LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 14, 1998 - 3 CRIMELO AAPD officers Investigate sexual assault The Ann Arbor Police Department .cilled the Department of Public Safety on Wednesday morning to request assistance in locating a possi- ble witness a sexual assault, DPS reports state. The assault allegedly occurred on the corner of South University Avenue and State Street. AAPD and DPS units were unsuccessful at locating the witness. AAPD Sgt. Mike Logey said he has no further information about the assault. He could not report the details sur- rounding the incident and did not say whether the witness or suspect has been located. Student arrested for marijuana possession DPS received a call on Saturday reporting a South Quad Residence Hall resident was using marijuana. When the suspect saw DPS offi- cers arrive at the scene, he fled down the stairs toward the back of the building. The suspect was appre- hended on the Monroe Street side of the residence hall. He was arrested and charged with possession of mar- ijuana. After officers apprehended the suspect, the caller told the 911 oper- ator that an irate man was threaten- ing to hit him inside a South Quad room. The operator could hear the potential assailant swearing in the background. Officers returned to the scene to take an assault report. Reports do not state whether charges were filed. Library staff foils theft attempt A Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library employee called DPS to report an attempted larceny, reports state. The employee said the library staff were sent to meet with the suspect, a *University graduate student, after an alarm went off at the door. The student was caught exiting the library with sev- eral pages torn out of two different journals. The caller said the suspect admitted she took the papers without permission. The suspect apologized for the theft and library employees told DPS they did not wish to press charges. Pop tart catches fire in E. Quad DPS received a call on Friday to report there was a fire in an East Quad 'Residence Hall room. The caller told the 911 operator that a pop tart was burning in his toaster oven. The caller said a lot of smoke was *resent in the room and the smoke detector had sounded. Police reporting to the scene said the fire was extin- ggJshed and the smoke was cleared. Reports do not indicate whether the om or the toaster sustained perma- , eht damage. ;No police reports was filed. *Man dies on South Forest St. A DPS officer found a homeless per- sop unconscious on Friday on the 500 _ block of South Forest Street, reports state. The officer said the person was not breathing and had no pulse. The 911 operator notified Huron Valley ,Ambulance and the medical examin- Der. HVA said the man was dead on arrival. --The medical examiner said the death -was from natural causes. Reports do not state the man's iden- tity or whether he has any surviving family members. -- Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jason Stoffer Archer announces Detroit's '98-'99 budget DETROIT (AP) - Mayor Dennis Archer pro- posed a "tight as a drum" budget yesterday that included a surplus of just under $1 million and an upgrade of the city's antiquated computer system. Archer's 1998-99 proposed budget is $2.461 bil- lion, or $102 million more than the current budget - a 4 percent increase from 1997-98 levels. "Given the challenges that we faced this year, beginning with the devastating impact of the tor- nadoes that hit our city just two days into this fis- cal year, this is remarkable feat indeed," Archer told the City Council. "This is clear evidence that we have made great strides in establishing fiscal discipline and respect for our budget constraints." Archer said that while the $911,000 surplus is good news, it means extra care has to be taken for the rest of the current fiscal year. To put the "tightness of this number in perspec- tive," Archer said a Detroit family with an income of $30,000, each week on the day before payday, would have a total of 25 cents. The 1995-96 budget included about $18.5 mil- lion in surplus funds. But amounts have been shrinking since then. Last year's surplus was $1 million, said Ed Hannan, city budget director. Under the budget proposal, Archer said he added only where the city must meet contractual obligations, such as the computer upgrade, where additional non-general funding is available. Archer presented his plan to the council after an Easter weekend that included golf, mass and some relaxation. The relaxed weekend came after Archer spent a week doing some intense lobbying for the City Council to approve three casino site agree- ments reached with developers. The council approved the agreements and the proposals now go to the state Gaming Control Board. Yesterday's budget included "not one red cent" for casino development, Archer said. Possible additional revenues from casinos also would be an extra that was not yet included on the budget as revenue, he said. Maryann Mahaffey, president pro tem of the council, approved of the budget plan, saying it looked good on paper. "Well, it certainly is a positive one. The devil will be in the details," she said. Mahaffey said that while the plan included step- ping up equipment replacement in the fire depart- ment, she was disappointed it made no mention of adding another police precinct. Archer's plan calls for the absorption of 60 police officers which will no longer be funded by grant funds. "While this produces a strain on a bare-bones budget, we must not back away from our commit- ment to maintain a safe city," he said, The budget includes $37 million for special technology efforts, such as dealing with the year 2000 and computerizing departments and facilitat- ing links with other departments. He said nearly all agencies wil! be receiving some upgrades or improvements in the technology area. Giving it a whirl House panel recommends bills to curb school violence A 13-bill package would spend $15 billion to crack down on violence in state public schools. LANSING (AP) - Everyone from parents to prosecutors have a role to play in combating school violence, according to a report released yesterday. A 13-bill package aimed at protecting students who want to learn while getting tougher with students who don't was outlined in the report. The bills summarize much of what a House education subcommittee heard dur- ing nine public hearings it held statewide on school vio- lence earlier this year. The bills encourage things such as having school dis- tricts draw up codes of conduct and policies for dealing with violence. They also put money into alternative edu- cation programs for troubled youths expelled from their local schools. Starting the alternative program would cost roughly $15 million a year. Other funding mentioned in the plan includes $75 million for an intervention and prevention program for juvenile violence and crime and $1.25 million for after- school, non-athletic programs. House Education Committee Chair Sharon Gire (D- Clinton Township) said adding more alternative programs across the state could reduce the need for more prison space in the future. "It's a lot cheaper to fund this program than a boot camp, jail or prison," she said. Some observers say the bills aren't needed, since school districts and their boards can and are doing much of what the bills would require. But Marc Cory, legislative liaison for Lansing Public Schools, said the package broadens the resources beyond school gates for solving violence and behavior problems. "It assists in dealing with problems as a community," Cory said. "Bringing together all community resources to solve problems is how we build communities." The bipartisan bills also include measures, already passed by the Senate, that would expel students who assault teachers. Some bills in the package are to be taken up by the House Education Committee next week. The House package allows local school boards to deter- mine punishment levels for violations of conduct codes: ; "This legislation responds to the leading conceins expressed by parents and educators," said House Education Subcommittee on Violence in the Schools Chair Mirk Schauer, (D-Battle Creek). "It preserves local control, stresses violence prevention and coordinates resources to manage the problem." Rep. James McNutt (R-Midland) said the bills require that each district have a protocol so everyone knows which behav- iors lead to expulsion and that schools will have zero toler- ance on violence, drugs, weapons and gangs. "I think it's maybe a strength," McNutt said of the option- al standards. "It provides for flexibility depending n resources each district has." Macomb County Prosecutor Carl Marlinga lent his support to the package and particularly to a bill that lets prosecutors seek enhanced penalties against anyone convicted of a felony on school grounds. "It won't result in additional incarceration time, but will serve as a bloody pulpit to let wrongdoers know to take their business elsewhere," he said. ADRIANA YUGOVICH/Daily Alex Baum, age 4, tries his might at spinning around the Cube yesterday in Regents Plaza. Report:Michigan chldre c;n li.ve lo nger LANSING (AP) - While more of Michigan's infants and children are living through their early years, they face a greater threat from lead poisoning and inadequate prenatal care. Those are two of the conclusions from the "Kids Count in Michigan" report for 1997-98, a broad collection of data on Michigan's counties that found many signs of decline in chil- dren's well-being. State officials objected to some of the report's conclusions, noting that some of the data in the report was ques- tionable, some too old to be accurate, and that newer number give a better impression. The report found that 38,600 chil- dren were likely suffering from unde- tected lead poisoning due to lead paint in older homes, which can cause developmental and learning problems without ever producing obvious symptoms. A recent federal study found that only New York had more children exposed to hazardous levels of lead than Michigan. "Right now, we're using kids as canaries," said Jane Zehnder-Merrell, project director for the league. "What we want to do is try to remove lead from housing or other areas where kids are, because once lead poisoning shows up, the kids are already dam- aged." A spokesperson for the Department of Community Health said that since 1997, the state has strengthened its lead testing requirements, and has started a program in 11 counties to help prevent lead poisoning. "For about 40 or 50 years, we were putting lead into the environment with- out realizing what the consequences would be," said spokesperson Geralyn Lasher. "All that lead is not going to be removed immediately. It's going to be a long process." The Kids Count report also found that between 1994 and 1996, an aver- age of 11,000 mothers a year, or 9 per- cent, did not get proper health care for their unborn children. From 1986 to 1988, 5 percent of mothers didn't get enough care. "This rise in the rate of inadequate prenatal care is troubling because it suggests a serious disassociation from the health system for a significant number of the state's mothers," the report said. Compounding both problems was a finding that roughly 100,000 children who live in families that earn less than 150 percent of the poverty level go without health insurance - even though all would qualify for Medicaid. Positive signs included sizable drops in infant mortality and child deaths, fewer substantiated reports of child abuse or neglect and an increase in immunizations. But Dr. David Johnson, the chief medical officer for the Michigan Department of Community Health, said he had questions about how Kids Count presented its numbers. "The best measure you have of (young children's) health is infant mor- tality rate," he said. "Over the last cou- ple of decades those numbers have come down and come down dramatical- ly. Before focusing on prenatal care, you want to focus on mortality." He also noted that according to department records, 75.5 percent of mothers had adequate prenatal care, compared to 72 percent in 1990. And the department believes only 23,000 children who qualify for Medicaid are not enrolled. "My dog ate it" stopped working somewhere around seventh grade. With Kinko's nearby, you have no more excuses. We're open 24 hours a day so you can finish your project on time. Surf the net for research and data using Internet access at Kinko's. 1iL' CLLENllR What's happening in Ann Arbor today r ... , 4 .;' C Dd fui~ in AEETvhIc Chinse 5ttiwii School o f Wi''l INI~n irnf,,4),ami,'h anti nri IM customer at participating locations only. Subject to availability. 4