1J, The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 27, 1995 - 3 JJNCF gets $1M mm NFL support The United Negro College Fund has teamed up with 50 players from the . National Football League to create a $1 million scholarship fund for histori- cally black colleges. Students at any of the nation's more than 100 black col- leges are eligible for the scholarships. Next fall, the fund will award a mini- mum of 100 renewable scholarships of as much as $5,000 to college juniors. Students must have at least a 3.0 grade pointaverage andprovenfinancialneed. Though this scholarship is affiliated with the NFL, students do not need to be athletes. The 50 football players involved have each made donations of $10,000, and the gifts are being matched by the league. The idea for the scholarship began when NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue saw an advertisement for the fund and contacted its president, William Gray, to see how the league could help. Cornell IFC cracks down on open parties Following a crackdown by the Cornell university police on underage drinking, the school's Interfraternity Council re- sponded Monday by imposing new open-party restrictions. Cornell IFC President Scott Fintzy said only students who have invitations to fraternity parties will now be al- lowed to attend. "The IFC is taking a stance that fra- ternities will be limited to the number of invitations produced and will only allow those with invites to enter the party," Fintzy said. "The change ... isnot the result of a new president, a new police chief or a new judicial administrator," said Susan Murphy, vice president for student and academic services. "The reality is on this campus we've got to figure out how to protect ourselves," Murphy said. Currently, there are five alcohol-re- lated lawsuits involving Cornell, with a sixth pending. These lawsuits are ap- proaching$ ill d ifall d continue "will shut down the system," Murphy added. Northwestern student tumbles from goalpost After the Northwestern University football team defeated Air Force 30-6 .,.for its first home win in almost two years on Saturday, about 300 ecstatic students stormed the field, and about 15 people climbed the North goalpost. During the post-game celebration, Northwestern student Wayne Heusel fell from the crossbar of the goalpost and landed on his neck. Heusel was semi-conscious and unresponsive on the field, said Northwestern University Police Lt. Darren Davis. Heusel wastakento Evanston Hospi- ..tal and released a few hours later, a hospital spokeswoman said. The people who climbed onto the North goalpost engaged in a futile at- tempt to tear it down. Northwestern " installed goalposts three or four years ago that were designed not to come down, said Vice President for Univer- sity Relations Ken Wildes. No new security measures will be taken to prevent people from climbing goalposts, Wildes said. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Lisa Poris 'U' alum, 19, overcomes challenges, heads to Yale Law The Yale Daily News NEW HAVEN, Conn. - At 13, while most current Yale students were agonizing over the slobbery logistics of their first kisses, Benjamin Bolget was entering the University. Now at 19, the youngest Yale Law student in recent memory is no Doogie Howser, though. He has had a long road to New Haven - one filled with dyslexia, drunk driving, poverty and divorce. Though Bolger graduated first in his class from the University, he can only read at a fifth-grade level - and though he has lived with his single mother in a house without running water, he has spent the past five months working just down the hall from President Clinton. "Most people would probably look at me and say I shouldn't be in a hurry," Bolger said. "But I look at my life and say, 'I'm 19, and what have I accomplished?' And the answer keeps coming back - not enough." Bolger has had to combat considerable adversity, beginning with dyslexia. Dyslexia is a much broader problem than just reversing letters to read "saw" as "was." Bolger describes his own problem as "phonetic." For instance, he spells "phone" F-O-N. "It makes sense," he noted, "but that's not how it works." Resources for dyslexic kids proved limited in Bolger's suburban Detroit hometown, so his mother opted to home-school herson. Mrs. Bolger had time to devote to her son only because she was unable to work. When Bolger was 3, a drunk driver hit him and his mother at 90 mph. The accident left Mrs. Bolger permanently disabled with internal inju- ries. Working was no longer an option. To make things worse, Bolger said his engi- neer father was not exactly "active" in finan- cially supporting him and his mother. A messy 10-year-long divorce left Mrs. Bolger single and unemployed. Still, Bolger thrived intellectually as a homeschooler. He loved being able to study some- thing for as long as he wanted, notjust until the bell rang. "I wasn't forced to learn. It was something I embraced - with excitement," he recalled. At 13, Bolger felt he had "exhausted the re- sources" of homeschooling. The University, he said, was the "next logical step." Since he arrived at college - and even now at Yale - Mrs. Bolger spends six or more hours a day helping Ben with his work. Most of this time is spent reading to him or taking dictation."I neverthought ofit as asacrifice," she explained. "I consider it a joy to be a mentor to my son." Mrs. Bolger didn't, however, move in with himn at college. So as a 13-year-old first-year student, Bolger had his own apartment. Although he claims not to have been an "Ani- mal House"-esque partier, Bolger wasn't as so- cially inept as one might expect a 13-year-old college student to be. His friends included many kids his own age and others of college age. - Distributed by University Wire Judaicdoogie answers to tim1,eless questions in exhibit MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Drum majors Members of the snare section of the Michigan Marching Band play daily outside Revelli Hall. Diag still under construction -plans are to be completed next By Lenny Feller Daily Sta"fReporter Joseph T. Adler was born in 1894 in Frankfurt, Germany, his family's an- cestral home since the 13th century. Adler worked as a book dealer and a real-estate broker until 1939 when he was interned in Dachau, a Nazi concen- tration camp. He spent four months there among displaced Jewish refugees before being released thanks to the tire- less efforts of his family. Within the year, he emigrated to the United States, where he worked for a short time as a tree farmer. His wife Marie worked in a flower store and made lampshades. His true calling, however, was a far cry from being a real-estate broker, a book dealer or a tree farmer. For 40 years, Adler's hobby was the collection of stamps. In the mid-1930s, he traded that hobby for what would become his lifelong obsession. "At first I collected only stamps. Then I thought, 'Why should you have stamps when you don't know what stamps mean?' So I came to Judaica," Adler said. "I work day and night and night and day for the collection. It keeps me on the go. What is the meaning of this? This I want to find out. And this is the most important thing," he said. Adler's collection , part of which is on display on the seventh floor of the Graduate Library, spans tens of thou- sands ofpictures, letters, paintings, post- cards, book manuscripts, stamps and artifacts, including a piece of wallpa- per from Anne Frank's home during the war and a singular description of Kri stallnacht, the "night ofglass," a riot that occurred Nov. 9, 1939, when Ger- man officers set fire to synagogues, Jewish businesses and homes. "This is the only one that has been found," said Ruth Schnee, Adler's daughter. "As things were happening, (Adler) would put it on little pieces of paper and hide it in pockets, in cups, anywhere he could because you were not allowed to record what was happen- ing. You would be shot." Kristallnacht and the four months he spent in Dachau haunt Adler, forcing him to remember the atrocities on a daily basis. "This follows me all my life, since the time I was there," Adler said. "It's been more than 50 years and still I can't get over it. I don't want to talk about it because I have enough thinking of it every day." "It stands in my view now as the day I came out of Dachau. I have the same feeling." Adler believes the emotions of the Holocaust can never truly be transmit- ted to the present generation. "You can't imagine the people they brought to Auschwitz and Treblinka and all the camps," Adler said. "You can't imagine because you have to see. "It was horrible. They asked people to dig holes. They put the people in the holes and killed them. It has no feeling for you. You say it's horrible and in five minutes you talk about something else." Though the emotions of the past can- not be transmitted to the present, it is knowledge of the past that Adler be- lieves to be vital. The collection serves a dual purpose in Adler's view: a chronicle of the history of the Jewish people and a place where answers can be found. "Everything that has to do with Juda- ism is in collection," said Adler. By Eileen Reynolds For the Daily As part of an overall campus beauti- fication effort, the Diag is undergoing a "refacing" that will continue until early next spring. Lead designers Johnson, Johnson, and Roy have conceptual plans, yet they are unclear when further construction and landscaping will begin. The West Engineering courtyard was recently redone, including the addition of an underground sprinkler system. New sod, trees and shrubs were also planted in the area, and heavy bark dust was added to increase drainage. Promptly after the completion of West Engineering, the area of the Diag situ- ated directly in front of the new Randall Laboratory was redone. New sod, shrubs and bark dust also were part of the re-landscaping at Randall. Supplementary lighting was installed around the building and walk- ways were built to increase safety. The landscaping on campus is con- ducted and overseen by the University Landscape and Architect office. Since the office is University-run, SNRE stu- dents and faculty will often participate in landscaping projects. SNRE Prof. Bob Gracey occasion- ally gets his students involved in the planting design of University grounds. Except for the area on the East side ,of Randall, "things are pretty much done," said Terry Ramsey an architect for the University. Jamie Maier, a laborer on the land- scaping in front of Randall, said, "We never know what we're doing from one week to the next." Even though there is a major plan for renovation being considered, things may be over for now. West Engineering took three weeks to complete and the area around Randall took less than two. While landscaping may be coming to a halt, construction is still well under- way. The office of construction manage- ment said the landscaping is ending because there is a rush to finish con- struction done before winter sets in. With the dedication of the new Randall Laboratory Facility Building coming up in October, the major reno- vation on the Diag will be suspended until early next spring. A Arrest made in murder case Lxpress yourself StUhy abroa . SOUTHFIELD (AP) -Police found Ken Tranchidajust after midnight Mon- day, alone in an apartment in an impov- erished Detroit neighborhood, his wrists bleeding from apparently self-inflicted wounds. Murder charges against the 42-year- old man, hunted intensely since he be- came a suspect in an Oakland Univer- sity college student's death, were ex- pected within two days. "We have reason to believe Ken Tranchida was directly responsible for the death of Tina Biggar," Police Chief Joseph E. Thomas said. Tranchida had not been charged with any crime yesterday afternoon. He was being held on a parole violation, Tho- mas said. Tranchida had failed to report to his parole officer since July 20, state Cor- rections Department spokesman War- ren Williams said. He had served time for breaking. h Corrections N There has not been a provost selected from outside the University in more than 30 years. This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. Saloni Raval's name was mispelled in yesterday's Daily. %' ! . . .. . What's happening in Ann Arbor today GROUP MEETINGS J Hindu Students Council, weekly dis- cussion, 764-2671Michigan Union, Pond Rooms A-C, 8 p.m. O La Voz Mexicana, meeting, 994- 9139, Michigan League, Room D, 7 p.m. 0 Lutheran Campus Ministry, Lord of Light Lutheran Church, 801 South Forest, Holden Evening Prayer 7 p.m., Choir 7:30 p.m. D Muslim Students Association, meeting, 6656416, Michigan League, Henderson Room, 7 p.m. U Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, men and women, beginners welcome, 994- 3620, CCRB, Room 2275, 8:30- 9:30 p.m. Dl Taekwn~nd~n fClub- heonn~rs and zine, Chemistry Building, Room 1650, 7 p.m. Q "FORUM Registration Sessions," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, 3200 Student Activi- ties Building, 12:40-1 p.m. and 6:10-6:30 p.m. Q "Israeli Soldiers in Gaza, Before and During Palestinian Autonomy," Israeli Video, spon- sored by Hillel, Hillel, 1429 Hill Street, 7 p.m. Q "Philosophy: Who Needs It?" spon- sored by U-M Students of Objec- tivism, Michigan League, 7 p.m. Q "Practical Training and Employment for international Students," sponsored by Interna- tional Center, International Cen- Q "Writing a Law School Personal Statement," sponsored by Ca- reer Planning and Placement, Mason Hall, Room 3410, 4:10- 5 p.m. Q "ZS Associates information Ses- sion," sponsored by Career Plan- ning and Placement, Michigan League, Vandenberg Room, 7-9 p.m. STUDENT SERVICES 0 Campus information Center, Michigan Union, 763-INFO; events info 76-EVENT or UM*Events on GOpherBLUE, and http://www.umich.edu/ t Beaver College,we believe that study i A abroad is an opportunity for you to express yourself in new ways. 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