LOCAL/S TATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 17, 2002 - 3A Sprawl control is a top priority for Byrnes Fight erupts in courtyard of residence hall By Jordan Schrader Daily Staff Reporter Several residents of West Quad Residence Hall reported a fight that broke out in the hall's courtyard early Friday morning. According to Department of Public Safety reports, the calls indicated at least 10 people were somehow involved in the fight. Upon arriving at the scene, DPS officers located several suspects who were allegedly involved in breaking a window and mutual assault.DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said that, as far as she was aware, no arrests were made following the incident. Death threat found carved in B-School A threatening message carved into a picture in the Business Administration Building caught the attention of passersby and DPS officers last Thurs- day, DPS reports state. The carving warned that "you will die at 0030." It was located on the main floor of Davi- son Hall. Woman sees man with no pants jogging in the Arb DPS officers spent part of Friday afternoon searching for a man, described as being in his late 40s and having short gray hair and a green hooded jacket, who was seen by a female jogger in Nichols Arboretum. According to DPS reports, the jogger saw the pantless man, who was holding himself, near the train tracks. The man was wearing shoes, the report states. DPS made four arrests at football game on Saturday A total of four arrests were made during Saturday's home football game against Penn State, DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said. Three of the arrests were for minor in possession of alcohol, while the other was for trespassing. There were also 10 citations, including seven for alcohol and three for urinating in public, and 13 ejections, including four for disorderly conduct and two for assault. At least five people were escorted from the stadium for throwing marshmallows. DPS reports state that one of those people was ejected after throwing penny-stuffed marshmal- lows at officers. In addition, 22 people were treated by personnel from. Huron Valley Ambulance and one person was transported to University Hospital, Brown said. K-9 unit discovers bomb threat in League to be false A University switchboard opera- tor alerted officers to a call she said she received Sunday from a foreign- sounding male who allegedly stated that there was a bomb under the Michigan League, where the Pales- tine Solidarity Conference was being held, DPS reports state. The University's K-9 unit checked the building, but found no evidence of a bomp. Moped stolen, sold by cocaine- possessing thief A suspect in a larceny involving a stolen moped was identified and arrested on a felony warrant for cocaine possession by DPS officers Monday, according to DPS reports. The suspect told officers he sold the moped, reports state. Couzens elevator befouled, damaged An elevator in Couzens Residence Hall was damaged Monday after somebody urinated and defecated in it, DPS reports state. The report did not list any possible suspects. Furniture taken from course during Saturday's game A woman reported Tuesday that her lawn furniture was stolen from the University Golf Course during Satur- day's football game, according to DPS Western Washtenaw County combines a pre- dominantly rural expanse with several urban areas, including Ann Arbor. Pam Byrnes, the Democratic candidate for the new 52nd District of the Michigan House of Rep- resentatives, said it's going to take government effort to make sure farmland survives as urban area expands. Preventing urban sprawl by allowing munici- palities to buy land development rights is among her primary goals. The district she is running to represent includes part of northeast Ann Arbor, including North Campus. Byrnes said she would also promote early childhood education by seeking federal funds for pre-kindergarten programs. Her goal is to m'ake such programs affordable for all families, she said. These two issues form the core of Byrnes plat- form in her race against incumbent Rep. Gene DeRossett (R-Freedom Twp.). Byrnes, a Lyndon Township resident and Uni- versity alum, is an attorney whose practice spe- cializes in family law. She also serves on the Washtenaw County Road Commission. After working with township officials to devel- op infrastructure, she understands the importance of preserving agricultural areas, Byrnes said. She said the state should provide greater sup- port and funding to Purchase of Development Rights programs, to allow communities to make the crucial decisions that stop sprawl and main- tain farmland. Under these programs, governments pay prop- erty owners for the right to restrict how their land can be used in the future. "Even if (the owner) sells it, that farmland can- not be developed," she said. The state and communities should use the restrictions to determine where to allow new non- agricultural construction, Byrnes said. That would prevent highways, chemical pollutants and other consequences of development from pushing into rural areas, she said. "If there's going to be development - and there is - you keep it along with the existing infrastructure," she said. Despite her push to restrict how land can be used, she said she doesn't want a halt in develop- ment. For example, Byrnes said the state's planned NextEnergy site should have stayed in Washtenaw County. The planned construction of NextEnergy, Michigan's alternative energy research and devel- opment project, was initially slated for York Township, but state officials encountered prob- lems with township resources and chose Wayne State University in Detroit as the new site. Byrnes said the program would have benefited the county and questioned why DeRossett allowed the opportunity to pass. "I want to know where he was and why that happened," she said. "It would have meant jobs. It would have meant.an opportunity for the Univer- sity of Michigan to work with (NextEnergy)." She also disagrees with DeRossett's attempt to repeal a law requiring motorcyclists to wear hel- mets, she said. The repeal bill passed the House but has not been taken up by the Senate. Byrnes said revision is needed on laws that make prison sentences mandatory for certain drug-related crimes. Putting the perpetrators of these "victimless crimes" in jail costs the state too much money, she said. Term-limit laws, restricting elected officials' terms of office, are also due for another look, she said. Laws now on the books limit members of the House to three two-year terms while senators, the governor and most other executive officehold- ers are limited to two four-year terms. The high turnover the laws create is "breaking down the continuity, and there's not enough time to get long-range things done," Byrnes said. RBECAHNDaily University alum Pam Byrnes is the Democratic candidate for the 52nd district of the Michigan House of Representatives. Free yogurt for all UM Coursetools website to expand with chatrooms By Steve Nannes For the Daily Students may soon be able to use electronic resources at other schools and chat with their peers online through a new website the Universi- ty is currently testing in hopes of giving more resources to faculty and students. The new websites, UM.Course- tools Next Generation and UM.Worktools Next Generation, will be open-source websites for col- laboration with other universities. "There will be a lot more flexibili- ty for both students and faculty," said Joseph Hardin, deputy director of the Media Union. "We thought there were quite a few capabilities and resources we'd like to make available." One of the new features of the UM.Coursetools Next Generation web- site will be "My Work Space," which will be able to store students' materials, set up work groups and open chat groups. Students can also build e-Port- folios for compiling resumes. The new versions will enable stu- dents and faculty to share informa- tion with other universities such as Massachusetts Institute of Technolo- gy, Stanford University and the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. "There will be online research and group collaboration," Hardin said. "It will be easier for the faculty to find materials to provide the stu- dents and it will bring together two worlds of academic activity and learning." University programmers are bas- ing the website construction on the Open Knowledge Initiative, a project initiated by several universities to create shared online resources for the participating universities. LSA sophomore Mike Rohde said UM.Coursetools is an intricate part of his academic life and he would welcome any new resources. "I have two classes that post homework and sample midterms," he said. "A chat or dialogue with class- mates would be really cool." Engineering sopijomore Bushra Malaibari said even with UM.Coursetools, she still prefers meeting in person. "I think physical interactions make it easier to explain things," she said. "And there's more camaraderie among students in person." Over 30,000 University students and 1,500 faculty members currently use UM.Coursetools and UM.Work- tools. UM.Coursetools was released in January 1999, and Hardin said there have been no major problems with the website. Hardin added that the university is currently testing the new websites and testing will not be complete for at least another year or two. "We have to be careful," Hardin said. "The resources have to be sta- ble before we can fully open them. ... We are constantly trying to improve the available sites for stu- dents and faculty." RYAN WEINER/Daily After completing a study on Stonyfield Farm yogurt packaging, Vanessa Smith of Michigan's Center for Sustainable Systems hands out yogurt yesterday in the Chemistry Building. New center W1l research-methods to reduce poverty By Emily Kraack and Dan Trudeau Daily Staff Reporters The University recently revealed plans for the creation of a federally funded National Poverty Research Center. The center will function as a unit of the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, but will involve professors and researchers from all areas of the University in studying the effects of public policy on peo- ple living below the poverty line. Researchers at the center will be studying the effects of welfare on families with low incomes, the cre- ation of successful child care pro- grams and the transition from prison to the labor market, amongst other subjects. Organizers say the center will help legislators make better informed decisions about social policy. "We are committed to engaging the researchers with policy makers on the state, local and national level," Research Center Co-Director and Ford School Dean Rebecca Blank said. "We're interested in dis- covering ways to create policies that will alleviate poverty." The project will be funded by a $5 million grant over a five-year period from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson said the center will play a unique role in social research. ,"Much of the progress we have made in this country on issues related to reducing poverty and reforming welfare was through careful research. (The center) plays a critical role not only in contribut- ing to this body of research, but 1a,. in nrn rrancaarcrnl atoI "(The center) plays a critical role not only in contributing to this body of research, but also preparing researchers, to meet this challenge in the future." - Tommy Thompson U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary It's going to bring a lot of students here who would not have been here otherwise. You just have this con- centration of resources across the University brought together in one center." Blank said HHS decided on the Uni- versity as the current site for the center because of the administrative ease that the University offers, as well as the large numbers of researchers already studying poverty on campus. Profes- sors from other universities will also work at the center. "We really put together an amaz- ingly strong and diverse group of researchers who traditionally had not been involved. We also pro- posed some unique and interesting research projects," Ford School Senior Research Associate Kristen Seefeldt said. Tn~ ndiAtirnthe center w~ilhold THE MONOLOGUES o EVE ENSLE'-k a k om!ll f ^' THE NEWYORK T Is i s 2 {} { i 3 f 3 aCx 'L. .4y dx n25.M z ,, p'6 3322 j { s } j s // j f .rw THE WORD 1H ARLEAGUE www.TiisArsitLeAutcom