The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 3, 1995 - 3 Fraternities stress academics, professional careers Piano destroyed in Hill Auditorium - DPS reports indicate the malicious destruction Friday of a piano in Hill Auditorium. "Soda pop damaged/warped inside of piano and ivory keys," police said. The Steinway grand piano was val- ued at $35,000. The piano was last seen in working condition last school year. The piano was stored in a dressing room, which usually remains locked unless there is a show. Shoplifter caught at Yost Ice Arena Whilemanypeople spendtimeplaying hockey at Yost Ice Arena, a shoplifter attempted to steal merchandise there. DPS was contacted Friday afternoon about a shoplifter stealing an item val- ued at about $55. "The staff has hands on a shoplifter, they are secure and don't feel he will attempt to leave," reports said. DPS officials arrived and trans- ported the alleged shoplifter to DPS. Aggravated assault in Mary Markley DPS reports indicate a caller reported two white males causing damage to a hallway and door ofMary Markley resi- dence hall. DPS was contacted at 1:43 a.m. Sat- urday morning. In the Fisher section of the residence hall, one suspect had a knife, but did not threaten anybody. DPS officials met with suspects in the front lobby and took one into custody. Housing officials said there was no permanent damage, only many of pa- pers and other items taken off the walls and doors. Child abuse cited at campus parking lot DPS reports show a caller informed police late Friday that a baby was being abused in campus parking lot NW-51 on Stone Street. At about 11:30 p.m., the caller heard ababy crying in the lot, and saw a "male putting baby in recycling bin, taking it out, then putting it in bin again 'as punishment."' Officers arrived on the scene and contacted the Department of Social Services about the child abuse. Woman injured at Mich. League buffet A patron at the Michigan League buffet sufferred an injury on the way to getting her food. DPS reports indicate the woman was inflicted with a large laceration on her arm Friday. The woman was "taken to St Joes via family member." The woman tripped while entering the buffet area and struck her arm on a piece of wood trim. Patient leaves emergency room Emergency room staff reported a pa- tient walked away from the "back hall" at about 2:30 Saturday afternoon. Her parents were on the way to the hospital when she left. DPS officials then broadcasted for units to be-on the lookout for a woman with the following description: 23 years . old, brown shoulder-length hair pulled back, black, long sleeve knit skirt, blue jeans and a black belt. Reports said the subject was 5'4" and 108 lbs. DPS units and the Ann Arbor Police Department then searched forthe woman. The subject later called her home from a pay phone in Ann Arbor. She said she was trying to get a ride home. -Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jodi Cohen By Laura Nelson For the Daily Any Greek society can offer its members wild parties and friendships that last a lifetime. But, pre-professional fraternities give students this and something more - a head start on their academic and professional careers. Pre-professional fraternities differ from Greek fraternities in that they are co-ed and their members share common educational and career goals. Most pre-professional fraternities also do not own houses. But they offer members a social life similar to traditional fraternities. "We are not this elite group of academics," said Shawn Cabot, president of the University's chap- ter of the international pre-law fraternity Phi Al- pha Delta. There are no academic requirements, he said; the fraternity is "open to all with an interest in law." Phi Alpha Delta stages social events, parties, and formals just like other fraternities, he said, and there is a strong fraternal bond between members. Alpha Kappa Psi is a pre-business fraternity that incorporates social and professional goals. "Our motto is, 'We mix business with plea- sure,"' said member John Li. The group empha- sizes "teamwork and brotherhood" like a Greek organization, he added. Alpha Rho Chi, the fraternity for architecture and the allied arts, also throws parties, but unlike traditional fraternities, they only publicize in the architecture school, said president Alexander Briseno. Members of the pre-law fraternity profit from the "elite" status of Phi Alpha Delta alumni, Cabot said. One in six attorneys are alumni of the fraternity, including Bill and Hillary Clinton, he said. Phi Alpha Delta also provides programs that help students apply to law school and focus their career goals, he added. The business fraternity offers resume work- shops and interview experience that "will prepare you better for the real world," Li said. For members of the architectural fraternity, the professional advantages are particularly impor- tant because architecture is such a competitive field, Briseno said. "Ninety percent of our mem- bers get their first job working for one of our alumni." The fraternity "serves as a good link to the architecture community," said Christy Bragunier, a new member of Alpha Rho Chi. Pledging the pre-professional fraternity is much like pledging any other Greek organization. Pledges to Phi Alpha Delta must interview every member of the fraternity, learn its history, attend weekly meetings and participate in fund- raisers and service projects, Cabot said. Like Greek fraternities, Phi Alpha Delta ini- tiates its members with'a secret ceremony, Cabot said. Cabot said hazing - which he defines as "any- thing that goes against one's moral standards"- does not occur in Phi Alpha Delta. Pledges are asked to evaluate the pledgingprocess mid-season to make sure no part of the process has made them feel uncomfortable, he said. Some pre-professional fraternities place more emphasis on academic achievement and career preparation than socializing. The accounting fra- ternity, Beta Alpha Psi, is one of these. The group's purpose is to "distinguish account- ing majors," said President Kristen Stieber. The fraternity is the "main way for accounting firms to get to know people," she added. Student dismantles e art project By Josh White Daily Staff Reporter After what she called an act of"cen- sorship" by the Art School, Art senior Stephanie Sailor dismantled her project, saying it had been altered by the presence of barriers in front of her work. Sailor's exhibit, which included "pornographic images showing women with cum on their faces," was hanging in the Street Gallery in the Art School on North Campus last week, partially blocked by barriers put there by Art School Dean Allen Samuels. Samuels said the barriers offered a choice to the public should they not want to see the sexually explicit art in a public place. "I took it down because from an artistic point of view my work had been altered by the barriers," Sailor said. "The barriers caused too much attention to be focused on one aspect of the work - the sexually explicit images. The important issues, that of sexual exploitation and the abuse of animals, were being overlooked and the exhibit was being treated as a peep show." Sailor still claims that she was cen- sored by the Art School, while Samuels vehemently denied any sort of censor- ship in the issue. "Let me make it clear: we do not censor in the Art School," Samuels said last week. "I want to say it again - we do not censor." Sailor said she still feels emotional about the whole event. "I feel anger and sadness, but I cer- tainly learned a lot from it," Sailor said. "I have learned how sex imagery is inevitably controversial." KRISTIN SCHAEFER/Daily LSA Junior Allen Ludwig (left) teaches his friend Spencer Fein, an LSA sophomore, to play guitar on their front lawn yesterday. City Council to keep~r dept heads By Maureen Sirhal Daily Staff Reporter Dispelling concern about one coun- cil member's inquiry to remove city department heads, the Ann Arbor City Council approved a measure last night to reaffirm confidence in them. The resolution passed with a vote of 10-1, and was written in response to the recent string of public inquires Councilmember Stephen Hartwell (D- 4th Ward) made in an effort to correct a mistake he says Councilmember Peter Nicolas (I-4th Ward) committed while interviewing candidates for city admin- istrator. "It is correct that I misspoke during the interviews," Nicolas said. "If I misspoke, I apologize ... But that memo elicited concern among staff people." Hartwell, who stated publicly that he would not support the measure Nicolas had proposed, came out in favor of a similar resolution that was substituted by another council member, Jean Carlberg (D-3rd Ward). Carlberg's added a portion mention- ing that council was not currently tak- ing any public or private action to re- move department heads. Hartwell said he hoped this issue would be a lesson to the minority mem- bers of council "not to jump to conclu- sions" about the inquires of other coun- cil members. The only opposition to the resolution came from Councilmember Elisabeth Daley (D-5thWard). "I have some concerns with depart- ment heads," she said. The memo Hartwell distributed was among other items discussed at the weekly departmental meetings in city hall. Hartwell released a letter to interim city administrators Winifred Northeross and Ronald Olsen asking them to explain the motives behind the inquires. "I am not taking any action, either public or private, to remove council heads," he said. Hartwell expressed hope at last night's meeting that some of the frayed working relationships on coumAo could patched through better commu- nication. Nicolas and other council members wanted to begin to restore the council's reputation, which he said took a bruis- ing over the process that eliminated city administrator candidate Roger Crum from the running. "One of the things that bothered me was the feedback we received that some of the administrator stuff made it onto the AP wire," Nicolas said. "...Anti-war activists in Ann Arbor have finalized plans for the demonstration after today's foot- ball game. !ponsored by the De- troit Coalition to End the War, and the Ann Arbor Peace Action Coalition (PAC), the plans call for a march from Michigan Sta- dium to the Diag where the rally will be held." C~l7 '/l O ArQ S 110% t ,r E rjs d, q f %'l/ 9 - A p o , // did 9dQ1,116i).@ StQ, sh ~ o A n y a't~ yr Q ' t .7t09 " ~Et Speaker warns students of ha By Courtney Stamm of what hazing is and what the rules For the Daily regarding hazing are." As a means of alerting students to the dangers of hazing, the Panhellenic Association and the Interfraternity Council co-sponsored a presentation by Maureen Syring last night at the Power Center. Syring, director of the Delta Gamma Foundation, has spoken at more than 250 campuses, conferences and con- ventions over the past several years. Justin Wyatt, IFC vice president for programming, said, "I hope this program gives students a better sense Wyatt also stressed that IFC is op- posed to hazing in all forms and will act immediately upon any reports of inappropriate activities. Dani Lederman, president of Sigma Delta Tau sorority, said, "Hazing is prevalent on campus, but is kept mostly underground. Last year's Sig Eps incident (now closed following hazing allegations) exposed some of the hazing problems we have here at the U-M." During her presentation, Syring em- zing dangers phasized that hazing is anything that does not fit into the founding philoso- phies of the fraternities and sorori- ties. Syring cited her own experience as a pledge as the most embarrassing, degrading time in her life, one that she wishes could have been avoided. She named peer pressure as the key factor in members not coming for- ward to expose hazing. Although members may be given the option of saying no, being sur- rounded by one's fraternity or soror- ity makes that an unlikely occurrence, she said. Syring reassured fraternity and so- rority members that they would be supported by both Panhel and IFC if they revealed instances of hazing. Marianne Anderson, a pledge of Alpha DeltaPi, said that on bid day- last Friday - all pledges of her so- rority were asked to sign an agree- ment that banned hazing. She said she'd heard stories of hazing and had been concerned. "I was very reassured by my president's policies against hazing," sic/) 6S Frlo§ y"'E~@ !y j h J GROUP MEETINGS U ALIANZA - Latino Orga weekly meeting, 764-28 ter House, 1443 Washten 7 p.m. U Amnesty International, me presentation, Michigan Pond Room, 7 p.m. ri [m~isle ftnob P.h i Anr wj C iZPL)1{ What's happening in Ann Arbor today Placement, Michigan Union, Wol- G39 nization, verine Rooms A-C, 6:30-8 p.m. "Yom 37, Trot- Q "China After Deng," Kenneth spOn awAve., Lieberthal, brown bagh series, acce sponsored by Center for Chi- Servi etingand nese Studies, Lane Hall Com- I Union, mons Room, 12 roon U "Federal Government Job Search," STUDEJ great scores... Law School Business School Dental mSchoom 0, 7:30 p.m. Kippur Mazon Donations," nsored by Hillel, donations epeted at entrance to Kol Nidre vices, Power Center NT SERVICES I