NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 4, 2006 - 3 ON CAMPUS * Workshop to demystify Michigan tax forms The International Center is hosting a workshop intended to explain the ins and outs of the Michigan tax form to international students. The event is scheduled for today at 1 p.m. in the Pendleton Room of the Michigan Union. Participants should bring a completed federal income tax form. Group to hold open forum on sexual violence University Women Against Rape is holding a forum to promote open dis- cussion about sexual violence today at 7 p.m. at Auditorium D in the Michi- gan League. The event is part of the Take Back the Night campaign aimed at stopping violence against women. Bestselling author to speak on interaction Linguist Deborah Tannen of George- town University will speak today at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan League on communication and human interac- tion. Tannen's book, "You're Wearing THAT? Understanding Mothers and Daughters in Conversation," is current- ly fifth on the New York Times Best Sellers list. CRIME NOTIrES r Yellow paint mars Oxford sidewalk Court fines members of elections board ® Appeals court orders Democrats to pay fine for disobeying court order LANSING (AP) - Two members of the state elections board who failed to comply with a court order to put an anti-affirmative action measure on the November ballot were ordered yesterday to pay a fine or face con- tempt charges. The Michigan Court of Appeals issued an order directing Democrats Paul Mitchell and Doyle O'Connor to each pay a $250 fine or show up in court on June 8. The appeals court told the four- member Board of State Canvassers last year to certify signatures gath- ered for the petition drive and put the proposal on the November 2006 ballot. But during a raucous meeting in December, the board deadlocked after Mitchell voted against a motion to place the issue on the ballot and O'Connor didn't vote. O'Connor said yesterday the Dec. 14 meeting was improperly adjourned and ended in confusion during a loud protest by the measure's opponents. "My gut reaction is not to pay fines where I haven't done anything wrong," O'Connor said. "The court is mistaken as to what happened here." O'Connor said he thought the board was voting on a motion to end debate, and not yet voting on whether to cer- tify the petitions. He said he intended to follow the court order and expects the appeals court to dismiss the case after hearing his side. But a three-member panel of the appeals court said yesterday that a motion to certify the petitions was the only motion pending before the board at the time it voted. A message seeking comment was left with Mitchell. The appeals court said that because a previous court order told the secretary of state to place the issue on the ballot directly, Mitch- ell and O'Connor had no chance to purge their earlier votes. The court said it must continue with criminal contempt proceedings "for violating this court's clear and unconditional directive to certify the petition." Opponents have said the ballot pro- posal shouldn't go to voters because its backers misrepresented the intent of their plan to some people who signed the petitions. But last week, the Michigan Supreme Court decided not to hear an appeal in the case, meaning the issue will be on the November ballot. The $250 fine is the maximum for criminal contempt. Paying the fine is deemed an admission of contempt. Michigan Democratic Party chair- man Mark Brewer said the contempt proceeding is unnecessary. "The court has far more impor- tant things to do than to address this moot issue," Brewer said. Feds intercept meds for 6-year -old boy CEO says Delphi will be able to avoid strike Congressman intervenes to get illegal medicine from the U.K. for 6-year- old boy in Michigan ROCKFORD (AP) - The federal government intercepted a package con- taining medicine shipped from England and intended for use by a 6-year-old Michigan boy with muscular dystrophy, until a congressman's office intervened. Anessa and Scott Fehsenfeld, of Rockford, were upset about the delay but relieved that the government released the drug, Deflazacort, which is vital to the health of their son. Tyler Fehsenfeld has Duchenne, an aggressive form of muscular dystrophy. "I'm choosing to give this drug to my son that a doctor says he needs, and my country says he can't have it," Anessa Fehsenfeld told The Grand Rapids Press for a story yesterday. "As if the diagno- sis isn't bad enough, and then you have this to deal with." Tyler is the grandson of Dan Gaydou, the newspaper's publisher. In November, customs agents within the U.S. Department of Homeland Secu- rity began cracking down on shipments of prescription drugs from outside the United States. Agents started intercepting pack- ages of Deflazacort and sending letters of explanation to intended recipients, saying the drug was being confiscated because it is not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. While Deflazacort is available in Canada and throughout Europe, the company that makes it has not sought approval from the FDA to sell it here. Some doctors and advocates for muscu- lar dystrophy patients believe the reason is because Deflazacort is an "orphan drug," with a market too small to be profitable. An estimated 12,000 U.S. children have Duchenne, which affects only boys. Brenda Wong, a Cincinnati mus- cular dystrophy specialist, wrote the Deflazacort prescription for Tyler. Without the drug, Duchenne patients typically lose their ability to walk between the ages of 6 and 12, said Mar- ianne Knue, a nurse practitioner who works with Wong. Since the disease also affects the heart and breathing muscles, they often die in their teens. "But with Deflazacort, we are finding boys are able to ambulate much longer, well into their teens' Knue said, adding that she has patients on the drug still liv- ing in their late 20s. After a Grand Rapids Press report- er called the Washington office of U.S. Rep. Vernon Ehlers (R-Grand Rapids) a member of Ehlers' staff contacted the FDA on behalf of the Fehsenfelds. The agency agreed to release the family's package of Deflazacort under a policy that allows people to import a small amount of a drug for personal use, as long as it does not pose a risk and is approved by a doctor. If future shipments are accompa- nied by an explanation of the drug's use and a prescription, they should not be impounded, the FDA said. A large can of yellow paint was poured onto the sidewalk on Oxford Street Sunday at about 10 p.m., the Department of Public Safety reported. Police currently have no suspects. DPS and AAPD team up to make burglary arrest A DPS patrol unit driving down Church Street was flagged down by three students yesterday at about 1:30 a.m., DPS report- ed. They told the patrol unit someone was breaking into their apartment on East Uni- versity. The officers saw someone running from the building. Ann Arbor police were notified, and they apprehended the man, who was transported to the hospital for medical assistance. Institute for Social Research staffer harassed Someone left multiple threaten- ing telephone messages at the office and home of a staff member at the Institute for Social Research, DPS reported. DPS learned of the incident Sunday at about 9:30 a.m. THIS DAY Delphi execs say they are determined to avoid strike that would devastate General Motors DETROIT (AP) - The chairman and chief executive of Delphi Corp. said yes- terday that he is confident the troubled auto parts supplier will avoid a strike that would devastate General Motors Corp., Delphi's former parent and largest cus- tomer. Speaking to the Detroit Economic Club, Robert "Steve" Miller said the bankruptcy court motion the company filed Friday, asking a judge to void its labor contracts, was "an insurance pol- icy" he hoped the company would not have to use. The United Auto Workers has warned that a long strike would be inevitable if the judge agrees to void the contracts and Delphi imposes its most recent pro- posal, which would have lowered wages from $27 to $22 through 2007, and then to $16.50. The offer was rejected by the UAW and other unions. Asked after the speech whether Del- phi would be able to avoid a strike, Miller answered: "Absolutely." "We are determined to work this out," he told reporters on his way out the door. In his speech, Miller said the motion in bankruptcy court was not the "nucle- ar button" some have portrayed it to be. He noted that hearings on the motion are scheduled for May 9 and a ruling from the judge is not expected until early June. "We've got a couple of months to work things out,' he said. Even if the judge approves the request, Delphi might not act unilater- ally if it believes an agreement is pos- sible, he said. "We are not leaving the negotiat- ing table, and I hope no one else does either," he said. "We are in good- faith discussions with our unions, but we cannot just keep talking and losing money indefinitely." Miller, who has overseen restruc- turings at companies such as Bethle- hem Steel Co. and Morrison Knudson Corp., said the first half of 2007 was a realistic target for Delphi's emer- gence from bankruptcy. In addition to asking the judge to void its contracts, Delphi on Friday also announced plans to cut 8,500 salaried jobs and close or sell 21 of its 29 U.S. plants. As Miller spoke yesterday at Detroit's Masonic Temple, the work- ers' group Soldiers of Solidarity held a protest outside. About 50 people carried signs and chanted slogans like "Steve Miller/Dream killer" and "Not one dollar, not one dime/Cut- ting wages is a crime." "It's a sad day for the Delphi work- ers that our plants are being closed," said Jonell Sayles, a 53-year-old who has worked at a Delphi plant in Flint for 30 years. "We're out here today to send a message to the world and our co-workers that somebody is trying to make a difference." In Daily History MSA demands halt of LSA dean reappointment April 4, 1985 - Last night the Michigan Student Assembly unani- mously passed a resolution asking the University Board of Regents to table its decision on the reappointment of LSA Dean Peter Steiner until he states his stance on student representation on the college's executive committee. MSA President Scott Page said the resolution was prompted by Steiner's refusal to discuss the issue with LSA Student Government leaders. The resolution requests that Stein- er's new term be suspended until he "publicly states his views on student representation on the LSA Executive Committee to the regents, the LSA fac- ulty and the LSA students." "We feel we should have students on (the cnmmittee) hecause it is the most for moreinformation call 734/998-6251 The University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Twenty-Seventh Distinguished Senior Faculty Lecture Sharon C. Herbert Professor of Classical Archaeology & Greek Director, Kelsey Museum of Archaeology I F. $