LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 25, 1996 - 3A Buckeyes take one more in Blood Battle rivalry ld care center gains #ccreditation The National Association for the Education of Young Children, the largest national organization of child- hood education, granted accreditation to the University's Family Housing Child Development Center. Only 5 percent of early childhood programs gain recognition from NAEYC. The Child Development Center pro- Wes programs and activities for chil- dren of students who attend the University. NAEYC evaluators were impressed with the interaction between children and teachers and said the students were comfortable at the center. Group supports lesbian victims I'f violence The Domestic Violence Project/SAFE House, a shelter for bat- tered women, announced it will hold a support group for lesbian survivors of domestic violence. The group meets from 6:30-8 p.m. every Tuesday at 4100 Clark Rd. The group is led by lesbian staff niembers of SAFE House. SAFE House also has a 24-hour cri- sis line for survivors at 995-5444. For more information about the group, contact Ann Humphry at 973- 0-42, extension 226. Comm. studies honors journalists The communication studies depart- *ent awarded its annual Morgan O'Leary Award for Excellence in Pitical Reporting to Richard Willing, Washington correspondent for The Detroit News, and former Detroit News reporters Eric Freedman and Jim Mitzelfeld. Willing is the author of "Coleman Young: The Unauthorized Biography." Freedman and Mitzelfeld received a Pulitzer Prize in 1994 for a series on ' misuse of more than $1.8 million qy members of the Michigan Legislature. O'Leary, a former Detroit News reporter, died in a 1971 plane accident. Rackham funds to be awarded Rackham students may apply for the arbour Scholarship for 1997-98. The scholarship trains female stu- dents in math and science for the devel- opment of their native lands. To become a candidate, students must be nominated by their graduate departments and programs. Education students may obtain an application and eligibility guidelines at the Office of Student Services, 1033 School of Education Building. The deadline for applications is Dec. agplications due 16r fellowships Applications for the Rackham 'Prgdoctoral Fellowship are available at the Office of Student Services, 1033 4SEB. Sixty fellowships are expected to be warded this year. The fellowships pro- de tuition, a $14,400 stipend and heglth insurance. Applicants must be doctoral students _who will complete their dissertations fuxing the 1997-98 school year and their doctorate within six years of the beginning of their programs. The first draft of the application is due in the dean's office at 1110 SEB by Wednesday. *For more information contact Patricia Natalie at 764-8408. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jeffrey Kosseff By Jeffrey Kosseff Daily Staff Reporter The Buckeyes defeated the Wolverines this year with a score of 2,160 to 1,751. This competition was not for points scored on the gridiron - it was for pints of blood collected in the 15th annual Blood Battle between the Ohio State University and University of Michigan chap- ters of the service fraternity Alpha Phi Omega and the American Red Cross. For the past two weeks, students donated blood in various residence halls and the Michigan Union. "Regardless of who won the competition, we could always use more blood," said APO member Jeff Firestone, an LSA sophomore. "The turnout was reassuring." However, some APO members noticed a decrease in blood donors from previous years. "This year I saw a little bit less student activity." said Education junior Angela Bolden, who volun- teered during this year's col- lection drive.i APO members cited a vari-T ety of reasons for the lower number of student donors. reallygle "I think there wasn't as much publicity as last year," tonW l L said Eugene Paik, an LSA Ito wi better" Osterholt said approximately 500 more students donated blood in 1995's Blood Battle than this year. Despite the low turnout, many were pleased with the s thisefforts of the volunteers. "From the volunteering . side, the response was very good," Firestone said. "It - Tammy O'Nill made it possible to do a J Cross Central drive this large." ervices Region Students from other groups also participated in the blood drive. "This year we had many more student volunteers from the Red Cross and Project Community," said APO member Michelle Lehan, an Education senior. At OSU, many students got involved in the com- petition. "We've gotten great support on campus," said Tammy O'Nill, the communications manager for American Red Cross Central Ohio Blood Services Region. "A marketing class helped us in executing our campaign." O'Nill attributed much of the student participa- tion to the competition between the universities. "The rivalry really gets this town going," O'Nill said. "We did not do as well on the field, though:' Justin Busch, a local APO member, agreed the rivalry is a factor in student donations. "It seems like that is one of the things that inspires people to do it," said Busch, an Engineering senior. Ohio State's victory places them ahead with eight victories compared to the University's seven. senior. Dawn Osterholt, an APO member who coordinated the American Red Ohio Blood S event last year and volun- teered this year, said there may be other reasons for the slightly lower turnout. "One factor is the weather," said Osterholt, an LSA senior. "Two years ago the weather was much Bio Station offers writers closeness, outdoor learning JONATHAN SUMMER/Daily Elizabeth Mustard, a member of the University's Folkdancing Club, dances to the music of The Ethnic Connection in the barn at Gretchen's House on Saturday. Mustard is a club organizer and a University librarian. Folk dancers celebrate traditions with international flair, un By Carrie Luria For the Daily The Folkdancing Club draws a little culture from almost every ethnicity imaginable - anything from the Macerena to Balkan line dances. "I go just to dance and have a good time" said Elizabeth Mustard, club organizer and a University librarian. Club members experiment with a variety of international dances. The core dances tend to be European and Middle Eastern, and range from simple steps to more complex combinations. "We seem to have dances that are our favorites, but we are willing to try anything," Mustard said. "If someone comes in and wants to do a dance that we don't know, we learn it." The club attracts most of the atten- tion at Leonardo's in Pierpont Commons, and caught LSA senior Mitza Simpson's ears last Wednesday night as she was studying. "I immediately noticed and recog- nized the traditional Serbian music (the Folkdancing club) was dancing to," she said. "When I was younger, I had learned the dance they were doing in my Serbian Orthodox church." The club, which is comprised mostly of University faculty, graduate students and Ann Arbor residents, often lures onlookers at Leonardo's into participat- ing. "People come in and recognize their cultural dances all the time," Mustard said. "They usually then get up, show us some new steps and dance with us." Simpson said she would come back and do some dancing with the club. "I like learning these dances because it gives me a chance to learn other peo- ple's culture, while enhancing my own identity," she said. Members said the club's popularity has declined in past years. Linguistics Prof. Andrew Carnie, who started teaching this year, recalled a huge inter- est in folkdancing when he was in col- lege less than five years ago. "This group, at one time, numbered in the hundreds and was mostly stu- dents," he said. "Children of the '60s seem to be more interested in folkdanc- ing than (those from the) '70s genera- tion." Simpson expects interest in folk- dancing to come around again. "Now, the children in my church love to do these dances. When I was their age, I used to hate it, and now, I have interest in it again." Simpson said. Those who participate in the club appreciate it for its musical and mul- ticultural aspects, members said. There is hope tha' the club will become more organized and more well-known. "Having a beginners' night and start- ing a performance group are some of our goals,' Carnie said. The dancers meet at Leonardo's in Pierpont Commons at 8 p.m. on the first and third Wednesdays and the sec- ond and fourth Tuesdays of every month. Students connect with nature during innovative program By Maria Hackett For the Daily Canoeing, backpacking, writing about the wind and gathering berries for dinner may sound more like a week- end camping trip than a day in a University student's life. But 11 students experience such events every day as part of the "Natural History Writer's Project"- a semester- long living-learning program at the BioStation in the northern tip of Michigan's lower peninsula. "Our focus is on examining how society, and especially ourselves, inter- act with the environment," said Engineering sophomore Ryan O'Connor, a participant in the program. The BioStation program is a var- ation of the This f Residential College's com- me devel munity living- learning atmos- own valu phere - what /l organizers call an life "intentional com- munity"E i "Intentional Enginec communities are groups of people that choose to live together to achieve certain goals," said Catherine Badgley, creator and director of NHWP Badgley said many of the program's goals are met through making group decisions as equals on such aspects of daily life as work, events and holidays. Their community has decided to emphasize the ideas of "living deliber- ately" and bioregionalism, a way of life emphasizing survival on only the sur- rounding habitat - including food from local farms and a simple lifestyle. "A lot of (our) decisions are made about food because we have total con- trol of that," Badgley said. LSA junior Matthew Pierle said group members cook all of their own meals and bake their own breads and pastries. "Furthermore, as we become more familiar with local fruits, berries, nuts, herbs and mushrooms, we've been gathering a fair deal of food products from the grounds on and around the BioStation," Pierle said. "We'll be slaughtering our own turkeys for Thanksgiving and that may make further vegetarians out of some of the seven or eight omnivo- m 14 rous members." Beyond sharing their daily cooking, cleaning and bread-baking duties, the students have classes six days a week. "Overall, the atmosphere is the most conducive to learning I have ever expe- rienced, and is much, much better than nearly any standard University class," O'Connor said. The classes - field ecology, culture and the environment, and creative writ- ing - are all interdisciplinary. "Our assignments and projects are inclusive of all the topics - the goal is to understand them as interconnected. This is the extreme opposite of the typi- cal U-M chemistry or anthropology lec- ture, which is as esoteric and lacking of any connection to the real world as pos- sible," said LSA junior Angie Migliaccio. She added that students in the program do not take tests or quizzes. ______________ Speaking of connections to 31l heied the real world, despite the out- opnmy doorsy setting and emphasis eS in on closeness to nature, the group main- R y an O'Connor tains much pComore contact with ing sophomore "the outside" -I er through e-mail, letters, radio and visitors. "We have guest faculty and researchers from the University visit and share with our community, as well as environmental writers, friends and family," Pierle said. Students said the program has proved to be a life-changing experience. "I think I have learned more here in three months than I think I would learn in four years at U-M's main campus, O'Connor said. "This fall helped me develop my own values in life, and opened my eyes to many different paths my life might take!' he said. The NHWP, which was originally slated to run twice - once in 1994 and once this year, may or may not contin- ue. Badgley said plans for the future of the program have not been discussed, but students said the effects of the pro- gram will stay with them for years. "These people are thinking, synthe- sizing and stand-up individuals," Pierle said. "I have no doubt that what we learned and shared with one another here will benefit a great deal of people in direct and indirect ways for some time to come." HIV testing may soon be mandatory for pregnant women in Michigan LANSING (AP) - Some Michigan lawmakers want to follow New York's lead and require mandato- ry HIV testing of pregnant women and newborns. "There will be a civil libertarian argument against it," said state Sen. Joe Schwarz (R-Battle Creek), a doctor. "But from the standpoint of proper epi- demiology and public health policy, it should be required:" Dozens of Michigan babies are born each year with the virus that causes AIDS. Medical experts say 25 percent to 33 percent of all babies born to HIV-infected moms will develop the virus. Dr. Hassan Amirikia of Hutzel Hospital in Detroit, who is treating eight pregnant HIV-positive women through a federal grant, said the tests for moms and infants should be required. "It's important we treat both mother and child for this disease as soon as possible," he said. Michigan law currently requires only that physicians offer HIV tests to preg- nant women, The Detroit News report- ed. Randall Pope, the state Depart- ment of Community Health's HIV/ AIDS coordinator, said that law is enough. He said HIV testing would cost the state millions and that pediatric AIDS isn't as rampant in Michigan as it is in New York. "And it really makes no sense to test newborns because by then the horse is already out the barn" he said. Dr. Theodore Jones, a high-risk preg- nancy specialist at Hutzel, said forcing women to get a test would erode the relationship between doctors and their patients. "The consensus is that mandatory counseling of women about their risks for HIV infection, and what we can do to reduce those risks, is the best way," he told The News. Nobody prepares you like Correction LSA junior Shawn Ohl said, "Making people go out and smoke in the cold - that's cruel." This was misattributed in fEriday's Daily.___________________ KAP'L A N- Kaplan has the most complete arsenal of test prep tools available. From videos to virtual reality practice tests, to software and on line services, nobody offers you more ways to practice. Kaplan's dynamic teachers will show you the proven skills and test-taking methods that help you get a higher score. I GROUP MEETINGS -° Women's BookGrup, 662-5189, Guild Q "MSARomper-room," sponsored by UNT, Channel 24 in all residence hall rooms, 3 p.m. and 8 p.m;.. 0 English Composition Board Peer ut ,Hall, Room l