LOCAL/STATE The Michigan o n, September 9, Bonsai exhibit showcases unconventional art 1996 - 3A Students win Summer Hopwoods Three University students were hon- with Summer Hopwood Awards in Creative Writing, while two others were given the Marjorie Rapaport Award in Poetry, also administered by. the University Hopwood program. Funded through a bequest from University alum and Broadway play- wright Avery Hopwood, the 59th annu- al contest bestowed awards in fiction, essay, poetry and drama/screenplay writing. *The winners for this year's Hopwood contest are: LSA senior Demian Linn, for his work of fiction, "Three Stories." Linn was awarded $500. LSA senior Gregory Parker, for his poetry, "Street Visions." Parker was awarded $300. LSA senior Michael Zilberman, for his essay, "Windows to Paris.' berman was awarded $500. e winners of the Marjorie Rapaport Award in Poetry are: LSA sophomore Melanie Kenny, for "Irregularity." She was awarded $125. LSA senior Sara Talpos, for "For Aaron in Ballymoney." She was award- ed $100. Professor wins esearch award r excellence Dr. Robert Williams, adjunct profes- sor of health policy in the School of Public Health, has received the 1996 Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation Excellence in Research Award. The $10,000 award is for his research article, "The Costs of Visits to ergency Departments," published in the New England Journal of Medicine on March 7. The award will support continued research in the University Department of Health Management and Policy. Agency needs foster homes to care for children Can you make time in your life for a child who needs you? Washtenaw County Family Independence Agency needs foster homes to provide care for children who have been removed from their natural families because of abuse or neglect. The agency needs black and white fmilies for children of all ages, with a 4ecial need for brothers and sisters to Splaced in the same home. Families who understand drug abuse and sexual abuse are needed. Black families willing to provide long-term foster care or to adopt chil- dren of all ages are especially encour- aged to help. WCFIA also needed homes for children ages 12-18 and for pregnant or parenting teenagers. The agency will sponsor a foster par- ..zt-adoption training program begin- 4 g Sept. 16 from 7-9 p.m. at the "Family Independence Agency, 22 Center St., in Ypsilanti. Call Barbara Ford at 481-2010 for more information. L.A. firm sponsors poetry contest International Publications, a publish- firm in Los Angeles, is sponsoring a national college poetry contest open to all college students in the United States. The top five finishers in the contest will win cash prizes, and winning poems will be published in International Publications' 40th edition of "American College Poets Anthology." The anthology is a collec- tion of contemporary poetry authored ' college students representing every state in the country. For contest rules, send a self- addressed, stamped envelope to International Publications, P.O. Box 44044-L, Los Angeles, Calif. 90044. The contest's deadline is Oct. 31, with an initial fee of $3 and an addi- tional $1 fee for additional poems. - Compiled from staff reports. By Matthew Rochkind For the Daily Expectations for the Ann Arbor Bonsai Society's 26th Annual Bonsai Show this past weekend may have been nothing more than to revisit a scene from "The Karate Kid." But many visitors with experience in the art of bonsai said the show took an accurate and instruc- tional look at the craft. John Lindsay, chair of the event, said he was pleased to have such a large number of trees for display. The society has more than 100 mem- bers, some of whom work on several trees, he said. Founded in 1970, the Ann Arbor Bonsai Society is a forum for members to learn about and practice the ancient art of bonsai. "The goal is to have something that looks like a real tree that's shrunken," Lindsay said. Each living work is distinct not only in shape but in the larger pictu bonsai artist Jack Wikle. A favorite tree was a 75-year-old Buttonwood, which was potted eight years ago. Its single trunk twisted around itself and leaned out over its pedestal, with a wide, circular crown of green, oval leaves at the top. res it brings to mind, said "The goal something t like a real tj shrunken." Chair of 26th Anr Tecumseh, Mich., who, by his own account, has "enough (trees) that I can't give an exact count." Wikle likens his trees to growing children. "It's a very subjec- tive thing," Wikle is itohave said. "You try to encourage and hat looks restrain the tree at the same time. If you're ree that's afraid of making mis- takes you're more likely to make more mistakes." - John Lindsay Although some nual Bonsai Show bonsai sell for thou- sands of dollars at $10, Wikle said. It doesn't have to be a full-time job either. "It's purely a hobby for most of us," Society President Dean Atkinson said. The art of bonsai is set apart from conventional arts such as painting and sculpting because the trees are continually"tended to and altered by an artist's creativity. "A tree is never finished," Wikle said. "The hori- zon is way out beyond us." Matthew and Jessica Schenk, University graduates in '93 and '92, respectively, said'the showing of rows and rows of trees is not exact- ly how bonsai have historically been seen in Japan or China, but that the exhibit was no less captivating. "It's simply on a different scale," Matthew Schenk said. Wikle started his first tree more than 30 years upscale international auctions, it's not expensive to ago. He is a nationally known bonsai artist from get into bonsai, and some trees sell for less than Students to lend 'compassion' to AIDS memorial By Heather Kamins For the Daily More than 1,800 panels of fabric symbolizing love, remembrance, hope and commitment will be spread along the floors and walls of the Track and Tennis Building next semester. The Athletic Department and the Ann Arbor Jaycees, along with sever- al University student groups, are preparing to bring the NAMES volunteer for the project. "Therefore, it is necessary to do everything we can to educate ourselves and our community." The memorial quilt was originally laid out on the Mall in Washington, D.C., in October 1987. Since that time almost 6 million people in the United States have had the chance to view the quilt, according to the NAMES Project. The complete 45,000-panel quilt will be on display in Washington, D.C., MARGARET MYERS/Daily An Ann Arbor resident walks past construction on the corner of East University Avenue and South University Avenue, where the new School of Social Work Building is under construction. Campus constrctiCog whirlwInd windsdown actlasses begin-a Project AIDS Memorial Quilt to Ann Arbor from February 6 to 9. At monthly quilting sessions throughout the fall, volunteers will be able to assist in the making of memorial panels lost loved ones "The purpose of the AIDS quilt is to educate people." - Susan Foltin Media chair of the Ann Arbor Quilt Display Committee from October 11 to 13. Most of the sections of the quilt that will cover the Track, and Tennis Building will represent local AIDS victims. Each section will be 12 for those who have to AIDS, and can More than $1 billion spent on construction, renovations By Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter Construction is a fact of life on free- ways and roads, but until five years ago it was not a fact of life at the University. More than $1 billion later, the frenzy of building and renovation that has made construction commonplace on campus in recent years will soon come to an end. During this summer alone, construc- tion crews completed projects that cost the University about $55 million. . "This summer has been pretty pro- ductive - but we could have gotten a little more finished," said University Planner Fred Myer. "Things are pretty much done, but they were supposed to be all the way done by now." Recent projects "essentially" com- pleted were: the Angell-Haven Hall connector, renovations to East Hall and the Student Activities Building, and the construction of the Media Union on North Campus. With the dust barely settled on those projects, several others are now under way, including the construction of the School of Social Work Building on the corner of East and South University avenues and the mostly completed East University pedestrian mall near the entrance to the Diag. Later this year, crews expect to fin- ish renovations on the C.C. Little Building and complete the new Cancer and Geriatrics Center and North Campus's $5-million Lurie Bell Tower. This summer's work is part of an unprecedented increase in construction on campus that has cost more than $1 billion over the last five years, Myer said. The most notable projects in that time have been around the Diag, includ- ing the completion of the Randall Laboratory, extensive renovations of Angell Hall and dramatic moderniza- tion of the Shapiro Undergraduate Library. On North Campus, the carillon, Media Union, and new Industrial and Operations Engineering buildings have enlarged the campus. Employees of the Shapiro Undergraduate Library said the renova- tions did more than just improve the appearance of a building once nick- Pair accused of Social Security embezzlement named for its ugliness. "(The renovation) not only added space, it allowed us to completely modernize information services," said Barbara MacAdam, the former head librarian of the Undergraduate Library. "It's a much better environment for study and research, not just aesthetical- ly but informationally." But all of the rebuilding and remod- eling of campus has left some students dodging too many plastic orange fences, large trucks and workers in hard hats. "It's annoying," said LSA junior Jeremy Moghtader. "This University has a demented desire to pave every- thing." Myer said once these major projects are completed, the rate of construction will slow down considerably. "There might be some students who will see grass in the next few years," he said. "You will see construction contin- ue, but not at the same pace we have seen recently." However, Myer said the University is planning to use state funds to renovate and modernize the LSA, Frieze, and Perry buildings in the future. Seed of Abraham Congregation Zera Avraham A 1Messi anic Jewish Synragogue Believing that Yeshua is The Promised Messiah Meeting at University Reformed Church receive information on how to make panels on their own. Student groups are also planning fundraisers and commemorative activi- ties, including films about understand- ing AIDS and a jump-rope-a-thon sponsored by members of the Greek system. "Without a doubt, these young adults possess both the enthusiasm and energy to assist with the many educational and promotional activities that will sur- round the quilt display in the year ahead," said Athletic Department Coordinator April Bayles. Profits from the memorial quilt and corresponding activities will benefit the HIV/AIDS Resource Center (HARC), and organizers hope to educate University and high school students of the danger of AIDS. "Women our age are one of the fastest-growing groups of people contracting AIDS today," said LSA sophomore Melissa Grant, who is a square feet and consist of eight individ- ual panels. Susan Foltin, media chair of the Ann Arbor Quilt Display Committee, said the quilt visually illuminates that HIV and AIDS can happen to anyone. She said the quilt educates people on the risks of contracting the disease while teaching "compassion" and "humanity" for the families of the victims of AIDS. "The purpose of the AIDS quilt is to educate people;" Foltin said. "We want to focus on what we think is the largest group at risk - college and high school students. Our focus is to educate people and take away the stigmatism for peo- ple who have it. "We want to get the word out early," she said. Quilting Bees to help construct pan- els for the quilt are scheduled for the third Sundays of September, October, November and January from 1-5 p.m. at Michael's Craft Store on the Ann Arbor-Saline Road in Ann Arbor. Everyone is welcome. LANSING (AP) -Two Lansing res- idents hired to distribute Social Security checks to people with a histo- ry of substance abuse are the subject of an embezzlement investigation, accord- ing to a published report. Police and Social Security agents are on the lookout for Johnnie Williams and Debora Verser. Officials believe the pair embezzled thousands of dollars from clients while operating as the African American Relations Reform Coalition. State Department of Commerce offi- cials told the Lansing State Journal in a story published yesterday that they never licensed the coalition as a nonprofit organization, which is the status required by federal law for all outside agencies to handle Social Security payments. Williams, who was in charge of keeping accounts for former alcoholics, was jailed in December 1994, when he was convicted of impaired driving - a notch below drunken driving. The newspaper was unable to contact Williams and Verser for comment. Their office was closed last month and neither Social Security agents nor police have located them. While the police investigation con- tinues, one Lansing man who relied on Williams and Verser to funnel his Social Security benefits to his landlord is about to feel the effects of the alleged theft. presents The International Scholar Account Bank of Ann Arbor, the only locally owned and operated bank in Ann Arbor, is pleased to offer University of Michigan International students an account specific to- their needs: * Money Market Checking Account with the highest interest rate paid in the area * ATM card with unlimited access and NO transaction fee regardless of location or frequency e Free 3x5 Safe Deposit box or $20.00 credit 0 0 toward a larger box Free Incoming Cables & Wire Transfers Free Travelers Cheques Free Money Orders and Cashiers Checks GROUP MEETINGS Guild House, 802 Monroe, 8:30- !D Safewalk,. 763-5865, Undergraduate 10 n~m.Library Lobby, 8-11:30 p.m. i i i