LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, December 10, 1996- 3 Fire officials hear alarm at 2 locations A smoke alarm originally thought to have come from Beta Theta Pi fraterni- ty house early Saturday morning actu- Olly came from South Quad residence hall. There was no sign of smoke or fire at the Beta house, located on the corner of State and Madison streets. Residents were notified of a potential fire, Department of Public Safety reports stated. Fire officials discovered that the noise was coming from a pull-station cover lying near the exit of the house. The cover came from a battery-operat- ed fire alarm in the 1800 corridor of Frederick House in South Quad, DPS reports stated. Beta house residents were contacted about the mistake, according to DPS reports. Driver allegedly leaves hit-and-run accident scene A driver allegedly hit a car and fled the scene Friday morning in the M-18 carport at the East Medical Center. ,The victim told DPS that the suspect stopped and was going to get his license after the accident. The suspect instead entered his vehicle and drove f4way, DPS reports stated. The suspect fled in a green Pontiac Bonneville or Grand Am with license plate 77 ECL, DPS reports stated. A license-plate check was done on the suspept's vehicle but returned negative. Man runs into racketball wall 'A man playing racketball ran into the wall of the court he was playing on Friday night at the Intramural Sports Building on East Hoover Street. The man was conscious but bleed- ing from his head. Staff members advised the man to seek treatment for a possible concussion, but he refused to be transported to the mergency room. The man then was advised of the policy concerning head injuries and later was transported to the University Medical Center, DPS reports stated. 1.1 Patient's knife allegedly stolen A caller reported Friday her small ;pocketknife was taken while she was being treated in the emergency room of the University Hospital last Monday. The patient told DPS that she saw hospital staff place her knife and other personal items in a 14-by-12-inch white envelope marked "Patient Property Envelope" The patient said she had all her property except the knife returned to er after she was treated, DPS reports stated. The knife is described as a pocket type with two folding blades. The larger blade was about two inches long. DPS has no suspects in the case. rChemicals spill in back of truck kA Metro Delivery worker told PS he had a "biohazard spill in the back of his truck" Thursday, DPS reports stated. _ :Occupational Safety and :Environmental Health was contacted after the spill occurred at East Medical Center. The worker waited by the truck until OSEH assistance. -arrived, according to DPS reports. OSEH responded to the scene after 1 1/2 hours because the OSEH fficials needed to get his equipment and then get back to the scene, DPS reports stated. No one was reported injured. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Anupama Reddy. Kleptomaniac group offers support, help Holidays especially tough on those who shoplift By Heather Kamins Daily Staff Reporter It started with small items, such as cigarettes. Then he moved on to clothing, which he would sell to his friends. He was arrested a few times, sometimes spending up to a week in jail. Last year, he tried to stop, but as pressures built up in his life, he just could not control the urge to steal. His mother almost died last year, and the stress of her illness created a void he could only satiate by shoplifting one more time. But he was caught again and was put on probation. Finally, as part of his probation agreement, he found the help he was looking for. "I was looking for a group I could confide in," said the Art senior who asked to not be named. "l couldn't find anything like it." The court ordered him to join a self-help dis- cussion group, Kleptomaniacs and Shoplifters Anonymous. Social Work graduate student Terry Shulman, a recovering kleptomaniac, founded the Ann Arbor branch of KASA a year ago to create a supportive atmosphere for students and Ann Arbor residents who suffer from kleptomania. He said the group is currently comprised mostly of community mem- bers because he believes students are afraid to come forward. "I am trying to raise the consciousness of stu- dents, because a lot of students shoplift. I know, because I was one of them," Shulman said. "A lot of people who shoplift don't know that it is a com- pulsive disorder. They don't know that there is help." Shulman said many shoplifters steal not because they need the items they are taking, but because they don't know how to express their feelings. "Shoplifting provides a sense of relief and plea- sure. You feel like you are gaining something for nothing, and you can't stop," Shulman said. Joseph Himle, University associate clinical pro- fessor of psychiatry, said kleptomania is classified as an impulse-control disorder. "It involves the inability to resist an impulse to steal," Himle said. "Many times they do not use the item that they are stealing." Shulman said his problem began as a way to repress his feelings and fears. "My father was an alcoholic, and I told myself that I was never going to be like him. Instead, I found a way of expressing my toughest feelings through shoplifting," Shulman said. For many people the holiday season is a time full of anxiety and stress. Shulman said that while some deal with the stress by shopping, others deal by shoplifting. "This time of year you will see a lot more shoplifting and arrests:' Shulman said. A foof students are out there being arrested. Shulman said he is trying to increase axwareness of KASA so the people who need support. espe- cially during this time of year, will know that they are welcome. "Most people feel alone. It is a very shameful habit, even though shoplifters are intelligent po- plc that know that they are not the only ones \\who shoplift," Shulman said. The Art senior who spoke on the condition Of anonymity said the group has brought relief to the embarrassment of his struggle with kleptomania. "It's been helpful. For one thing, (shoplifting} is very embarrassing. Most of my good friends do not even know," he said. "We share our experiences and there is no judgment, no one getting on your case. It's been a safe place where I can speak about things that are going on." Candidate search begins for new Architecture dean By Prachish Chakravorty Daily Staff Reporter A search team is looking to identify candidates for dean of the College of Architecture and Urban Planning fol- lowing Dean Robert Beckley's decision to step down from the school's top post after 10 1/2 years. Beckley, who will return to the col- lege's faculty next June, said he had a single agenda when he took on the posi- tion. "It was simply to make the college the best in the nation," Beckley said. As a result of the' decision, Provost J. - Bernard Machenf has formed a search committee an objec to locate prospec- tive replacements decision for Beckley. "The goal is to - identify the most Dean ofA outstanding candi- dates possible for the dean of the College of Architecture and Urban Planning," said John D'Arms, chair of the search committee. D'Arms said the committee is simply advisory and must present three to five names to the provost, although they are not involved in the actual decision mak- ing. Although it is still early in the search, D'Arms said the key quality they will look for is all-around excellence. "(We want candidates) to be consul- tative within the college and listen care- fully to faculty already there, and exert significant leadership giving them a distinctive and integrated profile," D'Arms said. It is expected that a new dean will be chosen before Beckley's contract expires June 30, according to the Office of the Provost, and that no interim dean will be required. Beckley said he will leave office when his contract expires in June, something he said was expected. "I hadn't imagined serving more than seven or eight years. I feel we've kind of reached a plateau, and it's'an oppor- tune time for someone else to step in." In addition, Beckley said a teaching position was opening up in the depart- ment of urban design, his field of expertise. "It seems like just the right time for me and the college," he said. "The main objective is to find the best possible peo- ple," D'Arms - said. "Time isn't really an issue." / I Otive Robert Beckley Architecture and Urban Planning During his tenure, Beckley oversaw signifi- cant changes at the college, including the modification of the doctor of 1 l architecture pro- gram into a Ph.D. program and allow- ing students with undergraduate degrees in fields other than architecture to enter the school's master's program. "Another thing that pleases me is our growing international reputation and growing numbers of international stu- dents," Beckley said. "There's (also) been a growth in opportunities for our own domestic students to study in for- eign countries." The decision to vacate the deanship is one that Beckley is comfortable with on a personal level. "We had an administrative leave a couple of years ago and (my wife and 1) reassessed what we were doing and decided," Beckley said. "Sometimes you become so engaged in what you're doing, you forget to be objec- tive. I feel this is an objective deci- sion." JONATHAN SUMMER/Dd1y The Michigan Union is being renovated and will be completed sometime In February. More than 600 student organizations: are look to get one of the 60 designated rooms. S or renovated Union roo s By Stephanie Powell specific group will be favored in the nizations, she said Daily Staff Reporter allocation of space. With this new renovation, the oroaii- Student organizations are lining up "We want to see more energetic orga- zations will be in a centrally locattd for the opportunity to obtain space in nizations, not necessarily more worth- place, will have Ethernet access and the newly renovated fourth floor in the while ones," Schwimmer said. will be provided with furniture. Michigan Union. Schwimmer also said the space is Many student organization mefn6brs The Michigan Union Board of much too important to waste on storage. are already excited about the possibiji- Representatives, the Union administra- "There needs to be some use of space ties. Ziehyun Huh, chair of the United tion offices and student organizations where new ideas can be generated," she Asian American Organization, said the are hoping to have construction com- said. "We need to see tangible out- renovation will greatly benefit UAA4. pleted in February, but an official date comes." "Before it was really terrible - thye will not be set until after winter break. Lee, an LSA senior, is involved in the were three organizations in one room o Peter Lee, president of MUBR, said renovation process. we ended up not using the space at alf" applications will be available eight to 10 "Each group earns a space every year she said. "With this new space and many weeks before the construction is com- by setting goals and keeping true to organizations in the same area, itRi ll pleted. them," Lee said. "The shift should promote unity and a natural interaction" Construction started in February focus from a right ... to a privilege." Until 15 years ago, the fourth floor f 1996, but the design phase began a year Schwimmer said that as a commitment the Union was used as a hotel. It was tt n before that, to student life, the University should converted into an area for student orgali- Union space is hard to come by, with invest in something valuable, like reno- zations, but the space did not fit the fu&c- 60 rooms designated for student groups, vating for student organizations. tion very well, which has prompted 1 e a conference room open to all organiza- "This will be a hub where energy and recent improvements to the building. s tions, and a resource room designed to activity can be generated," she said. Student organizations will be a~le help the organizations with pubic rela- Schwimmer was also impressed by to pick up applications inte tions and recruiting new members. the students' commitment to looking at Michigan Student Assembly off e With 600 groups on campus interest- the broader picture, not just the interests in Room 3909 of the Michi n ed in applying for space, the competi- of student groups. Union. The application asks "eh tion is quite stiff. "In thinking about making ramps for group to state their goals for thfyear Audrey Schwimmer, director of the people with wheelchairs, (students) and to meet with MUBR about tl ir Michigan Union, emphasized that no sacrificed more rooms for student orga- application. 4s T. _____________ Ross latest Dem. to j oin governor race LANSING, (AP) - Long before the 1992 presidential election, Doug Ross, Bill Clinton and others in the Democratic Leadership Council talked about moving their party to the center. The strategy worked for Clinton, who narrowly won the presidency in 1992 and soundly trounced Bob Dole last month for a second four-year term. Ross, a Democrat who has worked in the Clinton administration and who ran the Michigan Department of Commerce from 1984-89, thinks the same strategy can help him win the governor's office here in Michigan in 1998. Yesterday he talked with reporters in Lansing about his plans to give every- one in Michigan a chance for a good- paying job, good schools, clean envi- ronment, safe neighborhoods and secu- rity in their old age. "What I sense most people in this state are looking for is a government that cares about them, but that demonstrates that care by empower- ing people to solve their own prob- lems," Ross said. The former state senator joins sever- al other Democrats already in the race, including East Lansing lawyer Larry Owen, who ran an unsuccessful cam- paign for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in 1994; state Sen. Jim Berryman of Adrian; and Edward Hamilton, a Chrysler Corp. executive from Troy. Ross spent several years in the late 1980s and early 1990s running think tanks focused on economic develop- ment. He sees Michigan as poised to carve out a leading role for itself in the Information Age, as it did during the Industrial Revolution. Universit' Lutheran Cha1 el (and Student Center) Carols By Candlelight Wednesday December 11 at 7:00 p.rr "Finally" - End of Term Sunday December 15 at 10:30 a.m. . a Pastor Ed Krauss 663-5560 1511 Washtenaw, near HillStreit Handicap Accessible ILIL LA1L LL l The Nation's aa. N Te easram * Pesoa Comueize * o r .ni ak - --- More FuCLnt MCAT NE esIn sessons What's happening in Ann Arbor tday GRouP MEETINGS JAlianza, 995-6732, Michigan Union, Pond Room. 7:30 p.m. Michigan Union, Tap Room, 7 p.m. EVENTS J "Israel Tuesday News Schmooze," Tutoring, Angell Hall, Room 444C, 7-11 p.m. J Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley Lobby,_8p.m.- 130 a.m. U