LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 19, 199-- 3 Hazing ritual turns fatal Binaye Oja, a first-year student at larkson University in upstate New ork, died Monday from an alleged fra- ternity hazing ritual, the Cornell Daily Sun reported. Oja, whose parents are employed by Cornell University, was pledging a national fraternity, the newspaper reported. Oja was allegedly part of a group of pledges who had been standing around a can and drinking until they vomited into the can. Authorities believe Oja died of alcohol poisoning. The fraterni- ychapter has been suspended and all the members have been ordered to return to campus housing. Caller threatens Florida parents A man has been calling mothers of female students at the University of South Florida and threatening to rape * heir daughters unless the mothers articipated in phone sex with him, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. The man allegedly has . called 26 mothers. During these calls, he tells the moth- ers that he is with their drunk and unconscious daughters. The campus is offering a $5,000 reward for the man's arrest and con- viction. SU student jumps out window A Penn State University student fell from a third-floor window in an alco- hol-related incident last week, accord- ing to The Daily Collegian. Kevin Nigut jumped out of his apartment win- dow after drinking 12 cans of beer and etting into an argument with his girl- riend, the newspaper reported. He was treated and released from the hospital. This was the second such incident at Penn State this month. On Feb. 3, Leigh Anne Prevatte, a junior, died after falling out of a sixth-floor window. Alcohol also was involved in that incident, the news- paper reported. UC pirate radio station formed A campus radio station at the University of California at Davis recently was taken over by a pirate radio station. A radio station calling itself Davis Live Radio nabbed KDVS's 90.3 FM frequency, which has been inactive since January, according to The California Aggie. Davis Live Radio, which last broad- casted four years ago, is not exactly a *ollege radio station - it broadcasts noises, including people feigning mas- turbation. KDVS is expected to resume broad- casting shortly. Four students mugged in Minn. Four University of Minnesota stu- ents were mugged in three separate cidents last week, according to The Minnesota Daily. Two men are suspect- ed in the crimes. Police have one of the suspects in custody. All four victims reported being held at knife point while the suspects demanded their valuables. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Chris Metinkoffrom the University Wire. Council promotes marijuana awareness By Meg Exey Daily Staff Reporter Supporters of promoting marijuana awareness will now have more than just one weekend in April to spread their message to the City of Ann Arbor. The Ann Arbor City Council unani- mously agreed last night to recognize the month of February as Marijuana Awareness Month in conjunction with nationwide recognition of the month. Members said that recognition ensures the council will work with the Community Awareness For Substance Abuse committee, CAFSA, in estab- lishing a town meeting in October 1997 to discuss public concerns of marijuana use in Ann Arbor. "I strongly feel that we need to fur- ther educate the community about the dangers associated with marijuana," said Patricia Vereen-Dixon (D-st Ward), one of the councilmembers who proposed recognizing the national awareness month. "Marijuana use (by minors) in Washtenaw County is 19 percent above the national average." Vereen-Dixon said many people are not aware that marijuana smoked today is significantly stronger than it was in the 1960s and 1970s. "This is not the marijuana your mother used to take," Vereen-Dixon said. "What is produced today is much stronger and is often laced with other chemical substances" Ann Arbor resident Rich Birkett, who addressed the council in support of the recognition, questioned some of the discrepancies he found in the reso- lution's vocabulary. "I have a problem with resolutions that authoritatively say that marijuana is flat-out dangerous," Birkett said. "Actually there is still much debate about how dangerous it really is." Birkett, one of the organizers of Ann Arbor's Hash Bash, also proposed that the April event be officially recognized as "City Marijuana Awareness Day." "We've suggested changing the name before, to encourage a more truthful discussion about the effects of marijuana use," Birkett said. "Yet Hash Bash seems to have stuck." In unrelated business, the council also unanimously approved a resolu- tion to officially affiliate Ann Arbor with a new sister city in West Africa. Dakar, Senegal is the city's new "sib- ling," thanks to the effort and detailed program outline presented by Dr. Richard H. Ross, Sr. Ross, a University graduate, also was instrumental in the creation of the University's Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Scholarship Fund and in the promotion of the University's junior exchange pro- gram with Africa. CouncilmemberCristopher Kolb (D- 5th Ward) said the creation of the bond between the two cities will provide an excellent opportunity for ordinary citi- zens to exchange ideas and cultures. "A program like 'People to People' will help to create more goodwill and understanding between the two nations," Kolb said. He also emphasized the importance of community volunteers to ensure that the program succeeds. Ann Arbor currently has four other sister cities around the globe. A fifth, in Belize, was not successful due to lack of community volunteer commitment. Speed trap ' management MSA proposal would oversee By Katie Piona Daily Staff Reporter The Michigan Student Assembly passed a resolution last night about a topic not usually associated with stu- dents - Value Centered Management. MSA voted to lobby for the forma- tion of an oversight committee to inves- tigate complaints and oversee the use of VCM, the University's management and budget style. The committee would include stu- dents, faculty members and administra- tors from each of the University's 18 schools and colleges. VCM was adopted by former University President James Duderstadt as a means to balance the quality of cur- riculum and the amount of funding granted to individual schools. It is a topic often debated among faculty mem- bers but rarely discussed by students. LSA Rep. Yejide Peters, who pro- posed the resolution, said the purpose of an oversight committee will be to keep tabs on the changes made under VCM and whether the actions are in the best interest of the entire University. If formed, Peters said, the oversight committee also will make recommen- dations for certain schools they find need improvements in the way they apply VCM. "To me, it's probably the most impor- tant curriculum issue to the University and ... students need to take a stand. I'm glad that we have," Peters said, adding that forming the oversight com- mittee will take a lot of hard work. Peters said concerns about VCM have been expressed by members of the University community. "I think this speaks to that," he said. MSA President Fiona Rose said she thinks faculty members and administra- tors will be receptive to the committee because they are interested in students' concerns about VCM. "I feel very good about having passed it," Rose said. Rackham Rep. John Lopez predicts faculty and administrators will want to be a part of this committee. "They would be more than willing to be a part of this oversight committee, at least that's the case in Rackham," hesaid. Peters said all 18 schools will be rep- resented and whether the school's mem- ber is a student, faculty member or administrator will be decided by ran- dom selection. According to the resolution, MSA will vote on student candidates, the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs will appoint faculty members, and the Office of the Provost will 'nomi- nate administrators. "If we leave out one school we're leaving out their perspective,' Peters said, adding that every school's input is necessary for the committee's success. Rackham Rep. Mike Pniewski ;said VCM has the potential to be abused. "It's always good to have an advisory committee," Pniewski said. Now that the formation of the com- mittee has MSA support Peters said, the next step is to lobby SACUA. "I think SACUA can suppoit-This;" Peters said. "From there, we can build and go to the Office of the Provost with a new and improved vision of this and maybe a better model." According to the resolution, commit- tee member terms will run for one year, beginning in October. JULLY PARK/Daily Engineering junior Sridhar Kaza makes a pit stop to ready his car for the mouse trap car race, which is part of the University's Engineering Week. Scientists ostd ice theo in cause Co-m-air crash KIRK Continued from Page I. across the state. Geoff Brown, editor in chief of The Michigan Review, said there has been a specific candidates in the group's March 19 officer elections. "This is just an organized campaign against me," Kirk said. "They're trying to rig the election." Kirk also said the Review has a per- Colorodo atmospheric scientists to investi- gate fatal crash DETROIT (AP) - Atmospheric scientists in Colorado will join fed- eral aviation investigators next month to check out theories that icing may have contributed to the fatal crash of Comair Flight 3272 near Monroe on Jan. 9. Colleen Scully doesn't get "Hey sis" cards from her older sister. "A day doesn't go by when you don't think about them 100 times" said Scully, whose sister Maureen DeMarco died when the twin-engine commuter airplane crashed in Raisinville Township. "Just a mention of the airport hurts." But Scully got a personalized history of tension between Kirk and the Review. "The Review has had a prob- lem with him," Brown said. "That might have been his motiva- tion to choose the Review." Brown said he The Review has had a problem with him" - Geoff Brown, The Michigan Review sonal vendetta against him. "The Review has called me 'Dick Jerk.' They have called me 'Roy Cohn.' They :have called me 'Richard Nixon,"' Kirk:said. "They're just fling- ing mud at me" license plate reading The National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder will begin tests in March to deter- mine if large- droplet icing contributed to the accident, M a r c i a Politovich, a scientist with the research " A day doesn't go by when you don't think about them 100 times.3" - Colleeen Scully Sister of crash victim "HEY SIS," to remind her of DeMarco 's signature greeting on letters. Too often co-workers and friends believe it will be easy to return to their daily lives, said Albert Cain, a profes- sor of psychol- discovered Kirk's alleged fraud after receiving "several e- mails from College Republicans saying this had happened." Kirk said there are certain members of the College Republicans who are conspiring against him. He said these members are admitting many people into the group who have not participated in events only to aid Brown said Kirk was the only mem- ber of the College Republicans who pretended to be a Review writer. Also, Brown said he has been unofficially told that Kirk forged a press identifica- tion pass, but that charge has not been confirmed. "Allegedly, Nick (Kirk) made a press I.D., got it laminated at Kinkots and signed my name to it," Brown said. _ center, told The Detroit News yester- day. Transcripts of the plane's flight recorder data could be available the second week of March, National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Paul Schlamm said. More than a month after the crash, relatives of the victims are still trying to cope. ogy at the University. "People expect them to 'get over it' in a couple months," Cain said. "Research data show that the grieving process runs its course in two to five years. People shouldn't be rushed into getting back into their regular lives. This is a long, heartache-filled process." VARSITY TENNIS CENTER GRouP MEElTINGS U Black Biology Association, General meeting, 764-1066, Michigan Union, Conference Room 2202, 5- 6 p.m. 0 College Republicans, 747-6022, Michigan League, Room D, 8 p.m. U Graduate Christian Fellowship, 669. 6145, Ann Arbor Christian Reformed Church, 1717 Broadway, 7 p.m. U Korean Students Association, Michigan League, Henderson Room, 7 P.m. U Michigan Union Program Board, gen- eral meeting, 764-5750, Michigan Union, Bates Room, 6 0 Reo Chavurah, Weekly meeting, 669-0388, Hillel, 1429 Hill St., 7:30 p.m. U Student Group for Relatives of Persons with Mental Illness, 994- 6611, Lounge of St. Clare's Episcopal Church, 2309 Packard Rd., 7:30-9:00 p.m. nb ThLa ! ft.u D!2nCt 07-0l41'7 Ml.A d Building, Jean and Paul Slusser Gallery, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. J "Complire for Lent, sponsored by The Lutheran Campus Ministry, Lord of Light Lutheran Church, 801 South Forest Avenue, 7 p.m. U "Eugenics, Genetics, and Public Health," sponsored by Rackham Dean's Office, School of Public Health Building 1, Faculty Lounge 3026, 12-1:30 p.m. U "Guest Speaker Speaking on the Upanishads: Sharada Kumar," sponsored b Hindu Students Council, Michigan Union, Pond Room, 8 p.m. Q "Internship and Summer Job Fair," sponsored by CP&P, Michigan Union, 12-4 p.m. U "Internship Forum," sponsored by The Colee Democrats, Michigan League, Koessler Room, 7:30 p.m. U "JP Morgan and Company, Inc.: Information Session," sponsored by CP&P, Michigan Union, Crofoot Room, 6-7 p.m. U "Profs. Caspar p and Wolfoff Speaking," Lecture, sponsored byr Conference Room, 2:30-4 p.m. Q "Wednesday Workshops: Tell 'Em: Promoting Your Event on Campus, sponsored by The Division for Student Affairs, News and Information Services Building, 12:10-1 p.m. SERVICES Q Campus information Centers, Michigan Union and Pierpont Commons, 763-INFO, info@umich.edu, UMeEvents on GOpherBLUE, and http:// www.umich.edu/-info on the World Wide Web U English Composition Board Peer Tutoring, need help with a paper?, Angell Hall, Room 444C, 7-11 U Tutoring for100-200 Level Courses in Chemistry, Physics, and Math, 7646250, Markley and Bursley Hall Libraries, 7-9 p.m. and Shapiro Library, Room 2166 8-10 p.m. U Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursiey Hall, WANTS YOU! Now taking applications for Executive Board Positions! The Universities Activities Center is the-largest student-run organization on campus. Our goal is to provide educational and social programming for the entire student body. I I