The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 17, 1999 - 5 Swing your partner 'round 4 men charged with GHB related death High school girl died after she was drugged at a Grosse Ile party WOODHAVEN, Mich.(AP) - Four men were arraigned yesterday on charges they slipped a "date-rape drug" into the soft drink of a 15-year-old girl who later vomited, went into a coma and died. Samantha Reid, a first-year high school student, was one of three teenage girls secretly drugged at a party Jan. 16 on Grosse Ile, an affluent island community in the Detroit River, according to prosecutors. Police' said Samantha's Mountain Dew was spiked with either GHB or GBL, drugs that can render victims helpless. She died the next day at a hos- pital. One of the other girls also required hospital treatment. Charged yesterday with manslaughter and poisoning were Erick Limmer, 25; Joshua Cole, 18; Daniel Brayman, 18; and Nicholas Holtschlag, 17. Poisoning carries a maximum sen- tence of life in prison. Manslaughter is punishable by up to 15 years behind bars. The party was held at Limmer's apartment. The victim's mother, Judi Clark, sobbed uncontrollably as the judge set bail for the defendants at $80,000 each. She collapsed in a hallway. GI-1B and GBL are powerful central nervous system depressants. The Drug Enforcement Administration has said GIB is, linked to 32 deaths and 3,500 ove doses nationally since 1990. In 191) the Food and Drug Administrati~d banned GHB, a synthetic drug, amid concerns about its use as a dietary supplement. As for GBL, the FDA has warned the public against swallowing it. Some claim GBL can build muscle, enhance sexual performance and reduce stress. Police say it is increasingly being used in sexual assaults. Apple releases system secrets CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP) - Apple Computer Inc. delighted high-tech mavens and hackers yesterday by releasing the programming secrets to one of its operating systems. Apple's move, the first by a major computer company, is limited to its software that runs central computers. Apple, for now, will continue to keep secret its operating system for the Macintosh personal computer. "We're putting our source code and the intellectual property out there for everyone to see," said Steve Jobs, Apple's interim CEO. Source codes are the typed instruc- tions directing computers to execute programs. Jobs unveiled the source codes for a $499 operating system, called the MacOS X Server, for use by schools, small and medium businesses and departments within larger companies. The system will work on most new Apple computers, but is being pack- aged with the new Macintosh Server G3, a $4,999 computer for people who want to link many computers together. Apple's move gives a big push to a movement to use the Internet for enlist- ing volunteer programmers and speed; ing software development. Jobs said Apple will watch how the server source codes are used, but that he would like to open codes from more systems in the future. Eric Raymond, president of a group of programmers called The Open Source Initiative, said Apple's decisiofi will "shake up the computer industry:" "We in the Internet hacker culture want- to have access to these source codes and Apple really gets it," he said. "Now we'd like to see more of their codes." LOUIS BROWN/Daily Oackham first-year student David Elstein dances with Medical fourth-year student Grace Eng at the Swing Dance Jam at the barn at Gretchen's House, a day-care center near North Campus yesterday . Germany reacts to EU Commission'sregnation * BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - European leaders scrambled yesterday to plug the hole left by the abrupt resig- nation of the entire 20-member European Commission after a stinging report on fraud and sloppy manage- ment. The dramatic overnight departure of the-,European Union's executive body ptyiged the bloc into its deepest crisis ik Decades, just days ahead of a crucial t to overhaul EU finances in Ttaration for its expansion into Efern Europe. German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, whose country holds the EU's current presidency, flew to Brussels for talks with outgoing Commission President Jacques Santer on how to mini the damage. "We have a very competent parlia- ment, a council and presidency," #hroeder said. "Europe is not without leadership, and that will become clear." Santer said he and the 19 other com- missioners will stay on in a caretaker capacity until their successors are appointed, but the resignations and rev- elations of high-level malpractice left the EU in disarray. Still, the resignations were hailed by governments around Europe, which hoped they would lead to more respon- bVe EU management. "What we have got to do now is use this event, the resignation of the whole Commission, to drive through root and branch reform' British Prime Minister Tony Blair said. Dutch Prime Minister Wim Kok said the resignations presented the EU with a chance to "begin with a clean slate," while Catherine Colonna, spokesperson r French President Jacques Chirac, id Chirac felt EU leaders should "Europe is not without leadership, and that will become clear," - Gerhard Schroeder German Chancellor "learn a lesson" from the crisis. The mass departure was unprece- dented in the 42-year history of the EU -roughly equivalent to the entire U.S. Cabinet resigning. "There's nothing in the (EU) Treaty about a resignation like this," said Commission spokesperson Martine Reicherts. "We've got to look into the legality of it." The 15 EU nations were already struggling to heal splits over how to reform its $92.6 billion budget to ensure spending does not spiral out of control when Poland, Hungry and up to 10 other candidates join over the next decade. Hungary and Poland said they remained optimistic that the sudden res- ignations wouldn't affect their hopes of entering the EU. Schroeder's efforts to restore order in Europe, however, come as his own gov- ernment is reeling from the resignation last week of German Finance Minister Oskar Lafontaine. In Brussels, the caretaker commis- sioners have to deal with the EU's day- to-day business, including a trade battle with the United States over banana imports and talking up the euro, the EU's single currency that has recently slumped against the dollar. "It is frankly bad to have to work with a Commission which has stepped down," said Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar. Aznar said Santer's team should stay on until its term ends Dec. 31, calling that a "lesser evil" Others called for an interim executive to be put in charge until the end of the year. Several European statesmen have been mentioned as possible temporary replacements for Santer, including for- mer German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, former Prime Minister Romano Prodi of Italy and retired Portuguese president Mario Soares. Jose Maria Gil-Robles, president of the European Parliament - which ordered the fraud investigation - urged EU governments to nominate new commissioners soon so a tempo- rary executive could be in place by early May. Britain, Belgium and some other EU governments said they would reappoint commissioners untainted by personal criticism in the mismanagement report. "There may be more continuity than was apparent last night' said Ben Duffy, spokesperson for the U.S. mis- sion to the EU. "Some of the commis- sioners key to these discussions aren't going anywhere." HANDS ON Continued from Page 1 5,000 square-foot Techworks gallery that includ interactive water play area and the National Sc Foundation-funded exhibition, "How Things Work. The museum is also adding a science theater to: Mr. Wizard-type shows conducted by high schoo college students and Eureka Labs, which will be daily for lab demonstrations, classes or workshops Many of the current exhibits also will be upd The outside of the museum will feature an enorj sundial designed by Bil Mundus, Kit Steinaway Dick Crane. "I remember when I was younger that the Hand Museum was the best field trip because you can around and touch everything," LSA sophomore Ti Powell said. "That's great that they're makingj space because sometimes it was crowded with diff groups of kids." DAAP Continued from Page 1 UN sanctions on Iraq. Curtin said some of the party's passed resolutions -including the res- olution to "Oppose Scapegoating and Police Persecution" - have been amended to be weaker. "The Defend Affirmative Action Party represents the growing national student movement in the country," Curtin said. "We think MSA should be a leading organizer of the growing national movement." The expanded museum's grand opening will be held Oct. 19-- the 100th anniversary of the old fire building. "There's a lot of excitement coming from the Board of es an Trustees, staff and volunteers," said Cynthia Yao, the ience museum's executive director. "We can actually see the light at the end of the tunnel." stage The newly-renovated museum will also offer weekend 1 and demonstrations such as "The Shocking Truth," a pro- used gram on static electricity. Classes and workshops for >. children and families also will be offered. dated. "I think it's great, they're doing this to the museum, mous because I think it's time they did something," LSA first- and year student Anna Pavlicek said. "It was always small, and since everyone liked doing there, it might as well be ds-On bigger." n run The Hands-On Museum is located at 219 E. Huron ffany Street, and is open to the public Tuesday through more Sunday. ferent For more information about group reservations or pur- chasing bricks, call 995-5439. Do you have a BACHELOR'S DEGREE? We need you! Measurement Incorporated is an educational testing company that hires hundreds of people each year to hand-score tests. Bachelor's degree in any field required. Paid training provided. Scorers are hired per project. Projects usually last 3-6 weeks. As a reader/evaluator, you will work in a professional but relaxed atmosphere with many interesting people from around Ann Arbor/psilanti area. We employ a diverse group of individuals which often include new college graduates, retired persons, and teachers looking for supplemental income. 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