LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 2, 2003 - 3A Does it snow as much in Asia? Inventions exhibited at fair Sleeping men escorted from lot near 'U' property The Department of Public Safety reported Monday two subjects were found sleeping near 2850 S. Industrial St., in an area under the Eisenhower Bridge. Due to their proximity to the parking lot, which is under DPS patrol, they were escorted from the area and further warned to stay off of University property. The subjects complied with the offi- cers and no inappropriate behavior was found, DPS reports. Union employee reports threats from supervisor An employee at the Michigan Union called DPS to report that her supervi- sor had made a threatening call, caus- ing her to fear for her life. The problem is being dealt with administratively instead of through DPS. Wireless phone and $2,000 video projector stolen from 'U' building It was reported to DPS that a video projector valued at 2,000 and a wire- less phone valued at $200 were stolen three weeks ago from room 2036 of the Institute for Environmen- tal Sciences Engineering and Tech- nology Building. The theft occurred when the room was unlocked and the projector was not secured. Currently there are no suspects in this burglary, according to DPS reports. Doctor assaulted by patient he was trying to treat A patient punched a physician Monday at University Hospital. The doctor had been attempting to treat .the patient when the assault occurred. Security responded by transferring the patient to the psychiatric unit for treatment, DPS said. DPS is investi- gating the incident further and will possibly turn the case over to a prose- cutor for possible warrant authoriza- tion of the perpetrator. Burning iron sets off false fire alarm in South Quad A fire alarm was sounded in South Quad Sunday when a burning iron set off the detector, according to DPS. The building was not evacuat- ed, and the alarm was reset. DPS said that the smoke alarm is quite sensi- tive and has gone off because of burning food in the past. $1,500 shop vac stolen from Space Research building A shop vac, valued at $1,500, was reported stolen from the Space Research Building on Tuesday. The vac was taken sometime between the dates and times of Sept. 26 at 2 p.m. and .Sept. 30 at 7 a.m. While the theft, occurred the item was unattended in the first floor hall- way. DPS has no suspects. Subject arrested for driving with suspended license DPS reported Monday that a suspect was arrested on an outstanding warrant for driving illegally on a suspended license in Ypsilanti. The subject was taken to jail. Adult victim hospitalized after soccer assault A 34-year-old male student punched and kicked a member of the opposing team in a scuffle Sunday at 6:18 p.m. during a soccer game on Mitchell Field Sunday night. The vic- tim called DPS between the hours of 4:45 p.m. and 5 p.m. from the Univer- sity hospital to report the incident. Further details are being investigated by DPS although only minor injuries were reported. Two trespassers By Ivo Furman For the Daily Debuting innovations ranging from microchips that sense the chemical composition of water to a substance that allows materials to become light-sensitive, inventors gathered at the Michigan League Ballroom in an event intended for University faculty to celebrate and examine their inventions and meet with fellow colleagues from the University Tech Transfer Center yesterday. With the appointment of Universi- ty President Mary Sue Coleman, ini- tially a professor of chemistry and biology, the number of faculty patents and licenses have steadily increased. "The University takes great pride in the level of creativity that is rep- resented here, and in the contribu- tions that our inventors make to the outside world. You are part of a great tradition of invention at Michigan, and this a tradition that we want to sustain and develop," Coleman said in a written statement. After time for discussion among the inventors, the reception opened with speeches from Ken Nisbet, executive director of the University Tech Transfer Center, and Coleman, who described the burst in inven- tions designed at the University over the past year. "Things have changed. The maga- zine New Scientist has ranked the University eighth in the country in terms of impact of life science tech- nology on society," Nisbet said. In 2003, more than 500 University faculty and students have patented or licensed innovations. Awards for research were given out to Ray Counsel, an emeritus professor at the University's Department of Phar- macology, for his research on tumor cells and to John Maassab, a profes- sor in the Department of Epidemiol- ogy at the University since 1960, for designing a nasal spray. In technology kiosks located around the ballroom, University fac- ulty displayed eight examples of innovations and activities. The dis- played inventions included Sensi- core, a microchip designed to sense and monitor the chemical composi- tion of water, a Design Kit for Accessory Drives that analyzes the performance of a combustion engine and the Eibschitz Capsulorrhexis Knife that aids surgeons in cataract surgery. Maya Eibschitz-Tsimhoni, the designer of the knife, said her inno- vation is "a method for removing a portion of the outer eye with a 'cookie cutter' style incision lessen- ing the likelihood of tears and tags within the structure of the eye." Other inventions included Tissue Engineering, a team of multi-disci- plinary individuals attempting to facilitate repair and regeneration of specific body parts, and Helix, a toothpick-sized steel fiber that is used to reinforce concrete. Antoine Naaman, a professor at the University's Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, described Helix as "a commercial product you put in concrete to strengthen it. Helix is essentially a triangular, energy absorbing steel fiber and is simply the most advanced way to reinforce concrete." Other interesting innovations were the Neural Intervention Technologies designed to aid treatment of brain vessel defects; the Optrix, a tech- nique that allows material to become reactive to light and changes in light intensity and the Omnitread Hyper- Mobility Robot, which is designed to crawl and slither through niches and crevices in collapsed man-made structures. John Borenstein, the inventor of the Omnitread Hyper-mobility Robot described it as "a hypomobli- ty device that is built to imitate a moving skin. "The device has actuated joints that allow it to be raised over obsta- cles in the way that a skeletal joint moves up and down. The uniqueness of this hypomobility device is the combination of actuated joint and the moving skin which allows it to move over static surfaces," he added. LSA senior Olivia Rlutta, who studied in Thailand, talks about Southeast Asia at the Study Abroad fair yesterday in the Union. Cox: Foreign women dr ee BAC Continued from Page A eral items contribute to a motorist's BAC. "I don't think there are any hard and fast rules for BAC. It's controlled by many factors- gender, body weight, if and what the person has eaten that day," Bol- ger said. "It also depends what you mean by 'drinks.' Some- one who's had say, a Long Island Iced Tea, is more like- ly to have a higher BAC than someone who's had a lighter drink like a Coke and rum," Bolger added. Engineering senior Rob Rucky said the new law will not change his habits. "It's a little threshold between .08 and .1. I don't keep exact track of myself when I go out," Rucky said. Local restaurants said they were unfazed by the new law. Good Time Charley's Manager Tony Lavigne said he did not expect major changes. "We gauge serving alcohol on a person-to-person basis, not by the exact letter of the law," Levigne said. We haven't really seen a problem with people drinking and driving, he added. Rene Gress, co-owner of the Arbor Brewing Compa- ny, said she feels similarly unaffected by the new law. "I think people monitor their drinking by feel. I don't think the law will have a significant affect on what they do. We're not expecting any change in business," Gress said. LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Nearly two dozen women from the Middle East are accused of defrauding Medic- aid to cover the costs of having a baby in the United States. Attorney General Mike Cox said yesterday the 23 women flew to the Detroit area specifically to deliver their babies and get emergency Medicaid benefits to pay for it. Within a few months of having their children, the women returned to their native coun- tries, Cox said. To get Medicaid benefits, an appli- cant must say they intend to become a permanent resident of the state. Cox said the women falsified information on the Medicaid forms, while putting on their visitor visas that they intended to return to their home countries. Thirty-four babies were delivered between August 1997 and February 2003, Cox spokesman Sage Eastman said. In some cases, the women returned to Michigan up to three times to deliver more babies, he said. The Mixed results for Big Three car sales DETROIT (AP) - The traditional Big Three automakers posted mixed U.S. sales results last month as busi- ness tapered off after a blistering August pace. Foreign brands, however, remained strong. Among Detroit's Big Three, General Motors Corp. led the way with a 12 percent increase in September sales, spurred by heavy demand for trucks. Ford Motor Co.'s comparable vol- ume was flat, while DaimlerChrysler AG's Chrysler Group saw sales fall 15 percent. But Chrysler was truly back among the Big Three in Sep- tember, a month after Toyota's U.S. arm outsold Chrysler for the first time in a single month. September's tallies: 147,114 vehicles sold for Chrysler, 140,754 for Toyota, Japan's No. 1 automaker. Still, Toyota's volume rose 10 per- cent in September to cap a quarter in which the company's U.S. sales topped half a million for the first time in a three-month period. "The first three quarters of the year brought the situation in Iraq, econom- ic uncertainty and fluctuating gas prices, but U.S. consumers held tough and the auto industry experienced steady growth," said Jim Press, execu- tive vice president of Toyota Motor Sales USA Inc. Total sales for the Big Three were off 4.3 percent through September when compared to the same period last year. A month after the combined U.S. market share for GM, Ford and -A «.,l «l 14n n l~i 4:. nfb.. women ranged in age from 20 to 42. The amount of Medicaid funds used to pay for delivery services for the women ranged from a couple thousand dollars to $17,000. Eastman said the total Medicaid costs for these cases was $150,000. Eastman said while it's the state's intent to prosecute the woman and recover the costs, the women likely wouldn't be extradited. The women are from Lebanon, Syria and Yemen. Falsifying a Medicaid application is punishable by up to four years in jail and/or a $50,000 fine. The charges were filed in Ingham County District Court. Eastman said the attorney general's office will work Immigration and Nat- uralization Services. "We take these cases very seriously, and we are working closely with both federal and state agencies to put an end to this activity," Cox said in a statement. More people may be charged, Cox said. the daily m e nsapuzzle ( rEinceton Review 1-800-2-REVIEW following gr unscramble eight-word may move any directi each letter (Hint: Begin with L LN IS '' N k W i/ T E H I N G N 0 I E D R E B H A S' I A T H . .. Mti c~ktV wVVLtvtv ±QvODvk- to 4,twm. 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