The Michigan Daily -Monday, January 28, 1991 - Page 3 Lithuanian shot by Soviet w army captain VILNIUS, U.S.S.R. (AP) - A Soviet army captain !shot a Lithuanian at a military checkpoint yesterday, ,and officials of the breakway republic said they have be- gun keeping a record of brutality inflicted on their citi- zens, a government spokesperson said. Government spokesperson Audrius Azubalis said a Soviet patrol stopped the Lithuanian, who was driving a ca with two hitchhikers at about 1 a.m. The driver was :asked to get out of the car and put his hands on the windshield. A shot fired at the ground by the captain, apparently as a warning, ricocheted and hit the man in the leg. The; ithuanian, indentified as A. Shalkingas, was taken to a Vilnius hospital for treatment. Azubalis also said the last of six Lithuanians, seized after a shooting incident involving paratroopers Thurs- day, was released and taken to a hospital for treatment of concussion. The Lithuanian Health Ministry reported a similar case Saturday in Kaunas, 60 miles west of Vilnius, where a man detained Jan. 24 by the military was re- )eased and taken to a hospital suffering from a concus- lion, arm fractures and chest injuries, Azubalis said. The commander of the Soviet Army garrison had MICHELLE warned Saturday that his troops were getting "more and more out of control." Troops have been patrolling major cities in Lithua- Pinball wizard nia and the highways that connect them since a weekend James Augur, a graduate student in the School of Information and Library Studies, enjoys a game of Fun House in the video f violence two weeks ago claimed 14 lives and injured at Study Break in the Union. more than 500 people. Conference leaders help college activists GROW arcade Geology dep't. gets new chair by Garrick Wang Daily Staff Reporter University Professor Rob Van dr Voo will serve another term as chair of the Geological Sciences department, the LSA Executiv Committee announced last week. Van der Voo, department chair from 1981 through 1987, will r& place Prof. Henry Pollack - who announced his resignation last ApriL His term begins July 1. Van der Voo, on a year-lo'n sabbatical in Barcelona, Spain, w5 not available for comment. "On the basis of past experience, I think that (Van der Voo) would be a conscientious and able chair, Pollack said. "He's experienced, knows the way around the University and has his own com- mitment toward undergraduate education." Van der Voo will be involved in dealing with the department's space crunch, selecting which in- terdisciplinary extensions to pursue, and assisting degree recipients to find jobs. "I'm just elated that (Van der Voo) agreed to sign-up for one more term," said Geological Sciences Prof. William Kelly. "It's good for the department, the college, and indeed for all of us at the University." Pollack added that Van der Voo served on the Committee on the Undergraduate Experience last year, "He is tough-minded, creative, warm, and one of the best committee members I have ever worked with," said English Prof. Robert Weisbuch, chair of the committee. LSA Dean Edie Goldenberg sa- licited nominations from the d. partment's faculty last Septembgr. The faculty submitted nomination in October, and Van der Voo was one of the top choices. Kelly favored Van der Voo be- cause he was "instrumental in pro- ducing major increases in the sup- port of faulty and student research.' He added that Van der Voo was very active in increasing the financial and personal relationships between the students and the alumni. University of Wisconsin Platteville N N 0 ms by Bethany Robertson Daily Staff Reporter An angry mob rushed from a meeting with Kreighton Turpentine Company Friday night after their demands to clean up a toxic waste sight were not met. "Hell no! We won't glow!" they chanted as they charged out the door. "O.K., cut," said Kevin Harris, drassRoots Organizing Weekend (GROW) instructor. The "angry mob" and "Kreighton Turpentine Administra- tion" quieted immediately and re- turned to their normal roles as stu- dent activists participating in a weekend strategy conference for grassroots organizations. "You can be as sensational as you want, but if you don't have any power you're not going to win," Harris said while analyzing the two groups' performances in the role-playing exercise. The con- ference, held in Ypsilanti, cen- tered around instructional sessions and activities which gave partici- pants hands-on experience. Eastern Michigan University (EMU) sophomore Jaz Jones said the conference had an immediate effect on his planning skills. "You learn right on the spot what you can do and how you can do it," he said. Greg Aronin, a Michigan State University sophomore involved in student government, said learning a specific structure for organizing campaigns was one of the most valuable parts of the weekend. "I know in the future I'm going to need to know how to organize people, how to get things done... What this conference does is give you that method." GROW instructor Kathy Meis- ter began the weekend by outlining the principles of Direct Action Or- ganizing (DAO). Involving the greatest number of students possi- ble is the goal of the DAO system, she said. "Cut the issue so that it reflects to different people in dif- ferent ways." DAO involves winning concrete improvements in people's lives, making students aware of their own power, and altering relations of power to increase group influence. By using this system, Meister said, "You have created a rela- tionship where power sources real- ize they have to approach student groups first." Harris said a shift in U.S. poli- tics away from educational issues has created the need to spark ef- fective activism on campuses nationwide. "We need to have the power to organize," Harris said. "Hopefully we're giving people the skills to map out an entire campaign, not just an isolated event." The EMU-sponsored conference was one of 16 weekends planned this year for campuses across the country. About 30 students from colleges around Michigan partici- pated in the conference. Event or- ganizers speculated that no Uni- versity students participated due to last weekend's anti-war demonstra- tion in Washington, D.C. Personal Librarians service receives-mixed reactions by H.L. Greenberg How much time does the typi- cal student spend in University Li- braries researching a paper? Li- brarian Rob Savage figures most students spend more than eight hours on computers and in the stacks, looking for materials to write a paper. Personal Librarians, a student research service started by Sav- age, hopes to change all that. "When I go and give presenta- tions, the students applaud and cheer. I'm their Messiah," Savage, FAEs Continued from page 1 It is unclear whether U.S. forces iq the Gulf will use FAEs against the Iraqi Army. "The U.S. is backing off using FAEs as an anti- personnel weapon because of the odious political im- president of Personal Librarians, said. Personal Librarians is a profes- sional support service for students, an information brokerage firm. A list of sources for a typical nine- page paper costs $15, Savage said. Savage conducts an interview with each client to find which types of sources are needed for a particular paper: including maps, graphs, charts, journals. "As professionals, in our opin- ion these are the best sources you can get," he said. "If you don't plications," said Llewellyn King, an analyst at Defense Week magazine. In a Jan. 22 article, King wrote that "There may be more fear for al- legedly conventional weapons such as FAEs than from the chemical weapons and gasses which have dominated the public concern about the Iraqi arsenal." agree you don't have to use them." LSA Assistant Dean for Student Academic Affairs Eugene Nissen did not share Savage's enthusiasm for Personal Librarians. "The ad- ministration takes a dim view of this sort of thing," he said. "It runs against the spirit of how to do a bibliography. While it is not illegal, it is right on the boundary," he added. "Where do we draw the line?" About 15 graduate students in the Information and Library Stud- ies program do the actual research- ing for Personal Librarians clients. "We do this intellectual menial labor which is finding sources, like librarians are trained to do, like we are trained to do. We use all the University resources possible, those which we have been trained to know about, not just Infotrack," Savage said. Savage said, "Some services need to be provided to support (students) so they can go on with their academic or scholarly pur- suits which cost a lot of money. Librarians are working more as knowledge navigators for doctors, hospitals, businesses, and now students." David Hessler, a professor in the School of Information and Li- brary Studies agreed. "Personal Librarians is ethical and is not short-circuiting the intellectual ac- tivity; instead it is facilitating the (learning) process." "Information brokers are part of growing field," added Hessler. "Being able to use information ef- fectively is becoming more com- plex. More 'U' by Ronan Lynch Daily Research Reporter links to FAEs emerge More evidence emerged over the weekend linking University re- search to a weapon producing an explosion of a size and intensity that military observers describe as "the closest thing to a nuclear bomb." Former University Prof. James Nicholls performed research for the Air Force on combustion involving aluminum oxide and fuel-air ex- plosions (FAEs). In November 1981, Nicholls told Michigan Stu- dent Assembly researcher Brett Enyon the project was "funda- mental research." University Profs. Charles Kauff- man and Martin Sichel recently completed an Army subcontract on FAEs. Last Friday, Aerospace Engi- neering Prof. Charles Kauffman de- fended his research, telling the Ann Arbor News it was intended to save lives. A U.S. Senate investigation is being conducted to determine if U.S. technology was used in Iraq's devel- opment of the weapon. It is not known if Iraq obtained the technol- ogy from U.S. or Soviet sources. Correction Students will be required to make tuition payments in two installments beginning Fall Term, 1991. This information was reported incorrectly in last Thursday's Daily. THE LIST ! What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings Students Fighting Anti-semitism. Hillel, 7:00. UMAASC (University of Michigan Asian American Student Coalition). Contact Weston Woo (995-7008) for info. MLB, Rm. B134, 7:00. U of M Outing Club meeting to discuss upcoming events. Union, Pond Rm., 8:15. Speakers "South Africa - The Struggle for Health, the Struggle for Democra- cy," Dr. Barry Kistnasamy, speaker. International Center, Rm. 9, 12-1:00. "Mainland Chinese Poetry: A Bi- Lingual Reading," Edward Morin and Fang Dai, reading from their fiction and poetry. Guild House, 802 Monroe St., 8:30. "'vnthetic Analnues of Molvbde- Juan de Mena, and the Power of Courtly Love," Julian Weiss of UVA, speaker. MLB, 4th floor Commons, 4:30. Furthermore Safewalk functions 8-11:30 am Sun.- Thurs Call 936-1000 or stop by 102 UGU. Northwalk functions 8-11:30 am Sun.-Thurs. Call 763-WALK or stop by 2333 Bursley. ECB Peer Writing Tutors avalible to help with your papers Sunday- Thursday, Angell/Haven Computing Center, 7-11:00. U of M Shorin-Ryu Karate-do Club. For info call 994-3620. Every Monday, CCRB, Small Gym, 8-9:00. U of M Tae Kwon Do Club. Every Monday, CCRB Martial Arts Rm., 7- 8:3. ISRAEL Continued from page 1 Indiana forced Hebrew University to offer students an option of tak- ing final exams Jan. 8-10 instead of during the original exam period of January 22-29. The move was taken to provide a period for students to return home before the Jan. 15 United Nations pull-out deadline, said Besserman. PRECAUTIONS Continued from page 1 the Hard Rock Cafe." As an additional precaution, University students traveling abroad are now asked to fill out an emer- gency contact form. "University students don't make good targets, though," Nolting added. "They're not a good symbol." Nolting fears more for American diplomats and business representa- tives. The feature that made this al- ternative attractive was that stu- dents risked losing credits if bomb- ings prevented regularly scheduled exams to take place, Mono said. Ten of the 12 University stu- dents enrolled in this program de- cided to return home, Mono said. "The two students still there be- lieve that Americans should show an ultimate commitment to Is- rael," he said. "Many students wanted to stay but their parents literally could not sleep at night and they decided they could not let their parents worry like that, so they returned home," Mono said. Jeremy Litt, an LSA junior who left the program, said he was un- sure whether he would return to Is- rael. "I probably won't know until that day (February 24), whether or not I will return to Hebrew 'U." Study in 'tin Emphases in Liberal Arts International Business Courses available in Spanish and in English Fluency in Spanish not required . QWO$. Italian Restaurant 4~c~go with our finest homemade Pastas and Pizza. All courses approved by UW-Platteville and validated on an official UW-Platteville transcript $3975 per semester for Wisconsin and Minnesota residents $4225 per semester for non-residents