t l K JN" jj4 1IF The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 5, 1995 - 3 Student reports beating near Frieze Building Six to 10 men allegedly held down aa student on the loading dock of the Frieze Building on Friday, and police said the assailants tried to both place the victim in handcuffs and cover him in duct tape. Department of Public Safety re- ports say the victim called at about I p.m. Friday after he escaped the group affd shut himself in a Frieze Building room. The victim "stated he thought he was mistaken for someone else and assaulted instead," DPS reports say. "He refused to stay in the area or give any other information." Staff in the area said the group ofimen held the victim down, pulled his pants dawn and attempted to restrain him with the cuffs and tape. When he es- caped, reports say, the group hung around outside the room's door before leaving. "The group was carrying radios and was heard to be complaining about los- ing him although they knew his loca- tion," DPS reports say. "They were also seen hanging around a Ryder truck on the Washington Street side ofthe Frieze Building." -Both the victim and the assailants left the scene before DPS officers could respond. Neither the suspects nor the victim could be located. Boy allegedly chokes his grandmother University Hospitals security called DPS at 3:15p.m. Saturday to report that aperson was choking another person in a vehicle at the Emergency Room en- trance. A 7-year-old boy, who was being taken to the Psychiatric Emergency Room, was allegedly choking his grand- mother, reports say. The boy was re- strained and apparently had been on medication to try to control his behav- ,DPS reports say the incident began when the boy "grabbed on to his grandma's hair after finding out she lied to him about going to the hospi- tal..Grandma was not injured." Blood trail does not lead to suspect DPS officers followed a blood trail from a vandalized food vending ma- chine to a bathroom in a nearby building, but were left with no sus- pects. Saturday night at about 10:30, a DPS officer discovered the broken coin-operated vending machine in the Dental Building and determined that an unknown suspect had accessed the money storage area of the machine. The officer also found the front glass panel smashed and food items miss- ing. Officers followed the blood trail to a men's bathroom in theChemistry Build- ing across the street, but were unable to locate a suspect. Workers damage freezer, research 'contractors knocking a hole in a wall at the Medical Science 11 Building un- intentionally dropped concrete on a freezer below, causing damage to the freezer and its contents. The freezer damage is estimated at more than $3,000 due to the loss of the uiachine and the lost research, reports say. The damage ocurred sometime between Thursday night Friday morn- ing. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Josh White Probe1 Jupiter U' profs awai Galileo's data By Tim O'Connell Daily Staff Reporter This Thursday at 5:07 p.m., students will be sitting down to dence hall meal. At the same tim million miles away, a space pro signed in part by University prof will dive down into Jupiter's amm filled atmosphere, giving scient first concrete glimpse at the com tion of the planet's surrounding The spacecraft Galileo, whic been slowly approaching Jupiter its launch in 1989, released the pr July, and this week the two are c in contact with the planet's atmos for the first time. Engineering Profs. George Car and Sushil Atreya headed u University's Galileo science an periment team that constructe Galileo Probe Mass Spectromete the help of scientists at the Go Space Flight Center. The instrument will analyze and tify the atmospheric gases the passes through during its 75-m descent. As it falls, the probe will the information by radio transm to the Galileo spacecraft orbiting ter. Galileo will then transmit the mation to Earth. Engineering Prof. Thomas Don who helped in the design of the trometer, has been waiting a lon LSA-SG calls for tenure reviews By Laurie Mayk Daily Staff Reporter A move to alter the University' ure policies is getting some su from students who feel teaching s be considered on par with research considering who to reward with a anteed position. LSA Student Government is r mending that all faculty, especial] turers, be considered for tenure a accompanying titles and comp tions. The resolution, passed last expresses a desire to "keep good ers at the University," saidI Rosenberg, LSA-SG governmen fairs officer. Regard for good in tors who enjoy teaching tends tossed to the wayside during t considerations in favor of rever searchers bearing the title of prof he said. The resolution says a per imbalace in compensation betwee fessors and other university in tors, who are not on the tenure1 would be alleviated by rewardir search and teaching equally. "I don't really care if it's a lectu professor," Rosenberg said. "All about is that I have a good teach good teacher can be either a lectu a professor; a bad teacher can bea a lecturer or a professor." The resolution, which stems debates last month among the fac Senate Advisory Committee on versity Affairs, is expected to t viewed by LSA-SG's academica committee, SACUA and the LS ministration in the upcoming Rosenberg said. Copies of the r tion have been forwarded to v, SACUA members and lecturers, a many a resi- e, 550 ,be de- essors nonia- ists a nposi- gases. h has since obe in oming phere ignan p the d ex- d the r with ddard diden- probe inute l relay ission Jupi- infor- nahue, spec- g time wiil visit his week for the 750-pound probe's descent. "This mission was authorized in 1977 ... we've been involved since the early '80s," he said. "Galileo was scheduled to be launched by the Space Shuttle Atlantis in 1986, but the Chal- lenger explosion delayed the launch until '89." Scientists believe the information from the probe will shed light on the formation of Jupiter. "Since Jupitertrapped so much ofthe materials that were present during the making of our solar system," Donahue said, "it fundamentally helps us answer the questions of what was in the area before the solar system was formed and how it was formed." Atreya and some of the other re- searchers will be in Pasadena, Calif., on Thursday, where NASA will be track- ing the probe's progress. Donahue will join the group Sunday, when NASA expects to begin receiving Galileo's transmission of the probe's data. The probe should enter the atmo- sphere at a speed of more than 100,000 mph, Atreya said in a statement. A heat shield will protect the probe from an anticipated temperature of 27,000 de- grees Fahrenheit as it encounters fric- tion from the atmosphere. After the probe decelerates to 1,000 mph, the probe will drop the heat shield, and two parachutes will slow the probe during its remaining 125-mile fall be- fore it either melts or implodes. "Webelievetheprobewill passthrough four distinct clouds consisting of a layer ofsolid ammonia, a layer ofammonia and dihydrogen sulfide ... alayerofice clouds, We've waited 20 years ... We can wait a few more weeks." - Sushil Atreya Engineering professor the problem. "The current plan is to store probe data in the spacecraft's computer memory, with the tape re- corder used as a backup storage de- vice," he said. The spacecraft will then use its low- gain antenna to transmit information at the rate of 40 bits per second - one- sixth the speed of a 2400 baud com- puter modem. "I expect that we'll get all of the data back by the 15th, whereas if we had been able to use the high-gain antenna, we would have had it in a couple of hours," Donahue said. Atreya is not dismayed. "We've waited 20 years. ... We can wait a few more weeks." COURTESY OF NEWS AND INFORMATION SERVICES Members of the University Galileo team (left to right) Tom Donahue, Bruce Block, George Carignan and Sushil Atreya examine electronic components back in '87. and a final layer of water clouds, in which some dissolved ammonia will likely be found,"saidgraduate student Mike Wong, who is pursuing a doctoral degree in astrophysics. Wong has worked with Atreya since January. The original plan for transmitting the probe's data from Galileo to Earth in- cluded the use of Galileo's high-gain antenna. But since launch, the antenna has become inoperative. Atreya said NASA has alleviated I 's ten- upport hould when guar- ecom- ly lec- nd its pensa- week, teach- Barry tal af- struc- to get enure ed re- essor, eived n pro- struc- track, ng re- ureror I care her. A urer or either from ulty's Uni- be re- affairs A ad- term, esolu- arious s well LSASO Meeting Today on Drop/Add Deadline The LSA student government will be holding a meeting today on extending the drop/add deadline at 8 p.m. in Room 2002 of the LSA Building. Members of the LSA Joint Student- Faculty Policy Committee will be on hand to answer questions about the proposal to extend the drop/add deadline in LSA to the ninth week of classes. as LSA Dean Edie N. Goldenberg, LSA Associate Dean David Schoem, Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford and University President James J. Duderstadt. Although the resolution has not been extensively reviewed by SACUA, its chairman said he agrees with at least one of the document's assertions. "Lecturers should have a real crack at the tenure system," said George Brewer, SACUA chairman. "They should have their chance to compete for the tenure track." University lecturer Ailan Caroline Chubb commended the body on its ini- tiative on the issue and suggested that students play a greater role in faculty and administrative decisions. "No group has a greater stake in monitoring and improving instruction on campus than the students: It is they who take out the loans, work numerous jobs and burden financially their rela- tives to pay for this education." The resolution stressed the ability of teachers to communicate with students as an important aspect of the "overall effectiveness of the individual." While the University is well known for its research and retains respected research professors, it should be equally con- cerned with the retention of faculty members who enjoy teaching, Rosenberg said. The incentive that tenure gives fac- ulty to remain at the University is a common issue raised among faculty members. During yesterday's open fac- ulty forum for the presidential search, Martin Gold, a research scientist and professor emeritus ofpsychology, listed a regard for faculty tenure as one of the key qualities in a candidate for Univer- sity president. By Katie Wang Daily Staff Reporter A group of University researchers have discovered a method that may slow the spread of the HIV virus. After examining how HIV vaccine trials are currently tested, researchers have recommended they be redesigned to test for the vaccine's power to reduce contagiousness and stop the spread of the disease. Most of the studies were focused on the earliest stage of infec- tion. "Our work over time has found most HIV infection occurred over primary infection," said head researcher and epidemiology Prof. James Koopman. "This period of infection is the window period before the antibody is positive." Earlierresearch Koopman conducted found people are 100 to 1,000 times more contagious in the first two months of the HIV infection. residents out 011 ofMiller Manor home By Josh White Daily Staff Reporter A one-room blaze with heavy smoke caused the evacuation yesterday of Miller Manor, a 105-room senior citi- zens' home on the city's west side, and left an entire floor shut off from resi- dents for at least one night. An Ann Arbor Fire Department unit arrived at the building, which is oper- ated by the Ann Arbor Housing Com- mission, at about 12:15 p.m. and found "heavy smoke and flames visible" on the fifth floor, coming from one room. Three tenants were removed from the floor and taken to University Hospitals where one of the tenants was listed in serious condition, according to an AAFD statement. All other residents of the seven-floor home at 727 Miller Rd. were immedi- ately evacuated. Joe Morehouse, an accountant for the housing commission, saidthere were no problems getting residents out of the building. "Everyone left the building quickly and carefully," Morehouse said."Ido not know of any trouble with the evacua- tion." Media reports last night said arson is suspected in the case, but the AAFD would not confirm the reports. The Koopman said a vaccine that reduced infectiousness and contagiousness at the early stage would help "prevent or stop HIV epidemics." Researcherand math Prof. Carl Simon said current research on HIV vaccines focuses on how a vaccine keeps a per- son healthy and little work is done to test for contagiousness. Simon said other researchers who are not testing for contagiousness "may reject the vaccine that works by ignor- ing this research." Koopman and Simon stressed that their findings will not prevent a person from contracting the HIV virus but that vaccines can stop infected people from being contagious during the early stages of infection. This could stop people from spreading the disease. Their findings also recommend that scientists vaccinate uninfected, non- monogamous couples and compare their rates of infection overtime to uninfected couples who are not vaccinated. "Putting it very simply, if large num- bers of individuals in the vaccinated couple group are infected with HIV but their partners remain free of the dis- ease, it is likely that the vaccine re- duced contagiousness," Koopman said. Koopman began working on this re- search in 1986 with a "Transmission Analysis Group," which is composed of professors and students from several departments including epidemiology, economics and biostatistics. "This group formed because they re- alized current researchers were not fd cussing on transmission dynamics," Koopman said. The research was conducted by look- ing at computer simulations and other researchers' data. It was supported by a grant from the University's Office of the Vice President of Research. U' researchers suggest method to slow spread of HIV virus Attenti ertisers Due to the December vacation, there will be early deadlines for the following publications: Publication Date Deadline Wednesday, Jan. 10 Friday, Dec. 8 Thursday, Jan. 1 1 Friday, Dec. 8 Friday, Jan. 1 2 Friday, Dec. 8 Happy Holidays from The Michigan Daily Display advertising staff. What's happening in Ann Arbor today great scores... GROUP MEETINGS U ALIANZA - Latino Organization, weekly meeting, 764-2837, Trot- ter House, 1443 Washtenaw Ave., 7 p.m. U American Movement for Israel, meeting, Hillel Building, Hill Street, 7 p.m. Amnesty International, meeting, Michigan Union. Welker Room. tional Center, Room 9, 3 p.m. U "Resident Staff Positions - Infor- mation Meeting," sponsored by Residence Ediucation, Chrysler Auditorium, North Campus, 4:30- 6:30 p.m. O "Salomon Brothers, Inc. Informa- tion Session," sponsored by Ca- reer Planning and Placement, Michigan Union, Pendleton Rnnm 7,Qn m STUDENT SERVICES U Campus Information Centers, Michigan Union and North Cam- pus Commons, 763-INFO, info@umich.edu, UM*Events on GOpherBLUE, and http:// www.umich.edu/-info on the World Wide Web CI English Composition Board Peer Tutoring. 741-8958. Mason Hall. q r t