NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 28, 2005 - 3 ON CAMPUS * Contra dancing lessons to be taught on Diag Contra Dance at UM is inviting students to discover contra dancing from noon to 1 p.m. on the Diag today. There will be live music to accompany the dance instruc- tion. There is no cost to participate. Students of color discuss study abroad programs Students of color will talk about their educational experiences overseas through the University's study- and research- abroad programs at a discussion in Room 9 of the International Center from 3 to 6 p.m. this afternoon. Students will have the opportunity to find about internship and career opportunities with the U.S. State Department and the Peace Corps. Arts program to aid finding internships in New York A mass meeting will be held for the New York Arts Intern Program in the Career Center - Room 3200 of the Stu- dent Activities Building - from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Students can learn about secur- ing an internship involving the arts in New York. CRIME NOTES Graffiti discovered in Church Street garage stairwell Parking Services reported graf- fiti in the northwest stairwell of the Church Street carport early Mon- day morning. The graffiti included the message "Cops can't catch me." .The graffiti was sprayed on the wall sometime between Sept. 23 and 26, according to the Department of Pub- lic Safety. There are no suspects at this time. Cart with projector, laptop stolen from Dennison The Dennison Building staff reported the theft of a media cart that included a laptop and a projector Monday afternoon. The theft occurred in room 221 and the value of the stolen objects is unknown. DPS reports. DPS does not have any sus- pects at this time. Gunshot victim arrives at UMHS A gunshot victim was brought into the University Hospital emergency room late Monday evening. The victim was transported from Annapolis Hospi- tal, and the Inkster Police Department made the initial report. DPS reports that there are no security precautions for the patient. THIS DAY In Daily History Part dirt bike, part 10-speed mountain bikes hit campus Sept. 28, 1989 - Recently, the campus has seen a rise in the popularity of new bicycles called mountain bikes. Resem- bling a dirt bike but bigger, mountain bikes give students the durability and comfort to travel between classes. Mountain bikes are more appealing to students because they are more comfort- able than a regular 10-speed bike but, at the same time, cost a lot less. LSA sopho- more Paloma Preysley wanted a mountain bike because of its comfort and straight handlebars. Mountain bikes have an average price of $350, and most students look for a bike in the $300 to $400 range. Serious bikers can get customizable models that can cost rn to $2000 Unknown illness prompts school evacuation Jacqueline E. Howard Daily Staff Reporter Saline High School's halls will once again be filled today - one day after five students experienced dizziness and nausea and the school evacuated its 1,800 students. All five students fell ill sometime between 10 a.m. and noon. In response, the Pittsfield Town- ship Department of Public Safety recommended school administrators evacuate the school to prevent other students from falling ill. Authori- ties are still investigating the cause of the five students' illness. On top of the nausea, one of the students also fainted in class, said Saline senior Anne Chu, who was in class when her classmate fell ill. The student has since regained consciousness. At about 1:15 p.m. students and teachers were evacuated to the athletic fields surrounding the school, where parents of the students later arrived to pick them up. "Any time multiple people in a general area fall ill, a red flag goes up," said Alan D'Agostino, Pittsfield's deputy director of fire services. . Four of the five sick students were sent to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital with their parents, and one was sent home, said Saline Area Schools Superintendent Sam Sinicropi. After the evacuation, a Huron Valley Ambu- lance, the Pittsfield Township Fire Department and Washtenaw County's Hazardous Materials Response Team arrived on the scene but were unable to determine the cause of the students' illness. "Any time multiple people in a general area fall ill, a red flag goes up. - Alan D'Agostino Pittsfield's deputy director of fire services Sinicropi said all the classrooms were well- ventilated and had their windows open, and none of the students had prior chronic conditions. He added that it was unknown whether food was a factor because some of the students who fell ill had already eaten lunch, while others had not. "No one knows the probable cause of the ill- nesses; that's why we have people investigating," he said. D'Agostino said none of the responders detected toxic levels of any type of gas within the building. All of the students that were sick were in science classrooms - including chemistry labs that may have contained potentially hazardous substances - when they fell ill, but Sinicropi said they were not in contact with any harmful material. He added that because the anatomy and physi- ology laboratory class had a substitute teacher yesterday, the class was not conducting any experiments or working with hazardous mate- rials. D'Agostino said he thinks the class was watching a movie. AMY DRUMM/Daily An empty classroom in Saline High School in Saline, Mich. after school officials told students to evacuate. Levin to vote to put Roberts on Supreme Court Sen praises nominee's tendency to modify his ideology over time WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Carl Levin said yesterday he would vote to confirm John Roberts to the Supreme Court, taking President Bush's choice for chief justice at his word that he would be open-minded in shaping legal decisions that could affect future generations. Levin, (D-Detroit.), said his review of Roberts's writings and Senate testimony led him to believe that the judge's views had evolved since his days as a young lawyer in the Reagan administration. "To vote against Judge Roberts, I would need to believe either that he were an ideologue whose ideol- ogy distorts his judgment and brings into question his fairness and open- mindedness, or that his policy values were inconsistent with fundamental principles of American law," Levin said. "I do not believe either to be case, Judge Roberts has modified some of his views over time, which I take as evidence that he is not an ideologue, and has not only a keen mind but a mind open to argument," he said. Levin said he met with Roberts on Monday, asking the judge point- blank whether he talked to Vice President Dick Cheney and top Bush administration officials before his nomination about his views on several constitutional , flashpoints, including the powers of the presi- dency, prayer in public places and affirmative action. "He looked me square in the eye and said that they didn't take place," Levin said. "I must take Judge Rob- erts at his word." Levin said he realized his vote would not likely change the outcome, but it was a decision that could affect the court for three decades. Roberts is expected to easily win confirmation this week. Levin is the 17th Democrat to support Rob- erts, joining all 55 Senate Republi- cans. Judicial nominations require a majority vote of the Senate. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, (D-Mich.), who opposes Roberts's nomination, said many senators were struggling with the decision and reaching dif- ferent conclusions. "I think what we see is a con- science vote on all sides and people of good will making their own deci- sions," Stabenow said. Levin's decision also puts him at odds with some party leaders in his home state. Mark Brewer, the Michigan Democratic Party chairman, said last week that Roberts' "evasive testimony ... provide no assurance that he will set aside his ideologi- "I think what we see is conscience vote on all sides, and people of good will making their own decisions."~ - Debbie Stabenow U.S. Sen. (D-Mich.) cal agenda of the last 30 years and become a chief justice dedicated to protecting the rights of all Ameri- cans." In prior confirmation votes, Levin has supported Ruth Bader Gins- burg and Stephen Breyer - nomi- nated by President Clinton - and Antonin Scalia, who was chosen by President Ronald Reagan. Levin opposed the nominations of William H. Rehnquist, Clarence Thomas and Robert Bork. Levin and Stabenow have opposed some of Bush's judicial nominations in the past, citing the treatment of some of the Clinton nominees by Senate Republicans. Michigan Court of Appeals Judge Helene White, who is married to Levin's cousin, was kept on hold for more than four years, longer than any nominee in Senate history. Her nomination to the sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was later withdrawn. a 929L F IANNI KS ! - 413 V9200