2A- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 30, 2000 NATION/WORLD Hands-on experiences benefit students CLASSES Continued from Page JA LSA freshman Christina Urbanow- icz's Psychology 211 course in criminal justice placed her in a mentoring situa- tion at the Maxey W. J. Boys Training School in Whitmore Lake. "It makes me feel good to do some- thing to influence (the boys)," Urbanow- icz said. Through experiential classes, students learn to apply academic theories to practical applications. Mabel Rodriquez teaches a two- Dart course on migrant outreach. During the spring term, students "academically analyze" migrant workers in the Michigan. In the summer term, the students will visit migrant campus through- out southeastern Michigan and edu- cate migrant workers about pesticide, educational opportunities and health issues - all in Spanish. "They will have a first-hand experi- ence of the living conditions, while battling the same linguistics issues that the workers have to face," she said. Stella Raudenbush, executive direc- tor for the Michigan K-12 Service- Learning Center, teaches Education "The whole purpose of an education is to understand ourselves as human beings." - Stella Raudenbush Michigan K-12 Service-Learning Center executive director C ROSS T H E NATo ( Crews search for more tornado victims FORT WORTH, Texas - Cleanup crews sent huge dangling pieces of glass crashing to the pavement from Fort Worth's skyscrapers yesterday as rescuers searched for more victims of tornadoes that ripped through the city, killing at least three people. "We still feel there may be more victims trapped in the debris," Fire Chief Larry McMillan said. Three people were killed, one was missing and presumed dead, more thaL80 were injured and dozens were left homeless as two twisters blasted windows f dozens of offices and tore homes apart shortly after the evening rush hour Tuesday. "Imagine a large bomb going off," said Sean Finley, who hustled frantic cus- tomers down 35 floors to safety from his high-rise restaurant. The twister stripped the brick walls off a cathedral tower as two women prayed inside. "It looks like a battlefield and yet God brought us miraculously through," said the Rev. Bob Nichols as he surveyed the damage at Calvary Cathedral International. About 30,000 people were left without power at the height of the storm, with 2,000 still out yesterday afternoon, TXU Corp. spokeswoman Pat Nichols said. Downtown Forth Worth, a city of 480,000 about 30 miles west of Dallas, was sealed off as crews pushed 200-pound panes of glass to the ground fror35 floors up. W 317, "Leadership: multicultural, cross- disciplinary and intergenerational per- spectives," which combines lecture, class discussions and working in senior centers. She said the class gives students a deeper understanding of what leader- ship is. "You really learn best by doing,' Rau- denbush said. "The whole purpose of an education is to understand ourselves as human beings. What else is there?" ELLERBE Continued from Page 1A "Within the next couple of weeks I am certain I will have to deal with it," Bill Martin said. "If issues come out with the Ed Martin situation, then we'll deal with them. We'll get the truth, and we'll deal with it." Earlier reports indicated that Ed Martin gave large loans and gifts to several players, including Chris Webber, Robert Traylor and Louis Bullock. The NCAA has only a four-year statute of limi- tations, which would only cover possible new vio- lations dating back to 1996. Ellerbe refused to comment on the Ed Martin situation. Bill Martin confirmed that estimates of the department's budget will show a deficit of up to $3 million. Lost revenue from a canceled radio contract with TSN after the company failed to make pay- ments accounts for about $2 million of the dis- crepancy. Declining income from alumni gifts and apparel revenue accounts for as much as S1 mil- lion more. "We use to be the leader in logo sales, but we haven't won a championship in a few years," Mar- tin said. "There's also a change in fashion. Kids don't want to wear just a polo shirt with a logo anymore." Martin also said not to expect a miracle in repairing the budget by the end of fiscal year July I and said he instead hopes to look toward next year. Ellerbe and Martin said little else about other rumors related to the basketball program, includ- ing the status of freshman guard Jamal Crawford next season and the possibility of any players transferring. Crawford said all season long that he plans to be in a Michigan uniform this fall. He still has to serve three games of an eight-game suspension left for trying to enter the NBA draft. Crawford missed six games this season for vio- lating an NCAA amateurism bylaw by accepting cash and gifts from a family friend. ZIMMER Continued from Page 1A Sheldon kept in social contact with Zimmer after he left city council. "Every year he'd throw these Valentine's Day parties - he'd dress up in a tuxedo;" she said. Sheldon said she regretted not being able to attend his party in February. Some ITD employees were unable to reach their offices yesterday because of the investigation as busi- ness at ITD continued in a normal but "subdued" manner, said Jose-Marie Griffiths, the University's Chief Information Officer. Officials were on hand for employee grief counseling. "He was well-liked," she said. "People were shocked and saddened." Zimmer, who was 41, grew up in Ann Arbor and graduated from Pioneer High School. He received a degree in computers and a masters in business admin- istration from the University. Zimmer entered the building at 1:17 a.m. Monday with a 12-gauge, single barrel shotgun he had pur- chased sometime last week, DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said. Judge rules Clinton violated privacy act WASHINGTON - President Clin- ton and his top aides intentionally vio- lated the privacy rights of former White House volunteer Kathleen Wil- ley by publicly releasing friendly let- ters she had written to the president, a federal judge ruled yesterday. The ruling by U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth, which demon- strates the lingering effects of the Monica Lewinsky scandal and the persistence of the conservative group Judicial Watch, will force White House lawyers to answer questions from the Washington- based organization. But the finding by Lamberth, a Republican appointee who has often been at odds with the Clinton admin- istration, that "the president commit- ted a criminal violation of the Privacy Act" is unlikely to result in any sanc- tions against Clinton or his aides. At a White House news conference yesterday, Clinton defended his release of Willey's letters to show that her allegations in the midst of the 1998 Lewinsky furor "were untrue." White House counsel Beth Nolan said she is confident Lam- berth's ruling "will be overturned on appeal" because previous legal opinions have held that the privacy act does not cover the president's office. Boycott jeopardizes gay rgghts march WASHINGTON - When hundreds of thousands of gay men and lesbians marched on Washington seven years ago, they worried that conservative, anti-gay groups would disrupt the gath- ering. This time, the most bitter fighting is among gay rights leaders. In a time of unprecedented props for gay men and lesbians, the Millenni- um March for Equality scheduled for April 30 was expected to be the move- ment's fourth and biggest national rally ever with up to I million people. Activists are calling for a boycott, accusing organizers of planning the event without enough community input, especially from people of color. The Princeton Review August MCAT schedules are here. 0 8 Point average score improvement 0 Expert instructors # Over 4,000 pages of practice materials Five full length practice exams Guaranteed results (nce ton Review 1-800-2REVIEW www.review.com AROUND TH E WORLD Rape victims teshere, was a*consci nent of the Bosnia against Bosnian Serbs to "ethnically cleat Bosnia-Herzegov THE HAGUE, Netherlands - Her population in 1992 face was hidden by a screen, her voice . One European U: scrambled electronically. Identified as ed that in 1992 al Victim No. 50, she opened her private civil war in the chamber of horrors yesterday, telling 20,000 women an the world how women like her were lims, were raped by forced to become the sexual property of Bosnian Serbs. MVexicof "They would point their finger:X r 'You, you andayou,' "said the rape output, pr victim, who was 16 at the time of her o tu Bosnian war ordeal. MEXICO CIT During two months of terror, she its newfound rolea was sexually assaulted so often by er, Mexico took t Bosnian Serb men that she couldn't OPEC produce even give a total. count, she testified committing to rais yesterday. the supply hike ad In a landmark case, the Internation- nization of Petr al Criminal Tribunal for the Former Countries and thL Yugoslavia has begun hearing the first global oil prices. war crimes trial under international Mexico's decisio law in which the alleged offenses are in crude oil prices the organized, widespread acts of sex- in a row. ual violence against women. Rape, according to prosecutors - Compiledfron "" "i:isii .': ous and key compo- an Serbs' campaign .se" large swaths of ina of its Muslim -95. Jnion study estimat- one, at the onoof Balkan country, d girls, mostly Mus- vy Bosnian Serbs. ises oil ices drop Y - Underscoring as a world oil y- he lead among n- rs yesterday by e output in line with dopted by the Orga- oleum Exporting us ease pressure on on spurred a plunge for the second day m Daily wire ruts. POTENTiAL ".' If you want to make a high-velocity career move, check out Automation Alley. Located in Michigan's Oakland County, Automation Alley is the nation's newest technology cluster. And Automation Alley is on par or better than those more established clusters like Silicon Valley and Boston's Route 128. Here you'll find a lower cost of living. A higher per capita The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336; Opinion 764- :; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; billing 764-0550 E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaify.com. NEWS Jewel Gopwani, Managing Editor EDITORS: Nick Bunkley, Michael Grass, Nika Schulte, Jalmie Winkler STAFF: Eddie Ahn. Lindsey Alpert, Jeannie Baumann, Risa Berrin, Marta Brill, Charles Chen. Anna Clark, Adam Brian Cohen, ShabnaM Daneshvar Sana Danish, Nikita Easley. Dave Enders. Jen Fish, Josie Gingrich, Robert Gold. Krista Gullo, Elizabeth Kassab. 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