LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 12, 2003 - 3 THIS WEEK T S YA I W nY0 o Five years ago. Posing as party hoppers, Ann Arbor Police Department volunteers issued 75 minor-in-possession-of-alcohol tickets at three fraternities and one house party in two nights. "I am not surprised police found 75 minors drunk," Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hart- ford said. "It was probably far more than that." Ten years ago ... The University's solar car team - the Maize and Blue - finished in 11th place after completing a grueling six- day, 1,900 mile journey across the con- tinent of Australia. The team said they had conquered several challenges, including an out- break of what they dubbed the "out- back flu' marked by a viral infection in the digestive system. SNov. 14, 1984 TheMichigan Student Assembly vetoed a proposal by a 12-8 margin that would request the University Health Service to stockpile "suicide pills" for student use in the event of a nuclear war. Those against the plan objected to the encouragement of suicide as well as the legitimacy of the group behind the plan, Students Against Nuclear Suicide. "We defeated it but it's not like it's coming up next week," MSA Vice President Steve Kaplan said. "The wording was defeated, not the idea, intent or spirit." Nov. 11, 1958 More than 200 students living in South Quad Residence Hall became sick after eating in dining hall. Uni- versity doctors confirmed the cause of the "mystery illness" was food poisoning. Items served included egg salad sandwich, ham salad sandwich, clam chowder soup, peach short- cake, bluefish and relish plate. Samples of all the food served were taken to a lab for examination, except for the coconut cream pie, which was completely devoured, said Mark Noffsinger, director of South Quad. Nov. 9, 1963 A study released by the U.S. Depart- ment of Health, Education, and Wel- fare revealed that University students pay high room and board charges com- pared to students at other public uni- versities. Theaverage University student payed $820 for room and board while the national median was $690. The study also found that the University charged the third-highest out of state tuition of public univer- sities. Nov. 18, 1969 Time running out to pin killings on inmate Man allegedly killed women in Ann Arbor, across country KALAMAZOO (AP) - A woman whose close friend was slain 29 years ago has started a petition drive to keep the victim's suspected killer behind bars. Hazel Brophy's petition will urge Texas Gov. Rick Perry to do what he can to prevent Coral Eugene Watts from being released from prison in 2006 - although Perry's hands are tied by Texas' mandatory- release laws. Watts confessed to 13 slayings in Michigan and elsewhere, and police suspect he killed dozens of other women, including several in Ann Arbor. That would make him one of the most prolific serial killers in U.S. history. Watts was born in Texas and moved to the Detroit suburb of Inkster after his parents divorced. Following his arrest in Texas in 1982, he agreed to plead guilty to a charge of burglary with intent to commit murder in exchange for receiving immunity from prosecu- tion for the confessed killings. Watts admitted to killing.11 Tex- ans and one Michigan woman - Detroit News reporter Jeanne Clyne, 35, who was stabbed to death with a woodworking tool in 1979 as she walked home from a doctor's appointment. He also con- fessed to strangling a 14-year-old Texas girl. Although he did not receive immunity in the teen's death, prose- cutors lacked the evidence to go after him. At the time of the plea deal, authorities thought the 60-year prison sentence Watts received would keep him behind bars until he was in his 80s. So did the vic- tims' relatives who gave their approval. But mandatory-release laws aimed at relieving prison crowding in Texas require Watts to be discharged on May 8, 2006, at age 52, unless he loses good-behavior credits. Brophy and other survivors of Watts' alleged victims are collecting signatures to send to Perry. But the only apparent way to keep Watts in prison would be to convict him of a crime unrelated to the plea deal. Lt. Bill Hanger of the Michigan State Police Southeast Criminal Investigation Division in Livonia MSA bu! leads a task force looking into about 150 unsolved cases from the Detroit area and another 75 from the rest of the state. Watts is "a strong suspect in about 20 or so" of those cases, Hanger recently told the Kalamazoo Gazette. He said some had physical evi- dence "that's in various stages of being tested for DNA." Brophy, a 48-year-old Portage resident, began working to keep Watts behind bars when she learned police were investigating the possi- bility that his first victim was her close friend. S service Michigan State works to feed, world's hungry EAST LANSING (AP) - Michigan State University will lead a $25 million collaborative effort to get more nutritious food to the world's poor, financed by a founda- tion set up by Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates. HarvestPlus, an alliance of research institutions and agencies, will use the money for a four-year project on biofortification, which crossbreeds crops with high nutri- tional value and those that are high-yielding and disease resistant, says organization Director Howarth Bouis. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announced the grant last month, saying the goal is to provide people in poor and developing countries with food already fortified with vitamins and mineral nutrients. Worldwide, "half the instances of death among chil- dren have malnutrition as important contributory causes," said David Fleming, director of the foundation's global health program. HarvestPlus offers a strategic approach that would address the problem of malnutrition, he said. Michigan State is the coordinating institution of a team of three that make up the Nutritional Genomics team of HarvestPlus. "The project seeks to bring the full potential of agri- cultural science, genetics, molecular biology and genomics to bear on the persistent problem of micronutri- ent malnutrition in the developing world," Michigan State said in a news release. "Micronutrient malnutrition affects more than half of the world's population, especially women and children," said Dean DellaPenna, a Michigan State professor of bio- chemistry and molecular biology. "The costs of these deficiencies in terms of lives lost, forgone economic growth and poor quality of life are staggering." Michigan State said that until now, plant science in agri- culture has had to focus on increasing yield and resistance to pests and pathogens to feed the growing world population. While this has been successful, it has given rise to an increasing reliance on a limited number of staple crops, DellaPenna said. As a result, diets across the world have less variety, such that even when caloric needs are met, will take students " to their: By Kristin Ostby Daily Staff Reporter Students who need rides to and from the airport this Thanksgiving won't need to fork over fistfuls of cash to taxi drivers. AirBus - a Michigan Student Assembly-sponsored program - will be available to transport students to and from Detroit Metropolitan Airport for only $13 round-trip. MSA passed a resolution to fund the AirBus program at last night's meeting. AirBus's charter buses will pick up students on Nov. 25 and 26 at the Michigan Union and Mary Markley and Bursley residence halls. Students can buy tickets for their ride home at Metro Airport on Nov. 30 and charge them to their student account using their MCards. Students can buy tickets now at the Union Ticket Office. A one-way ticket is $8, but students can save $3 by buy- ing a round-trip ticket for $13. When students buy their tickets, they will be provided with a schedule for rides back to Ann Arbor. By sched- uling their ride home at the airport upon return, students will avoid the possibility of missing their airBus ride, flights said MSA President Angela Galardi. "Then, if people's flights are delayed they're not restricted to a cer- tain route, so people aren't worried that they're going to miss their airBus plan," Galardi said. "I think that students will have an opportunity to really benefit from what MSA has to offer via airBus," said MSA Communications Committee Chair Courtney Skiles. "It saves students tons of money and time and will get them safely to the airport over break." This is the program's second year of operation. Due to last year's overwhelming student use of the program, airBus will use twice as many buses this year to transport students. "It's been an incredible success the last three times we've run it. It's very reliable. It's cheap. It's really easy for students. We encourage any student to use airBus because it is very user- friendly," Galardi said. "We're so excited about this. We as MSA see airBus as a way that student government is really making a differ- ence for students and really filling a void where service is needed." The airBus program also will be available for winter and spring breaks. AP PHOTO Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates addresses the company's annual shareholders meeting yesterday in Bellevue, Wash. Gates will finance a foundation coordinated by Michigan State University. many essential micronutrients are lacking. The developed world addressed this issue in the early 1930s and '40s by fortifying foods with the essential vitamins and minerals, such as iodine in salt and vitamins and minerals in cereal, milk and flour, for example. Yet reaching the necessary populations in most devel- oping countries with fortification is difficult or impossi- ble, Michigan State said. It said creating staple crops with more and balanced micronutrients provides the opportunity for many people in developing countries to have better daily nutrition and better health. The programs hopes to get improved varieties of crops to the world's farmers within a decade, Bouis said. Michigan State began concentrating on biotechnology began in 1998, when it recruited top academics and grad- uate students in the field. Since then, federal agency grants alone have almost doubled, to $196 million a year. "We must be aggressive. We want to be leaders," Ian Gray, director of the school's Michigan Agricultural Experiment Statiog; told The Detroit News. Gran/oim talks budget cuts, sacrifices i Detroit Grant boosts research on efforts to restructure damaged brains I The University's Senate Assembly voted to end all financial and most academic ties between the Universi- ty and the ROTC. The approved report called on the University's Board of Regents to renegotiate contracts with the ROTC programs on campus. Defense department officials indi- cated that if the University with- drew its subsidies - especially granting free building space - it might cause the ROTC to be can- celled on campus. Nov. 9, 1974 The University rejected Graduate Employees Organization demands for a salary hike of 25 percent as well as free tuition, claiming it would cost as much as $10 million. The University countered by offering a two-year contract with an 8-percent pay increase in the first year and in-state resident status for all teaching fellows, research and staff assistants the second year. David Gordon, chief negotiator for GEO, said an 8-percent pay raise was unacceptable because it does not keep up with current inflation rate of 11 percent. a Nov. 8, 1979 Students and bar owners fretted over the passage of Proposal D, which raised the legal drinking age in Michi- gan from 18 to 21. Although it passed by a large margin statewide, with better than 55 percent approving of the change, it lost better than two to one in Ann Arbor. Nov- 14. 1994 DETROIT (AP) - A Henry Ford Hospital researcher is getting support from the National Institutes of Health for his efforts to develop therapies to "remodel brains" that have been injured by stroke and other brain traumas. The $6.5 million, five-year NIH grant for Michael Chopp, scientific director of the hospital's Neuro- science Institute, will support research to further develop cellular and drug therapies that restructure the brain. Chopp's study will primarily focus on the treatment of stroke and traumatic brain injury with cells derived from the adult bone marrow. The cells essentially restore neuro- logical function after stroke and brain injury. "The laboratory studies strongly suggest that we will someday success- fully treat patients days or even weeks after they have suffered a stroke," Chopp said in a statement. Resources from the grant also will be used to develop and implement new forms of cell and drug therapies to restore neurological function after brain trauma. Chopp develops and tests cell- based therapies as well as compounds that may .generate new brain cells in animals and improve function after neural injury. Meanwhile, neurologists at Henry Ford Hospital using data generated by Chopp and his colleagues are expect- ed to launch human studies soon using pharmaceutical agents to help stroke victims. The therapies work to remodel the brain or spinal cord to take on the functions that have been lost by the injured or dead tissue. "Think of the brain as a house," Chopp said. "If a tree falls on your house, what you want most is to fix the damage to restore your daily quality of life. "Remodeling the brain, like remod- eling a house, may require new plumbing, such as new blood vessels; new electrical connections or new synapses; and new rooms or new brain cells." GRANHOLM Continued from Page 1 we take in," she said, adding that she wants to consider the sentiments of residents before slashing programs. "I could be behind my desk in Lansing behind closed doors making these decisions - but how much better and rich has the discussion gotten having the opinion of people who are stake- holders," she said. Before broadcasting the conference, audience members completed a survey asking them to recommend programs that the government could cut. Audience members voted on social services such as health care along with after-school programs and "rev- enue sharing" operations with munici- pal governments. Granholm and audience members wavered in their decisions to cut or save state education programs. Although adult and higher education services are still coping with cuts made during the last fiscal year, Granholm said they would likely be cut further. Referring to higher education - which consumes a quarter of the budg- et and took a 10-percent reduction last year - Granholm said, "I think you'll see a cut, but I don't know if it will be as big as 10 percent." Twenty-one percent of the studio audience voted to make some cuts to higher education programs, all of which would affect the University's budget. But according to Granholm's figures, schol- arships to students attending private col- leges and universities could receive reductions along with public institutes of higher education. But Patrick Ballew, a junior at Wayne State University, said he opposed all funding reductions to public universities, adding that such rollbacks may increase tuition. "It's a commuter school and most of the students are hard-working kids try- ing to pay their way through college," Ballew said. Granholm said she believed the public wanted to preserve funding for the state's "safety nets" - programs such as Medicaid and state police agen- cies. Voters proved more receptive to cutting programs that do "not affect the immediate well being of citizens of Michigan," one resident stated. For example, 72 percent of audience members opted .to release certain parole-eligible penitentiary prisoners 30 days before their sentences run out, while no residents voted to decrease prescription drug coverage for senior citizens and few voted to eliminate state inspections of day care centers. "You can see people want to see the safety nets protected," Granholm said. Other cuts that some audience mem- bers said they supported included trim- ming scholarships granted to high scorers on the Michigan Educational Assessment Program exam. Jennifer Billand, a teacher, said she felt she did not need the test to guide her through her lesson plans. "I feel, as a highly qualified teacher, that I'm able to prepare the kids for the MEAP no mater if it stays or if it goes;" she said. Cutting MEAP "would save about $5 million," Granholm said. "On the other hand, the (federal) No Child Left Behind Act mandates that the state have its own standardized test." Even if Granholm and the state Legis- lature agree to enact all cost-reduction measures, the state will have "just barely what we need to get to $920 million." To more quickly resolve the deficit - which, she added, will not happen this year or the next - Granholm asked audience members if they would support a 1 percent pause or a freeze on current income-tax cuts. Nearly all members said they favored a pause or a freeze. The tax-cut rollback may persuade con- sumers to spend more of their income, boosting state sales-tax revenues. Since realizing the budget deficit, Granholm has already made $14 million in admin- istrativefuts around state offices. The first set of program cutbacks will take place within the next couple of weeks, she said. Grant mishap costs colleges milions KALAMAZOO (AP) - Western Michigan University and Southwestern Michigan College have lost out on mil- lions of dollars in federal money because a grant writer missed a deadline. Bonnie Helm of Cheyenne, Wyo., was sentenced to three months in prison last month for using illegally obtained postal equipment to backdate the applications for the Upward Bound program, a program that helps at-risk high school students prepare for college. Twenty other universities, colleges and nonprofit agen- cies across the country had contracted with Helm to write their U.S. Department of Education grants. All lost money because she failed to submit the applications on time. The. institutions now will have to wait and apply for the next cycle of grants four years from now. The missed deadline cost Western about $3.8 million for its Upward Bound program and two related programs. Officials say they will keep the programs afloat, at least through the spring and hope to find other sources of fund- ing. The program serves about 70 high school students annually. Southwestern Michigan College officials say they can't afford to run the program without the grant. They lost at least $936,000 for its program that served about 50 stu- dents. Martha Warfield, director of Western's Division of. Mul- ticultural Affairs, told the Kalamazoo Gazette school offi- cials reacted with "disbelief and concern" at the news of losing the funds. Helm had worked with Western several times in the past and came with impressive credentials, said Warfield. Officials at both schools said they are upset the Educa- tion Department did not notify them that Helm was under investigation or that something was amiss. Several congressional officials have requested that the department reconsider its decision to deny the schools funding, but the department is holding firm. Education officials say the schools should be more care- ful not to place the fate of such programs in the hands of contractors without adequate supervision. As part of her sentence, Helm was ordered to stop preparing grant applications. WANT.TORU.N... .NFORMATNON YO.UR - SFPWN- Cflft.UR.P ae""*is?. tonight lo1pm J 2 Amateur Contest k$ f Ladies, Compete For That $200 Cash Prize (;APRTMNT HMESx Receive $25 Just For Entering