I LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 9, 1997 - 3A 10 i Symposium to address genoncs research today Recent discoveries related to the -tiuman Genome Project as well as other genomic research will be present- .,d in a genomics symposium today. The goal of genomics research is to :determine the position and function of all genes for a particular species. Of the few organisms whose genomes already have been mapped, humans are not one of them. However, a number of University researchers ve predicted that the Human enome Project may be completed as early as 2010. The talks begin at 8:15 a.m. and con- clude at 4:30 p.m. All lectures/discus- sions will be conducted in the Dow Auditorium of the Towsley Center at the Medical School. Real, 3D image echnology to be opic of lecture The future of holography is the 'sub- ject of a lecture being given by EECS professor Emmet Leith this afternoon. The lecture, titled "Image Formation through Highly Scattering Media using Electronic Holography," will being at 4:30 p.m. in room 1200 of the EECS building. lesearcher to ',talk about the origins of sex The notion that sex in animals evolved as a result of parasite evasion is controversial - so the Institute of Social Research is expecting a large turnout for this afternoon's presenta- on, titled "The Parasite Theory of exuality: The Current Position." Proponents of the hypothesis con- tend that physiological differences between the sexes make infection less likely in one than the other, ensuring the ultimate survival of the species. Visiting zoologist William Hamilton of Oxford University will deliver the special lecture in room 1324 of East all at 4 pm. Id tools can be used for current veseach Jerry Urquhart of the Center for ,Great Lakes and Aquatic Sciences will talk about gleaning information from the environment in a lecture titled ginswering ecological questions with aleoecological methods." Urquhart will discuss the growing repertoire of tools - usually used to ,reveal the ecology of the past - that rcn be used to study current ecological conditions. Urquhart's lecture will take place on Tuesday, in room 2003 of the Natural Sciences Building at noon. Giant extinction vent rivaled dinosaurs end Paleontologist and author Richard ;x amback will discuss the single most -Bbtense extinction event in Earth's his- jory next Tuesday. The Permian Extinction, as it is P lled by scientists, marks the end of the Paleozoic era 250 million years ago When reptiles were dominant. Many scientists believe the Permian Extinction was grander in scale than even the Cretaceous/Tertiary extinc- tions that wiped out the dinosaurs about 65 million years ago. Bamback, of Virginia Polytechnic , Ipstitute, will deliver his lecture at 8 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter David Bricker Shooting victim at EMU in good condition By Stephanie Hepburn Daily Staff Reporter YPSILANTI - Aaron Patterson, a 25-year-old Eastern Michigan University sophomore who was shot twice in the chest Monday, was released from St. Joseph's Hospital yesterday at 12:49 p.m. Patterson was released in good con- dition. EMU spokesperson Pamela Young said police believe Patterson was target- ed specifically. "Police believe the victim may have been acquanted with the assailants," Young said. "The investigation is ongo- ing, tips keep coming in, but not every- thing is concrete yet.' Young was shot outside the Margaret Wise residence hall on Eastern Michigan's campus. "All we know is that Patterson was approached or just shot by two sus- pects," Young said. "Patterson ran or walked after being shot, and someone drove him off in the car that he had been previously driving, a Ford, white Expedition Jeep." According to John McAuliffe, chief of EMU's Department of Public Safety, police are looking for two suspects who fired between two and five shots at Patterson, two of which entered Patterson's chest. The suspects were both male. One is described as 6-foot-2 with a thin build. He was wearing blue jeans, a blue shirt and baseball cap. The second suspect was 170 pounds, wearing a white tank top and black shorts. The assailants fled on foot. State police arrived on the scene with a tracking dog, but were unable to locate the suspects. "Patterson decided to leave the UIniversity Tuesday. We are unaware of the reasons behind this decision," Young said. Eastern Michigan's security levels have maintained their normal status since the shooting. "We have a strong safety program here at Eastern Michigan," Young said. "This was an isolated incident and that made aill the difterence. Something like this 11asn't happened in six years. This is not the norm." First-yier student Mike Papsidero said that t wo days after the shooting, the campus ha calmed down. "Everything is back to normal. There isn't even more security than before the shooting," Papsidero said. "People talked about it on Monday, but no one is really talking about it anymore, which is weird. ... but so many people have other things going on that this incident didn't have the biggest impact." First-year student Jennifer Cantwell said she was shocked by the shooting. "It wasn't dark. It happened before six," Cantwell said. "I still feel pretty safe. There are lights everywhere. Police are always around." A candlelight vigil took place yester- day outside an eatery near the scene of the shooting. Students said they have no tolerance for the violence. Antione Sharpless, a vigil organiz- er, said that words of police and the presence of faculty at the vigil reas- sured students that they are safe on campus. "DPS reassured us that this was an isolated incident," Sharpless said. "Violence is not just limited to a certain group of people. EMU has zero toler- ance to violence." Groups denounce domestic violence By Neal-Lepsetz For the Daily Sixty-five white T-shirts hung on a clothesline and gently swayed in the wind in front of the Ann Arbor City Hall and Police Department yesterday. Each shirt represented a woman in Michigan who was killed by domestic violence in 1996. The clothesline wrapped around a tree, under which lay a stone commemorating the "The Great Peace March" of 1980 and dubbing it as "The Peace Tree." The shirts were included in a nation- al event called "Stop All Violence Everywhere" Day, sponsored by the American Medical Association Alliance to combat a major health crisis - violence. Focusing on domestic violence in particular, the organization hopes to increase awareness and the options available for victims. "Maybe this will be the first step to ameliorating the situation," said Zena Brovins, former president of the Washtenaw Medical Society Alliance. Pamphlets were handed out and placed in women's restrooms and doc- tor's waiting rooms around Ann Arbor. The issue hit close to home recently with the murder of LSA senior Tamara Williams by her boyfriend. According to statistics compiled by the AMAA, three to four million women are bat- tered each year by husbands and part- ners, making it the most common cause of injury to women in the United States. One woman passing by the T-shirts told her story of domestic violence. Ten years ago, Dawn Hester moved back to her hometown in Michigan from Colorado to escape an abusive marriage. Hester said her husband was a "con- trol freak" and didn't allow her to have friends. Constantly getting fat lips, black eyes, and even held at gunpoint, Hester said she snuck out to prevent him from finding her. "It still affects me," Hester said. "I SAPAC Continued from Page 1A the keynote speaker and student coordi- nator of peer education for SAPAC. DeVaney, an LSA senior, said working with survivors is challenging, but worth the effort. "It's different to do this kind of work because you don't see immediate results - you have to be committed long term," DeVaney said. "I'm hoping the vigil will remind people that domestic violence is an ongoing problem." In her speech to the crowd, DeVaney drew on her own experiences to encour- age others to "end the silence.' "I remember SAPAC reaching out to me ... it was like the bursting of a dam"' she said. DeVaney told the crowd to "never ever ignore violence." "We must reclaim the silence as some- thing ... powerful and chosen;' she said. Interim SAPAC Director Sarah Heuser was the opening speaker. "We invite the spirit of those lost in the struggle, the spir- it of those still involved with the struggle, and spirit of those who will struggle" never experienced violence until I got married." Hester said she still experi- ences sleeping problems and gets scared if anyone raises their voice at her. Hester stayed with her parents for awhile. She got a divorce and moved to Ann Arbor when she realized her hus- band also had moved to her Michigan hometown. Hester now does data entry for the Ann Arbor Police Department, where she sees people every day arrested for domestic violence. "I wish there was something I could do," Hester said. "There's a lot of us out there." Hester later discovered that her ex- husband remarried and was beating his second wife as well. "The part that gets me angry (is) the women that don't get away... You can always get away," she said. "I'm just sorry that one girl who died last week couldn't get away" Among the resources handed out was a list of agencies that provide assistance to individuals dealing with domestic violence. In Ann Arbor, places like SAFE House and the SOS Crisis Center provide counseling and shelter to victims. In addition to violence against women, "SAVE Today" participants tried to make people aware of the amount of child abuse cases in the nation. According to AMAA statistics, nearly two million children are abused and neglected each week - 1,000 die as a result of the abuse. The AMAA, consisting of physi- cians' spouses, works to support and raise funds for community health pro- jects. Beginning in 1995, "SAVE Today" occurs on the second Wednesday of October and is part of a month-long campaign against violence. "I'm glad to see all the exposure," Hester said before she left. "We didn't have this where I'm from." Heuser said. Ken Blochowski, LGBTA interim director, spoke about the lack of domestic violence progratns and cited new statis- tics on violence in the LGBT community. "It could have been all too easy for us to ignore this opportunity given the opportunities we've had together in recent weeks," Blochowski said. "It is especially important for us to recognize Domestic Violence Awareness Month, and we are pleased to have played a part in that." Lore Rogers, legal advice director at SAFE House, reminded the crowd that their "awareness of domestic violence was tragically increased two weeks ago" with the death of LSA senior Tamara Williams. Rogers talked about typical abuses and excuses, as well as differing counseling options. Many in attendance said the vigil was the first they had attended. "One of my friends is in SAPAC and I wanted to support what they stand for," said LSA senior Roger Huang. "(The vigil) is something different I haven't experienced." I V2 LOWUS BROWN/Daily Colleen Mulligan looks at a "now hiring" sign hung outside Brueggers Bagels on North UniversIty Ave Many Ann Arbor businesses are looking for help, and a low local unemployment rate is making employees scarce. " b unempoyment hits 2 perCent L. By Peter Meyers Daily Staff Repo. ter Among Ann Arbor's coffee shops, book stores, T-shirt shops and restau- rants, the owners are hiring. Unemployment in Ann Arbor dropped to a record-breaking 2.1 per- cent in September. In fact, local employers are having trouble filling their open job positions. "It's a double-edged sword," said Nathan Voght, a site selection analyst with the Washtenaw Development Council. "We're obviously happy that the economy is doing so well. It's a problem in the sense of finding employees." Economists generally agree that the ideal rate of unemployment is about 5 percent. Businesses around Ann Arbor are especially having problems finding part-time workers. "Everybody is short. It certainly is a job-seeker's mar- ket," said Thomas Heywood, director of the State Street Association. Vinod Sharma, general manager of Bruegger's Bagel Bakery, said "stu- dents would rather eat than work at lunch." In addition to the enormous "Bruegger's Fresh Bagel Bakery: Now Hiring!" sign that hangs in front of his shop, Sharma said he has gone to great lengths to attract more stu- dent workers. Starting wages at Bruegger's have risen to $6.50 or $7, he said, well above the minimum wage of $4.75 an hour. Voght said that wages are up throughout the area. "You can expect to pay (employees)10 to 20 percent more in this county than you would somewhere else," he said. Sharma also tried to make his busi- ness appealing to student workers in other ways. "Parking is always an issue," Sharma said. Because of this, Bruegger's now maintains an employees-only parking lot. He also tries to be flexible with scheduling, he said, so students can work their jobs around classes. But some students still are looking for work. Engineering sophomore Amanda Paige is searching, but has- n't yet found a job she wants. "I'm looking for one that will fit around my schedule, that's not exces- sively labor intensive, but not where you sit on your butt for hours and hours," Paige said. Heywood said Ann Arbor has some unusual conditions that make finding workers difficult. Most employment is in the retail and ser- vice industries, which requires a lot of "human capital," he said. This increases the labor demand. Heywood also said Ann Arbor is unique because University students made up most of the labor pool. "You don't have a lot of part-time help because you don't have a lower socio- economic class" he said. Economics Prof. Charles Brown said ultra-low unemployment hits some businesses harder than others. "Fast food places are used to high turnover," Brown said, adding that these businesses worry less about their employees being lured away by. other employers. "But if you're hiring one person in a context where you're going to be training them for a period of time, then things get worse." Brown also characterized the low labor market as a place where the, overall stakes of being in business are higher. "On the one hand, it becomes more; difficult to produce a product of good quality, but the rewards for doing so increase" Brown said. a a GROUP MEETINGS U Black Undergraduate Law Association, Mass meeting, 327- 4032, Michigan Union, Parker Room, 7 p.m. U Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, 647-6857, Modern Languages Building, Lecture Room 2,7 p.m. 0 MIchigan Animal Rights Societ,Mass meeting, 741-0353, Michigan Union, Pendelton Room, 8 p.m. U University Aido, 668-0464, Intramural Sports Building, Course sponsored by YoHA, Michigan League, Michigan Room, 12-1 p.m. Q "Depression Screening," sponsored by The Huron Valley Consultation Center, 2750 Carpenter Rd., Suite 1, , Room 3512, 10 a.m. U "Depression Screening and Information Session," sponsored by Counselling and Psychological Services, Michigan League, First Floor, 10 a.m. 5 p.m. U "Exhibit of African American Gardens," sponsored by The School League, Trotter House, 7 p.m. U "Slavery and Brutality in Michigan Prisons," sponsored by The Anti- imperialist League, Modern Languages Bui ding, Room B108, :10 p.m. U "Study Abroad Fair," sponsored by The Office of international Programs, Michigan Union Ballroom, 4-6 p.m. SERVICES U Campus Information Centers, 763- INFO, info@umich.edu, and I