NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 15, 2004 - 3 ON CAMPUS California prof. * addresses political problems of Japan The University's Center for Japanese Studies will hold a noon lecture by University of California-Davis politi- cal science prof. Ethan Scheiner, titled, "Democracy without Competition in Japan: Opposition Failure in a One- Party Dominant State," in Room 1636 of the School of Social Work Building tomorrow. Visual culture the focus of lecture by St. Louis prof Shawn Michelle Smith, author of "American Archives" and "Photogra- phy on the Color Line," will present a speech titled, "Contested Archives: The Visual Culture of the War in Iraq," in Room 1014 in Tisch Hall, at noon Fri- day. An associate humanities professor in the Department of American Studies at St. Louis University, she will com- plete another workshop in the Univer- sity's History Department. Each workshop has a precirculated paper, and the majority of the workshop time will be devoted to discussion and debate. Copies of papers are available in the History Department mailroom. CRIME NOTES Asphalt placed on student's driveway, hose moved A caller reported Monday to the Department of Public Safety that over the weekend asphalt chunks were placed on the driveway of the caller's house, and a 150-foot hose was moved. The caller requested to meet with a DPS to discuss the incident. Game Cubes stolen from children's hospital DPS reports that two Nintendo GameCubes were stolen from room 6663 of Mott Children's Hospital on Monday. The game consoles belonged to the Child Life area of the hospital. Fallen dancer dislocates shoulder while practicing A caller reported to DPS that a stu- dent had dislocated their shoulder while practicing in the Dance Building. An ambulance arrived and provided assis- tance to the injured dancer. Pedestrian's bag, vehicle collide at Cancer center A vehicle collided with a bag being carried by a pedestrian on the circular drive of the Cancer and Geriatrics Cen- ter on 1400 West Medical Center Rd. Monday. No injuried were suffered. THIS DAY In Daily History Sept. 15, 1992 The University experienced a 5.6 percent increase in violent crimes, including rape, aggravated assault and robbery, from the year before, according to Department of Public Safety statistics. No murders or manslaughters were reported during the 1991 school year, but nine women reported that they had been raped on University property, up from six in 1990. The number of armed robberies on campus also rose from 12 to 14. Overall, the University recorded 57 violent crimes in 1991, the sec- s ond-highest number among Dublic D-TOWN DETOUR State warns of tainted food cha MIDLAND (AP) - A warning against eating wild game was issued yesterday by state officials who say dioxin levels downstream from the city's Dow Chemical Co. complex have become dangerous. The Michigan Department of Community Health issued an advi- sory against eating wild turkey meat or deer liver and urged consumers to limit consumption of venison and squirrel harvested in or near at least 22 miles of the floodplain along the Tittabawassee River. Although numerous advisories exist for fish tainted with toxic chemicals, it only is the second time the state has issued such a warning for land animals, officials said. is expected." Biomagnification refers to increased contamination of animals higher in the food chain. The advisory is based on a Dow- funded study released in July. The study showed higher levels of dioxin in meat tested downstream of the plant, where large amounts of the potent chemical were released into the air and water in the first half the 1900s. Meat from deer downstream of the complex had dioxin up to seven times higher than upstream veni- son, according to a state review of the data. Squirrel meat was up to 40 times higher, turkey meat up to 66 times higher and deer livers up to 118 times higher. Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John Kerry greets residents after an unscheduled stop at Steve's Souly Food Restaurant in the West Side section of Detroit yesterday. Businesses critical of water pro tection plan "We don't this on a whim," T. J. Bucholz, commu- nity health spokesman, told the Detroit Free Press. This is rooted in serious health con- cerns." Dow offi- cials, in the issue advisories like "These toxins are accumulating in land animals that are fairly low on the food chain." State Department of Environmental Quality, in a report on Dow Chemical Co. Anne Ain- sworth, a spokeswoman for Dow, said the company agrees with the advice against eating deer liver or turkeyeskin. But "we still conclude that individuals who con- LANSING - Representatives of farmers and business owners told the state's top official on the Great Lakes that they're worried a proposed interstate agreement to restrict water consumption from Michigan's five Great Lakes will hurt the state's economy. "We must be careful not to make this a jobs diversion plan," Michael John- ston, director of regulatory affairs for the Michigan Manufacturers Association, told Office of the Great Lakes Director Ken DeBeaussaert during yesterday's hearing on the proposed Great Lakes Charter Annex. Johnston said he's worried the agreement will mean more regula- tion for business owners and take away Michigan's ability to keep jobs in the state, and bring in new ones, because governors from the other Great Lakes states would have to sign off qn certain diversions. New diversions that would take an average 1 million gallons a day out- side the Great Lakes basin over a 120- day period would need the unanimous approval of eight Great Lakes gover- nors, who would consult with the pre- miers of Ontario and Quebec. Six governors would have to approve a new or expanded with- drawal within the basin that with- draws an average 5 million gallons a day over 120 days. States would have 10 years to create and insti- tute a review program for smaller withdrawals. Scott Piggott, of the Michigan Farm Bureau, said farmers are wor- ried that the proposal will mean getting a permit for many things they're doing now. "We see a movement in that direc- tion," he told DeBeaussaert during the two-hour hearing. "We've had a long discussion about permits with our members. ... Even in the best situation we could create, they didn't want one. " Piggott said it's unfair to require farmers in the Great Lakes basin, where water is plentiful, to do things differently than states that need water. Noah Hall, senior manager of Great Lakes Water Resource Pro- gram of the National Wildlife Federation, helped develop the pro- posed compact. He said a 120-day exemption was added to leave out farmers that use a lot of water on their crops during the summer months, but use much less during the spring and winter. Hall also denied that the compact would hurt Michigan's already- struggling economy. "Bring in one person who lost their job because of water use regu- lation," he said." Minnesota already has a com- prehensive system and no busi- ness there closed because of permit problems. " Dan Voglar, who runs a trout farm in Wexford County, said he's worried the changes may force some farmers out of business. "We continually get more and more regulatory scrutiny. ... The list is manifold in length for agri- culture producers and yet many producers are this far," he said. Lake effect Eventual approval of a binational, multi-state agree- ment on preserving and using Great Lakes freshwater awaits the outcome of several public hearings. S Drafts of the agreements, which will go under discussion in hearings across Michigan and other states, were put forth by a council of eight American governors and two Canadian premiers. Some Mich. farmers and business owners said in a hearing yesterday that the agreements' proposals on water use could damage the state's economy. midst of negotiations with the state about cleanup of dioxins in the region, said they agreed with part of the advisory but contended state regulators have overstated the risks from venison. Dioxins, a group of chemicals cre- ated by incineration and chemical manufacturing, are linked to altered metabolism, hormonal changes and increases in diabetes and cancers. Other game species also may be contaminated with dioxins, state experts said. But the advisory is limited to the three types of animals included in the Dow study. "These toxins are accumulating in land animals that are fairly low on the food chain," reads a state Department of Environmental Qual- ity analysis of the Dow study. "As these animals are eaten by their predators, further biomagnification sume veni- son, squirrel or turkey with the skin taken off south of Midland would incur no greater exposure than by eating meat, fish or poultry from the national food supply," Ainsworth wrote in an e-mail. It was unclear how far away from the river's banks the advisory would affect. The only other such wild game advisory was issued in 1981, said Steve Schmitt, veterinarian in charge of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Dis- ease Laboratory. That advisory was issued for pheasant, grouse, raccoon, muskrat and opossums harvested near the Gratiot County landfill, where PBBs - man-made chemicals that were banned in 1976 - were polluting the ecosystem. That advisory was lifted in 1995. Lawmaker wants robe of AG's tnps WASHINGTON (AP) - Lead- ing House Democrat John Cony- ers asked the Justice Department's watchdog yesterday to investigate Attorney General John Ashcroft's trips last year to promote the anti- terror Patriot Act. Conyers, a Michigan representa- tive and the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, contends a pair of speaking tours Ashcroft took broke laws barring publicity campaigns and grass- roots lobbying by executive branch officials, unless authorized by Congress. Conyers requested the investiga- tion in a letter to Glenn Fine, the Justice Department's inspector general. A spokesman for Fine said no decision has been made on the request. Justice Department spokes- man Mark Corallo said the trips were fully vetted for legal issues by agency lawyers and were meant to correct what he said were false impressions given to the public by Patriot Act opponents. "It wasn't just misleading the public. It was having a negative law enforcement impact because it was hurting morale," Corallo said. Conyers also released a review by the Government Accountabil- ity Office, the investigative arm of Congress, estimating the cost of Ashcroft's Patriot Act trips at more than $208,000, not counting expen- ditures by U.S. attorney's offices around the country in connection with the initiative. The Patriot Act, passed over- whelmingly by Congress a few weeks after the 2001 terror attacks, gave federal law enforcement expanded powers of surveillance and prosecution against suspected terrorists, their helpers and fund- raisers. President Bush, Ashcroft and other top law enforcement officials have called the law critical in pre- venting future attacks. $~OG188 cash cholrshisFRE F"0o Coile go PokI Ue r ChiainponhP WAhn will ha tha nowt ' nllouua Dnkann Phamninn fnn 9flfl;9