathematics Prof. Phil Hanlon, who is part of the group Re-accreditation occurs once every 10 years and is per- focusing on undergraduate learning and teaching, said the study formed by a private organization called North Central is of particular importance at the undergraduate level. Association of Colleges and Schools. The structure of the undergraduate colleges makes interdisci- Accreditation began as a way to shape the way high schools plinary work difficult to achieve but necessary for students who prepared students for college. But during the first quarter of the want to master things like information sciences, Hanlon said, century, higher education imposed accreditation upon itself as a adding that information sciences doesn't fit within the curreyt way of measuring progress with respect to mission statements curriculum. and goals. Hanlon also said one of the things the working group vwil] Criteria for re-accreditation require the University to do a self- look at is the faculty and student relationship, noting that study. Members of NCA compile their own report after spend- research relationships have been improved more than instruie- ing three days on campus scrutinizing the self-study results and tional relationships. "For me, what I would like to see are sobne conducting interviews. Whether or not the University is re- sort of concrete recommendations for that the provost could accredited depends on the outcome of NCA's visit. enact," Hanlon said. "Ten years ago (the study) was to the form of an institutional One such recommendation would be reducing the number of audit,' said John Godfrey, who works in the office of the provost. administrative difficulties that stand in the way of creating inter- "In terms of what we got out of it, it was of no value at all.' departmental classes. For this decade's re-accreditation, the University has decided But he added there are many intellectual issues barring these to focus its self-study under the heading of collaborative and types of classes. "We don't want a course to be so shallow that interdisciplinary research and learning. it doesn't go into depth," Hanlon said, adding that interdiscipli- "The purpose is to develop a review that examines the bor- nary classes mean breadth more than depth. der crossing work that makes this University a distinction," Some working groups have had one preliminary meeting, but Godfrey said. Opening new cross-disciplinary fields is the way other groups are scheduled to begin meeting today. Godfrey the University could move in a new direction, Godfrey said, said much of the work will be done in May and said he expects explaining that student, faculty and graduate interests have all a finished report sometime next fall. MSU suspends tdent DARBY FRIEDLIS/Daily Graduate student Dave Muir lifts LSA junior Michelle Miller above his head yesterday in the Diag. The cheerleaders were promoting next week's tryouts. " W- Amend-ment wl access crime stats LANSING (AP) - Two Michigan State University students were tem- porarily suspended yesterday for their role in last weekend's riot, and universi- ty officials say more suspensions are being considered. The students, who aren't being named, received hand-delivered letters yesterday telling them to leave campus immediately, university spokesperson Deb Pozega Osburn said. One student is accused of causing property damage and the other is accused of interfering with emergency workers. Both incidents occurred on campus Saturday night in a rampage that began even before Michigan State lost to Duke in the NCAA semifinals. The university's code of conduct gives officials the right to suspend stu- dents before a hearing if the students present a "clear and present danger" to the campus, Pozega Osburn said. Vice President of Student Affairs Lee June made the decision to suspend the students because campus police reports gave him reasonable cause to believe the students performed the activities, but he stressed that the charges are only allegations until a hearing is held. By Marta Brill Daily Staff Reporter An amendment has been added to the state's higher education budget that will require state funded Universities to sub- mit campus crime statistics to the Michigan Department of Education. Representative A.T. Frank (D-Saginaw Twp.), a member of the House Appropriations Higher Education sub- committee, proposed the amendment. "We're now waiting the Senate's actions on the bill," Frank said, adding that it is important to have the amendment in the budget so the state government can share control of publishing crime statis- tics with the federal government. Universities are currently required to submit statistics and reports on campus crime to the federal Department of Justice. "It has come to my attention that some universities are not complying to the federal requests," Frank said, adding that he has no reason to believe the University does not comply. "Students and families should have the right to know when it comes to the type and frequency of crimes being commit- ted on a campus," Frank said in a written statement announcing the amendment. "It's time that colleges and universities put public safety over image," Frank said. "Statistics for crimes committed on cam- pus often are hard to uncover because some of our universities are more inter- ested in preserving their image." University-spokesperson Joel Seguine said nothing will change in the way the University handles publishing crime sta- tistics. A report is already furnished annually to the federal government under the Crime Awareness and Campus Security Act. "This will not put any new burdens on the University," he said. "It makes no new demands." The University also makes crime sta- tistics available on request and publishes them in a monthly feature in the University Record newspaper. Seguine said he agrees that people involved with the University have a right to information about crime on campus. "The best use of crime statistics," Seguine said, "is to educate not only staff, students, and the University community, but also prospective students." He added that publishing crime statistics is more than just keeping a running tab - it is educational policy. Some students said that while crime is a concern, crime rates aren't something they considered when choosing a college. LSA first-year student Jessica Horvath said it never came into her mind to check the campus crime frequency. "Safety was considered, but the col- leges I was looking at weren't in very bad areas," she said. Horvath added that she thought most colleges have a good repu- tation in promoting campus safety. "I wouldn't have thought about it" LSA first-year Valeriesha Howard said, explaining she didn't associate Ann Arbor with having crime problems. CorreCtion: U The press conference for Maureen Johnson is scheduled for was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. 1 p.m. at the Michigan Union. This What's happening in Ann Arbor today Koessler Room, 4 p.m. U Safewalk, 936-1000, Shapiro Library Lobby, 8 p.m.- 2:30 a.m. - EVENTS J "Undergraduate Research ERVICES i .. ... a. t1::f K'_ _ ..ss:.r r ai..a..s ! IA IM 1 1m walI V11 1ram