LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 22, 1996 - 3A Relief for cat ~tlergmes could cone soon * For the 40 million people who get sniffly and teary-eyed when a cat is any- where nearby, relief could be on the way. - The Allervax cat vaccine relieves allergies because the body's cells usu- ally responsible for producing symp- toms are made to tolerate call dander tand saliva, the two primary cat sub- stdnces that cause allergies. In an early trial, 87 percent of patients 'treated with a high dose felt relief. Patients received a series of four shots ver a two to four week period. They maygetaboosterevery sixto 12months. Yeast infection risk factors identified Two of three women experience the itching, burning, soreness and discharge ofa vaginal yeast infection at least once in their lives, but little is known about *revention of the condition. A University study found receiving oral sex tripled the risk of developing an infection, while oral contraceptive and spermicide use doubled the risk. Patients were more likely to be young apd non-white. Vaginal intercourse, type ofunderwear worn and number of sexual partners were notilinked to risk of yeast infection. The study was conducted by Betsy 'Foxman, an associate professor of epi- *emiology and Ann Geiger, who is now at Kaiser Permanente in California. The results are in next month's issue of Epidemiology. leaders gather for symposium The research relationship between the government and universities will be he topic of the first Jerome B. Wiesner 4ymposium next Tuesday. Representatives from major univer- sities, government officials and indus- try leaders will hear a keynote address by Charles Vest, president of the Mas- sachusetts Institute of Technology and "former University provost. N@J"Our goal is to generate a discussion that brings all the parties and sectors together, in the hope of developing a broad, mutual understanding of the prin- *ples that ought to guide both universi- ties and government as they plan for the .future," saidHomerNeal, the University's vice president for research and the orga- nizer of the symposium. The conference is open to the public. Some of the leaders participating in the panel discussion include U.S. Rep. Lynn Rivers (D-Ann Arbor), University Presi- dent James Duderstadt and Anne eterson, deputy director for the Na- onal Science Foundation. For more information, contact Gary krenz in the Office of the Vice Presi- dent for Research at 763-6048. - Compiled by Daily News Editor Megan Schimpf Art exbibits showcase prisoners' talents By Christopher Wan Daily Staff Reporter Three campus art exhibits are offer- ing a gateway to prison life by showcas- ing the work of prisoners and the ideas surrounding the current legal system. One highlight of the exhibition is a small version of "A Table of Voices," an installation put up by Richard Kamler, the Adeline Kent Award-win- ning artist from San Francisco, Calif. "A Table of Voices" consists of a long table of lead and gold bisected by a vertical sheet of glass, similar to a non-contact prison waiting room. Ten seats are on both sides of the table. In front of each seat is a tele- phone. On one side ofthe table, a visitor to the exhibit will hear the voice of a parent of a murdered child telling their Japanese corp. gves B-school $1.5 M gift By Melanie Cohen Daily Staff Reporter One of the largest companies in Ja- pan is giving a $1.5 million gift to the School of Business Administration to mark the 10th anniversary of the company's privatization. The Nippon Telephone and Telegraph Company's gift will bring professors from top Asian universities, both to teach at the University of Michigan and to expand its research on Asian finance. School of Business Administration Dean B. Joseph White said the gift will be beneficial to the University. "We're excited about this because NTT is Japan's largest company. More Japa- nese people own stock in NTT than any other company," White said."They are a very exciting partner." White said he thinks the gift will help strengthen the Business School teach- ing and research in Asian finance. "It adds to the gift of $3 million we got from Mitsui Life Insurance Corp. 5 years ago, which helped create the Mitsui center." The money will be used for two pur- poses, White said. "First, it will sponsor a competitive research grant for research in Asian financial markets. Second, the gift will support a visiting professor at the Busi- ness School every other year," he said. E. Han Kim, director of the Mitsui Center, will be one of two co-directors of the program. Takaaki Wakasugi, of the University of Tokyo, will serve as the other co-director. "Together, they both solicited the gift from NTT, and they will direct the teaching and research program funded by the gift," White said. story, while on the other side, one can listen to the story of the perpetrator. "The effort is to really have these two voices talking to each other so they can create essentially to begin the process ofrestitution, communication and heal- ing," Kamler said. "A Table of Voices" is part ofa larger project that Kamler said he has been working on for the past two years. "What interests me about working on this project is the possibility about trans- formation," Kamler said in a speech Tuesday. "Art works on all kinds of levels, and one level is transformation of people with horrific experiences of both the murder of a child, and also the murderer. "The Table of Voices is going to cre- ate a context ofcommunication to occur, to establish a common ground," he said. Also on display at the exhibition are about 60 works of art by prisoners in Michigan correctional facilities. "Do not become irate when you hear about inmates doing art," said Herschell Turner, an art instructor at Ionia Maxi- mum Correctional Facility. "Right here in (Rackham Galleries), you'll see as much talent, as much skill, as you would in any major campus. "I think that very little of (the art- work) reflects on life in a prison," Turner said. "I think that it's probably the-same type of artwork you would see in a community art show. I think it's repre- sentative of the talent and skill of some inmates." English Prof. William Alexander, to- gether with Janie Paul, an adjunct Art professor, are curators of the exhibi- tion. "It's an opportunity for artists to show what they have," Alexander said. "To show their work to a public audience, and to sell their work -something that most of them have not been able to do before." "Prisons are invisible in our society," Alexander said. "One of the purposes of this show is to enable people to see that really remarkable, talented, inven- tive people are in our prisons doing very worthwhile work." Paul said she agreed."There are many people in prison who shouldn't be there and as long as they're there they're being treated very inhumanely," Paul said. "We're trying to do something to bring some life and creativity into their lives." The third exhibit by the Fundamental Fairness Committee, also at Rackham, is the Lifers Display, an educational collection of photographs, art and text addressing inequities in the Michigan sentencing guidelines. "We fight for the National Lifers Association," said Nina Shepard, vice president of the committee. In 1980, the Michigan Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional to sentence a person to first degree felony murder without parole ifthere was no malice or intent proven in the commission of the crime, Shepard said. "They did notmake the law retroactive." Shepard said there are about 300 in- mates convicted before 1980 still under the "old abolished law." The three exhibitions opened Tues- day and will run through Feb. 28. Prints taken, trial set for one-man crime wave DETROIT(AP)-A man whose 16- year-old son waged a "one-man crime wave" in their Detroit suburb was fin- gerprinted, booked and set for trial in the first use of a new parental responsi- bility law. The youth, now serving time at the Macomb County Youth Home, was a suspect in 11 burglaries - including three at St. Isaac Jogues Church - that netted $27,000 in property. "He went out and created a one-man crime wave," Detective Ed Stock of the St. Clair Shores Police Department said yesterday. Police say the municipal ordinance gives them a tool in cracking down on parents who fail to rein in their law- " H e breaking offspring. He rah "It's an atten- tion getter," said house.H H Detective Sgt. Jack McFadzen. parents, "They're mugged and printed and f my ro arraigned before a - Sgt. judge."S In the law's first St. Claire S application, the father of the 16- year-old faces a pretrial hearing March 13 in 40th District Court. Anthony Provenzano is charged with a first offense of failure to exercise parental responsibility. He is free on $5,000 bond. Conviction brings a fine of up to $100. A second offense has a maximum $200 fine and a third offense up to 90 days in jail and a $500 fine. Provenzano's son came to police at- tention last year when they linked him to the church break-ins. Police found marijuana he apparently had been selling when they arrested the youth at Warren De LaSalle High School on May 26, McFadzen said. They also searched his home and found stolen property, marijuana and m C, beer in his bedroom. Police said they warned his parents they could be pros- ecuted unless they reined in their son. "We told them this has got to stop," Stock said. McFadzen said the father "acknowl- edged there were problems in the housie. He had a lock on his bedroom door. His tool room was locked. He said he woujd do his best to take control of the situa- tion and watch his son." But police say the crimes continued. A second raid Sept. 29 found more contraband, including a handgun taken in a burglary two days before, and more evidence of drinking and drug use. "He ran the house. He told his pir- ents, 'Stay out of my room,"' i the McFadzen said. St. Clair told hIS Shores, a city of 68,000 northeast of Detroit, adopted the law lil in 1994. ack McFadzen "The thought )res Detective, behind it is to be an encourage- ment for parents to assume their proper supervisory role with their chil- dren," said City Attorney Robert Ihrie. "Where it doesn't happen, where par- ents stick their head in the sand or just don't care, this puts the burden on them." To be prosecuted, parents first must get a police warning about their law- breaking offspring. And they are ex- empt ifthey seek help from police or the state Department of Social Services. "Even if a parent could not control a child, all the ordinance asks is that they seek some outside help," Ihrie said. The family's home telephone number is unlisted. The parents did not immedi- ately return a message left yesterday with theirson's attorney, LeonardBuczkowski. He said his client is an intelligent boy with good prospects ifhe can go straight. Sitting in the rain Ann Arbor street personality Jeffrey Tallman enjoys a break from the rain while sitting on William Street yesterday afternoon. After a day of steady misting rain, Tallman relaxes against the dry gate. ';Correction 'Richard Kamler's name was incorrectly spelled in yesterday's Daily. U In response to allegations that the University had planned to deny rush to first-year students, Panhellenic Assocation adviser Mary Beth Seiler said, "I had not heard that." This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. What's happening In Ann Arbor today .V.ANWMNAOAMEA I fff 5 g/ f'. }' f. . off F, }; . ' . r, rf f> . S'8: It's never too late. Call 76-DAILY to join ~i13dheigufnITdalg GROUP MEETINGS U AIESEC Michigan, International Student Happy Hour, 662- 1690, Arbor Brewing Company, 9 p.m. U Campus Crusade for Christ, Real Life, 930-9269, Dental Building, Kellogg Auditorium, 7-8:15 p.m. U Circle K international, general memeber meeting, 668-2403, Michigan Union, 7 p.m. U Homeless Action Committee, weekly meeting, 663-4568, 802 Guild House, 5:30-7 p.m. 0 Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, 747-8938, East Engineering Build- ing, Room 1360, 7-8:30 p.m. U Third Wave Writers' Group, Third Wave Magazine, third.wave.editors@umich.edu, Grati Caffe, corner of State and Liberty, 9 p.m. EVENTS 0 "Blanket Drive," sponsored by Michigan Project Community, blankets can be dropped off in front of the Michigan Union, all day U "Celebrate Kinelology: Kinesiol- ogy and the Seismic Shudders of Change in American Univer- sities," Prof. Waneen Spirduso, sponsored by Division of Kine- siology, Michigan League Ball- room, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. U "Forum on the War Crimes Tribunal J "In Vivo and Subcellular Monitor- ing of PhP Hormones and Neu- rotransmitters Using Capillary Electrophoresis and Microelec- trodes," Robert Kennedy, physi- cal/analytical seminar, spon- sored by Department of Chemis- try, Chemistry Building, Room 1640, 4 p.m. 0 "Networking: Key to Job Search Success," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, 3200 Student Activities Building, 4:10-5 p.m. Q "Practical Training for Interna- tional Students and Scholars," sponsored by Inter- national Center, Institute of Science and Technology, Room 1114, 12 noon U "Primary Care of the Lesbian Pa- tient," sponsored by the Michigan OB/GYN Department and Michi- gan Initiative for Women's Health, Caren Stalberg, Medical Center, MCHC Auditorium, 8 a.m. J "Sakalava, Betsimisaraka, and Merina: Three Patterns of State Formation on Madagascar: Cur- rent and Future Research," Prof. Henry Wright, sponsored by Museum of Anthropology, Ruthven Museum of Natural History, Room 2009, 12-1 p.m. U "The United Nations Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugo- slavia and Rwanda: Bakcground, Experience and Amphitheatre, 5 p.m. 0 "War and Postwar: The Twenti- eth Century Life of Takahashi Masao," Laura Hein, sponsored by Center for Japanese Studies, Lane Hall Commons Room, 12 noon a "Women in the Executive Posi- tion in the Academe: Insights and Experiences," Royster Harper, noon lecture series, sponsored by Center for the Education of Women, Women's Studies Program and MSA Women's Issues Commission, Michigan League, Henderson Room, third floor, 4-6 p.m. STUDENT SERVICES U Campus information Centers, Michi- gan Union and North Campus Com- mons, 763-INFO, info@umich.edu, UM eEvents on GOpherBLUE, and http://www.umich.edu/-info on the World Wide Web U Campus information Centers, staff selection, applications available at CIC Michigan Union and NCIC Pierpont Commons, call 763-INFO for more informa- tion U English CompositionBoard Peer Tu- toring, Mason Hall, Room 444C, 7- 11-p.m. U North Campus Information Center, North Campus Commons, 763-NCIC NwArIAMWANNOMMMMEMEMM great scores... 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