2 - Tuesday, March 19, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2 - Tuesday, March 19, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com - w FRIDAYW °s Photos of the Week Learning by teaching others Jeffrey Stanzler is the director of the Interactive Communica- tions and Simulations group in the School of Education. Stanzler earned his Master's degree at the University and has been teaching for 20 years. What do you teach at Michigan? I teach educational technol- ogy, and I also run a project that does web-based simulations and writing projects where college students mentor middle-school, high-school and, in some cases, elementary-school students. Where do students do these type of projects? My students do their work wherever they choose to - they're working with students in actual classrooms around the country and around the world, so there's a password-protected website where they're interact- ing with their students. What has been the best thing you've learned while working at the University? It's important, if you can, to retain your humility. Whether you're older folks or younger folks, we're always learning and if you stay open to that, my experience has been that life is happier and more interesting than if you figure that you've got everything figured out. Any advice for students? I know in my class situa- tions, students are a little more reticent to ask questions. But, I think in a bigger sense, the willingness to ask questions indicates that we have a natu- ral curiosity. If we're not care- ful, school can kind of squash that curiosity, so I think that it's important for people to honor that curiosity and view it as a strength and not a weakness. - MICHELLE GILLINGHAM CRIME NOTES CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com ANDREW WEINER RACHEL GREINETZ Editor is Chief Business Manseer 724-410-4115 se. 1252 734-415-4115 ext. 1241 anweiner@michigandaily.com rmgrein@michigandaily.com Newsroom News Tips 734-418-4115 opt.3 news@michigandaily.com Corrections Letters to the Editor corrections@michigandaily.com tothedaily@michigandaily.com Arts Section Editorial Page arts@michigandaily.com opinion@michigandaily.com Sports Sentian Photography Section sports@ fichigandaily.com photo@michigandaily.com DisplaySales Classified Sales dailydisplay@gmail.com dailydisplay@gmail.com Online Sales Finance dailydisplay@gmail.com f inance@michigandaily.com EDITORIAL STAFF MatthewSlovin Managing Editor mjslovin@michigandaily.com Adam RubenfireManagingNews Editor arube@michigandaily.com SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: Alicia Adamczyk, Katie Burke, Austen Hufford, Peter Shahin, K.C. 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Shaky hands Lost then found Study abroad Pick a minor Two inmates in Quebec WHERE: Intramural WHERE: Intramural WHAT: The Center for WHAT: Students are invit- escaped prison by grab- Sports Building Sports Building Global Study will host a dis- ed to attend a fair to learn bing a rope attached to WHEN: Sunday at about WHEN: Sunday at about cussion about undergradu- about minoring in writing. a hijacked helicopter, the AP 5:55 p.m. 2:55 p.m. ate opportunities to study Faculty and students will reported. The prisoners then WHAT: Three people WHAT: A wallet was abroad. Cookies and discuss the application, engaged police in acar chase, dropped a bottle of alcohol reported stolen from the brownies will be served. courses and opportunities. gun fight and were captured upon entering the building, workout room while left WHO: Shapiro Pizza will be served. guacind werelcptr University Police reported. unattended, University Undergraduate Library WHO: Sweetland Writing pt a ated for hck. A police officer talked to Police reported. The wallet WHEN: Toda at 2 pm. Center pilot was treated for shock. them and all three were asked to leave the building. was then found at the lost- and-found. VT 111t\" L uay a . . t WHERE: Shapiro Under- graduate Library, Bert's Study room WHEN: Today at 6 p.m. WHERE: Michigan Union, Parker Room Dude, where's Paint and run N NYT lecture Buddhist art my car WHERE: Biomedical Sci- ence Reasearch Building WHEN: Sunday at about 8:20 p.m. WHAT: A drunk person tried to get into an employ- ee's car while the owner was in it, University Police reported. The suspect could not be located afterwards. WHERE: 200 block of Thayer Street WHEN: Sunday at about 12:45 p.m. WHAT: Graffiti was found in the seventh floor stairwell of the parking structure, University Police reported. The drawingwas done in paint. No timeframe of the incident is known, and there are no suspects. 1 I 1 1 1 V V V K 1 V ZJ N. l.l.%A 111" 4 "X 4 WHAT: Jill Abramson, the first female executive editor of The New York Times, will lead the 2013 Mullin Welch lecture. Abramson has previously worked as an investigative reporter for The Wall Street Journal. A reception will follow. WHO: Center for the Edu- cation of Women WHEN: Today at 4:30 p.m. WHERE: Biomedical Sci- ence Research Building, Kahn Auditorium WHAT: Arjia Rinpoche, the former abbot of a famous monastery in Tibet and lecturer on Tibetan art, will lead a discussion about the importance that art has in the practice of Tibetan Buddhism. The presentation will includea short blessing ceremony in the UMMA Apse. WHO: University of Michi- gan Museum of Art WHEN: Today at 3 p.m. WHERE: UMMA On Wednesday, Cali- fornian senators pro- posed a law requiring the state's 145 public colleges and universities to give credit for online courses. Could it happen here? >> FOR MORE, SEE OPINION, PAGE 4 As Lindsay Lohan arrived for a court date 48 minutes late, an onlooker threw glitter at her, TMZ reported. Lohan struck a plea deal after being accused of lying to police officers after crashing her Porsche last June. Patriarch will visit new Pope Police look for answers in crash Eastern Orthodox attendance at Papal inauguration will be the first in history ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - Bar- tholomew I, the spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Chris- tians, will attend Pope Francis' installation Mass - the first time a patriarch from the Istanbul- based church has attended a papal investiture since the two branches of Christianity split nearly 1,000 years ago. Bartholomew said he is doing that to underscore the impor- tance of "friendly ties" between the churches and expectations that the new pontiff will advance rapprochement efforts that began decades ago. It's asentiment thatmanylead- ers of other faiths are expressing ahead of Tuesday's installation, which is drawing dozens of Jew- ish, Orthodox and other Chris- tian leaders to Rome for the start of a pontificate that is poised to deepen the Vatican's ecumenical and interfaith efforts given Fran- cis' namesake and own history. Those who knew Jorge Mario Bergoglio as leader of Argentina's Catholic Church say promoting interfaith dialogue was at the heart of his view of the what the Catholic faith should be about - an outward-reaching, bottom-up effort to improve lives, no matter what people's faith. "He's the one who opened the cathedral of Buenos Aires for interfaith ceremonies, like when we prayed for peace. He's not one of those who waits for you to call them to participate in these events - he promotes them," Buenos Aires Rabbi Alejandro Avruj told The Associated Press on Monday. Bergoglio brought Jewish, evangelical Christian, Greek Orthodox and Muslim leaders into the Metropolitan Cathe- dral to pray for peace in the Middle East. Last November, he welcomed Jews for a joint ser- vice on the 74th anniversary of Kristallnacht, the night in 1938 when nearly 200 synagogues were destroyed, Jewish shops were looted and tens of thou- sands of Jews were sent to be exterminated in Adolf Hitler's Germany. He also sponsored interfaith prayers after Pope Benedict XVI offended Muslims in 2006 by quoting a Byzantine emperor as saying some of the Prophet Muhammad's teachings were "evil and inhuman." Rather than criticize Benedict directly, Ber- goglio let a lower-ranking priest lead that service and did not him- self participate. Bergoglio also shared happier moments - such as lighting the first candle in a Jewish Hanuk- kah ceremony in December, his latest interfaith act. California police hypothesize that faulty steering wheel caused race accident SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Authorities are investigating whether a faulty steering wheel caused a California raceway crash that killed two people, including the young cousin of the teenage driver, officials said Monday. The Yuba County Sheriff's Department is looking into wit- ness reports that the detachable steering wheel came off just before 17-year-old Chase John- son's car careened off the dirt track and crashed into pit row Saturday evening, Undersheriff Jerry Read said. "It's shaping up to look like a mechanical failure, but there's still work to be done," Read said about the investigation. Race car owner Dale Won- dergem, 68, of Grass Valley and Marcus Johnson, 14, of Santa Rosa were killed by the collision at Marysville Raceway Park, about 40 miles north of Sacra- mento, officials said. The accident occurred when Chase Johnson and sev- eral other drivers were doing warm-up laps on opening day of the California Sprint Car Civil War Series. No one else was injured in the crash, and spectators were never in jeop- ardy, according to the sheriff's department. Marcus Johnson's father, Rob Johnson, said his nephew Chase told him the wheel detached from the steering column as he was heading into a corner at about 90 mph, according to KTVU-TV. The car hit a sloped wall, launched into the air and crashed about 150 feet from the track, striking his son. Johnson said the car was brand new, so he believes some- thing in the steering wheel's quick-release mechanism failed. "He had no control of the car," Johnson told KTVU-TV. "I don't know how it could come off. He always double-checked it just to make sure it was down tight. He wasn't careless." Rob Johnson, who lives in Santa Rosa, said the two cousins were close friends, and Marcus had been helping Chase in the pits during races for three years. "The two of them were just peas in a pod. They'd do everything together and enjoy every minute of life together," Johnson said. "He was one of the sweetest boys you'll ever know." Friends and family gathered at Marcus Johnson's Santa Rosa middle school on Sunday eve- ning, where they remembered the 8th grader as a passionate basketball player who loved rac- ing cars. S 6 to