NEWS The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 8, 2005 - 3A ON CAMPUS Festifall show- cases student groups 1,000 student organizations will set up booths at the annual Festi- fall today from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the Diag. Students are invited to come find out about University clubs and campus departments, as well as sign up for future mass meetings. Dance Marathon holds mass meeting Dance Marathon, which raises money and awareness for children's rehabilita- tion programs, will host a mass meeting today from 8 to 9 p.m. in the Koessler * room of the Michigan League. Students can learn how to become involved with Dance Marathon during the school year. N campus hosts film and gathering The colleges of engineering, art, music, architecture, and urban planning will host a showing of the Adam Sandler film "The Longest Yard" at 9 p.m. on the North Campus Diag. Students will also have an opportunity to meet and talk with current juniors and seniors from the colleges beginning at 8 p.m. CRIME * NOTES Cars keyed in * Thayer parking lot A caller reported that numer- ous vehicles on the top level of the Thayer carport, located at 216 Thayer St., were keyed on Tuesday, according to the Department of Public Safety. The caller indicated that sever- al young subjects had been in the parking structure earlier. No report - was filed. Student injured opening door A caller requested an escort for a student with a self-inflicted injury obtained while opening the front door to Bursley Hall on Tuesday, according to DPS. Assistance was provided. * Banner stolen from outside dorm A Michigan banner was stolen on Tuesday from the Helen New- berry Residence Hall, according to a report filed with DPS. The banner was hanging outside the building. There are no suspects. THIS WEEK In Daily History 'U' won't fund draft resisters Sept. 8, 1983 - The University announced that it will not replace lost federal aid for students who refuse to comply with the new federal law requiring registration for the draft. The controversial law approved by the Supreme Court last July requires all male students to reg- ister with the Selective Service by the end of the month or forfeit all federal financial aid. While some schools have decided to replace federal aid for students who choose to not to comply with the new law, the University will not follow suit. "We simply wouldn't have the resources to make up for the lost feder- al funds," said Billy Frye, provost and vice president for academic affairs. "It would be inappropriate to divert Forrest nominated as VP for research By Karl Stampfl Daily Staff Reporter When Prof. Stephen Forrest takes over as the University's vice president for research, he will inherit a $750 million budget, one of the University's most influential positions and the reins to one of the largest research opera- tions in the country. An accomplished researcher, For- rest most recently served as a professor at Princeton University, where he con- ducted his own studies in a branch of physics called optoelectronics, which concerns the meeting of electricity and light. Before that, he taught at the Uni- versity of Southern California and directed the National Center for Inte- grated Photon- ic Technology. He has written 371 scholarly papers and has} been granted 134 patents.: "Profes-x sor Forrest combines an impresw- Forrest sive record of research achievement with personal, hands-on involvement in the important work of technology transfer and in the administration of major research oper- ations," University President Mary Sue Coleman said in a written statement. Coleman nominated Forrest to replace longtime vice president Faw- waz Ulaby yesterday. Ulaby will help ease the transition by remaining in his post until the end of the year and then will step down to serve as a professor in the electrical engineering depart- ment, as he has for 20 years. If the University Board of Regents approves the nomination, Forrest will take over Jan. 1. "My most important job for a while is to listen," Forrest said. "I have some very definite directions I want to go in, butI have to get a sense (of the job) first." He stressed the importance of researchers interacting with the indus- trial world and the forging of stronger links between separate schools such as medicine, engineering and LSA as a possible future mission. Much of the focus of his new post will be promoting interdisciplinary work, he said. "When you're really talking about what the next thing is - what the new thing is within a discipline - (the researchers) are the ones who know what they're doing," he said. "My job will be to make the connections between the schools and make the whole greater than the parts." As an example of potential inter- disciplinary research, he cited what he calls the two major problems that he expects mankind will have to face in the 21st century: energy and water shortages. To solve those problems, he foresees the coming together of every- thing from nanotechnology to life sciences. Robert Todd, an associate vice president for research, said Forrest has experience working outside his discipline to solve problems, citing his leadership of an initiative to ensure the health and well-being of human research subjects. "You can't pick someone in multiple disciplines, so you have to pick a lead- er," Todd said. Forrest will split his time between Princeton and Ann Arbor until he takes over. When he comes to stay on Jan. 1, he will bring along his optoelectronic research group, which seeks to create practical optoelectronic devices. No stranger to Ann Arbor, Forrest spent 1973 to 1979 at the University in pursuit of a master's degree and a doctorate in physics. He received his undergraduate instruction from the University of California at Berkeley. Mich anti-terror law sparks debate among officials LANSING (AP) - Michigan's use of an anti-terrorism law to curb school violence has sparked debate over the law's intent and raised an important question among prosecutors, school offi- cials and others: When is a trou- bled teen a terrorist? Law enforcement officials say the law against threatening ter- rorism, enacted in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, gives them a vital tool to avert shootings like the one last month in Minnesota, where a student shot and killed nine people before turning the gun on himself. With no specific state law against threatening to kill some- one, they say, the terrorism law is the only one that works. But many school-violence experts say labeling a disturbed or angry teen a terrorist is going overboard. In some cases, they say, what the student needs is psy- chological help, not jail time. "(We have to) discern between students who pose a threat and students who are making threats," said Glenn Stutzky, a clinical instructor at the Michigan State University School of Social Work. "It appears the terrorism law doesn't make that distinction." Two Michigan cases, one in Macomb County northeast of Detroit and one in adjoining Oak- land County, appear to be among the first in the country where ter- rorism laws are being applied to school violence. One involves a 17-year old accused of threatening to bring a gun to school to kill a school liaison officer and whose home, when checked by police, revealed a cache of firearms, ammuni- tion, bomb-making materials and instructions, Nazi flags and books about white supremacy and Adolf Hitler. Andrew Osantowski ofMacomb County's Clinton Township was arrested last September after authorities received a tip from an Idaho girl who had been exchang- ing messages with Osantowski over the Internet. He has been charged as an adult and faces up to 20 years in prison. The other case involves a 14- year-old whose backpack con- tained a notebook with a "kill list" that included a dozen people, including his mother, several stu- dents and school officials. A police search of Mark David O'Berry's home in Oakland Coun- ty's White Lake Township in mid- March found no weapons, and he has denied making the list. He is being dealt with as a juvenile and could be held until age 19 if found guilty. Prosecutors in both cases say they used the state's terrorism law because no other charge applied. Macomb County Assistant Prosecutor Steve Kaplan said he could have charged Osantowski with attempted murder but didn't think he could prove it. "Essentially you have to show he was on his way to school with the guns and was thwarted. It didn't fit," said Kaplan, who also has charged Osantowski with using a computer to make terror- ist threats. "We would not have gotten a conviction." Oakland County Assistant Prosecutor Bob Zivian said he turned to the terrorism law in the O'Berry case for the same rea- son. "Until we know what makes this young man tick and can get a psychological evaluation on him, we're just doing what we can to protect the public and even his own mother, who's No. 1 on the hit list," Zivian said. O'Berry's court-appointed attorney, Ryan Deel of Troy, said he doesn't like seeing youths inappropriately labeled as ter- rorists. (And you don t want to leave your room and computer?) (What can be any easier? You'll never need a paper menu or a phone again!) m m