LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 5, 2002 - 3 CAMPUS SAPAC opens its doors to campus community SAPAC - the Sexual Assault Pre- vention and Awareness Center - will host an open house from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today. The open house will give those interested an opportunity to meet staff members and learn about offered services. Free highlighters will also be given out. The SAPAC office is located at 715 N. University Ave. Photos, drawings by Harris to be exhibited The Institute for the Humanities is presenting an exhibition of works by Melissa Harris, known for her ability to combine art and architec- tural aesthetics through different media. The exhibit, "Inventory: Photog- raphy, Drawing and Assemblage," runs now until Oct. 1 in the insti- tute's Osterman Common Room. School of Music hosts concert of renown cellists The School of Music will present "Friendly Collaboration - Cello Ensemble Music" to celebrate the 300th birthday of the Duke of Edin- burgh Tecchler - the historic cello owned by Music School Prof. Anthony Elliott. The free concert will feature a variety of guest cellists and will take place Saturday at 8 p.m. in Britton Hall in the School of Music. Undergraduate art award winners showcase work The School of Art and Design will host an exhibit of works by the talented winners of the Spring 2003 All Undergraduate Show. The show, titled, "stART IT UP," begins today in the Work Gallery at 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. and will last until Oct. 12. Curator discusses nature themes in Japanese art Guest curator Natsu Oyobe will dis- cuss the seasonal themes in the Universi- ty of Michigan's Museum of Art's current exhibition of Japanese Art. Oyube will highlight such features as cherry blossoms and autumn leaves that appear in the paintings and prints. The talk will begin at 3 p.m. in the Museum of Art. SNRE faculty to present research projects The School of Natural Resources and the Environment will host an opportuni- ty to mix and mingle with faculty mem- bers from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. today in Dana Commons. The event will also highlight facul- ty endeavors in research with a sym- posium from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. The symposium will follow with an ice cream social. Starbucks invites local artists to open mike night Poets and musicians are invited to participate in an open mike event tonight at Starbucks, located on 222 S. State St. The open mike portion begins at 8 p.m. and is preceded and followed by the Upthegrove Project, an sextet of poets and musicians that per- forms poetry set to music. The event is free. Museum will display art of Congo Basin Beginning Sunday, the Curtis Gallery in the Museum of Art will house the exhibit, "Masterworks of African Art: The Congo Basin." The exhibit will look at the rich culture found in the Congo River Basin in Central Africa. The gallery will be open to the public at noon. Author leads . . .. . - - - - UAW talks speed up pace, approach end DETROIT (AP) - Contract talks between the United Auto Workers and the traditional Big Three automakers have quickened in recent days as bargainers try to reach agreements before the current pacts expire Sept. 14. A deal could be reached in the next few days, after UAW President Ron Gettelfinger confers with his lieutenants on the status of talks with General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co., Daim- lerChrysler AG and suppliers Delphi Corp. and Visteon Corp., a source close to the negotiations told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. The sides have been meeting daily, at times late into the night, since mid-July. An early resolution "would be very unusual, but this is a new president who might want to set a certain innovative style," said Sean McAlin- den, chief economist at the Center for Automo- tive Research in Ann Arbor. "You'd have to go back to pre-1978," McAlinden said. "But it could be something new. Why not?" The current contracts were negotiated in 1999 during the term of Gettelfinger's fiery predeces- sor, Stephen Yokich, who died last year. The UAW and automakers are negotiating confiden- tially on issues such as wages, jobs, health care and pensions that affect 300,000 workers and nearly a half-million retirees and their spouses. At a time when the U.S. market share for GM, Ford and Chrysler is at an all-time low, and for- eign automakers continue to expand their domestic lineups and capacity, most observers say the probability of a strike is low. "Given the very competitive market, nei- ther side wants a repeat of 1998, when GM endured a 54-day walkout at several facilities and lost significant market share," Morgan Stanley analyst Stephen J. Girsky said in a recent research report. Gettelfinger has yet to choose one of the com- panies to lead negotiations. Typically, the union reaches a deal with one automaker and the oth- ers follow the resulting contract terms _ a so- called "pattern" agreement in the industry. In past years, the leader has been called the "target" - as in "strike target" - but all sides hinted early on this summer that a strike would not be in the best interest of anyone involved. GM, Ford and Chrysler reportedly have made their initial offers, though no one with the companies or the union will discuss the progress of talks. McAlinden said the offers could be similar enough that the UAW will negotiate with all three until a pact is reached. "That would be very, very different - no target, no leader," he said. "But all three com- panies aren't in a great position right now. Even if one of them could offer something better than the other two, there's probably a feeling that the other two couldn't come up with it." Charges brought against two in Troy hotel robbery, murder Getting around town TROY, Mich. (AP) - One of two people accused in the fatal shooting of a hotel employee and wounding of a guest tied up the employee before shooting her execution style, a prosecutor said yesterday. Holiday Inn night clerk Michelle Eberhard, 35, of Wayne County's Redford Township was bound and shot in the back of the head early Tuesday, Oakland County Assistant Prosecutor Shareen Lynch said. Robbery appeared to be the motive. Thomas Ralph Jackson, 24, and Shirley Ann Haywood, 36, both of Detroit, were arraigned yesterday on charges of one count each of first-degree murder, second-degree murder, manslaughter and armed robbery. First-degree murder carries a mandatory penalty of life in prison, without the possibility of parole. Jackson was a former cook in the hotel's restaurant and was let go about six months ago. Prosecutors said the second vic- tim, Rachel Joost, 28, of Cedar Park, Texas, was shot in the face after she came in to register at the hotel. She was traveling alone on business. Before Joost arrived, Jackson left the hotel and returned to the car where Haywood remained through- COmpanies dispute blackout " " origins LANSING (AP) - The head of a major Michigan transmission compa- ny and an official with Ohio-based American Electric Power traded blame over the spread of the Aug. 14 black- out in separate hearings yesterday. International Transmission Co. President Joseph Welch told the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Com- mittee that the Ann Arbor company got "absolutely no warning" before being hit with a high-voltage electric flow that collapsed ITC's grid in the Thumb area and southeast Michigan. Welch took a slap at AEP and its reliability coordinator, PJM, for dis- connecting their systems "to save themselves." Several AEP lines tripped automatically before the black- out struck at 4:10 p.m. But J. Craig Baker, AEP senior vice president for regulation and public policy, told a state Senate committee yesterday that Welch was trying to pin blame on AEP when ITC may have been at fault. "AEP did not manually trip our pro- tective equipment, sacrificing Michi- gan to save ourselves' Baker told the Michigan Senate Technology and Energy Committee. "This is not a case of a company gaming the system, as Mr. Welch is implying to Congress today.... This was a chain reaction of events based on the laws of physics." The dispute broke out as state, fed- eral and provincial officials in the United States and Canada, as well as an independent overseer and a two- nation panel, continue to delve into what caused the blackout that spread through eight states and Canada in a matter of seconds, leaving millions of customers without power. Welch said no one told ITC that Columbus-based AEP and Akron- hI'aed First~nerev Corn. were experi- out the incident, Lynch said. He is believed to have returned when he saw Joost enter the hotel. Lynch said Joost was on the phone with her husband, a Cedar Park police officer, when Jackson came back in. County Prosecutor David Gorcy- ca said Joost begged for her life before she was shot. He told WDIV- TV that she put up her hand, which partially deflected the bullet that hit her face. As Joost lay on the floor pretend- ing to be dead, the man tried to shoot again but the gun apparently did not fire, Gorcyca said. He said the robbery netted about $500. From a hiding place on the third floor, Joost phoned her husband, told him to call police, then dialed 911 herself, Lynch said. She said Joost was doing well. Police said they arrested a third suspect who would be arraigned tomorrow and were searching for a fourth. "We're asking for the public's help ... because we believe he's dan- gerous, very dangerous," said Lt. Steve Zavislak, referring to the fourth suspect. Zavislak said the third suspect, also a male, was taken into custody Wednesday evening. He declined. sHUBRAOHRI/Daify Bus driver Steve Cain concentrates on maneuvering a Link bus en route yesterday. The Ann Arbor Transit Authroity introduced its new "Link" route on Aug. 22. The Link connects Ann Arbor's four major shopping and dining areas in Kerrytown, State Street, Main Street, and South University and Central Campus. The buses run every eight minutes, and 13 of the 24 stops are on campus. STONEBRIDGE O o I f c i u b $25 green Fees on weekdays 11d holidays after 1pm * carts extra Stonebridge Qolf Club 1825 Clubhouse Dr. Ann Arbor, Ml 48108 (734) 429-8383 Fulbright Program for Study & Research Abroad The IE Fulbright programs support study abroad to over 100 countries, providing grants for research, study and travel for selected countries, and various other opportunities such as teaching assistantships. The competition is open to U.S. students at all graduate levels, and to seniors who will have graduated by the time the award is to be used. Students need not have international experience to be considered. Recent graduates and graduating seniors are not at a disadvantage. Information sessions will be held in room 2609 of the International Institute on: Thursday, Sept. 4, 3-5 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 9, 5-7 p.m. Application materials are available at the International Institute (located in the School of Social Work Building). The U of M Fulbright Program Adviser is Amy Kehoe. 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