LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 30, 1996 - 3 AA PD officers hospitalized 4fter car crash Two Ann Arbor police officers were taken to University Hospitals on Satur- day after their patrol car crashed into a parked vehicle on the 900 block of Packard Street. The patrol car swerved to avoid hit- ting another car that was attempting to turn left onto Vaughn Street, said Sgt. Pam iWyess of the Ann Arbor Police Department. Wyess said the officers avoided hit- g a tree before they rammed into a parked car. Both officers were released from the hospital after being treated for minor injuries. Pizza delivery car smashes into another far, flees scene MayUniversity students have sat patiently and expectantly late into the night waiting for their recently ordered pizzas to be delivered. One such deliv- ery ended in tragedy Sunday as a Pizza Housedelivery car crashed into another vehicle's driver-side door. The driver then fled the scene but not before the victim obtained the license plate num- ber of the delivery vehicle. Police ran a warrant check on the *spected Pizza House driver, a 21- year-old man. Students report harassing e-mail from Boston universities In the past week alone, at least two separate e-mail messages from Bos- ton universities, each loaded with ra- ti slurs, have been received by Uni- e-rsity students. . The first message came from Bos- ton University late last week. Depart- ment of Public Safety reports indicate that the same BU student is also send- ing similar racially harassing mes- sages to fellow Boston University stu- dents. The second message originated at Lesley College and contains racial jokes d threats. For instance, the message 'ribes "what they want to do to their skulls and running them over with their car," DPS reports indicate. DPS officials are working with both schools' local campus agencies to stop the individual culprits. $2.8 million scam reported to police magine receiving a letter promising u $2.8 million in exchange for your bank account number. That's exactly what happened to one woman last week as she opened correspondence from Nigeria asking the woman to allow $28 million to be deposited into her bank account. Police said the letter then promised that in exchange forallowing the money to remain in the account for an unspeci- fied period of time, she would be per- *ted to keep 10 percent of it, $2.8 million. All she had to do as compensa- tion was to reveal her bank account number. instead, the woman reported theinci- dent to DPS officials. The letter, post- ntarked Jan. 12, 1996, was signed. Street sign vandal caught in the act 9A 19-year-old Engineering student, attempting to steal a street sign, was spotted by passing DPS officers Sun- day. The sign, at the corner of Thompson and Madison Streets, was torn down around 2 a.m. - compiled by Daily Staff Reporters Lenny Feller and Sam T. Dudek Elementary students visit site of peace talks By Maggie Weyhing For the Daily When Candace Martin, a third-grade teacher at Clinton Elementary, heard of the preliminary Bosnian peace talks in Dayton, Ohio, she knew her class could become involved. "I told them the story of children being killed, of families told to move immediately, of lost homes and of starving people," Martin said. "Then I told them of the peace talks and they became excited." Martin said she and her third-graders brainstormed ideas and decided to write peace messages on paper doves to send to the Wright- Patterson Air Force base where the talks took place. "One child wrote, 'remember the children,' another wrote, 'Talk peace, not war,' and on one of the doves it simply said, 'peace,"' Martin said. Shortly after sending the doves, Martin said she received a call from Lt. Stan Lauwrie of Wright- Patterson. Lauwrie invited Martin and her 26 stu- dents to travel to Dayton for a tour of the base, the base museum and the rooms in which the peace talks were held - a space usually not open to the public. "Lt. Lauwrie was in charge of making the maps during the peace talks," Martin said. "It seems that our doves were displayed around the doorway in the room where the talks took place." State Sen. Jim Berryman (D-Adrian) said the Clinton Elementary class set an example for other students. "First of all I was very impressed with what the kids did," Berryman said. "Public education gets kicked in the teeth so much in this state. The kids ought to be patted on the back." Martin said that Lauwrie had been inspired by the doves during the course of the talks. "He said that he had a special relationship with our doves. He told me that they kept him going and gave him hope," Martin said. However, despite the invitation for the students to view the base, Martin said a lack of transporta- tion was a barrier. "We are a very tiny school district with one high school, one middle school and one elementary school. We have a very tight budget and at the time, the teachers' contract hadn't even been ne- gotiated yet," Martin said. Although the Air Force could not provide Mar- tin and her class with transportation to and from the base, Martin said she had the idea to call Berryman for help. Berryman offered to provide a bus for her and the students, on the condition he was allowed to join them. In addition to the senator's transportation dona- tion, Martin and her class received T-shirts from the United Nations Association. Each T-shirt read, "The Rights of a Child Know No Boundaries." "We promote the concept of peace in Bosnia and we were very pleased to find out what Martin and her class had done," said Susan Chang, vice president of the Huron Valley chapter of the U.N. Association. Martin and the students learned during their tout that 14 of the 26 doves were taken back to Paris where the Bosnian peace accords were signed. Martin also said that Lauwrie is attempting to include the remaining 12 doves in the Wright- Patterson archives along with the peace talk papers. Martin said the impact of the experience on the students was profound. "I want my students to know that they can make a difference and that what they do is important," Martin said. "Nobody could sleep on the way home, and it was a four-hour trip - I think that says a lot." Former'Ufaut member travels on shuttle Endeavour Curtain going up Susan Crabtree, a staff scenic artist in the theatre and drama department, dance performance of Carmina Burana, which runs Feb. 8-l1. JENNIFER BRADLEY-SWIFT/Daily paints the scrim to be used in next week's By Alice Robinson Daily Staff Reporter Getting rejected 13 times by an em- ployer would be enough to discourage most people, but to Dr. Dan Barry it was undaunting. Barry, a former faculty member of University Hospitals, applied to NASA's astronaut program annually for 13 years before finally obtaining an interview. His efforts proved worth- while. On Thursday, Jan. 11, the space shuttle Endeavour was launched-with Barry on board. He served as a mission specialist and as one of six astronauts selected for the flight, which returned Friday, Jan. 19. After first being interviewed, Barry was selected as an astronaut candidate along with 18 others from a pool of 2,000. He and his family left Ann Arbor and relocated to Houston in 1992, where he began his training. During the shuttle flight, Barry re- marked that he was enthralled by the multitude of colors around him. "(It was) indescribable," he said. "The depth ofcolor was what was so fantastic. You're moving five miles a second." Barry said he and his family were thank- ful for all of the encouragement he re- ceived from the Ann Arbor community. "Even though we don't live in Ann Arbor anymore, we still have a lot of ties and friends who do," he said. "(It's good to know) Ann Arbor is still behind us." Dr. Jim Richardson, a colleague of Barry's at University Hospitals, trav- eled to Houston to watch the event. "They announced Dan ... and that he was from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He was the first one on board," Richardson said. Richardson also described the impact a space shuttle has on the Earth's atmo- sphere. "At 4:30 a.m., for 30 to 60 sec- onds there was enough light you could read pretty fine print by it," he said. In an e-mail message to Richardson, Barry noted that there was one point dur- ing the mission where the astronauts could see from Miami to Boston as well as locate all the major cities. He shared his favorite part of the experience with Richardson: looking down on the shuttle and the earth while sitting on the end of a robot arm. Richardson and his fiancee had the opportunity to view the astronauts on the flight through a video cameraplaced inside the Endeavour. The first thing Barry did, Richardson notes, was to playfully demonstrate the law of grav- ity to all who were watching. "(He) took out his clipboard and spinned it," Richardson said. "He let go of it so it sat in front of him. He touched it and it spun. (Then) he smiled and gave a big thumbs up." SAPAC receives funds from task force to improve programs By Heather Miller Daily Staff Reporter The Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center plans to implement and expand its programs due to new funding. SAPAC Director Debi Cain said University President James Duderstadt has been trying to solicit ideas for pro- grams of "importance to women." Because of Duderstadt's efforts, the University Violence Against Women Task Force recently awarded SAPAC with funding to implement such programs. The funding will be "geared toward creating and expand- ing some of our (current) programs," said Joyce Wright, prevention and education coordinator for SAPAC. SAPAC was notified about receiving the funds shortly before the holiday break and will have access to the money until Jan. 1, 1997. "We are in the program development stage," Wright said. "We are really just getting started." The four primary areas where the funding will be applied are the Athletic Department, the Greek system, the international center and the undergraduate housing division. "Many students go through these areas," Wright said, explaining the group's decision to target these organizations. Cain said these groups came to SAPAC and asked if programs could be implemented. "These were areas that had expressed an interest (in receiving programs)," Cain said. Wright said SAPAC is in the "initial networking stages" and in the process of receiving input from the groups that will be targeted. Although the new programs have not been defined, Cain said the funding for the Athletic Department will partially go towards workshops for male and female athletes on violence against women. Cain said SAPAC wants to continue its dating violence workshops on campus and expand these programs beyond the undergraduate population to international students and Lecture Notes Course Packets Resume Services Copy & Bindery Fax Services: ACCURATE + FAST * PROFESSIONAL Receive $2 off a resume package with this ad. One per customer. Grade A Notes at Ulrich's Bookstore Second Floor " 549 E. University 9 741-9669 family housing. Archer gives optimistic State of the City address Spread subversive http://www.umichedu/-alexboko or I umtrans~iognasor BOOKSTORE. DETROIT (AP) - Mayor Dennis Archer said the city is on its way to becoming a leading city of the 21st century, saying it is forming the foun- dation for society's future. "Detroit is more than on its way back, it is on the way to becoming the new city of tomorrow," he said to applause during his State of the City address. "Detroit is now among a select group of cities that is leading the way in revital- ization and revitalizing America." Archer said that Detroit has moved in its ranking of300 cities by Money Maga- zine from 295 in 1994 to 56th in 1995 and that World Trade Magazine rates the Motor City as the third best area in America for exporting and importing. "By any standard, the factual record of the last two years speaks loud and clear," he said in a speech telecast live. "The decades of decline are over. Detroit is on anew course of growth and opportunity." In his second State of the City ad- dress, Archer cited a drop in the city's unemployment rate, a decrease in crime, business expansion and growth and an overall improved national image as af- firmation of Detroit's safeness. Archer said the city's unemployment rate has dropped from 13.4 percent in January of 1994 to 8.2 percent in Octo- ber of 1995. He added that the number of homicides in 1995 dropped by 4.8 percent and decreased by 6.4 percent in 1994. " Career at Equis Entrepreneurial companies are the new drivers of American business. These companies provide the economy with a constant stream of new ideas, services and products. They outpace many larger, more established companies in creating jobs and offering opportunities for professional growth. Equis is an entrepreneurial company. Founded eleven years ago, we have evolved from a start-up real estate brokerage firm into a high-growth national services business. We have created our own niche, expanded our services and positioned ourselves to represent many of the nation's emerging growth companies and major corporations. U ft T What's happening in Ann Arbor today MEETINGS EVENTS sponsored by Center forF A - Latino Organization, U "Bosnia: Prospects for Peace," East European Studies AmnhthparP_ -.4Ondm (GROUPr Russian and s, Rackham 0 ALIANZ weekly meeting, 764-2837, Trot- ter House, 1443 Washtenaw Ave., 7 p.m. Q Amnesty International, mass meeting, 764-7027, Michigan Union, Kuenzal Room, 7:30 p.m. Q Black Undergrad Law Association, meeting, Michigan Union, Welker Joseph McCadden, sponsored by Ecumenical Campus Center, In- ternational Center, 603 E. Madi- son, 12 noon Q "Elements of Curriculum Reform: Putting Solids in the Founda- tion," inorganic seminar, Prof. Arthur B. Ellis, sponsored by r-n-nrmnnnrhati'nam_ STUDENT SERVICES 0 Campus Information Centers, Michigan Union and North Cam- pus Commons, 763-INFO, info@umich.edu, UM*Events on GOpherBLUE, and http:// www umichedu/~info on the I i m