LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 24, 1999 - 3 .si R olIIGHER EDUCATION Arizona Greek system regulates alcohol use The University of Arizona's Interfraternity Council decided to phase out parties sponsored by Greeks Advocating the Mature Management of Alcohol during the next two years, virtu- ally eliminating the ability to have alco- hol at parties in Greek chapter houses. Starting in the year 2000, the 22 Arizona fraternities will be allowed dn'l five GAMMA events. The num- ber will be reduced to three in spring of 2001 and beginning the following *6tnster, Arizona chapter. houses will only be allowed to have alcohol at Homecoming gatherings. GAMMA regulates alcohol use and safety at fraternity parties and requires chapters to hire security guards and police officers for their events. Students apathetic to, anti-gay protest * The Westboro Baptist Church is spending the next few days picketing various institutions in Providence, RL.. that are accepting of homosexuals. Sunday WBC held an anti-gay protest on the corner of Prospect and Wasserman streets at Brown University. About 50 students, includ- ig members of Brown's Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transsexual Association showed up at the intersection to watch he protest. Members of the Rhode an Alliance for Lesbian and Gay Civil Rights also observed the protest, but neither group decided to conduct a counter protest, saying such action would be counter-productive. While members of WBC held posters advocating the church's anti- gay mission, many students filled the other side of the street singing hymns, playing a stereo and carrying posters *eading, "God loves me." WBC, a Topeka, Kan., group, is known for picketing beating victim Matthew Shepard's funeral. Sfudent has a fatal fall from window University of Maine junior Andrea Amdall, of Menomonie, Wis., fell from her ,fourth-floor residence hall room 0indow Wednesday. Amdall, 20, was ansported to the Eastern Medical Center after falling at around 12:40 p.m. from her room at Somerset Hall. She died later that afternoon. Amdall, a student at the University of Wisconsin at Eau Clair, was spending the fall semester as a part of a national student exchange pro- gram. Students decide college rankings The College Student Report is a new college ranking system, which rates uniyrsities based on student surveys primarily completed on the Internet at wwwindiana.edu/~nsse/bro2 www hntm The survey asks students questions such as how they spend their time, how meaningful their experiences have been with faculty and students, and what *ley have gained from their classes. The National Survey of Student Engagement is scheduled to release the survey in the spring of 2000. The University of Massachusetts at Amherst and Boston University are taking part in the survey. Colorado decides against riot fee' 0 Instead of charging the students of the University of Colorado at Boulder a mandatory "riot fee," as University of Colorado Regent Jim Martin suggested at a regents meeting earlier this month, the university is considering fining stu- -dents directly involved in a riot. At a meeting with the University of Colorado's Student Union on Monday, Martin admitted that he was not serious about charging a "riot fee," but that it sjust a suggestion. Student leaders agreed to address anti-riot measures that would impose some sort of fine or eco- nomic sanction against a rioting stu- dent or student who disobey police orders to disperse during a riot. --Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jewel Gopwani. Security increases at museum meteorite exhibit By Nicole Tuttle Daily Staff Reporter Stealing a 250-pound meteorite couldn't be con- sidered easy, but the University's Exhibit Museum of Natural History has made it next to impossible. After the theft of a smaller meteorite in August 1998, museum officials have increased security at the exhibit. "We've redesigned the meteorite exhibit to make it more secure ... it would take a blowtorch to get (the 250-pound meteorite) off its base now," said Matt Linke, planetarium director at the muse- urn. Ypsilanti resident -Stephen Collins admitted to selling a meteorite stole in August 1998 to Michael Amtrak to add high Ispeed rals s for travel By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter As students rush out of Ann Arbor and other college campuses across the nation for the Thanksgiving holiday, Amtrak trains will be packed to capacity for its busiest travel period of the year. And with the coming of high-speed rail service between Detroit and Chicago, Amtrak and Michigan transportation officials are hoping that within the next few years students will have to spend less time riding the rails. Passeng "The trip will be more time-competi- speed ti tive with air travel and cars' said Gary Naeyaert, spokesperson for the Michigan holiday,, Department of Transportation. on rails "Currently, the trains top out at no more East Coa than 79 miles per hour. We'd like to make Midwes it closer to 100 miles per hour." tor of i Amtrak plans to run high-speed trains national on about 100 of the 280 miles between will be i Chicago and Detroit, said Kevin Johnson, 46,000,' manager of media relations for Amtrak's "It's th regional headquarters in Chicago. he said. "The rest of the spoke is owned by the Amtr freight companies and that track won't be high-spe able to handle it," Johnson said. spring, V Naeyaert said Amtrak hopes to make Nine 10 round trips between Detroit and signedc Chicago each day instead of four, and Regiona travel time between the cities would be tually pe cut from six hours to four. Chicago "If we can get it down to four hours, Milwauh ridership should increase," he said. Michi Twenty-two miles of track near Niles, mum al Mich., currently are ready for high-speed state to travel, Naevaert said. The remaining 78 existing miles could be ready as early as 2005, he rather th said, depending on the availability of other sta funding. "Wer In anticipation ofa 28 percent increase capital f in passengers during the Thanksgiving reality," Casper, a mineral dealer from New York. He w as sentenced to nine months in prison last week for interstate transportation of stolen property. Casper recognized the stolen meteorite's description in an online notice posted by the muse- um and informed museum officials of his pur- chase. DPS officers apprehended Collins within a few days of Casper's report and had an easier search because Collins had given Casper his real name and phone number. A suspect has not been named in the actual theft of the meteorite, although FBI Ann Arbor Bureau Special Agent Greg Stejskal said officials believe Collins was involved. "His claim was that he bought it from a person whom he knew from prison," said DPS Sgt. Kevin McNultv, who questioned Collins at his initial arrest. The theft occurred the afternoon of Aug. 1, 1998, at a time when the museum has fewer visitors. The thief cut the wires securing the meteorite and snuck it out of the building, investigators said. "Getting out of the building with a 60-pound meteorite in a bookbag while acting natural would be the tough part," Linke said, adding that he sus- pects that museum patrons may have seen the theft but not taken action to stop it. Though the meteorite is essentially nothing more than a large chunk of iron, Collins traded it for S 1,000 plus two valuable minerals. 'Meteorites can havec considerable value," Linke said. "They're from another world and they're not that common." A much larger meteor struck the earth approx+- mately 50,000 years ago, creating Canyon DibIlo Meteor Crater in Arizona. Ninety percent of the meteor vaporized upon impact but smaller chunks, or meteorites, remained. The stolen meteorite was discovered in the crater, along with a 250-pound meteorite also on display at the museum. McNulty said that museums are not generally the target of crime at the University. "It's very rare ... I can only think of a couple of thefts in the past few years;" he said. Admissions system works out kinks SAM HOLLENSHEAD/ Daily gers board an Amtrak train station yesterday. Amtrak plans installing hIgh- rains to increase travel time efficiency. Amtrak is putting 61 extra trains in the nation's Northwest and ast areas and adding coach cars to tern trains, said John Wolf, direc- media relations for Amtrak's headquarters. Overall, Amtrak ncreasing its seating capacity by Wolf said. he busiest time of the year for us" ak plans to debut its new Acela eed train in the Northwest next Wolf said. states, including Michigan, have on to be part of the Midwest l Rail Initiative, which will even- ermit high-speed train travel from to Detroit, St. Louis and kee. agan plans to increase the maxi- lowable speed of trains in the 100 mph, a speed at which the trains are capable of traveling, an the 110 mph limit proposed in ates, Naeyaert said. need just under 5400 million of or improvements to make this a he said. To prepare for high-speed trains, Naeyaert said, M-DOT has to evaluate rail crossings along the line and upgrade signal and warning equipment when nec- essary. "There are some crossings on this entire corridor that might not be able to be made safe enough and might have to be closed down;" he said. Another destination may soon be available to passengers boarding at the Depot Street station. Lansing's Capital Area Transportation Authority on Monday chose a potential route for passenger rail service between Detroit and the state capital, Naeyaert said. The selected path would travel through Dearborn, Ann Arbor and Howell, he said. CATA initiated a study examining four possible routes after General Motors Corp. announced plans to move its Oldsmobile headquarters from Lansing to Detroit. "The route that was seen as most fea- sible and having the most potential is the route that includes Ann Arbor" Naeyaert said. By Michael Grass Daily Staff Reporter The University's admissions office has finally worked the kinks out of its information processing system, follow- ing significant delays last fall. Since the implementation of M- Pathways - the University's admin- istrative computing system - in admissions processing, the transition period including installing the system and learning to use it caused many applicants to be waitlisted until the backlog was alleviated. To address the delay, the admissions office implemented a modified rolling admissions system which is still in use this year, along with some minor changes. The admissions staff feels "it's work- ing pretty well," said University spokesperson Julie Peterson. In the modified rolling admission system, small weekly batches of appli- cation responses are sent out, unlike last year, when only four batches of responses were released. Peterson said applications began to arrive in the beginning of September and the first letters of admission were sent to prospective LSA and Engineering students Oct. 25. In past years, the University used a basic rolling admissions system where applications were processed as they were received. The University often responded with notification letters within four to six weeks. But the implementation of M- Pathways last fall and the subsequent delay distressed many prospective stu- dents and their guidance counselors when the University switched to modi- fied admissions.r "That's why there was a delay last fall," Peterson said. Part of the system slowdown was rooted in the training of staff who use the admissions processing system. "It's kind of a gradual process .. peo, ple get up to speed at different times Peterson said, adding that the admissions process currently is running as expected; Laura Patterson, M-Pathways pro' gram director, said the source of the delay wasn't the admissions processine software itself, but the switch from one processing model to another. "Because we went to a different model (for processing applications), it took us longer," Patterson said. Patterson said M-Pathways now aids in applications processing. "It's able to identify students widi certain characteristics," Patterson said, adding that the system does not pick who is accepted and who is not. "It provides more information to the admitting officers so they can make the best decision," Patterson said. In the past two years, the University received more than 21,000 applications for undergraduate admissions. Although numbers for this year's applicants are not available, admissions office staff members said they estimate that the same number of people will send in applications. Jane VanderLeest, a guidance coun- selor at City High School in Grand Rapids, Mich., said she hopes things will run more smoothly than last year. "There was a substantial number who were good candidates who didn't hear," she said. VanderLeest said under a rolling admissions system, the University would send notification of status letters out in four to six weeks. But many of her stu- dents were on "pins and needles," last year due to the University's slower than expected responses. VanderLeest said she is pleased with the changes to the modified rolling admissions system this year. "I do like more frequent responses than the large batches" from last year, she said. LSA-SG clarifies waitlisting p Olicy By Josie Gingrich For the Daily The LSA-Student Government recently instituted a focus group to clear up student confusion surround- ing waitlist policies in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. The group will look at ways to homogenize waitlist procedures across LSA departments and divisions factor- ing in student preference. "Since the waitlist procedures in LSA are not uniform it has become our charge to find out which classes specifically students are having trou- ble enrolling in or those in which stu- dents find the process particularly frustrating," LSA-SG Academic Affairs Committee Chair Adam Damerow said in a written statement. Currently, each LSA department, and even classes within each division, have varying procedures concerning waitlist- ing for courses during registration. Students are scheduled to begin regis- tration for winter semester classes today. "Everyone says waitlists are a pain in the neck especially in the foreign lan- guage department," LSA sophomore Lauren Rosinski said. Often times, waitlist procedures are the decision of individual pro- fessors. In an effort to determine for what courses students have the most diffi- culties waitlisting, LSA-SG officials circulated questionnaires at a concen- tration fair earlier this year. LSA-SG representatives also plan to go into residence halls to interview students about their impressions of the waitlist system. "Hopefully through these processes we will be able to identify specific courses which the waitlist procedure is frustrating or inefficient and approach the individual faculty member with stu- dent concerns;"said Damerow, an LSA sophomore. "Our goal in this focus group is two- fold," said LSA-SG President Seema Pai, an senior. "We want to make (waitlist procedures) consistent across divisions and departments, and if that's not possi- ble, to educate students the procedure.? But some students said they have not experienced problems with course wait- lists. "They were a matter of course," LSA senior Dave Johnson said. "If you want the class, you have to be confident you will get in." He added, "I've never taken classes that I thought would be hard to get into.? LSA-SG has not set a date when the project will be completed, but a report will be posted on the LSA-SG Website, according to AAC documents. ay's Daily. on campus statistics from the Office YCorrections: LSA seniors Raoul Sreenivasan and Wayne Dahl were misidentified in yesterd * Graduate Student Instructors and faculty members are not included in stalking of Student Conflict Resolution. This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily :, r . . I I m