I 4C - The Michigan Daily - New Student Edition - Tuesday, September 3, 2002 Security of the future: M-Cards may be used to open residence hall bedrooms and restrooms By Jeremy Berkowitz Daily Staff Reporter In addition to present construction on Hill Auditorium, Mason Hall and the Life Sciences Institute, students will see a fair amount of work being done in residence halls over the next two years in efforts to improve secu- rity. Department of Public Safety officials presented plans at the Uni- versity Board of Regents' June meet- ing to place video cameras at all entrances of residence halls, as well as install automatic door locks on all rooms and bathrooms. "Personal safety of our residents is undoubtedly our paramount concern," Director of Housing Security and Associate DPS Director Ian Steinman said. "We are making a strong effort to work on crime prevention." The cameras will face towards the outside and will only be looked at as archival footage after an incident has occurred. The automatic door locks will require students to use their M- Cards to open their room doors and bathrooms. DPS officials and the regents said they want to make sure the new measures are efficient in pro- moting safety but at the same time don't violate student's rights. "There is always that one balance between one's privacy and one's safe- ty," Regent Olivia Maynard (D- Goodrich) said. "We want to protect the students." The new initiatives are a result of a crime wave that raged across campus last term. Between January and May, DPS issued 18 crime alerts for vari- ous offenses where a clear suspect description could be given; one of them was later canceled due to sus- pect apprehension. Of those incidents, 15 occurred in University Housing facilities and were a mixture of home invasions where a perpetrator unlawfully entered a person's room, sometimes taking personal items, or "peeping tom" incidents, where residents reported suspects looking at them in the shower. DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said in March that despite the increased crime, most of it had for- tunately not involved any personal danger. "It is alarming that we have ha number of incidents, but most these incidents have been agai property," Brown said. In February, DPS took action locking the residence halls 24 hou day and increasing the number officer patrols inside. But Univer Housing and DPS officials h repeatedly claimed that campus se rity is a collaborative effort betw officers, students and faculty. T have constantly reminded student be more careful of their possessi and to take extra precautions such locking their room doors. "(DPS) can only go so far parti larly in a place that values comma ty responsibility," Brown sa "(Students are) creating more o problem for the entire community order for the community to be sa we need people to secure th belongings." Some students agree that DPS doing everything they can and s dents need to be more responsible. "Girls should make sure that door is shut and lock their room wl they are sleeping," LSA junior Er d a Irland said. of But others note that more security inst and better communication is needed between University Housing and stu- by dents. One problem that arose last rs a winter was the negligence of resident of advisors in posting crime alerts in sity their halls. Brown said that crime ave alerts usually arrive at residence halls cu- within a day after the respective een crime. hey "My (resident advisor) doesn't s to really ever post anything," LSA sen- ons ior Nidhy Sighal said. "We didn't i as find out about the new bathroom keys until it happened." cu- University Housing officials said uni- they are looking at ways to improve id. security procedures on campus. f a While they have looked at practices . In used on other campuses such as door fer, monitors or sign-in sheets for guests, eir measures implemented here need to match the needs of students, the Uni- is versity and Ann Arbor. tu- "You want to use your resources as effectively as possible on your cam- the pus," said Alan Levy, director of pub- SHOSHANA HURAND/Da hen lic affairs and information for The security of residence halls has been a constant hot topic since the rica University Housing. increased crime rate, particularly in West Quad Residence Hall (above). Plethora of majors often perplex undergraduate students at 'U' aily MSA is most prominent voice for the student body By Tomislav Ladika Daily Staff Reporter Students interested in gaining a voice on campus affairs or those eager to try out something new, have the chance to take on a greater role through the Michigan Student Assembly. MSA is the main student governing body on campus. Every college and school, including the Rackham Grad- uate School and Law School, is represented proportion- ally in MSA with at least one representative. The assembly is led this year by LSA senior President Sarah Boot and Vice President Dana Glassel, an LSA junior. MSA meetings are open to the public and convene every Tuesday night at 7:30 p.m. on the third floor of the Michigan Union. The central issues of most meetings are resolutions usually calling for either MSA funding to certain student projects or demanding that the Assembly take an ideological stance on an issue. Committees also report their weekly progress, and budget issues or pro- posed changes to various MSA procedural rules are often discussed at every meeting. MSA serves two main purposes. It creates tangible results through its large bureaucratic system of commit- tees and commissions, which consist of both representa- tives and regular students who work on various campus projects during the week. These committees sponsor forums and programs on issues, including campus safety, sexual assault awareness and diversity. One committee and one commission also have power to appropriate ALYSSA WOOD/Daily LSA senior Sarah Boot was sworn in as the new MSA president April 2, 2002. MSA funds to various student groups. Groups can apply to MSA for money and each year the assembly hands out over $200,000 to various campus groups. MSA also has the power to lobby the University's administration to make major changes on campus. Last year, many MSA representatives focused on several proj- ects, and by the end of the year, the assembly had creat- ed a fall study break, extended recreational building hours and expanded the availability of Entree Plus to Michigan Stadium. MSA's second role is to act as the voice of the student body. Through resolutions, the assembly takes ideologi- cal or political stances on issues important to students, ranging from race as a factor in admissions to President Bush's war against terrorism to racial slurs written on campus sidewalks. These resolutions ask the assembly to either support or condemn these ideas and events. By Mada Sprow Daily Staff Reporter Biological anthropology, cultural anthropology, zoological anthropology. Biology, chemistry, physics, psychology, biological physics. English, literature, film and video studies, communication studies, language studies, women's stud- ies. Computer science, social sciences, natural sciences, political science. To be or not to be a lawyer, a doctor, an activist, a politician, an artist, an astronomer, a French fry flipper or gas station attendant - oh, the possibilities. For many students, the choices that await them once they arrive at the Uni- versity are limitless - and let's not for- get overwhelming. However, the University does provide help and special services for students, especially for the two kinds most com- monly found on campus: Those with a path and those undecided. The first piece of advice students walking into the University's Academic Advising offices will find doesn't have much to do with paths, said Cathy Con- way-Perrin, an associate director of LSA Academic Advising. Instead, it's about steering clear of paths, at least at first. "The thing that we would stress the most is that they explore their interests, try to branch out,' Conway-Perrin said. Most students, even those who already believe they know what they want to do with their post-college lives, will benefit from additional exploration. "I came to school wanting to be a doctor, but through exploration and mishap, I discovered I liked my com- munication studies classes much more than biology, chemistry, physics and calculus," LSA senior David Levy said. "Unfortunately for my parents, I decid- ed medicine wasn't the profession for -me, but at least I figured it out before suffering through medical school." Most students eventually stop explor- ing and declare majors and minors - the most popular concentrations at the University include psychology, biology and English - and finish with either a Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science degree. Although the requirements for each major are different, the process of choosing a major is fairly simple, and many students find themselves going through it several times during their col- lege careers. No matter what, those seeking to obtain a BA or BS must fulfill distribu- tion requirements in the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, math and symbolic analysis and creative expression. They must also become pro- ficient in a foreign language, take a Race and Ethnicity class, a quantitative reasoning course, introductory compo- sition and take an upper-level writing class during their junior or senior year. Despite all the requirements, Conway-Perrin said most University students are successful in graduat- ing in four years, as long as they declare a major by the end of their sophomore year. "It's usually pretty easy, (but) sta- tistically it doesn't really look like it," she said. "There are so many different options that we don't have a set schedule that we recommend. We recommend that they take a lan- guage right away so that they don't have a gap between their high school study and their studies here. There really isn't a set map." But some students do choose to spend more than four years in under- graduate studies, due to various factors, including the economy and study abroad options. "They are pacing themselves a little differently to get more out of it or to pursue some different things that they may not have gotten out of it other- wise," she said. For others, whose interests are either too wide or varied to be contained, the University offers a Bachelors of Gener- al Studies degree. Students seeking a BGS degree have to follow different requirements to grad- uate -they don't have foreign language or distribution requirements and are required to take more upper-level cours- es. However, the degree gives students time to explore and allows them to take a wider variety of classes. Some people choose not to receive a BGS because of it's supposed bad repu- tation, but Conway-Perrin said employ- ers don't look down on students who major in general studies, and some even prefer them. "Career Planning and Placement has done follow-up studies with employers, and they hire or admit BGS degrees at the same rate as everybody else," she said, adding that success is more dependent on the student than the employer and how the student describes their situation. "It's more like, my interests didn't fit in with the defined majors, so I went and took the initiative to create my own major" than saying I couldn't choose a major and slacked off, she said. Whatever students choose to do, there is always another option available if they change their mind, and Conway- Perrin said students should take their time and realize college is not like high school. "I guess the other thing that we would stress is the transition issues. Stu- dents coming in their first year don't always realize how different it is," she said. "A lot of students come in, and they are very bright, but they were used to doing well in high school without having to work very hard." GOVERNING BODY OF MSA President, Sarah Boot siilboot~umich.edu Vice-President, Dana Glassel dglasse1@umich.edu Treasurer, Liz Mullane emultane@umich.edu Student General Counsel, Joe Bernstein jiecool@umichedu . ;ji Angell Hall houses the LSA Academic Advising Center. V m