WE Itil leather day: Partly cloudy. High 58. Low 43. One hundred nine years' edftorilfreedom imorrow: Partly cloudy. High 57.J J Tuesday October 26, 1999 c ! e.j ., a ... . .. ,~. .: ! Green y Anna Clark aily Staff Reporter Green in Michigan Stadium? Not if niversity athletic officials can help it. )Men Absopure, a bottled water vendor ia sells its product within the stadium, onated 100 recycling bins for fans' beverage >ttles, nobody thought about the color of the ns - made from clear and green recyclable ottles. But when the green-tinted sample arrived at e Athletic office, officials said the stadium ould need an alternative color. "There was no gray area on this; our apartment unanimously decided that green s ouldn't work,"' said Tom Brooks, bins clearly wrong choice University athletics sales and promotion coor- dinator. "The rivalry (with Michigan State) makes us sensitive to the color green in our stadium." Brooks said Absopure is replacing the green bins with clear ones, which will be positioned at all major gates in the stadium by the Nov. 6 Northwestern v. Michigan game. The greenish bins would have arrived just before the football game against Illinois. "The whole situation was kind of frustrating," said University Recycling Coordinator Sarah Archer. "Personally, I think the issue of color was taken out of context. But I guess I have to understand that (keeping the color green out of Michigan Stadium) is important to the Athletic Department. "To me, green bins would've been better, more noticeable to fans. I'm not sure how clear bins will work," she said. Brooks said it wasn't difficult to return the green bins in favor of clear ones. "It turns out that the president of Absopure, Bill Young, is a huge Michigan fan. He didn't blame us for wanting to keep green out of the stadium," he said. SNRE Prof. Raymond DeYoung, who teaches environmental psychology and con- servation, said that he could understand the desire to keep green away from the maize and blue. "Green has a definite meaning in a football stadium. I imagine it's very important to consid- er the color of the bins," he said with a laugh. Archer said that the Athletic Department had been very cooperative with expanding the recy- cling program at the stadium, which currently recycles cardboard. "The stadium's done very well with announc- ing opportunities for fans to recycle. And they're not saying no to recycling by replacing the green bins; they're just looking for an alternative," Archer said. Archer said Absopure's unexpected donation of bins was "probably a result of the first game," against Notre Dame, when temperatures reached the 90s for a record-breaking number of football fans. "There were water bottles everywhere after the game," Archer said. "Maybe Absopure took notice of that." She estimated that at least 60,000 bottles were left in the stadium. Brooks said that Absopure is "very active in recycling," which may have affected their deci- sion to donate the bins. Absopure works with its recycling affiliate Clean Tech Inc. to promote the recycling of plas- tic beverage bottles. According to their company Website, www absopure.com, the two companies have. "made a solid commitment to helping protect our environment by keeping plastic out of our landfills." Survivors o give iccounts if abuse y Shomari Terrelonge-Stone aily Staff Reporter Survivors of sexual and physical vio- :nce will speak out publicly today in a upportive environment of friends, imily and the University community a ' the Sexual Assault Prevention n wareness Center's 13th annual peak Out. "Speak Out is an opportunity for the >mmunity to help break the silence iat surrounds sexualized violence," APAC Director Virginia Fhingairai hitanda said. "The forum is open to omen and men in the community to ome in and support survivors." The Speak Out is scheduled to take lace from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the 14 gan Ballroom of the Michigan nion. October is National Domestic iolence Awareness Month. Chitanda said national statistics iow that one in four women will be exually assaulted during their colleges ears, and that women at the University re not exempt from that statistic. "The problem of sexual assault, dat- Ig violence, domestic violence, sexual a sment and stalking exists in the r rsity of Michigan community ist like they exists in any other com- iunity for both men and women," hitanda said. Ann Arbor Police Department Sgt. See SPEAK OUT, Page 7 Send in the clowns Profs. elected to Institute of Medicine By Jeremy Peters Daily Staff Reporter In what is considered a great honor by the medical community, four University, professors were recently elected to the prestigious medical academy, The Institute of Medicine. Only Harvard, with five new members, had a higher number of faculty elected this year. The institute, comprised of 588 med- ical scholars from across the nation, elected only 55 new members this year. Biological chemistry Prof. Michael Marietta said he was greatly honored by his election to the institute. "It feels pretty good," he said "It's cer- tainly a recognition of what my students and I have accomplished." Head of the section of neurosurgery Prof. Julian Hoff also said he was grate- ful for his election. "It's a great honor and a humbling experience" Hoff said, adding, "It was a bit of luck. My number just happened to come up . Marietta stressed the magnitude of having so many University professors elected to the institute in a single year. "The fact that we had four elected speaks highly to the quality of the bio- medical sciences here. What we are doing here is valued outside the University," he said. Lee Katterman, assistant to the vice president for research, said he, too, sees the elections as extraordinary. "Part of what makes this so significant is that the whole body elects the new members. You really have to prove your- self to be an outstanding scholar and researcher to even be considered for elec- tion,' Katterman said. In addition to Marietta and Hoff, the professors elected to the institute this year are Director of the Survey Research Center and sociology Prof. Jim House and internal medicine and human genet- ics Prof: David Ginsburg. All four pro- fessors were recognized for outstanding contributions in the field of health care. Marietta is recognized for his discov- ery of nitric oxide's role as a chemical messenger in the body. "The surprise value of nitric oxide as a language cells use to talk to each other was very high because nitric oxide is toxic!' Marietta said. He added that the discovery initially came, "as a shock to many scientists that something this toxic is so important." Hoff is recognized for his study of cerebral hemorrhages - one form of a stroke. His research involves the search See MEDICAL, Page 2 JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily Chelsea High School student John Holmes volunteers at the haunted house at the former Ann Arbor 1 and 2 Theater on Fifth Street yesterday. All proceeds from the haunted house will go to benefit youth programs. I Israel opens safe passage in Gaza for Palestinians JESSICA JOHNSON/Daily t-year Pharmacy student Audrey Nakamura works in a pharmacy lab yesterday, easuring the rate and stability of enzymes. harmacistsfcu onpatient .relations Gaza gateway is newest step on road to peace The Washington Post TARQUMIYA JUNCTION, West Bank - Assad Kamel Abu Jazzar, who lives in one of the most crowded stretches of real estate in the world, got a breath of fresh air yesterday. It was a long time coming. He awoke before dawn, stuffed 300 Israeli shekels (about $70) in his jeans' pocket, packed a change of clothing and a bag lunch and - for the first time in six years - set foot outside the teem- ing, destitute Palestinian-ruled part of the Gaza Strip. "We've been like in a siege," said the 20-year-old Palestinian, smiling broad- ly in the midday sun and savoring his newfound sense of liberty. "Between the sea on one side and the border on the other, we haven't been able to go anywhere. It's like being in prison." The gates of Gaza swung open yes- terday for Abu Jazzar and about 425 other Palestinians, nearly all young men in their 20s. After four years of delays and weeks of 11th-hour hag- velinu - even after peace talks were The Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat, and the late Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin agreed in an interim peace deal in 1995 to open a route that would allow Palestinians to make the passage without Israeli interference. Since then, it has been postponed repeatedly by Israeli gov- ernments worried that it posed a potential security risk. Right-wing Israelis have opposed it, arguing that Palestinians deter- mined to attack Jews could easily turn off the designated route and slip into Israeli communities to do so. "We have every reason to be scared and to be careful," said Haim Gross, 24, a religious Jew who said his broth- er was killed by a Palestinian in 1983. He was among a small group of pro- testers posted near Gaza's Erez Crossing Monday as the Palestinians' buses and taxis rolled by on the way to the West Bank. Despite such fears, Israelis promised not to use the right of way to trap and arrest Palestinians wanted for past ter- ror attacks - although they will deny crossing permits to any such suspects. The difficulties in crossing between the two areas began shortly after the Oslo agreement, which revolutionized work, business or personal reasons. More than 35,000 Gazans have per- mits to work in Israel, and many more West Bankers cross into Israel legally or illegally every day. But until now, the passes that allow entry into Israel for work have generally not permitted a Gazan to cross into the West Bank, or a West Banker to go to Gaza. Monday that changed. Those who have no record of secu- rity arrests will receive a magnetic swipe card that allows them to ride in taxis or buses across Israeli territory; it will be valid for one year. Those who have a security record in Israel will be able to travel Monday or Wednesday in a convoy of buses escorted by Israeli soldiers. For thousands of Palestinians, to whom the Middle East peace process has paid paltry dividends since it began in 1993, the route holds the promise of real improve- By Josle Gingrich or the Daily Open most people think of pharma- ists, they see images of busy and unap- proachable people in white lab coats counting pills. The object of National Pharmacy Week, which started yesterday, is to dis- pel this view of pharmacists. "Pn m.-v i nn i;frmnt;nn nres- Pharmacy Week is "Educate before you Medicate," and advocates consumers be more demanding of the pharmacy system. In a written statement, Jennifer Pakkala, director of marketing and communications with the Michigan Pharmacists Association said "the pur- pose of the week is to encourage a;tients to enter into a diloPIae with AP PHOTOS TOP: A smiling Gaza resident holds his transit papers out of a taxi about to take him across Israeli territory yesterday. ABOVE: Dozens of Palestinians stand behind barricades as they wait to cross into Israel. make up an independent Palestinian state. The 34-mile corridor, which uses r I