LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 22, 1997 - 3 i Oregon State fraternity settles $1Mlawsuit An Oregon State University fraternity as agreed to pay $1 million to settle a lawsuit filed by the parents of a student who was killed in a van accident after an off-campus fraternity party last year. The campus chapter of Pi Kappa Phi also agreed to ban alcohol at its house from Jan. 1 to June 8, 1998, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. The national fraternity said it saw no need to revoke the charter of the Oregon State chapter because the uni- lorsity had temporarily halted the fra- ternity's social activities and required members to do community service. Students rally for affirmative action at Berkeley Nearly 100 University of California Students camped out last week on a campus plaza to protest California's ban on using affirmative action in admissions. No students were arrested for camp- ing overnight on Sproul Plaza, although doing so is illegal, campus police officers said. The Chronicle of Higher Education teported that several UC schools have Already seen a sharp drop in applications *nd enrollment of minority students since the ban went into effect this year. Police search for ;missing student An Ohio University student has been missing since Oct. 14, when he was last seen working in his office. Anish Kumar, a 24-year-old comput- r science and electrical engineering graduate student, did not return home ist Tuesday night, The Post reported. ,The Athens Police Department is conducting the investigation surround- ing Kumar's disappearance with assis- tance from the OU Police Department. However, OU director of campus safe- ty Ted Jones said it appears Kumar left of his own free will. Kumar withdrew $450 from a bank achine on Oct. 13 or 14, but the bank ould not be identified, OU police said. This might indicate Kumar planned to leave, Jones said. Worms found at Illinois State deli The Tower Deli, a main attraction at Illinois State University's food courts, *advertently added a new topping to fixings bar: worms. In what was originally thought to be -n isolated incident, an ISU student found two worms in her sandwich on Sept.15. Since then, two more discov- eries of worms have been reported, The Daily Northwestern reported. ,.ISU Director of Media Relations Jay Groves called the incidents a mystery. Usually, the source of the problem is thefood supplier, he said. But the food *upplier provides all of ISU and many -ther Midwest schools with the same food, and only this food court has expe- rienced problems. t To ease fears about the situation, ."tl McClean County Health g partment declared the food court a model of sanitation, from storage to food handling. *Meningitis infects PSU student A Pennsylvania State University stu- dent is confirmed to be infected with meningitis, The Daily Collegian report- ed. Though the student, whose name was not released, is responding well to treatment, the infection is serious, said Dr. Margaret Spear, director of #niversity Health Services. Last year, PSU first-year student Andrew Karp died after contracting a similar meningococcal infection. In February, a student also contact- 1d a meningococal infection but later recovered after treatment. -Compiled from The Chronicle of ,,,,Iigher Education and the University Wire by Daily Staff Reporter Megan Exley. MSA resolves to support nursing clinic By Susan T. Port Daily Staff Reporter In hopes of increasing student awareness of the importance of the North Campus Nursing Clinic, the Michigan Student Assembly passed a resolu- tion in support of the center last night. Carlos Ford, an MSA representative from the North Campus Resident Council, said the clinic has a history of being overlooked by administra- tors housed on Central Campus. Ford stressed the need for the University to realize how many stu- dents and their family members are treated by the medical clinic. "They are the primary source of health care to people who live in family housing," said Ford, a Medical first-year student. "Family housing has been disregarded, largely ignored." Ford said the clinic is a valuable resource for students and their spouses who live in North Campus family housing. Many students who have children do not have the time or the budgetary means to get to the University Health Center, located on Central Campus, he said. "For some, even though they pay for UHS they aren't able to use because of transportation con- straints," said MSA Vice President Olga Savic. Students living in family housing pay for access to UHS services through their tuition bills. The clinic on North Campus, however, charges inde- pendently for services. "If a student uses the North Campus Clinic they shouldn't pay out of their own pocket," Ford said. "If you are a student already living in family hous- ing you are paying chunks to the clinic. The clinic should be considered a H IS resource." NMSA President Mike Nagrant said the resolu- tion recognizes the need to make sure the clinic continues to provide services. "I think that the services they provide are very v aluable," Nagrant said. "We need to have a dia- logue with the administration to make sure these services are provided to students on North Campus." Ford said funding for the clinic is insufficient to ensure the services meet the needs of family hous- ing residents. "IThey are not getting enough funding," Ford said. Nagrant said the assembly is exploring options that may help provide the center with additional funding. "I know they are struggling," Nagrant said. "We are going to look at different v:enues and see how we can support them through the division of stu- dents affairs" MSA Engineering Rep. lark Dub said the Universitv nceds to understand the importance of the center to those Iamilies living on North Campus. "It's important that e maintain quality services for our constituents living on North Campus, Dub said. "People need to be made aware of the situa- tion. If there is a problem, it needs to be fixed. The plug must not be pulled." Savic said the clinic offers services to "a lot of non-traditional students who sometimes are over- looked." "For many students the Nursing Clinic is the only medical clinic nearby and readily available" she said. Construction deaths few and far between in A2 By Carly Southworth For the Daily Trends in Michigan indicate an increasing rate of fatalities tied to con- struction work. But despite the constant presence of construction projects at the University, major accidents remain few and far between. "We have been very fortunate. There has only been one fatality in the 17 years that I have been here," said Tom Schlaff, director of con- struction management at the University. That fatality was the result of a fall - the most common cause of construc- tion site deaths. Twelve of the 30 deaths that have occurred in the state this year have been caused by falls, while eight involved being crushed by an object and five resulted from being struck by something. The number of construction fatalities in the state is already higher in 1997 than it has been in nearly two decades. Including the most recent fatality that occurred last week in Kent County, there have been 30 construction site deaths since January. With few fluctuations from year to year, construction deaths have tapered off statewide since the mid-1960s. The former average of 44 deaths per year dropped to near the teens by the early '90s. "Over two decades, the general trend was decreasing almost into the teens. That is why this year's turnaround is so dramatic," said Douglas Earle, director of Michigan's Consumer and Industry Services Bureau of Safety and Regulation. Schlaff said the state conducts safe- ty inspections on an irregular sched- ule. "(The Occupational Safety and Health Administration), a division of the Department of Labor, conducts inspections of construction work on a sporadic basis," Schlaff said. In response to the year's fatalities, MIOSHA has now authorized overtime for these inspections. "We haven't had a problem with regulations," said Randy Harvey, a construction worker installing the M on the Diag. He said, however, that the enforcement from OSHA is weak. The University is not in charge of most worker training and safety. Contractors that oversee University construction projects are responsible for supervising safety measures in accordance with the Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Act. The contractors work closely with insurance companies to ensure mea- sures are met. The University also conducts its own electrical and mechanical inspections to make sure completed projects meet safety standards. Schlaff said there have been a few cases in which these inspec- tions actually have saved the lives of workers. Schlaff said there are no clear expla- nations for this year's rise in statewide construction deaths. "There is a complexity in the indus- try that makes it hard to examine," Schlaff said. He said that the increase is "We haven't had a problem with regulations"' - Randy Harvey Construction worker not surprising because construction volume is high and increasing. Richard Mee, chief of construction safety for MIOSHA, said not enough data is captured to analyze the source of this year's increase. Inexperience -of workers is a possible cause that is being considered, he said. But the average age of construction site victims is 40-49, Mee said. Mee said the data contradicts the idea of inexperience because workers at those ages have generally been in the industry for a long time. One of MIOSHA's concerns is vio- lation of safety standards and regula- tions. A higher percentage of this year's deaths involve citations for such violations. Only three of 30 deaths this year did not involve a violation. To address these deaths and help decrease the numbers in the future, MIOSHA has invited representatives from major construction companies to meet Monday to get informatiin, answers and feedback. MIOSHA also is reaching out to employees in hopes of raising awareness. p "Safety is an important element-to success, Schlaff said. JOHN KRAFT/Daily At the International Center yesterday, Mayor Ingrid Sheldon and SNRE Prof. Bunyan Bryant celebrated the 52nd anniversary of the United Nations. SNRE Po. .speaks to kikofU.N.Da By Steve Horwitz Daily Staff Reporter SNRE Prof. Bunyan Bryant, fresh from an international conference in Australia on environmental justice and global ethics, kicked off United Nations Day yesterday with a speech about his experiences. Bryant outlined his speech by talking about the five themes he learned at the recent conference. He said the development of third world countries could lead to increased environmental threats. A paramount concern to environ- mental justice advocates is "the dis- mantling of environmental protec- tion laws as developing nations begin to industrialize," Bryant said. He also said nation-states in devel- oping nations have been abdicating sonie of their power to big business. This is also dangerous because "one reason governments came into power was to prevent corporations from growing out of control," he said. Such shifts could cause "a runaway market with no control." The world's environmental balance also is affected by the strength of many industrial nations, Bryant said. "Global restructuring contributes to the growth and development (of industrializing nations) and at the same time contributes to the green- house effect," Bryant said. The United States has six percent of the world's population, but creates 30- 40 percent of the world's pollution. Serious environmental threats would increase if developing nations emit pollution at similar rates, Bryant said. Changing eating habits can coun- teract these changes. Bryant said peo- ple should eat "ethically without sacri- ficing our quality of life." For exam- ple, cows are inefficient producers and pose some resource problems. "Just eat the grain. Don't feed it to the cows and then eat the cows," he said, noting that it takes 15 pounds of grain to generate one pound of beef for human consumption. Some audience members disagreed with Bryant's assessment. LSA junior Matt Harris said not everyone needs to take such drastic measures. "I don't think that in orderto save the environment, everyone has to be a vegetarian," Harris said. Inequality in environmental justice needs to be overcome, Bryant argued. He said industrial nations have stricter waste-disposal laws than developing nations. As a result, many companies ship waste to third world nations, which dispose of it danger- ously. Bryant said that in some coun- tries, waste disposal is a critical issue. "We are producing lots of waste in this country and trying to move it into third world communities in our country, or shipping them to third world com- munities across the pond," Bryant said. The United Nations should play a critical role in combating such multi- national problems, Bryant said. "We need to make the U.N. more effective. They have a lot of moral prin- ciples, but its hard for them to imple- ment these principles because they don't have much power," Bryant said. Finally, Bryant stressed the impor- tance of bringing about nonviolent change in the world. Amy Heinrich, a pastor for the First Presbyterian Church of Ann Arbor, said she enjoyed Bryant's speech, adding that the United States is the benefactor of an unfair situation. "We are on the upper end of an unjust equation," Heinrich said. "I would have liked more direction - how can we be more involved; what can we do as concerned global citi- zens," Heinrich said. The speech was sponsored by the Church Women United and the Ecumenical Center as part of their International Forum Luncheon. -' i 1i" L QALLKA What's happening in Ann Arbor today INFO, info@umich.edu, and www.umich.edu/-info on the EVENTS FREE MOVIE POSTERS ..................:.:.:.... i z ' ' <>> I 1