HIGHER EDUCATION The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 23, 1999 - 5A Shooting stars Protests mark first class day for Princeton bioethics prof. By Richard Just and Emma Soichet The Daily Princetonian PRINCETON, N.J. (U-WIRE) - A day of protest against Princeton University's hiring of controversial bioethicist Peter Singer culminat- ed Tuesday in the arrest of 14 activists, who were dragged away from Nassau Hall after sealing off the building for two hours. About 30 wheelchair-bound protesters and several other disability-rights advocates from Not Dead Yet barricaded all five entrances to Nassau Hall - trapping University officials inside and preventing at least two deans from entering - before being removed by Princeton Public Safety officers around 1:30 p.m. Just hours before, about 200 protesters descended on a soggy campus while singing, "Shapiro promotes murder," and wielding posters that compared Princeton to Auschwitz. Meanwhile, at the Center for Human Values, Singer's first seminar proceeded without inci- dent. Public Safety officers rimmed the build- ing to ensure that only authorized students could enter the class. "Singer was an incredibly open and amiable man," said Princeton junior Hyeseung Song, one of Singer's students. "It was like a regular course." Nevertheless, the day was anything but typi- cal for more than a dozen Public Safety offi- cers who found themselves attempting to police a rally that began outside FitzRandolph gate at 10 a.m. Protesters, including pro-life, anti-euthana- sia and disabled-rights activists, stood in the steady rain, periodically chanting, "We're not dead yet," until 11:30 a.m. At that point the crowd began to pour through the gates and converge on Nassau Hall - where it soon became apparent that Not Dead Yet members were attempting to seal off the University's central administrative offices. There they stayed until Public Safety, local police and state troopers surrounded them with metal barricades, warned them to leave and then charged them with trespassing and disor- derly conduct. The Princeton Borough Police helped proc- tors process the arrests but the physical removal of activists was left to campus securi- tv. None of those arrested were New Jersey res- idents. Shortly after being dragged away from the north entrance of Nassau Hall, Not Dead Yet self-proclaimed "ambulatory wheelchair war- rior" Eileen Sabel chided Shapiro for not answering the protesters' demands. "The administration wouldn't give us the courtesy of a response, so we escalated," she said. Sabel added that it was the 40th time she had been arrested in the past decade. University spokesperson Justin Harmon dis- missed Not Dead Yet members as attention-: seekers. "This is their little moment of politica, theater, and they've been planning it for a while," he said. Despite the intensity of Tuesday's protest. it may well have marked Not Dead Yet's final appearance on campus. Group president Diane Coleman said her organization - which has been the central presence at anti-Singer rallies - would not return to campus. But New Jersey Right to Life Director of Public Affairs Marie Tasy said here group will continue to demonstrate at the University. No University students were among the pro- testers blocking entrances to the building.. Chris Benek, president of Princeton Students Against Infanticide, a group that helped orga- nize the rally, took pains to distance his organi- zation from the activists who sealed off Nassau Hall JEREMY MENCH#K/Oa iy more than 40 students trying out for the Michigan Rifle Club take aim yesterday at the rifle range n the North University Building. Online notes raise questions at OSU By DeAnna Browne Daily O'Collegian STILLWATER, Okla. (U-WIRE) - Website that gives away class notes iht be ripping off professors' intel- lectual property, an Oklahoma State University official says. Students who are taking their notes and posting them on the Internet may be held responsible for the accuracy of the notes, said Guven Yalcintas, director for Intellectual Property and Technology Transfer at OSU. StudyFree is paying students at 62 universities to post their class notes on the company's Website, StudentU corn. Anyone can print the notes for free. As of Sept. 19, students in 14 classes at OSU were paid S300 per course, per semester to post their notes. And it's all done anonymously, said Oran Wolf, StudyFree's president and Website cre- ator. Wolf, who founded his Houston- based company in 1995, and took it online Sept. 6, 1999, said he is sur- prised that some people think his ser- vice to students is unethical. "I don't think this is unethical," Wolf said. "When I was in school, my class- mates and I shared notes all the time. Notes are free to students in the class - why shouldn't they be free to the world?" Perhaps because it may be stealing from professors, said Rebekah Herrick, associate political science professor at OSU. Someone in her Introduction to Government class is posting the lecture notes on StudentU.com. "I wonder if there are intellectual property theft issues here. The notes are presented as mine," she said. "Someone else is profiting from my labor. This bothers me." Herrick may be right. "There could be intellectual prop- erty in the presentation of her lec- ture," Yalcintas said. "The presenta- tion technique of her lecture may be unique. Her lectures may also be coming from her own research. In these cases, she has the right to claim intellectual property." Wolf said the disclaimer on his Website protects his company and the students he employs. The disclaimer reads, in part: "You need to know that the lecture notes you find in StudentU.com are just a notetaker's interpretation of what was presented in the lecture. They are absolutely, posi- tively not the professor's lecture notes." Yalcintas said the disclaimer really does not mean anything. It does not protect StudyFree or the students post- ing the notes. "A disclaimer is just a disclaimer. It's not God's law - there are always holes." he said. Suspects arrested in c Florida By Zophia Rendon Indepedent Florida Alligator GAINESVILLE. Fla. (U-WIRE) - Alachua County Sheriff's Office arrest- ed three more Live Oak residents Tuesday afternoon in connection to the beating death of University of Florida student Brian Tew at Campus Club Apartments early Saturday morning. homas Anthony Bartolotta, Jason iey and Bryan Kelley, were asked to turn themselves in to the Suwannee County jail, where Alachua County Sheriff's officers arrested them, said Sheriff's spokesperson Sgt. James Troiano. The three men are charged as princi- ples to second-degree murder. Joshua Wells, also of Live Oak, was arrested over the weekend and charged with second-degree murder. * artoldtta and the Kelley brothers Pre with Wells the night of the Campus Club Apartment fight, where Wells "maliciously kicked" Tew in the head after they fell down the stairs while fighting, Troiano said. Interviews with witnesses who saw LIKE TO WRITE? SKIP CLASS? DON'T 0 SLEEP MUCH? So DO WE. JOIN T HE * DAILY. STOP BY 420 murder the Saturday morning fight led to the arrest of the suspects, who are in the Suwannee County jail. The three men will be moved to the Alachua County jail later this week, Troiano said. Bartolotta is a teacher and wrestling coach at Suwannee High School, said Wyman Harvard, Suwannee County School Board superintendent. The Kelley brothers are not employed by the school. More charges against Bartolotta and the Kelley brothers are possible as the investigation continues, Troiano said. Troiano said eight people, including the four already arrested, were in the group from Live Oak that came to Gainesville the night before the Tennessee vs. Florida game looking for a party. The investigation is ongoing, and police are still working out the details of Saturday morning's events, which left Tew, a criminal justice major who want- ed to become an FBI agent, with multiple skull fractures. He died at Shands Hospital at UF early Sunday morning. We're Already Taking Enrol lmentY April 2000 MCAT Schedules Are Now Available.... Like most pre-meds, The Princeton Review is already thinking about the April MCAT - in fact, we're already taking enrollments. We offer SIGNIFICANT discounts for students who enroll early and all it takes to reserve your space is a refundable $95 deposit. We also have courses beginning as early as November for those of you who want to get started soon! Or, ask us about our Verbal Accelerator program that allows you to get a jump start on your verbal prep! *+ CALL TODAY For Princeton Review April 2000 MCAT schedules! Visit us at: 800-REVIEW www.review.com THE PRINCETON REVIEW ri Flashcom = Internet Access Up To 100 Times Faster Let Flashcom save you time and money. Digital Subscriber Lines offer the fastest; most secure high speed Internet access available today. DSL is an "always on" service, no more annoying busy signals or dropped calls. Largest nationwide coverage avail- f "I have a Flashcom DSL connection and this is surely the future for Internet connectivity. Anyone anyplace that can get this technology into their homeoroffice is foolish not to order it today! It's fabulous!" U 1::