NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 25, 2006 - 3 ON CAMPUS Hopwood award * New Orleans Brass winners announced Band to discuss Big Easy's music Poet Alice Fulton, a former span of 30 minutes. T L_ _ __ - . "In the essav com etitin _ RC frehm Ben I - Members of the Hot 8 Brass Band will discuss the musical heritage of New Orleans, the group's home city, at the Rackham auditorium today from 4:30 to 6 p.m. University Musi- cology Prof. Mark Claque will facili- tate the discussion. Symphony band to perform at Hill The UMS Symphony Band will per- form today at 8 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. The performance will feature the music of Giovanni Gabrielli and Samuel Bar- ber, among others. Sundance winner to perform with students The Office of Academic Multicul- tural Initiatives is sponsoring spo- ken-word performances by students and artist/filmmaker Saul Williams at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater in the Michigan League at 7:30 p.m. C RIME NOTES Alert student * foils Bursley theft Upon returning to his room in Burs- ley Residence Hall on Monday after- noon, a student found a person leaving the room with his laptop computer, the student reported to the Department of Public Safety. The student was able to get the computer back by grabbing it out of the suspects hands. The victim then proceeded escort the suspect out of the dormitory. An area search for the suspect turned up no suspects. Chairs stolen from East Quad Computer Lab Chairs were stolen from the East Quad computing site Monday evening at 10:31 p.m., DPS reported. * Patient kicks ER security officer While a University Hospital security officer was in the process of securing a patient in the emergency room yester- day, the patient kicked him in the face, reported DPS. THIS DAY In Daily History Protesters convicted of trespassing Jan. 25, 1985 - Three members of the Progressive Student Network were convicted yesterday by the 15th District Court of trespassing while barricading a University engineering laboratory last March. The six-member jury issued its unanimous vote that the defendants were guilty after less than an hour of deliberation. Linwood Noah, the prosecuting attorney, said he was not surprised by the guilty verdict. Similarly, Donald Koster, the defense attorney, replied he was "disappointed, but not sur- prised" by the verdict and plans to appeal the case. Koster said he would appeal on the grounds that Engineering Prof. George Haddad, whose research the students were protesting, read the trespass act without the proper authority. Haddad confessed during yesterday's cross- examination that he had no authority to read the act to the demonstrators. Haddad testified that the demonstra- tors demanded that the guidelines for classified research projects adopted by the University be extended to nonclassi- fied research. Koster argued that he could not present the case he wanted after University creative writing professor, was the guest speaker By Andrew Klein Daily Arts Writer This year's Hopwood Underclassmen Awards Ceremony, held yesterday at Rack- ham Auditorium, not only celebrated the bot- tomless pool of young talent thriving at the University, but also marked a return to the University for the event's guest speaker, poet Alice Fulton. Fulton, currently a professor of English at Cornell University, taught creative writing at the University from 1983 through 2001. English professor and former director of the Hopwood Awards program Nicholas Del- banco presided over the ceremony, sparing only a few sentences outlining the legacy of the Hopwood Awards. There are three Hop- wood underclassman categories: essay, fic- tion and poetry. Presented along with the Hopwoods, five different fellowships make up another substantial list of awards. A total of $21,750 in awards was presented in the u i csy p ou~~i~i , ires man peen- ish Ahmed was awarded $1,500 in the essay category with a piece titled "Because I Swal- lowed an Ocean." LSA sophomore and Michi- gan Daily reporter C. C. Song earned $1,250 in the fiction category for her short story "Grace." RC sophomore and Daily reporter Karl Stampfl took home three awards total- ing $4,300, which included $1,000 in poetry, $800 in the fiction category and $2,500 from the Roy W. Cowden Memorial Fellowship. The second-and third-place winners in the essay category, LSA sophomore Geoffrey George and RC sophomore Alison Heeres, both submitted papers that were originally conceived in Residential College Prof. Leslie Stainton's course, Creative Adaptation. The awards ceremony lasted less than an hour. Delbanco introduced his former col- league, Alice Fulton, with select but warm- hearted remarks, describing her as possessing "an unflagging ambition" and her work as some- thing that "stands somehow outside of time." Fulton received her Master of Fine Arts from Cornell in 1982, and less than a decade later won a MacArthur Foundation fellowship for her poetry. Her best-known collection of I JI* L.4,I 4'f U English Prof. Nicholas Delbanco gives out the 2006 Hopwood underclassmen awards at the Rackham Auditorium yesterday. poetry is "Felt," which won her the 2003 Bob- bitt National Prize for Poetry from the Library of Congress. She read numerous selections of her work from several different books, their topics ranging from embarrassment to religious experiences. She was emphatic in her encour- agement to those who were not graced with an award, explaining that, "Perseverance is nine- tenths of being a writer." Granhoim to talk about economy, jobs, education Michigan has 180,000 fewer jobs available than it did at its peak in 2000 LANSING (AP) - Gov. Jennifer Granholm plans to focus her 2006 State of the State address today on familiar themes: improving the state's economy to create more jobs and strengthening education so more workers can get high-tech jobs. "The governor knows that our state is hurt- ing," Granholm spokeswoman Liz Boyd said yesterday. "The governor has a plan. She's working her plan. Citizens can expect to hear more steps of that plan tomorrow." Focusing on jobs and education are nothing new for the Democratic governor, who gave her first State of the State address in 2003. Since Republican Gov. John Engler left office in December 2002, Michigan has gained back nearly 95,000 of the jobs it lost in the recession and afterward. But the state still has 180,000 fewer jobs than the 4.98 million it had during its mid- 2000 peak, according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. Some of the initiatives Granholm will talk about Wednesday have been redrawn to make them more acceptable to the Republicans who control the state Senate and House. Her plan to reward students who complete at least two years of college or technical train- ing with scholarship money, for instance, now gives some of the money up front for use dur- ing those first two years to students who do well a on standardized high The govern school tests. She's workin Under her plan, the Michigan Merit Award Citizens can would give those stu- dents $1,000 each of to hear mor their first two years of school - whether that plan tor that's at a community college, university or other training - and give them another Spokes $2,000 if they earn a two-year associate's degree or become juniors at a four-year uni- versity while maintaining a minimum 2.5 grade point average. If students didn't do well on the high school test, they could get the full $4,000 by finish- ing two years of college. Granholm also will propose a $1 billion plan to provide health insurance to half of the million state residents who don't have coverage. The Michigan First Health Partnership would be paid for with state and federal dollars. It's designed to lessen some of the strain or has a plan. ag her plan. expect e steps of morrow." - Liz Boyd woman for Granholm the uninsured put on the economy and busi- nesses, Boyd said, and is part of the gover- nor's broader efforts to improve the state's economic climate and quality of life. Granholm also wants to use education pro- grams at schools, offic- es and churches to help better promote healthy lifestyles and push for setting up an electronic network to consolidate will be to urge lawmakers to support a plan requiring high school students to take four classes each in math and English, three each in science and social science, two in world languages and one each in physical education and the arts. After-school programs to help middle- school students with math, science and com- puter technology also will get attention, with the governor proposing to use state money to get more programs going. Some House Republicans have proposed their own plan for stiffer high school requirements. Under their proposal, high school students could, with their parents' permission, opt out of the college-prep curriculum and instead begin receiving vocational training in their freshman year. They would not need to take a foreign lan- guage class to graduate. Senate Majority Leader Sikkema and House Speaker Crag DeRoche, both Republicans, will respond to the governor's hour-long address with a Capitol news conference fol- lowing the speech. The Michigan Green Party has taped a 20- minute response that will be shown on Michi- gan Government TV at 8:20 p.m. EST today. health care information for providers. Republican lawmakers also are pushing for more technology in health care record- keeping. The governor's main education initiative I I, _________________________________________________________________ COME WRITE FOR THE DAiLY. STOP BY 420 r Volunteers with an excessive fear MAYNARD ST. AND of snakes or spiders are needed at the U of M Anxiety Clinic for a phobia study. Participants will receive a free self-help manual and up to $200. IRB #2004-1006. Call (734) 647-8354 Summer 2006 in Paris A multitude of undergraduate, credit-bearing courses *Two 5-week Sessions a : : .: .: .: .. ...a........a....,..a... ...a .a.r a.'a 'a 'a 'a 'a.a.'a 'a''.a.''a -a'a.. a. a'., . . a'< .a.1 4 'I 4 'I '4 '4 Dis *Fast Track Intensives * French Immersions wwwaupedu :4 4 I i 4 1I 1 1i 4 I'f ',1 't 41 ', ', 4 ''' 4' '' is The College ofLiterature, Science & the Arts and the Department ofMathematics present a tinguished Lecture Series in Mathematical Biology (LS&A Research Theme Semester in Mathematical Biology) N Profesor Mihael .fiReedf Bishop-MacDermott Family Professor of Mathematics Duke University Why is Mathematical Biology so Hard ological systems are exceptionally diverse, complex, and special at the same time. The difficulties herent in investigating such systems will be illustrated by a discussion of folate and methionine etabolism, which plays a critical role in DNA synthesis, DNA methylation, and protection against idative stress. Mutations in the genes of one-carbon metabolism and dietary imbalances in the bstrates of these pathways (amino acids, vitamins .b, 32, folate) are associated with developmental normalities, cancer, heart disease, and depression. Mathematical models can be used to investigatefi usal mechanisms and to shed light on public policy alternatives, but the construction of these models fraught with difficulties and uncertainties, The complexity of the dynamics of the system poses new uestions for research mathematicians. Thursday, January 26, 2006 6:00 p.m. 9 Room 1360 East Hall THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY OF PARIS knowledge, perspective, understanding Bi in m ox su ab ca is qu ~. Ann Arbor District Library Should Religious Beliefs be a Qualification for Public Office? Tuesday, January 31, 7:00 - 8:30 pm Downtown Library Multi-Purpose Room o . ..S,4. A 115l ;till I