LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 26, 2001- 3 CygME Runner confronted by pantsless man near Arboretum A woman reported she was con- fronted by a 40-year-old man who was naked from the waist down last Friday while she was running in Nichols Arboretum, Department of Public Safety reports state. The woman said while she was jogging in the "prairie" area by the railroad tracks at about 9 a.m. she saw the man naked. There have been several incidents of indecent exposure near the Arbore- tum in the last few weeks, but DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said it is too early to conclude if the cases are linked and if the suspect is the same. Brown said the Ann Arbor Police Department has received reports of similar incidents in Gallup Park, which is adjacent to the Arboretum. S The man is described as short, approximately 170 pounds with salt- and-pepper colored hair. Morphine syringe stolen at hospital A University Hospital emergency room nurse stated an unattended syringe was stolen early Tuesday morning, according to DPS reports. She said she had set down two syringes full of morphine in a r patient's room. They were left unat- tended for two minutes, and upon her return to the room she found one stolen. An investigation was pending. False prescription used to get drugs A University Hospital employee said a person not affiliated with the B University attempted to use a fraudu- lent prescription pad to receive drugs Monday afternoon, according to DPS reports. DPS is not conducting an investigation. Unhappy worker may have keyed paramedic's car A paramedic said his vehicle was keyed while parked near Palmer Drive Development Center Thursday or Fri- day of last week, according to DPS reports. He suspects that a construction worker at Palmer Drive Development's construction site may have been responsible because he is a paramedic a d treatedsome of the workers. The paramedic said he believed some of the workers were unhappy with their drug test results. Woman spotted stealing bottles A five-foot-tall woman wearing a blazer-style coat was spotted carrying a bag of pop bottles which belonged to the Advanced Technology Lab Wednesday morning, DPS reports state. The woman was located by a responding officer, but there was no evidence of larceny. Water damages West Quad door A West Quad resident found a trash can full of water against his door Monday morning, according to DPS reports. He said someone had leaned the can against the door. DPS was conducting an investigation. S Man injured during hockey game A man was injured while playing hockey in Yost Ice Arena Monday evening, according to DPS reports. The player, who is not a student, was knocked into the boards by another player, which might have caused a head injury. Upon arrival, Huron Valley Ambulance workers found the person hyperventilating. He was taken to Uni- versity Hospitals' emergency rooms. Woman hit during parking space fight A avoman reported she was involved in a parking space dispute on. North Campus with another woman Monday evening, DPS reports state. During the dispute, the woman struck her in the face. - Compiled by Daily StaffReporter Jacquelyn Nixon. Spoke-n for Wednesday's storms kill two i n Michigan Bicycles bear the cold weather outside Angell Hall as students attended classes yesterday afternoon. J 2 A unemploment rate was state's lowest in September LANSING (AP) - Ann Arbor had the state's lowest seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in September, the state Department of Career Develop- ment said yesterday. Ann Arbor was one of only five of Michigan's 12 major labor markets that did not see unemployment increases last month.. Seasonally unadjusted unemployment rates ranged from a high of 6.8 percent in Flint to a low of 2.8 percent in Ann Arbor. Jobless rates decreased in two areas and were unchanged in three. State economists said the numbers don't reflect the fallout of the Sept. I1 terrorist attacks, since unemployment data is collected each month during the week of the 12th, and few companies were laying off workers or making major changes that soon after the attacks. "The earliest any of that will show up is in our data for October," Detroit-based state economist Bruce Weaver said. The unemployment increases were slight, limited to 0.4 percentage points or less. Employment gains at universi- ties and schools were offset by cutbacks in tourism-related jobs, department Director Barbara Bolin said. Slight declines in the unemployment rate were recorded in the Flint area, which had a 7.2 percent unemployment rate in August. Declines were expected, since temporary auto layoffs that affect- ed Flint this summer have ended. The Upper Peninsula also recorded a decrease in the unemployment rate from 4.7 percent in August to 4.4 percent in September. State economist Joe Billig said the Upper Peninsula's seasonally dependent labor market generally shrinks in the fall, and those who lose summer jobs don't necessarily look for other employment. Billig said the numbers were typical for September, which generally sees increases in education-related jobs and decreases in construction and recreation. The number of manufacturing jobs also declined in September. Billig said the terrorist attacks halted any sort of recovery the state was see- ing. "In August and September, there were some early signs that the economy was going to improve," he said. "But given September 1Ith and the very dras- tic slowdown in retail, the employment picture for the next few months is going to be much weaker than what people had expected." The September unemployment rates for the 12 major labor markets, and their relationship to the August rates, were: Ann Arbor, 2.8 percent, unchanged from 2.8 percent; Benton Harbor, 5.1 percent, up from 4.7 percent; Detroit, 4.7 percent, unchanged from 4.7 percent; Flint, 6.8 percent, down from 7.2 percent; Grand Rapids/Muskegon/Holland, 4.8 percent, up from 4.7 percent; Jackson, 5.0 percent, up from 4.8 percent; Kalamazoo/Battle Creek, 4.4 per- cent, up from 4.1 percent; Lansing, 3.1 percent, unchanged from 3.1 percent; Saginaw/Bay City/Midland, 4.9 percent, up from 4.7 percent; Upper Peninsula, 4.4 percent, down from 4.7 percent; Northeast Lower Michigan, 5.9 percent, up from 5.5 percent; Northwest Lower Michigan, 4.8 percent, up from 4.5 percent. DAVISBURG (AP) - A crowd of parents, teachers and children watched yesterday as firefighters and school workers searched through the rubble of a fifth-grade classroom demolished by a tornado. The firefighters were looking for anything that might be salvaged from the crumbled concrete, broken desks and rain-soaked books. Statewide, thunderstorms produced at least two tornadoes, left two people dead, damaged dozens of homes and blacked out more than 195,000 electric- ity customers. In this northern Oakland County community, some residents brushed away tears yesterday as they stood in the howling winds and swirling snowflakes, while others took pictures of their children in front of the wreck- age. A tornado cut a 15-mile path Wednesday night through Livingston and Oakland counties, doing most of its damage in Davisburg, the National Weather Service said. It uprooted ancient sprawling trees, crumpled outdoor signs and destroyed part of the community's elementary school. Kent Barnes, superintendent for the Holly Area School District, said four classrooms at Davisburg Elemen- tary were demolished and eight others were not safe for occupancy. A smaller tornado touched down briefly in Saginaw County east of Fos- ter, cutting 100-yard path, the weather service said. It said a microburst of high straight-line winds damaged a barn and pushed a pickup truck 20-40 feet in Lapeer County near Lum. In Clinton County, 46-year-old Michael G. Elliott of Maple Rapids died Wednesday evening when a tree fell on his pickup while he was driving, the sheriffs department said. A 52-year-old Portage man went into cardiac arrest and died while trying to remove downed trees, said Heidi Ober- lin, spokeswoman for the Kalamazoo County Office of Emergency Manage- ment. The office reported that at least five other people sustained serious, storm-related injuries. Oberlin said two were listed in critical condition yester- day at area hospitals: a 44-year-old Scotts man who fell off his roof while removing a tree and a 46-year-old man hurt in an auto accident. In Eaton County, sheriff's Capt. Fred McPhail said about 70 homes were damaged, half of them seriously, in the Narrow Lake area. In Calhoun County on Wednesday, winds gusting up to 71 mph destroyed eight mobile homes south of Tekonsha, said John Townsend, director of the county's Office of Emergency Services. Seven residents of the mobile home park were treated for minor injuries at hospitals and released. At least 20 homes elsewhere in the county sus- tained wind damage, Townsend said. Chilly winds with gusts of up to 49 mph were blowing through the state last night, with sharply colder temperatures and traces of snow well into southern Michigan. The winds hampered repair crews and created fresh blackouts as electric utilities worked to restore service. The storms cut power to at least 195,000 Michigan electricity customers, and at least 68,000 remained without power last night. Many people will have to wait until the weekend to get service back, power companies said. Consumers Energy spokesman Kevin Keane said more than 100,000 of its customers lost power in the storm, and 32,000 remained blacked out last night. Detroit Edison spokesman Scott Simons said about 79,000 of its cus- tomers lost power and about 25,000 remained blacked out last night. High winds and cold temperatures were expected to continue into the weekend, said forecaster David Koehler from the weather service office in Oak- land County's White Lake Township. Snow is expected in parts of both peninsulas today and tomorrow, the weather service said. The weather is expected to begin breaking tomorrow or Sunday, with temperatures possibly reaching 50 degrees. In Houghton in the northern Upper Peninsula, city crews were busy clean- ing up salt trucks and plows yesterday afternoon in preparation for two to 10 inches of snow. DaimlerChrysler introduces new car phone technology AUBURN HILLS (AP) - Daimler- Chrysler AG is looking to take a bite out of the burgeoning on-board com- munications market by putting a tech- nology called Bluetooth in its vehicles. Bluetooth, named for 10th century Viking Harald Bluetooth who united Norway and Denmark, allows various components of telematics systems to "talk" to each other through radio fre- quencies, instead of hard wires. That means a driver could hook any Bluetooth-equipped cell phone to the car's audio and display system without the phone having any physical contact with the vehicle. The user can be as far as 30 meters away from the vehicle to operate the system, said Jim Kohut, lead engineer for telematics at the Chrysler Group. The system, still unnamed, would be handsfree, using voice-recognition technology developed by IBM. The only hand-operated action nec- essary is pressing a button located on the rear view mirror to turn on the sys- tem. Chrysler Group chief operating offi- cer Wolfgang Bernhard said the com- bination of handsfree, voice-recognition makes the system safer. "It recognizes commands and num- bers so there's no taking your eyes off the road to fiddle around with all kinds of numbers while you're driving," Bernhard said. Bluetooth-equipped phones are commercially available now for $150 to $500 according to Don Boerma, of AT&T Wireless, one of Daimler- Chrysler's partners in the project. While the automaker said it was not ready to reveal the availability of spe- cific services, it said the new system would be markedly different from OnStar, which is owned by General Motors Corp. OnStar services, such as roadside assistance and navigation, require a subscription fee. Chrysler Group telematics chief Jack Witherow said users will contract for online services through their'cell phone service providers. Any added fees would be-folded into their phone bills. The system is fully integrated into the vehicle using its existing audio lay-' out including the radio. Once the system is turned on, the user calls out commands or a phone number for the system to dial. The user also can tell the system not to accept incoming calls if traffic is heavy or they desire privacy. A small microphone is embedded in the rearview mirror. Prototype vehicles have a display integrated into the mirror as well, although Witherow said a production version may have the display more conveniently located on the radio. The system will be offered as an aftermarket feature in the spring of 2002 and as a factory-installed option in early 2003. The automaker said prices have not yet been set. THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor this weekend FRIDAY "Environmental Health Pol- icy, Science, and Public Perception: A Challenge for Genetically Modified Institute for Research on Women and Gender, 12:00 p.m., 250 Hutchins Hall, 625 South State Street C A'Y' Yn~hAV versity Band-O-Rama; Sponsored by the School of Music, Featuring the Concert Band, Symphony Band, SERVICES Campus Information Centers, 764- NFO, info@uich. edu, or www. urich.edu/'-info x I