LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 21, 1997-- 3 Officials snag NBD robbery euspect Friday Ann Arbor Police Department offi- cials say they have nabbed the man who robbed the East William Street branch of NBD bank on Oct. 1. Richard Lee Housewright was arrested by AAPD detectives on Friday and arraigned on Saturday. Police say they were aided by anonymous tips from people who saw the security cam- photo of the incident and recog- zed Housewright. A preliminary hearing is set for Oct. 2. Blind Pig robbed on Thursday The owner of the Blind Pig was alert- ed by an alarm company that his busi- jness's alarm was blaring early Thursday roming. By the time the owner arrived the business, three suspects had fled, according to AAPD reports. The Blind Pig is located at the corner of First and East Liberty Streets. The man later discovered from the hidden security camera that the sub- jects were carrying items when they left the Blind Pig at around 3 a.m., including an unidentified object and a stolen briefcase. .;The incident is being investigated as *'larceny, according to AAPD reports. Various items stolen from local businesses Three local businesses were broken ,nto since a week ago today, AAPD reports state. AAPD officials do not believe that the incidents were related. Minor damage was caused to Big City Bakery, Arbor Hills Salon and Activate Cellular. Big City Bakery on Miller Street was entered Saturday, sometime around 7 am., AAPD reports state. A circular saw was taken from the bakery, as well as loose change. AAPD officers say the suspect's name is a familiar one to the Special Investigations Unit. The Arbor Hills Salon on South ate Street was entered Friday by one or more suspects, sometime between 4 a m. and 5 a.m., AAPD reports state. The unknown suspects smashed the building's front doors in order to enter, but did not take anything from the business. About $95 was stolen from an Activate Cellular cash box last Tuesday or Wednesday, AAPD reports state. Police reports state that the suspect or tspects pried open a cabinet door in order to reach the cash box. Currently AAPD has no suspects in the incident. Boy missing, found at bus stop A missing person report was filed with DPS on Thursday morning by a woman in Northwood V family hous- ing who could not locate her six-year- old son. ' The woman stated that her son had been sitting on the front porch waiting for his father to emerge from the apart- ment when he disappeared. The same day, bus drivers saw the young boy walking toward the Diag and then standing outside of Angell ' all. DPS officers met up with the bby at the CC Little bus stop, where the boy said that he was going to the vnagogue on Hill and Oakland streets pray. Man almost hit by angry driver .The officers returned the boy to his home, where he mci up with his mother. A man called the Department of Public Safety last Thursday morning to report that a female driver came close to running him over. * The caller told DPS officers that as he crossed Palmer Drive near the Fletcher parking structure, the woman "waved her hand in anger" as she almost crashed into him. The woman then proceeded to drive to the Fletcher Street carport, DPS reports state. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Alice Robinson. Public Health alumni gather to discuss worldwide issues yam. By Heather Wlggin Daily Staff Reporter Public Health alumni from around the country and as far away as Kenya convened Friday to hear panel discus- sions and presentations on current issues in the field. "It's really hard to think of an area that's more exciting than public health," Public Health Dean Noreen Clark said in her welcome statement. "We're always struggling to deal with newly emerging infectious viruses." The visit marked the second annual Alumni Day at the School of Public Health. "Rather than inviting alumni back for a dinner, we want to showcase the best of the school for them," said Director of Alumni Relations Laura Rosenthal. A poster session featured the work of University public health experts. Studies covered a broad range of topics, from E. coli to depression in older women with heart disease. Dental hygiene Prof. Joan McGowan said she hoped her poster on chewing tobacco would increase awareness of a "gross, addictive, yucky" habit that is especially com- mon with American athletes. McGowan's objectives include "break(ing) the connection between baseball and spit tobacco" and "get- ting players and owners together on this subject." McGowan said dental hygienists should talk to every patient about tobac- co use. "We are gung-ho about getting the message across (that spit tobacco is not safer than cigarettes and causes can- cer);' McGowan said. The field of public health encom- passes more than the study of specific diseases, said keynote speaker John Henshaw, who presented information about "corporate profits and environ- mental responsibility." The human race is growing exponen- tially, and "if present birthrates contin- ue, our population will double in less than 40 years," Henshaw said. "The most important issue is we're going to deplete life-sustaining resources." Reducing waste, increasing quality of life, accepting capitalism and realizing that humans are not willing to sacrifice enough for a greater good were all chal- lenges Henshaw exposed and discussed. "The next revolution (is to) take advantage of biological systems," Henshaw said. Genetics is another hot topic in pub- lic health circles. Internal medicine Prof. Elizabeth Petty tackled problems PAUL TALANIAN/Daily Dr. Elizabeth Petty, assistant professor of internal medicine and human genetics, speaks In the Public Health 11 building as part of Alumni Day on Friday. in genetic testing. Her ethical questions such as, "Can anyone force anyone else to be tested, and who decides?" sparked interesting debates to accompany rela- tively new genetic technology. For example, there are psychological issues that can be agitated when one finds they have a genetic disease with- out a cure, or pacified when one's fears of genetic disease are calmed by nega- tive test results. "It is important to understand value systems and moral systems of genetic testing;" Petty said. l Tl'f lrll 'I ! i oaactso- xa. Council delays vote on pollution BRYAN MCLELLAN/Daily SSA Junior Mae Clark speaks with Cuban painter Rocio Garcia at her exhibit titled "Cuban Geishas." Her work is on display in Rackham's East Gallery through Oct. 28. Cuban artist brings innovati e paintingrs to Rdackham 71dis-p&mlay By Peter Meyers Daily Staff Reporter Ann Arbor City Council decided to once again postpone voting on a per- mit that would allow the Pall/Gelman Sciences corporation to continue injecting decontaminated ground water into Ann Arbor City sewers. Councilmember Chris Kolb (D-5th Ward) proposed the delay so that the legal wording of the permit could be perfected. "They're word-smithing now. That all has to be done right," said Pat Ryan of the Gelman Remediation Project, an intergovernmental advisory group that is overseeing the cleanup of the groundwater contamination by Pall/Gelman Sciences medical waste. Ryan felt comfortable with the delay caused by the proposals' rewording. "There's nothing being held up or damaged because of this," Ryan said. Spalding Clark, Scio Township commissioner, said Gelman Sciences (now called Pall/Gelman Sciences) was for several decades disposing of 1,4 dioxane by dumping it. "They were literally spraying it on their lawns, Clark said. This dioxane, which is carcinogenic, has since contaminated the Scio Township groundwater. Contaminated water must be pumped up and treated. The dioxane is a byproduct from the manufacture of the Pall/Gelman med- ical filters. The contaminated aquifer has been moving toward Ann Arbor. The clos- est point is now at the corner of Dexter and Allison Roads. While Pall/Gelman has been developing more permanent methods of disposal, the company has temporarily been injecting treated water into Ann Arbor City sewers. "Gelman has to pay the sewage dis- posal rate, so this can get pretty pricey," said Ann Arbor Water Utilities Director Frank Porta. Porta said the sewage disposal rate in Ann Arbor is $1.97 per 100 cubic feet, which amounts to about 750 gal- lons. At present, Pall/Gelman is inject- ing the water into the sewers at a rate of 80 to 100 gallons per-minute. Porta estimates that the entire aquifer would "There's nothing being held up or damaged because of this" - Pat Ryan Gelman Remediation Project take 10 years to dispose of at this rate. The permit would allow Pall/Gelman to use the sewers at a lower rate. The City of Ann Arbor has been requiring that Pall/Gelman treat the water to the point where the dioxane presence is undetectable. "At this point, they're destroying all of the compound. They're discharging clean water into the sewers" Ryan said. But officials from local govern- ments have complained .that Pall/Gelman is not running a satisfap- tory cleanup. "Gelman never really spent the time to make it work right;" Clark said. He added that Pall/Gelman was uninter- ested in devoting its resources to utido- ing the damage, and hasn't hired enough experts or hasn't bought the best equipment to solve the problem. Ryan said the city in the past has been too lenient with Pall/Gelman as it conducts its cleanup. "The city has been extremely coop- erative with this company," Ryan said. She said she blames this cooperative attitude for the expansion of the conta- mination into new wells and aquifers. Ryan and Clark said that Pall/Gelman has in recent years ibeen delaying the cleanup operation by con- testing ordinances in court. "Gelman has taken a sort of hostile stance" Clark said. Ryan said that Pall/Gelman is a company that for years "has preferred to litigate rather than clean up." This makes the wording of the er- mit much more important, Ryan Said. Clark said that the cleanup could be done in one or two decades, but added, "At the rate they're moving, it won't happen in my lifetime." By Asheley Riley For the Daily Illustrating feminist and gay alle- gories, Rocio Garcia's paintings fea- ture subjects that include a beheaded Geisha and a half-human, half- giraffe figure standing in a men's room. Sponsored by the Latino/a American and Caribbean Studies Department, artist Garcia's work has been widely exhibited in Cuba and Spain. Garcia, who was born in Cuba, will have her work on display in Rackham's East Gallery through Oct. 28. The exhibit comments on the rise of prostitution in Cuba, which according to anthropology Prof. Ruth Behar, is becoming "the Bankok of the Caribbean." Many of Garcia's paintings por- tray the Japanese symbol of the Geisha, who by definition is "a woman of artistic talent" The Geisha is used as a vehicle to portray the new meaning of sexuality in Havana. Two paintings in particular, "The Maja Geisha" and "Geisha Samurai" are part of a series show- ing a naked Geisha lying on a bed with a sword between her legs. The next painting shows the same woman, who has committed suicide by cutting her own head off. All of the work in Garcia's exhibit portrays swords, which is a symbolic way to refer to prostitution. The paintings are dramatic, and often violent. "Her work is wonderful," said Behar, who introduced the exhibit. "Every painting in this exhibit is dazzling, dramatic and disturbingly beautiful - great feminist work." Garcia's painting "The Dream" refers to gay sexuality. The paint- ing depicts a nude man with the head of a giraffe, who according to Behar is "somewhat of a voyeur, the one who wants to see every- thing in kind of a vulgar fashion." The giraffe-headed man stands in a men's bathroom in the company of two naked men. "The paintings are really interest- ing and rather shocking," said Leslie Davis, who works in the Office of Academic and Multicultural Affairs, one of the exhibit's sponsors. "They reflect a shocking reality." Rackham student Toby Barnes said he appreciates the source of Garcia's work. "I'm from Miami and I can understand where she's coming from," Barnes said. Garcia considers herself to be one of the first artists to express these kinds of issues in a symbolic way. "I'm happy about it. A lot of people have come, a lot of gay people and young people especially," Garcia said through a translator. Garcia's two-month visit to the United States was sponsored by a Distinguished Visiting International Artist-in-Residence Fellowship at the University. She will leave at the end of the month to show her work at an exhibit in Spain. Behar is presenting Garcia and her work to one of her classes on Cuba tomorrow. It will be held at Rackham on the third floor of the East Gallery from 2-5 p.m. The title of this exhibition is "Cuba and Its Diaspora." Garcia's work also is now being displayed at the Common Language Bookstore, located on Fourth Street. L Meeting to focus on domestic violence DETROIT (AP) -Animal cruelty investigators and child protective ser- vices workers will be some of the new faces at the third statewide meeting on domestic violence. The relationship between domestic abusers, abused children and animal cru- elty has become a focus of study in recent years. "We're finally linking this all up," Lynda Baker, director of the Wayne County Coordinating Council to Prevent Domestic Violence, which is organizing the event, told the Detroit Free Press. About 300 people will attend the meeting tomorrow in Detroit. It is not open to the public. "For several years, we've known that many of the men who batter their wives and girlfriends are also abusing the children," Baker said. "The family pet is often a part of this. We're finally real- izing we have to coordinate our efforts. We can't treat one problem independent of the other," she said recently. Services for abused women and children have been "separate in terms of response, even though the majority of shelter residents are children and even though the child-protective ser- vices are working primarily with mothers and their children," said Jeffrey Edleson, a professor at the University of Minnesota School of Social Work. who will speak at the gathering. Studies show 30 to 60 percent of bat- tered women are mothers to abused or neglected children, Edleson said. S77 ::": ,;, ;: -, ; :> (Z:L K.IIIIL . What's happening in Ann Arbor today GROUP MEETINGS EVENTS U Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley Lobby, 8 p.m.- 1:30 a.m.