LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 28, 1996 - 3 East Quad resident bitten by bug An East Quad resident was bitten by nunknown bug last Thursday night, according to Department of Public Safety reports. DPS officers escorted the victim to University Hospitals emergency room after she complained of dizziness and a severe allergic reaction. Cashier checks stolen from West Quad cafeteria Two cashier checks were stolen Monday night from the West Quad dining hall, a West Quad resident reported. The checks, DPS reports state, which are valued at more than $6,000, were stolen from a table that was left unattended for several min- tes. DPS is currently investigating e incident. DPS arrests men for car thefts Two men were arrested yesterday morning by DPS officers in connection with the alleged theft of items from two parked cars in Ann Arbor. DPS officers were sent to the 1700 lock of Hubbard Street after receiving a report that two car windows had been smashed. The officers spotted two men sitting in a parked car with a stolen car radio and a radar detector in the back seat. The suspects, ages 17 and 20, were questioned while officers attempted to trace the ownership of the articles. DPS is currently investigating the incident. Disturbance occurs at Lloyd A resident of Alice Lloyd residence hall called DPS last Thursday night after discovering six residents being hostile toward each other and causing a loud disturbance. The residents in question had *ngaged in this sort of behavior in the past and were drinking, the caller said. A resident adviser later contacted DPS about the incident and told police it involved a student entering another student's room without the resident's permission. DPS is currently investi- gating the incident. Male suspect swipes wallet from Union A male suspect was spotted stealing a wallet from a woman on the first floor of the Michigan Union'on Wednesday evening. The wallet was sitting on the table directly parallel from Wendy's restaurant when the man snatched it nd ran out of the building. The sus- ect was last spotted going south on South State Street. He then fled in a blue pickup truck, according to DPS reports. The wallet contained more than $240 and several credit cards. Witnesses were able to obtain the license plate and DPS is currently searching for the sus- pect. *Maynard resident stalked by ex-gi rlfriend A resident of a 400 Maynard St. apartment building called the Ann Arbor Police Department claiming his ex-girlfriend had been stalking him. According to AAPD reports, the % irlfriend was upset after the couple roke up. AAPD officers found the suspect knocking on the door upon arrival. The suspect was removed and questioned. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Ajit K. Thavarajah. Student researcher takes home trophy for uranium project First-year student will advance to national competition in Boston By Marc Lightdale Daily Staff Reporter Engineering first-year student Michael Muse captivated three judges with a thorough explanation of the chemistry of radioactive elements such as uranium and thorium. Moments after setting up his poster- board and charts, Muse walked away with third place and a trophy he describes as "gold and marble" at the annual Undergraduate Student Technical Research Project competition in Chicago. "I was nervous and excited," Muse said. "I had never presented research before and I received a lot of positive feedback." Muse and six other students have been working with chemistry Prof. Henry Griffin since September to refine a technique that calibrates a crys- tal detector - a device used to measure radiation emitted from various ele- ments. "This has given me the opportunity to give a formal presentation on sci- ence," Muse said. "You have the chance to present to people who didn't necessarily know anything about the topic." Griffin said the next step Muse and his lab partner plan to take is to deter- mine the ratio of Uranium 235 to Uranium 238 that exists naturally. This'kind of research will be helpful in determining the overall quality of Uranium fuel used by nuclear power plants, Griffin said. "We have a group of seven students working on the project," Griffin said. "Mike and (his lab partner) have made a good team." Muse's reward for his third place pre- sentation was $50 and the opportunity to present his experiment at the National Society of Black Engineers Competition (NSBE) in Boston next month. JENNIFER BRADLEY-SWIFT/Daily Engineering first-year student Mike Muse takes a closer look at his research at Phoenix Laboratory yesterday. Muse was awarded third place at the annual Undergraduate Student Technical Research Project. Winners of the nationwide USTRP competition in Boston will be award- ed $2,000. Before the Boston competition, Griffin and Muse will read through the judges' comments from the regional contest and mnake some final adjust- ments to the project. Muse said he has enjoyed the chal- lenge of working with Griffin. "He always wants you to think and he poses new questions," Muse said. "He has also given us an opportdnity to branch off in different directions. "This will be my first national con- ference interacting with all students across the country from NSBE," Muse added. "I have nothing to lose."M Table legs 'U' Greek system captures awards at national conference By Greg Cox Daily Staff Reporter Although University Greek organiza- tions often compete against each other in sports and other activities, last week- end they were given the opportunity to prove their combined merit outside of Ann Arbor. Both the University's Interfratemity Council and Panhellenic Association took home honors at the Mid-American Greek Council Association Conference in Chicago last weekend. The University's Greek organiza- tions, which competed with Greek councils from more than 200 schools representing a 17-state region, received three awards. A total of about 1,700 stu- dent representatives and Greek advisors attended the conference. "The conference was a series of edu- cational sessions over the weekend," said Panhellenic Association Advisor Mary Beth Seiler. "In addition to gener- al sessions everyone attended, students were broken into pathways for sessions geared towards their particular areas of involvement:' Panhel received the MGCA Greek Communications Award for its "Timeless Tradition" rush booklet. LSA seniors Jennifer Kruer and Rachel Goldrich put together the book- let last year as part of their duties as Panhel rush co-chairs. "This year we made the booklet more serious and aimed toward par- ents," Kruer said. "It stressed that the Greek system's GPAs were higher than the student body's and the long-time tradition of Greek life at 6 Michigan." ThIs y IFC was rec-A ognized for made the achievement in S e lf - more serl Governance and Judicial Affairs for its Panh policies ofjudi- cial review. Its review process was honored for foster- ing education and development of the Greek community and ensuring full due process throughout the review. IFC President Ken Tanner, an Engineering junior, worked with Mary Lou Antieau from the Office of Student Resolutions to improve the Greek judi- cial process - an effort that has been going on for some time. Tanner said the award was given to the University's IFC because of the educational nature of the reprimands handed down for violations of-JFC codes. "Instead of prohibiting a fraternity from participating in IM sports f{r a violation, we force a certain numbdr of their members to participate in a semi- nar on a topic related to the Par we bookie Ions ... - Jennifer Kr offense,' Tainer said. bt Both organi- zations received s c h o I a st i c uer a c h i e v e e n t . awards ~:for el i rush co-chair maintainring overall fraterni- ty and sorority GPAs higher than the average GPA for the student body as a whole. Only about 15 of the more than 200 schools represented received: this accolade. Tanner said the award is particular- ly impressive considering the high GPA that the University student body maintains relative to other universi- ties. Diver trapped while cleaning dam JENNIFER BRADLEY-SWIFT/Daily LSA senior Roz Thatcher adds finishing touches to her midterm project, a table mounted on boots, in an East Quad classroom yesterday. The project is for her RC course on visual thought. Archer pledgec..s to aid troubled city, schools LIVONIA (AP) - A diver for a private construction company was missing and presumed dead yesterday after rescue workers freed him from a dam where he had been trapped for several hours yesterday, authorities said. Frank Zimmerman had become pinned by rushing water as he cleared debris near a dam in the 34-degree water of Newburgh Lake. He appar- ently became wedged near a gate, Wayne County Sheriff Robert Ficano said. Rescue workers freed him from the gate but searchers were unable to locate his body late yesterday, and shifted their focus downstream before calling off the search at dusk, Ficano said. The search is expected to resume today. Authorities said Zimmerman, who worked for Divtec Corp. of Romulus, was feared dead. His age and home- town were not immediately released. About three hours into the ordeal, a diver went in and came back out after what appeared to be releasing some- thing blocking the slew and sending water and debris under NewburghRoad and into the' Rouge River below the five-lane road. But Ficano said the diver couldn't find Zimmerman. Other divers were unable to go back in to try a rescue because of thestrong current and cold water, Ficano and other officials said. Rescuers -began trying to drain some of the water to relieve pressure around the dam and were pumping air and warm water to the man's diving suit from above ground. DETROIT (AP) - Mayor Dennis Archer said he's working on a new part- nership to aid the city's troubled schools, despite declining to intervene earlier. Speaking on the "Ask the Mayor" radio program aired Monday night on WCHB-AM and WWJ-AM, Archer told a caller that he and the city had no legal authority over Detroit schools, but that he had a moral obligation "to dig in and roll up my sleeves," the Detroit Free Press reported yesterday. Archer declined to discuss specifics of the partnership Wednesday, the newspaper said. ' The district's problems include national media reports about toilet paper rationing; $124 million cut from its $1.4-billion budget since July; and borderline academic performance. Students at Detroit's 28 high schools have a mean grade-point average of 1.8 - roughly a D-plus - and fewer than 20 percent of those who took the first High School Proficiency Test scored at the proficient level. Archer denied reports last month that he was formally offered the job of run- ning Detroit's school system. But dur- ing a Jan. 29 news conference, Archer restated his hope that city officials would work with the state to help Detroit schools meet certain state edu- cation requirements. On the radio program, Archer said: "I've been working with the Detroit school board and with the general super- intendent. I intend to do so, and if things go well, I think you will be very pleased at something I've put in the works to see if we can build a partnership." Archer also has opposed Gov. John Engler's suggestion that the state take over school districts that fail to meet specific standards - except as a last resort. I (~ ,?a%'"< -p4- Summrer is sooner than you think" YELLOW- CAB, 2066 Comut0 UAnn P~xx, Mi148103 PLAN YOUR STUDY ABROAD EXPERIENCE NOW! Where will you be next summer? How about interning in London? Working with film directors in Australia? Exploring the Daintree Rainforest and the Great Barrier Reef? Hanging out at the Edinburgh Festival? Visiting Sigmund Freud's House in Vienna? Touring the Irish Parliament in Dublin? Chatting with the locals in Guadalajara? If any of the above sound better than what you've already planned, call us right now! Reaur College offers a ranze of summer orograms in six FRIDAY Activities Building, Room 537, 9- 11 a.m. Q "Weekly Rummage Sale," sponsored by Kiwanis Club of Ann Arbor, D "Holy Communion for Lent," bible sponsored by Lutheran Campus Ministry, Lord of Light Church, 801. South ForestAve., 10 a.m. Q"Conversatlons with Courtney I~I.llvh fl nnnerrIrl by l nn