LOCALISTATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 25,1997--3 woman replaces roommate's soap with ammonia A woman replaced her roommate's facial soap with ammonia after having a disagreement Friday, Department of Public Safety reports state. A woman in Vera Baits II reported to DPS officials that she had civil disagree- ments with her roommate. After the fight, the roommate returned and replaced the woman's facial cleanser .with ammonia, which the woman later ed. The woman confronted her room- who admitted tampering with the cleanser. The victim declined emergency med- ical treatment. Thief returns stolen goods A worker in the Campus Information ter in the Michigan Union reported at rsonal belongings were stolen last Thursday The items were later returned with a note, according to DPS reports. While she was working, the caller's purse and keys were stolen but were returned the following Friday in her mailbox. The suspect returned the belongings with a note that read, "I already took my reward, but I didn't want you to lose your keys."The caller report- $30 cash and a copy card missing om her purse. ,The victim said in the report she is concerned that the thief may have copied her keys and personal information. Husband kidnaps woman A woman was kidnapped by her hus- -nd Friday and taken to a hotel near the ichigan-Indiana border, according to Ann Arbor Police Department reports. The woman told AAPD officials that her husband, whom she is in the process o divorcing, had assaulted her several times throughout the evening and dis- played numerous handguns to her. He -later forced her into a vehicle and drove westbound on 1-94. The woman said the ,ar trip probably ended near the Indiana rder, in a hotel room. The suspect ptied his gun and gave the woman the bullets, reports state. In the morning, the suspect drove the woman home and then left. The suspect was in violation of a personal protection order. Trumpet player attacked Friday A victim playing the trumpet was acked near the tennis and basketball courts at Nixon Clague School last Friday, AAPD reports state. ,m:1The victim was playing his trumpet on the athletic courts and was asked to stop playing the instrument. The victim was putting the trumpet away and had his back to the courts when he was allegedly struck with a three-inch piece >of asphalt on the right side of his head reports state. 'The suspects then fled in an unidenti- ied vehicle. Narcotics cabinet door falls off A door on a narcotics cabinet at University Hospitals fell off when an employee attempted to open the lock last Sunday, DPS reports state. When the employee attempted to open the cabinet with a key, the door fell off. The employee stated it appeared that someone had tried to gain unauthorized access to the narcotics inside. - Compiled by Daily StaffReporter Jenni Yachnin Students' Party captures LSA-SG election ballots By Heather Kamins Daily Staff Reporter By a margin of just 27 votes, the Students' Party took over the leadership of LSA Student Government. LSA-SG President-elect Lauren Shubow and Vice President-elect Geeta Bhatia captured the election that occured last Wednesday and Thursday, beating Michigan Party candidates Adam Schlifke andYejide Peters. Shubow and Bhatia received 930 votes in a race that left Schlifke and Peters with 903 votes. Shubow said she was very excited and pleasantly surprised by the results. "It was very close," Shubow said. "I think that was because we were both very qualified candidates.' Schlifke contended that the results of the election are carried by the Michigan Student Assembly president, vice presi- dent and representative elections that took place during the same two-day peri- od. The Students' Party took the top two seats on MSA. "The Michigan Party has won the elec- tion for the last four years;" Schlifke said. "(In the past) whatever majority party won the MSA election, also won the LSA-SG election." Schlifke said each year this pattern has followed suit. "This year Mike and Olga won the (MSA) election by 300 votes and Lauren and Geeta only won by 30," Schlifke said. "I think in some respects people do not know about LSA-SG. "I am not saying they did not work hard and that they do not deserve it," Schlifke said. "I just think a lot of stuff happens with parties. We had bad cir- cumstances and that was the outcome." The small margin between the parties is especially significant because of an increase in voting participation this year, said LSA-SG Election Director Pranav Patel. "The numbers are definitely up;' Patel said. "I'd say they are probably up by like a couple hundred (votes). Last year around 1,600 people voted, and this year it is in the ballpark of 2,000." Schlifke said last year's LSA-SG group had many problems and he hopes the new leaders will acknowledge them. "There were definitely a lot of prob- lems on this year's government;" Schlifke said. "A lot of people were not that involved, and a lot of people were not happy with that." Shubow said she and Bhatia are ready to start implementing many of their new ideas for the government, including mid- term evaluations for instructors and stu- dent representation on academic depart- ment committees. "We hope we can implement it as soon as fall semester" Shubow said. JENNIFER BRADLEY-SWIFT/fagy LSA Student Government President-elect Lauren Shubow and Vice President-elect Geeta Bhatia sit together yesterday. The two will take office in September. Brater proposes three bills to improve environmental quality By Jeffrey Kosseff Daily Staff Reporter While some legislators see state Rep. Liz Brater's proposed changes to the state's environmental policies as a step to a better future, others see the plan as more bureaucracy and paperwork. "We need enforcement of our environ- mental policies" Brater (D-Ann Arbor) said. "It's an effort to give public input.' The three bills, which Brater announced yesterday at a press confer- ence, are designed to inform the public of polluted sites, use environmental indi- cators and create an Environmental Quality Commission appointed by the governor to oversee the Department of Environmental Quality. Brater predicted that the House will support the bills, but she said passage will be more difficult in the Senate. "If it puts yet another board and another bureaucracy between the deci- sion makers, I'm going to oppose it," said state Sen. Loren Bennett (R- Canton), the Senate Natural Resources and Environmental Affairs committee chair. "The more bureaucracy the Democrats create, the better they sleep at night." Brater said the Environmental Quality Commission must be created because Gov. John Engler and the previously Republican-controlled Legislature elimi- nated 19 oversight boards with their cre- ation of the Department of Environmental Quality in 1995. "Since then, the number of environ- mental clean-ups has been greatly low- ered," Brater said. Brater said the bill that requires the Department of Environmental Quality to erect signs at polluted sites is important for public safety. "If we are aware of the polluted sites, we must inform the people" Brater said. The indicators would measure stan- dards such as pollutants in the state's water and the acreage of forests in the state. The statistics would be used for environmental planning and an annual environmental report card. Thirty-four states are currently undertaking identi- cal environmental.indicator projects. Establishing the environmental indica- tor system will cost money, Brater said, but it will save money in the long run. , "The amount the indicators cost wijl be a lot less than the cost to taxpayers if a mess needs to be cleaned up," Brater; said. The bills have many co-sponsors, including some Republicans. "Open government is a cornerstone-of our democratic republic"said state Rep. Greg Kaza (R-Rochester Hills). "I co- sponsored Rep. Brater's bills because they provide for open government." Brater said one reason there is great support for her bills is that they are part of a family-oriented agenda. "I have bipartisan support for it because there is no better way to protect families than to protect them from haz4 ardous pollution," Brater said. Ken Silfven, a spokesperson for the Department of Environmental Quality said the 'Environmental Quality Commission is unnecessary. "The issue isn't public access, it's con- trol," Silfven said. "This legislation would be a major step backward. Our director reports to Governor Engler, who reports to the public. That's true democracy." ADDIE SMITH/Daily Art first-year student Michelle Mijal views "The Writing On the Wall" Holocaust exhibit at the School of Art yesterday. Campus remembers Holocaust victims PEACE CORPS "THE TOUGHESTJOBYOU'LL EVER LOVE" Peace Corps Representatives will be on campus March 24-26 By Alice Robinson Daily Staff Reporter Standing outside in the cold at four in the morning is not something most students prefer to do on a regular basis. But that is just what many students will be doing early Thursday morning on the Diag when they read off the names of Holocaust victims as part of the 24-hour Memorial of Names, sponsored by Hillel. -- The event, which 0o 1E# begins Wednesday at noon and lasts until noon H on Thursday, is part of the 18th Annual Conference onnthe Holocaust, a series of films, lectures and cultural events exploring the worldwide implications of the Holocaust. "It was very somber," said the con- ference's chairperson, Marnie Holtzman, of last year's vigil. "The whole meaning behind what we were doing was really felt, especially at night, when it's cold and it's quiet" The conference includes Wednesday night's Michael Bernstein Memorial Lecture featuring Ernest Heppner, a Jewish refugee who fled from Germany to Shanghai in 1939. "I am curious to see what he has to say because it's a new perspective that I don't think people are aware of,"said LSA junior Carrie Auster, a publicity co-chair for the conference. Auster said the Diag vigil is one of the easiest ways for students to take part in the conference. "I think the vigil is very important because you don't have to make the effort to '> go to it;" she said. t m The names read during the --S 24-hour period represent only a small fraction of the more than six million Holocaust vic- tims. The conference, which runs through April 4, will vary slightly from last year's conference, Holtzman said.. "This year we chose not to have a theme" she said. Organizers said the conference plays a vital role in helping students sort out the past. "It's important to know history, not only for the sake of understanding what happened but also for the sake of preventing it from hap- pening again" Holtzman said. Information Tables March 24 3:00 pm, Michigan Union Lobby 10:00 am - March 25 10:00 am - 3:00 pm, School of Education March 26 10:00 am - 3:00 pm, School of Natural Resources Film and Information Session March 26 7:00 pm, International Center FOR MORE .wij' INFORMATION CALL 1-800-424-8580 www.peacecorps.gov - R- ' 4 Ito All j %. L * what, aROUP MEETINGS 0 Allanza, 995-6732, Michigan Union, Pond Room, 7:30 p.m. O Black Undergraduate Law Association, Mass meeting 332- 6122, Michigan Union, Welker Room, 7 p.m. O Cleptomanlacs And Shoplifters Anonymous (CASA), Self-help roup, 913-6990, First Baptist Church, 512 E. Huron, Room 102, 7-8:30 p.m. O Domestic Violence Project Support Group for Lesbian Survivors, 973- 0242, 4100 Clark Rd., 6:30-8 p.m. U Dyke Discussion Group, East Quad, Second Cooley Lounge, 9 p.m. Q Frst CmItv 741-0987. GG Brown 's happening in Ann Arbor today Room 1360, 7-8 p.m. EVENTS U "Carl Levin," sponsored by College Democrats, Michigan Union, Pendleton Room, 7:30 p.m. Q "Cheerleading Tryouts," sponsored by The Cheer Team, Intramural Building, Gymnastics Room, 7-9 p.m. U "Darkness Into Light: The Re-emer- gence of Jewish Culture In Germany," sponsored by Hillel, Michigan Union, Art Lounge U "Emperors, Empresses, and Women Chieftains in Ming," Brown bag lunch lecture, sponsored by The Center for Chinese Studies. Lane by Hillel, School of Art and Design, Warren M. Robbins Center for Graduate Schools, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. U "Women Deans' Forum," sponsored by The Institute for Research in Women and Gender, Michigan Union, Pendleton Room, 4 p.m. Q "Vanishing Farm Architecture," Black and white photography exhibit, sponsored by Pierpont Commons Arts and Programs, Pierpont Commons, Gallery Wall SERVICES U Campus information Centers, 763- INFO, info@umich.edu, and www.umich.edu/-info on the t-.A 1,- As o I I