The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, October 22, 2007 - 7A WEBSITE From page 1A student academic affairs in LSA, said students who try to get ahead by copying the answers to home- work problems are only hurting themselves. "I'm not sure that's giving you an edge if you're doing that," he said. He said a study guide is only as helpful as the effort a student puts into using it, and that it defeats the purpose if students are simply going to the answers without learn- ing to solve the problems. "I wouldn't recommend it," he said. "I don't see the benefit." Along with textbook solutions, the website also provides students with lecture notes and practice exams as well as forums where students can ask for help. The site has a point system in place, called "Karma Points," that rewards users for participating on the site - for example, by submitting solutions to unsolved textbook problems or by helping others on the forums. For 550 Karma Points, Cramster users can get a $25 Starbucks gift card. For 5,000, they can get an iPod, and for 30,000, users can get a Sony Vaio laptop. To view the solution sets to OSCR From page 1A and maintaining the educational focus, and also a balance between complainants and responding student rights," Schrage said. The statement also now requires OSCR resolution coordinators to inform students before proceeding with any hearings that they have the right to meet with an adviser, which couldbe aparent, other stu- dents or a legal adviser.l The student bringing the com- plaint must now agree to have it heard by a student panel. The accused party previously had the right to choose whether a student panel or resolution officer would hear the complaint. Holzrichter said this change was made in part because the old system made cases of sexual mis- conduct problematic. A student accusing another person of sexual assault, for example, might be too embarrassed for their case to be heard before a student panel. the michigan c LARGE FURNISHED 2 or 3 bdm. apt. at 1111 S State, Near U-M bus stop, Avail. Fall '08, Heat & water incl. Baic., A/C, prke., ldry., $1t1O-41850, No smkg/so pets. 734-996-3539 or 734- 678-7250. ehtseng@comcast.net PEPPERS PROPERTIES, GREAT Houses, 5-8 people great location, leas- ing now for fall '08, furn. free onsite Idry. and prkg. 810-231-0229. PETS WELCOME SPACIOUS 2 & 3 bdrms. in historic west side available! 741-9300. annarborapartments.net TREE CITY PROPERTIES May & September 2008 Leases www.treecityproperties.com 734-994-8733. UNIVERSITY TOWERS ON Cam- pus Apartments. Taking reservations now!!! Furnished Studio, 1, 2, & 3 Bed- rooms. 734-761-2680. UniversityTowers-mi.com IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. LARGE two bedroom apartments located near U-M Medical Campus. 2 blocks to Central Campus. Lots of amenities. Heat, water, parking, laundry. Can be furmshed. Call Michigan Realty 734-662-5500 or www.michcomrealty.com for details. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. 6 bed- room house located near U-M Campus. Great location for Med and Engineer- ing students. Call Michigan Realty 734- 662-5500 or www.michcomrealty.com for details. IS -- Do the cross+ sublet 070 1 BEDROOM $730 @ 220 West Ann Available now. 734-260-7215. APTS., SUBLETS, & Rmmte(s). List and Browse FREE! All Cities & Areas. 1-877-367-7368 or www.sublet.com CAMPUS REALTY. NOW taking reservations for '08-'09. Stop by our of- fice for a full housing brochure. 1335 S. University 734-665-8825 campusrealty.com all problems in a given textbook, students must pay a fee of $9.95 a month. Users who don't pay the monthly fee can only view the answers to odd problems. Robert Angarita, president and co-founder of the site, said Aaron Hawkey, an alum of the University of California at Los Angeles, devel- oped the idea for the site while he was in college and wanted a resource to help him with his own classes. Hawkey began to gather content, like practice exams and explana- tions for problem sets for his own use. He launched the site in Feb- ruary 2003, after graduating from college. Angarita said student abuse of the solution sets is a concern. Still, he said it's up to students to decide how to use the site. "We're not there for them on the midterm," he said. "One of the things we try to do is replicate the experience someone would get studying in a study group." Prof. Gus Evrard, who teaches Physics 140, said referencing solu- tion sets might help a student who's stuck on a homework problem and has no other way to get through it. "I don't see that practice as abu- sive," he said. But he said it is unlikely that students who rely too heavily on solution manuals and sites like Cramster will gain a good under- standing of the material. "You don't learn physics by memorizing the solutions to five thousand physics problems," he said. "You learn physics by orga- nizing your thinking through find- ing answers by yourself." A statement on the Cramster website says that whether using Cramster constitutes cheating depends strictly on whether the student's intention is to use it as a resource to learn or just to copy the answers. The site also warns students not to cheat. "Please make no mistake: if you plagiarize a homework solution from a friend minutes before class or the night before from Cramster, you are cheating," the statement says. "Please don't. We want you to understand how to do it, be pre- pared for your exams and succeed academically!" Plans to expand Cramster to include help on biology, economics, high finance, and business statis- tics are underway, Angarita said. He also said the site will also begin catering to high school stu- dents by the start of the 2008-2009 school year. We never heard from them again' STORIES From page 1A took the town's Jewish population to a ghetto. Later, when they were deciding who would be killed, they noticed a red cross on Brysk's father's arm indicating that he was a physician. The soldiers pulled Brysk's father and his family from the line of those condemned to death. Two Jewish resistance fighters rescued Brysk and her family from the ghetto in December of 1942 and brought them to a forest filled with Russians and Jews resist- ing the Nazi occupation, where Brysk's father helped establish a hospital. For the more than two years that Brysk lived in that forest, she dressed as a boy to prevent from being raped. She was given a pistol as a present on her eighth birthday, she said. Russian troops liberated the for- est in 1944. After that, Brysk's fam- ily lived in Italy for two years and then moved to America. Brysk, a digital artist who focus- es on works portraying the Holo- caust, now lives in Ann Arbor near her two daughters and five grand- children. Yesterday's luncheon, spon- sored by University of Michigan Hillel's Conference on the Holo- caust, allowed students to sit at a table with one or two survivors and discuss their stories in an intimate setting. About 300 people, many of them University students, attended the event, as well as about 60 survivors and 10 children of survivors. Regis- tration for the event was full, with as many as 45 people on a waiting list to attend. "We had no idea we would have this big of a turnout," said LSA junior Carly Wayne, one of the event's organizers. Sam Offen, another survivor who shared his stories, was 18 when life in his hometown of Kra- kow, Poland changed forever. "September 1,1939; the dayI will never forget," he said. That day, Germany invaded Poland, enforcing a curfew that forced Jewish residents to remain inside their homes for several days. Shortly afterthe curfew was lift- ed, people who admitted to being Jewish were pushed into large trucks and taken away. "They took this human cargo away and we never heard from them again," he said. "That's how I lost a lot of relatives." Offen also described the time he spent in Plaszow, a labor camp near Krakow, and then in Mauthausen, a concentration camp in Austria. Prisoners were forced to walk in five columns when moving across the camp. If one person escaped, everyone else in the column would be shot, Offen said. On Oct. 2, 1942, Offen left his barracks and saw "hundreds and hundreds" of corpses lying in the street. "They continued the oppres- sion to the very last day," Offen said. "Five years, nine months, six days." Offen was asked about Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has called the Holocaust "a myth." Offen said he was disheart- ened by Ahmadinejad's speech at Columbia University last month. "It made me feelvery bad," Offen said. "It reminded me of 1939, and Hitler." After survivors finished telling their stories, they participated in a Yahrzeit, memorial ceremony where small groups lit candles to remember those who died in the Holocaust. LSA sophomore Dori Moscow- itz said the event was important because there will be a time when no more Holocaust survivors will be around to tell their own stories. "It's important for people our age to be learning this, because soon we'll be the ones passing this on," she said. As the event came to an end, sev- eral survivors handed out contact information to their tables. Miriam Brysk gave each person at her table her business card and a hug, prom- ising they could visit her house to see her art anytime. "It is up to you guys to remem- ber, and to make sure no more Holocausts go on in this world," she said. - Beth Wittenstein contributed to this report. NEWS TIP? E-mail news@michigandaily.com or call the newsroom at 734-763-2459. RANDOLPH COURT APARTMENTS I S 2 Bedroom Apartment Homes Ground Floor Ranch Style! Private Entrance! Patio! Spacious Kitchen! Air Conditioning! Laundry Facilities! 24-Hour Emergency Maintenance! Pets Welcome! And much, much more! Call today to reserve your new address! 734"971-2828 T-SHIRT PRINTERY QUAULTY SHIRTPRINTERS SINCE 1973 EVENT5/DORM5/CLUB5 . EMAL SECE SIGN CALL IN tCARD DEPOSIT . SHIRTS IN 5 DAYS OR LESS 8 MINUTESFROCQAMPUS TEL734.M -1367 [ AdriasThitsconI AMERICAN VETERANS: BECOME A NEW LEGIONNAIRE Learn what the American Legion stands for and what it can do for you. For details, request free brochure by writing to American Legion, Post 46, PO Box 2192, Ann Arbor, MI 48106 or www.americanlegionannarbor.org For more information, phone (734) 663-3920 or email Drek Rlumke at dlumkpoumich edu INTRODUCTORY MEDITATION COURSE, 5 Thurs. eves, 6:15-8:30, starts Oct. 25. Six wk. Yoga I, 6-7:- 15pm, starts Oct. 23. Yoga II, starts Oct. 23, 7:30-9pm or Oct. 25, 7-8:30 pm. Public Services every Sun- day, 9:30am or 4pm. Zen Buddhist Temple, (734) 761-6520 or a2buddha@sbcglobal.net PERSONAL TRAINING/PILATES. 734-678-3422. Maryheth2@juno.com PRIVATE TUTORING FOR LSAT, LAW SCHOOL, BAR EXAM My credentials: - perfect 180 onLSAT - Michigan Law graduate (3.85 GPA) - licensed attorney - 15 years of teaching experience - hundreds of delighted students 734.996.2861 www.TESTGURU.com THESIS EDITING- LANGUAGE, organization, format. 25 yrs. U-M ep. 996-0566 or writeon@iserv.net help w anted !!!BARTENDING!!! $300 /day poten- tial, Age 18+ ok. 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PARTICIPANTS NEEDED FOR INFLUENZA VACCINE RESEARCH STUDY The University of Michigan School of Public Health is enrolling volunteers in a study to compare the flu shot with the nasal spray influenza vaccine. You will be asked to attend 3 short visits this study year (Fall 2007-Spring 2008). You maybe a candidate if you are 18-49 years old and in good health. Compensation: Participants will receive at least $100 for completion of 3 scheduled visits. 734-615-8331. www.umict.edu/-fluvacs IRBMED #HUM-14574 Principal investigator: Arnold S. Monto, MD. PRE-SCHOOL GYMNASTICS In- structors-Enthusiastic, reliable instruc- tors needed to teach morning and after- noon pre-school classes. Gymnastics and previous teaching experience neces- sary. Call Gym America 971-1667. SALES PERSON NEEDED for a cus- tom design jewelery store in downtown Ann Arbor. Strong people and commu- nication skills. Senior students in mar- keting or business school preferred. Re- tail exp. a plus! 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TUTOR HIGH SCHOOL Algebra/Bi- ology/study skills 734-332-7876 or mflanner@umich.edu UNDERCOVER SHOPPERS Earn up to $150 per day. Under cover shoppers needed to judge retail and dining establishments. Exp. Not req. Call 800-722-4791. WOLVERINESNEEDJOBS.COM Paid survey takers needed in A2. 100% FREE to join. Click on Surveys. Chl Carfe "-" BABYSITTER NEEDED. TUE.Thur. afternoon in A2. Car helpful. 769-7786. Check out the FA LL REAL1' section on N IST NO. 1 because it's NEVER too early to start looking for next fall's housing! tiICets & travel **#1 SPRING BREAK Website! 4 & 7 night trips. Low prices guaranteed. Group discounts for 8+. Book 20 peo- ple, get 3 free trips! Campus reps needed. www.StudentCity.com or 800- 293-1445. SPRING BREAK '08 Lowest Prices!!! www.sunsplashtours.com 800-426-7710 LOUIE THE LEGAL Hyena wants to be your friend. Check him out at www.legalhyena.com For Monday, Oct. 22, 2007 ARIES (March 21to April 19) For the next few weeks, shared prop- ery and insurance mattres are of primary interest toyou. This is an opportunity for you to clean up some old business. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Ex-partners are definitely back on the scene. Look good! Living well is the best revenge. It could be an opportunity to settle unfinished business. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Despite the delays and silly errors that continue at work, you're galvanized into action now because you want to get bet- ter organized. Give yourself the right tools to do a good job. CANCER (June 21to July 22) The next few weeks the perfect time for vacations, playful times, social occa- sions, love affairs, romance, sports and activities with children. You want to have fun! LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Home, family and real estate matters are your primary focus for the month ahead. Discussions with family, espe- cially a parent, could be significant. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Fasten your seat belt! You've got places to go, things to do and people to see. You're entering a busy phase of your life. Plan on taking short trips, running many errands and talking to siblings. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You've been thinking alot about your values lately. This could be because old money issues or the opportunity to make a major purchase have arisen again in your life. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) For the next four weeks, the Sun will be in your sign. Happy birthday! This is your tarn to recharge your bateries for the rest of the year. It's all about you now. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) It's time to lie low and work behind the scenes. You need time to contemplate what your New Year should be, because your birthday is looming! OAPRICORN (Dec. 22to Jan. 19) Your popularity rating definitely is going to increase. Everyone wants to see your face. Accept all invitations. Enjoy schmoozing with others. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) The Sun is high in your chart now, act- ing like a spotlight on you. Because of this, others notice you - especially bosses and VIPs. Furthermore, they think you're great! PISCES (Feb. 19to March 20) Try to do something different. The next few weeks are an excellent time to sign up for a course or travel some- where. You're eager for adventure and the opportunity to learn something new. YOU BORN TODAY You have excel- lent social skills. You practically can magnetize others to you with your charm. You're aware of your image and how you look. Your private life is dra- matic because, despite your sophisti- cated exterior, you are a passionate, rebellious person! In the year ahead, a major change could take place, perhaps something as significant as around 1998. Birthdate of: Jeff Goldblum, actor; Catherine Deneuve, actress; Sarah Bernhardt, actress. Advertise in this section by contacting: 734-764-0557 o 2007 King Features syndicate. inc. 4