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November 14, 1996 - Image 2

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The Michigan Daily, 1996-11-14

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2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 14, 1996

NATION/WORLD

DANCE
Continued from Page 1A
professional talk about an experience
that every working mother has with a
special insight" Stewart said.
One student said she was able to get
a clearer understanding of Fogel's mes-
sage through the dance.
"I got a deeper, more meaningful
understanding of the problem;' said
Archana Kella, an LSA sophomore.
"You could feel what she was feeling,
and it was more beautiful."
Fogel said she wants students to under-
stand her personally, not just as a profes-
sor. By using dance as a way to describe

her experiences, she said students may be
able to understand her fully.
"This sort of dance demystifies the
teacher. You can see the personal back-
drop of private lives," Fogel said.
Motivated by different experiences in
her own life, Fogel uses real-life stories
to develop dances as a means of com-
munication.
Fogel told about events in her life
that she used as motivation for her
choreography, such as getting robbed
in New York.
The name "Upswell" came from an
article in The New York Times describ-
ing the love of a parent for its child,
Fogel said.

THEFT
Continued from Page :1A
"It's unrealistic
to put cameras to
watch the Diag
because of the
lack of funding in t
our budget;' she
said. "We do,
however, plan to
have employees
of this depart-
ment make rou-
tine visits to the
Diag."
Sundholm said the

__ __ __ __ _ __ __ __ _ __ __ __ _ __ __ -

"(The) department is working hard to
make more opportunities for students to

t

f v owgp, .+

purchase advertising

It's unrealistic
W put cameras to
watch the Diag ,.a"
- Betsy Sundholm
Michigan Advertising Works

spaces' she said.
"We feel that
the less costly
the spaces,the
more student
groups will
participate
without the
fear of having
s o m e o n e
destroy their
signs and not
being able to

.:
<<
1 '.i%

answer is to

advertise something they feel is impor-
tant."
Anyone with information on the
crime can contact DPS at 763-1131,

Sergeant sentenced In Army scandal
FORT LEONARD WOOD, Mo. -A drill sergeant who had sex with three
women recruits got five months in prison and a bad-conduct discharge yes-
terday in the first sentencing of the burgeoning Army sex scandal.
Sgt. Loren B. Taylor, 29, pleaded guilty a day earlier of breaking the ban on sex
between commanders and subordinates, having consensual sex with three women
recruits and trying to have sex with another.
Two other instructors at Fort Leonard Wood face similar charges.
The charges were disclosed Tuesday, five days after a sex scandal broke at the
military's Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland, where four drill instructors and
a captain have been charged with raping or sexually harassing at least a dozen
female recruits.
In another case, The San Antonio Express-News reported yesterday that women
Army trainees from Fort Sam Houston kissed their supervisors during wild drink-
ing binges and that one trainee performed oral sex on her supervisor. Five sergeants
were disciplined.
Taylor, who had faced up to 14 years behind bars, asked the judge to spare him
prison so he could support his 7-year-old son, who lives with his former wife.
But prosecutors, bolstered by the testimony of the victims, asked the judg4
send him to prison as a deterrent to others.

provider cheaper advertising opportuni-
ties for students.

b 's'r
n

Rabbi Amy Levenson
Dean of Academic Administration
of
Reconstruction ist Rabbinical College

join the Daily. Call- .7AIL
asstaaat rd a u

will speak on
THE REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN IN THE JEWISH
TEXTUAL TRADITION; BIBLICAL, MIDRASHIC AND
CONTEMPORARY VOICES
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22ND
Following Shabbat Potluck at Hillel
Prior to her talk, Rabbi Amy Levenson will be available for
questions about the Reconstructionist movement and the
Reconstructionist Rabbinical College from 2:00 to 4:00 PM, Friday
afternoon.
great scores...
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Dental chooi
Graduate School Medical School
great teachers...
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study where you need it most. Our
teachers will show you the proven
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Emergency system
gets modem souind
FARGO, N.D. - For kids growing
up during the Cold War, there were few
things on TV scarier than that long,
shrill tone and the warning: "This is a
test of the Emergency Broadcast
System. This is ONLY a test."
Now the high-pitched tone is about
to be replaced by a few short buzzes,
and the "this-is-a-test" warning may be
dropped altogether.
The idea was not to make the tests
any less scary to children. Rather, the
system for warning the country in the
event of a nuclear attack is being mod-
ernized, and the buzzes are the sound
the new computer technology makes.
The Emergency Broadcast System
was designed under President Kennedy
in 1963, a year after the Cuban missile
crisis, to allow the president to address
the nation on a moment's notice in an
emergency.
The current test of the system lasts
about 35 or 40 seconds; the new one
will be shorter, though how much

shorter is still unclear. And so far, the
Federal Communications Commission
has not adopted any requirement that
TV and radio stations explain what the
digital tones mean. Many stations still
might, however, since listeners are like-
ly to wonder.
Pi viruls _apable o
inecting humans
NEW YORK - A previously
unknown virus has been discovered in
pigs that is capable of infecting human
cells.
Though it is unclear what disease
- if any - the virus causes, the dis-
covery poses a serious challenge,
the burgeoning organ-transplant
industry. Only this summer the Food
and Drug Administration approved
the use of specially bred pigs as
organ donors for human-transplant
surgery.
British researchers formally
announced discovery of PERV, or pig
endogenous retrovirus, at a symposium
this week in New York.

1220 S. University

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Bomb blast rocks
Athens university
ATHENS, Greece - A bomb
exploded in a campus bathroom yester-
day, damaging the Polytechnic
University but causing no injuries,
police said.
Students were attending lectures on
the ground floor when the bomb
exploded in a second-floor bathroom of
the mechanical engineering depart-
ment. Other students had been evacuat-
ed after an anonymous caller warned of
the bomb 20 minutes before the blast.
No group has claimed responsibility.
The attack, in downtown Athens,
came days before the 23rd anniversary
of a bloody student uprising that felled
the military junta that had ruled Greece
between 1967 and 1974.
Annual celebrations, featuring mass
rallies at the U.S. Embassy, usually end
in late-night clashes between police and
self-proclaimed anarchists.
Last year, youths vandalized the
Polytechnic University and hurled hun-

dreds of gasoline bombs at police dur-
ing a 24-hour siege of the campus.
Police arrested 504 people. In 1991, the
university was also the battleground for
riots following anniversary celeb9
tions.
Rescuers try to free
earthquake victims
NAZCA, Peru - Rescuers looking
for up to 60 miners trapped in a gold
mine found two bodies and three sur-
vivors yesterday, and said they believed
others remained trapped by a power
earthquake that rattled southern Peru.
Army patrols set out yesterday morn-
ing for the Huanca mine, 480 miles
southeast of Lima, which caved in during
Tuesday's magnitude-6.4 quake. They
navigated roads blocked by landslides
and washed out by recent flooding.
The quake did the most damage to
Nazca, a town of 25,000, and nearby
small towns.
- Compiled from Daily wire reporb

MR

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L'

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A

NEWS Amy Klein, Managing Editor
EDITORS: Tim O'Connell, Megan Schimpf. Michelle Lee Thompson, Josh White.
STAFF: Janet Adamy, Brian Campbell, Prachish Chakravorty, Anita Chik, Jodi S. Cohen, Jeff Eldridge, Bram Elias, Megan Exley, Jennifer
Harvey, Heather Kamins, Jeffrey Kosseff. Marc Lightdale, Laurie Mayk, Chris Metinko, Heather Miller, Katie Plona, Stephanie Powell,
Anupama Reddy, Alice Robinson, Matthew Rochkind, David Rossman, Matthew Smart, Ericka M. Smith, Ann Stewart, Ajit K. Thavarajah,
Katie Wang, Will Weissert, Jenni Yachnin.
EDITORIAL Adrienne Janney, Zachary M. Raili, Editors
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Erin Marsh.
STAFF: Emily Achenbaum. Ellen Friedman, Samuel Goodstein, Katie Hutchins. Scott Hunter, Yuki Kuniyuki, Jim Lasser-David Levy,
Christopher A. McVety, James Miller, Partha Mukhopadhyay, Jack Schillaci, Paul Serilla, Ron Steiger, Jason Stoffer, Matt Wimsatt.
SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managng 5 Ed
EDITORS: Alan Goldenbach, John Leroi, Will McCahill, Danielle Rumore. Barry Sullenberger.
STAFF: Nancy Berger, TJ. Berka, Chris Farah, Jordan Field. John Friedberg, James Goldstein, Kim Hart, Kevin Kasiborski, Josh Kleinbaum,
Andy Knudsen. B.J. Luria, Brooke McGahey, Afshin Mohamadi, Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy, Jim Rose. Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, Dan
Stillman, Jacob Wheeler, Ryan White.
ARTS Srian A. Gnatt, Joshua Rich, Edors
WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Greg Parker, Elan A. Stavros.
SUB-EDITORS: Dean Bakopoulos (Fine Arts), Lise Harwin (Music), Tyler Patterson (Theater), )en Petinski (Film)
STAFF: Cohn Bartos. Eugene Bowen, Anitha Chalam, Melanie Cohen, Mark Feldman, Stephanie GIckman, Hae )in Kim, Kai Jones. Bnan M.
Kemp. Stephanie Jo Klein. Emily Lambert. Bryan Lark, Kristin Long. Elizabeth Lucas. James Miller, Aaron Rennie, Jula Shin, Prashant
Tamaskar, Christopher Tkaczyk, Angela Walker, Kelly Xintaris.
PHOTO Mark Frildmn, Editor
ASSISTANT EDITOR: Sara Stillman.
STAFF: Josh Biggs, Jennifer Bradley-Swift, Aja Dekieva Cohen. John Kraft, Margaret Myers. Jully Park, Damian Petrescu, Kristen Schaefer,
Jeannie Servaas, Jonathan Summer, Joe Westrate, Warren Zinn.
COPY DESK Elizabeth Lucas, Edi
STAFF: Lydia Alspach, Jill Litwin. Heather Miller, Adreanne Mispelon, Anupama Reddy, Matt Spewak, David Ward. Jen Woodward.
ONLINE scott Wiox, Editor
STAFF: Dana Goldberg, Jeffrey Greenstein, Charles Harrison, Anuj Hasija, Adam Pollock, Vamshi T-andra, Anthony Zak.
GRAPHICS Melanie Sheran , Editor
flUC~tDE VClCi

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