news@michigandaily.com NEWS The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 6, 2004 - 3 'U', By Melissa Benta Daily Staff Reporter ombudsman acts as student advocate * Prof to discuss religion in antiquity Hebrew University of Jerusalem Prof. Isaiah Gafni will lecture on the influence of geographic location on the development of religion Monday at 7 p.m. in the Michigan League Ball- room. The lecture, titled "What a Differ- ence a Place Makes: Jews and Chris- tians East of the Euphrates," is part of a lecture series called "Judaism and Christianity in the Roman World." The Frankel Center for Judaic Studies is sponsoring the series. 'U' opens Angell Hall's rooftop telescope to public People will have the opportunity to look through Angell Hall's rooftop telescope tonight from 8 to 11 p.m. Most notably, the double star Albireo, made up of a blue and an orange star, is expected to be visible. The event is free, and the Student Astronomical Society will be avail- able to answer questions. The roof can be accessed through the eleva- tors on the State Street side of Angell Hall. Dance concert held to celebrate St. Petersburg As part of the University's cele- bration of St. Petersburg's 300th anniversary, Alonzo King, founder of the San Francisco LINES ballet, will perform a dance set to the music of Shostakovich's String Quartet no. 15. tonight at 8 p.m. at the Power Center. Among the other performers are University dance faculty Peter Spar- ling, Jessica Fogel, Gay Delanghe and Ruth Leney Midkiff, who will all perform pieces inspired by Russian poets and composers in an event titled "Dances for Petersburg." Stu- dent tickets are $8. Opportunity to volunteer overseas offered The Career Center will offer stu- dents the opportunity to volunteer overseas for at least two weeks and no more than two years. An informational meeting will be Monday from 4 to 5 p.m. in room nine of the International Center. Professor will discuss European anti-Americanism Lars Rensmann, political science professor at Free University in Berlin, will give a lecture titled "Hannah Arendt and the Problem of European Anti-Americanism." Rensmann, also a research affili- ate for the European Studies Coun- cil at Yale University, will speak in room 3308 of the Modern Lan- guages Building today from 4:10 to 6 p.m. The event is sponsored by the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures. Culture bus to send students to event at Detroit museum The Arts at Michigan Culture Bus will take students to the Wright Museum of African American Histo- ry for a musical titled "Sarah, Ella & Pops" Sunday from 1:30 to 5 p.m. The musical, by the Plowshares Theatre Company, remembers Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong and Sarah Vaughn. Actor James Bowen, singer Sheila Alyce and Detroit jazz musician Marcus Belgrave are among the many performers of the show. The event is part of the Brown v. Board of Education Theme Semester. Students can purchase tickets for $11.50 on the University website. MLK panel focuses on American security policies Nabih Ayad, Kary Moss and Brian Silver will take part in a panel Mon- day at 4 p.m. in the Michigan League Hussey Room. The event is part of the University's 17th annual Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Symposium. Nabih Ayad is a member of the Arab-American Defense Council. in Ironically, an important student advocate on campus says he feels lost and unknown in the University bureaucracy. Robert Holmes, the University ombudsman, provides students with confidential counseling service to get advice and settle disputes with the University. If students feel that they are being treated unfairly or that the University has made an error, the Ombuds Office can assist them in resolving the issue, Holmes said. "Number one, I help - through information - to empower students to be good advocates for their position. Secondly, I give them options that perhaps, in the heat of the moment, they didn't consider," Holmes added. The Ombuds Office acts as an impartial mediator in disputes. "There's more than one party to every story, and beliefs are often mutually exclusive and in opposition to one another," he said. Furthermore, confidentiality is guaranteed to students who choose to meet with the Ombudsman, Holmes said. Students are not required to disclose any personal information - such as a name or student ID number - and the UVI II Ombuds Office will not. .. share any information 4VDFIO&s1fU without written permis- IgnygfAfsy ro sion. "The only time I (break) Hd my pledge of confidentiality Ut iivers - which happens rarely - is ments as anhr if I feel a student will be dan- . gerous to himself or others,"ff d Holmes added. N -e10 The Office of Student" Conflict Resolution works x R+ ttep0n closely with the Ombuds nd +nt SX Office in channeling stu- dent complaints. OSCR has the power to remove a student from housing, courses and activities. It can suspend or expel a student. It can also order students to per- form community service for various infrac- tions. "If a student has a complaint against anoth- er student or if the Uni- versity has a complaint .against a student, a for- mal complaint can be R : v ;k K.filed (with OSCR) and vbudsman there can be sanctions," Holmes said. ° m He said students are plices'or nsh-. referred to the appro- priate office based on -" the nature of their com- in ttg plaint. ideftiaIfty.' "I am the opposite of }$OSCR in a sense, because I deal with stu- } 'ti'tns k dents' complaints . against the University." Unlike OSCR, the Ombuds Office does not have the authority to issue sanctions. The Ombuds Office functions in an informal setting. Students do not have to complete paperwork, they simply sit and talk with the Ombudsman, Holmes said. He said hundreds of students use this service every year. Yet many students still do not know about the functions of it, such as LSA sophomore Mary Shelly "Now that I know about it, if I had a really big problem I would probably go there. If I couldn't deal with it on my own, I would go there," Shelly said. LSA junior Ryan Bonneville said that he wouldn't use the Ombuds Office because he is not familiar with it. "I would prefer to use (OSCR) because I know about it and I know where it is," he said. Holmes advises students to imagine the other person's perspective when attempting to resolve a conflict. "It's important to put yourself in the shoes of the other person. Sometimes this allows you to see yourself and the conflict in a dif- ferent way, Sometimes this helps you to understand where others are coming from," he added. Hopwood awards serve as test of writing ability By Caroline Saudek For the Daily For most students, the reward for good work comes in the form of a good grade, but for some creative writers at the University, the reward comes in the form of a check for up to $7,000. The Hopwood Program gives out awards twice a year. The deadline for submissions to the spring Hopwoods, which tend to have more applicants and give out larger awards, is Tuesday at noon. Last week the winners of the fall awards were announced at an awards ceremony -22 students, ranging from freshmen to graduate students, won a total of almost $20,000. The Hopwood Program distributes on average $120,000 per year to talent- ed undergraduate and graduate student writers at the University in an effort to encourage creative and innovative writing. Established in the will of Broadway playwright and Michigan alum Avery Hopwood, the Hopwood Awards began in 1930. Over the years, the Hopwood Program has expanded to include vari- ous fellowships and awards, some of which take financial need into account. Once submissions are collected for the categories of essay, short fiction and poetry, the winners are chosen by judges, many of whom are well-known writers. Arthur Miller, Sinclair Lewis and Joyce Carol Oates have all judged Hopwood submissions in the past. Michael Byers, a writer who won a Hopwood Award while he was a graduate student at the University in 1996, said these awards are unique because they create a link between older readers and younger writers who would otherwise not have expo- sure to each other. "It gives undergraduate and graduate students a way to test themselves against a real audience.... (The) judg- ments are true and honest," he said. Although the awards are fiercely competitive and carry substantial pres- tige, many winners say that the Hop- woods do not create animosity within the writing communities on campus. Irene Hahn, a Rackham student and winner of the Cowden Fellowship, said that the Fine Arts program at Michigan is unique because of the camaraderie that develops among students and with professors. As a result, competition for the Hopwoods does not create as much tension as one might expect. "We're all just happy for whoever wins. ... We know it is an arbitrary decision," Hahn said. LSA senior Sarah Rubin, who won an award in poetry this year, said the existence of the Hopwood Awards has a positive impact on the writing envi- ronment. "I think it makes the (English) pro- gram a little more competitive, but it makes it a little bit better," she said. "People tend to write more towards an audience than just for themselves." Winning an award can also provide needed encouragement to writers preparing to enter a challenging and often ruthless field. "It's not a profession that people know that they can become successful in. Winning a Hopwood gives you validation and recognition," said LSA freshman Uyen Bui, who won $1,000 in the fiction contest. "For me, it strengthened my desire to write because something came out of it," Bui said. Rackham student Irene Hahn is one of 22 students who won Hopwood Awards last week. The deadline for students to submit work for spring Hopwood Awards is Tuesday. PYS f RECORDS & USED CDS 617 Packard C pstairs from Subway Paying $4 to $6 for top CD's in top condition. Also buying premium LP's and cassettes. Open 7 days 663-3441 The selection is ENDLESS SCOREKEEPERS WE HAVE SOME NEW WEEKEND DRINK SPECIALS WE THINK YOU'RE GONNA LIKE FRIDAY ANN ARBOR'S LONGEST HAPPY HOUR! With Featured Mug Drinks On Sale Along With The Pint - Bottle special of the week rxar S pc s I II c/y: 5uturdays £r-C fzz 4 NO Coverl 25 Taps! Full Menu! 310 Y 995.0100 1 &OVERWIHPOE1 HEW mMIWWWKMM I THE JOHN MARSHALL LAW SCHOOL Op en House T he John Marshall Law School invites you to attend an open house to learn how flexible schedules, groundbreaking specialties and 21st century curricula can help you in your career. Saturday, Feb. 7; 10 a.m. to noon Thursday, Feb. 12; 6 - 8 p.m. Students and faculty will share their insights into John Marshall's