420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com ARTS SECTION arts@michigandaily.com SPORTS SECTION sports@michigandaily.com ADVERTISING dailydisplay@gmail.com NEWS TIPS news@michigandaily.com LETTERS TO THE EDITOR tothedaily@michigandaily.com EDITORIAL PAGE opinion@michigandaily.com NATHAN GUPTA Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 nathankg@michigandaily.com EMMA KINERY Editor in Chief 734-418-4115 ext. 1251 kineryem@michigandaily.com PHOTOGRAPHY SECTION photo@michigandaily.com NEWSROOM 734-418-4115 opt. 3 CORRECTIONS corrections@michigandaily.com The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University OF Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily’s office for $2. Subscriptions for September-April are $250 and year long subscriptions are $275. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. 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Michigan is breaking 100. You heard it here first. Ameera Kamalrudin @ameerakmirdn Overheard conversation: “I’m just, spooketh by that!” Wow is that the halloween version of shooketh Michigan Students @UMichStudents I’d like to officially apologize for using the w-word this morning. I totally misspelled Dennison. Thank you all for catching my mistake. Scary Squad Mother™ @baldillly Being an adult is buying $20 of on sale halloween candy CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Carillon Recital: The Tsar Bell Project WHAT: Prof. Tiffany Ng & the Charles Baird Carillon will play pieces on a digital recreation of the Tsar Bell, the largest bell ever cast that broke in 1732, in between HAILstorm! shows. WHO: School of Music, Theatre & Dance WHEN: 5 p.m., 5:45 p.m., 9:15 p.m. & 9:45 p.m. WHERE: Burton Memorial Tower A-Maize-ing SMTD WHAT: Student instrumental soloists, dancers, actors and chamber ensembles will perform as part of the bicentennial festivites. WHO: School of Music, Theatre & Dance WHEN: 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. WHERE: Hill Auditorium ClueMix WHAT: Kick off Halloweekend at the Union with a scavenger hunt, crafts, face painting, a screening of Sherlock Holmes and buffet. WHO: Center for Campus Involvement WHEN: 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. WHERE: Michigan Union HAILstorm! WHAT: Celebrate the University’s bicentennial with a 3D projection mapping performance on the Rakcham Building, complete with an original music score. Shows will last approximately 15 minutes. WHO: Bicentennial Office WHEN: 8 p.m., 9 p.m., 10 p.m. & 10:45 p.m. WHERE: Ingalls Mall Linguistics Bicentennial Colloquium WHAT: Prof. Anne Curzan questions those who promote standard “good” English at the expense of other varieties and examine strategies to overcome miscommunication. WHO: Department of Linguistics WHEN: 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. WHERE: Hutchins Hall, Room 250 Amfecanerica, or American Mfecane, 1650-1850 WHAT: Prof. Brandi Hughes will explore the commonalities between Southern African and Eastern North American colonialism and indigenous devlopments. WHO: LS&A WHEN: 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. WHERE: Tisch Hall, Room 1014 Third Century Expo WHAT: The finale of the bicentennial, pavillions and tents with interactive exhibits from all three UMich campuses will showcase the positive impact the University is making on society. WHO: Bicentennial Office WHEN: 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. WHERE: Diag & Ingalls Mall National Potato Day WHAT: Join the Markley and South Quad Dining halls in celebrating National Potato Day. WHO: Michigan Dining WHEN: 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. (South Quad); 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. (Markley) WHERE: South Quad & Mary Markley Hall Every Friday, The Michigan Daily will be republishing an article from the Daily’s archives from a moment in University history. October 31, 1990 — Ghastly ghouls and spooky sights are sure to attract scary souls tonight. That is if you’re not too old for Halloween. Unfortunately for horrific- minded but responsible students, Halloween falls on a midweek evening amidst midterm anxiety. As a result, some of the fun has to wait until the weekend. “Halloween comes at a bad time this year,” said LSA sophomore Jonathon Marx. “I haven’t even thought of going out, especially since I have a midterm. Besides, most people either celebrated it last weekend or will this weekend.” Last weekend did not lack activities. East Quad did the “Halloween Thang” and R.O.T.C. sponsored its annual Haunted House before hundreds of scary souls. In spite of midterms, a multitude of parties have worked their way into students’ calendars this week. Among the Halloween personalities appearing this week are Phantom of the Opera, Medussa and the New Kids on the Block. Fantasy Attic, a popular costumer in Ann Arbor, is not surprised by their excellent sales this season. Lindsay James, a sales assistant, said “Dick Tracy, Breathless Mahoney and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles are the hot in demand this year. Pirates are always a favorite, too.” Big kids aren’t holding a monopoly on fun in Ann Arbor this week. Residence halls, such as Mary Markley, East Quad and Stockwell, are taking part in Trick-or-Treating activities for local children. Student residents who signed up are visited by area kids making the candy rounds. First-year LSA student and East Quad resident Jun Pangilinan is taking part in the festivities. He said “I thought it’d be nice to watch the kids Trick-or-Treating since I’m no longer doing it myself.” His intentions are less than noble, however, as he added, “Besides, I get to keep the candy left- overs.” Music enthusiasts eagerly await the School of Music’s annual Halloween Concert tonight. The fun is slated to begin at 9 p.m. as the University Philharmonic Orchestra performs skits and ensembles before a sold-out audience at Hill Auditorium. Free tickets were distributed within two hours of availability weeks ago. “It should be really fun,” said School of Music sophomore Jennifer Fari Ansel. “Everyone, including some of the audience, comes dressed in costumes. Some of the sections are coming as a group. I’m excited to see the flutes in their ZZ Top skit.” Yet, amidst the fun, the environmental concerns of the 1990’s are not forgotten. LSA senior Elizabeth Steel said “the weirdest costume at East Quad’s Halloween Thang would have to be the guy who came dressed in non-recyclable plastic.” It must have been a scary sight to behold. —LISA SANCHEZ FRIDAY’S BICENTENNIAL FEATURE: SPOOKY FESTIVITIES BREW TONIGHT HALLOWEEN SERVES TO FRIGHTEN AND EXCITE field sites primarily in Southeast Michigan help MSW students apply their knowledge learned in the classroom to a real position in their field of interest. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Fair Labor Standards Act outlines six requirements an internship “in the ‘for-profit’ private sector” must meet for a position to be unpaid. According to these standards, the requirements include: internship positions reflect an educational environment, no immediate employer advantages from said internship work and the internship does not displace employees in favor of unpaid internship labor. Raycraft said the School of Social Work’s field education requirement meets these six points through the field education’s association with the University, structure around classroom learning, University oversight and credit allocation. The program also requires agreements between the school, the company and the student to make sure the field education program stays in line with the U.S. standards for unpaid internships. Raycraft said this field education requirement is different from an internship in that the programs MSW students are placed in reflect their educational interests, not the workforce needs of the employer sponsoring the position. “An MSW student has an academic agreement and they’re created for each student individually,” Raycraft said. “It’s giving them the opportunity to apply their knowledge that they’re learning in classes and to gain practical skills, so it’s an extension of the classroom. It’s associated with academic programs, not with the employer … that’s the biggest distinction.” Both the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Social Work School’s requirements for field placement positions reflect Raycraft’s statement that no field education position should take the place of regular, salaried employees. However, this is what Social Work student Erica Watson, School of Social Work Student Union vice president and Fair Labor Organizing is claiming often happens. Watson said though the learning contracts between the MSW student and the employer are sound from the beginning, often these field education positions morph into unpaid labor. “We know that technically we are not supposed to be replacing regular employees and I think that when the School of Social Work goes to these placements to place us, that’s sort of the agreed upon thing but we hear again and again and again, from students, we’ve heard, ‘After I left my field placement, they hired somebody full-time with a health care package to do the exact same job as me’ or, ‘My supervisor was on maternal leave and I actually had to pick up all of her responsibilities while she was gone,’ ” Watson said. To discuss methods of how the Social Work School can provide MSW students with more stipends and paid positions that satisfy the field education requirement, Watson and other MSW students created FLO. It became an official organization this past June and was recently made into a subcommittee of the School of Social Work Student Union. FLO’s survey was sent out over the summer on the School of Social Work listserv and from their responses to the survey, FLO has been working on the promotion of paid labor for MSW students. Working a part-time job and being a student at the University of Michigan is not uncommon, with 52.5 percent of in-state students and 6.3 percent of out-of- state students reporting they pay for everyday expenses like food with a student job, found a survey conducted by The Michigan Daily earlier this year. However, Watson said the program’s 912 field placement hours requirement often results in students working unpaid positions, going to class and having to find outside jobs to pay for rent and food. Watson cited the University’s Higher Education graduate program, whose required two- term internship program most often includes a paid hourly stipend, as a branch of the University she believes from which the School of Social Work should draw inspiration. She said as the number-one-ranked social work SOCIAL WORK From Page 1A See SOCIAL WORK, Page 3A