LocAL/Sirwrt The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 26, 1995 - 3A Homecoming game, festivities bring, alums back to U Provost x. U'selected for aional Gene. 1ector Center The National Institutes of Health has lected the University Medical Center a site for one of three National Gene ector Laboratories to create and pro- ace gene transfer agents for use by searchers. The laboratories will share Sto$3 million this year, with addi- >nal funds to be provided over the xt four years. The laboratories have been established overcome one of the significant ob- acles to therapies designed to treat ge- tic diseases: a shortage ofreliable"vec- r," or delivery systems, to introduce w strains of engineered DNA to re- ace faulty genes in human cells. The bs' long-term goal is to produce and stribute vectors that meet government dards for clinical studies. Gary J. Nabel, a professor of internal edicine and of biological chemistry, ill concentrate on developing lipid- sed DNA carriers and other non-viral ctors that can be used by any re- archer who has received approval to nduct gene therapy trials. Other re- archers in the department of internal edicine will participate. lectronic support for ancer patients . After the initial shock of a cancer agnosis wears off, the fear is usually ertaken by a gnawing hunger for ev- morsel of information available out the disease and its treatment. For ose traditionally lacking trust in or cess to the medical system - such as inoities, the elderly and those from wee' socioeconomic backgrounds - e specter of such major illness can be pecially traumatic and intimidating. To help cut through the fear and con- sion, the University School of Nurs- g and Comprehensive Cancer Center ye joined to establish Hearth Inc., an -home computer network that allows ch patients and their loved ones to - ail members of their health care team henever the need arises. They can so communicate electronically with hers in the pilot program as well as ith cancer survivors nationwide rough patient support groups on the ternet. The network also allows ac- ss to the National Cancer Institute's -line cancer information database. Ten patients are initally being linked. osteparticipants are in their 50s and s, and about half are African Ameri- ns from inner-city Detroit. esearch and chnology conference be held In Ypsilanti The Southeast Michigan Research d Technology Exposition and Con- rence will be held Nov. 20-21 at the arriott Hotel adjoining the Eastern ichigan University Corporate Educa- n Center in Ypsilanti. The confer- ce is a cooperative effort between the iversity, EMU, Washtenaw Com- unity College, the Industrial Tech- logy Institute, the Environmental seach Institute of Michigan and ilips Display Components. The confrence will ccombine 40 ex- its with special events and speakers ncerning the area's technological re- urces. The conference fee is $200. Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Cathy Boguslaski By Soumya Mohan For the Daily Wolverines all over the state are ready to roll on home. While the Michigan football team will attempt to turn the Minnesota Golden Gophers black and blue Satur- day to cap off Homecoming Week, many other events are planned for the coming days to whip up spirit. Homecoming events go into full swing tomorrow with the parade and pep rally. The Alumni Association will host its annual Go Blue Brunch on Saturday; the ROTC's annual Haunted House takes place tomorrow and Satur- day. The theme of this year's celebration is "Painting the Town Maize and Blue." The parade will begin at 4:30 p.m. at thecornerof SouthUniversity and South Forest avenues and travel west to State Street, then head north to North Univer- sity Avenue and conclude near Ingalls Mall. The streets will be closed from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. There are 45 parade entrants this year, including the Michigan cheerleaders, the dance team M-Pact and the Men's Glee Club. Jennifer Gorecki, parade chair, ex- pressed delight that there were so many entrants. "I think it will be great this year. We have twice as many groups this year as we had last year, so we are all pretty excited. "The parade is a way to generate student spirit and get everybody in- volved," Gorecki said. She added that the Homecoming com- mittee was working closely with the Alumni Association and hopes to get good alumni support. The Pep Rally is scheduled to start around 5:30 p.m. Athletic Director Joe Roberson will deliver the keynote ad- dress. Several other members of the Athletic Department, including basket- ball coach Steve Fisher and members of the football and wrestling teams, are also scheduled to give talks. Wendy Pell, chair of the pep rally, was optimistic about the turnout at the rally. "We have a good mix of speakers along with the athletes, so it should be a good combination," she said. Free gifts such as T-shirts and pom-poms will be distributed at the rally, and Pell said there would be enough giveaways for everybody. Because Homecoming falls on the weekend before Halloween, there will be a timely addition to the festivities. The ROTC's Haunted House will run Friday and Saturday from 7-11 p.m. in the basement of North Hall. The ticket proceeds will go to SAFE House and Avalon House. Catalia Crossen of the ROTC ad- vised people to come early to avoid long waits in line. Among other events, KUUMBA will host a tailgate barbecue at the Trotter House at I1 a.m. Saturday. University Activities Committee and Black Folks Productions are sponsor- ing the Homecoming Comedy Jam. Montana Taylor and Bruce Bruce will perform at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Mendelssohn Theater. Tickets are $7 in advance and $8 at the door. hosts tea for Rhodes candidates By Heather Miller Daily Staff Reporter Described as a "dress rehearsal," the Provost's Office hosted a tea yesterday afternoon in the Michigan Union for two of the four candidates the Univer- sity is endorsing for the Rhodes Schol- arship. "It's a real social event," said Nancy Pietras from the Honors Office, which handles all national scholarships. Pietras said the tea is an opportunity for the candidates to speak to Provost J. Bernard Machen and to offer a thank- you to their academic advisers and people who wrote them letters of rec- ommendation. The tea also serves another purpose. The Rhodes Scholarship state competi- tion will have a similar social event for the candidates. "(The tea) is to give them an idea of what to expect if they get a state interview," Pietras said. "The Honors Office does an extraor- dinary job of preparing students for what's ahead," said Rhodes candidate Hao-Chin Yang, an LSA senior. Rhodes candidate Benjamin Novick, an LSA senior, mentioned that the Hon- ors Office will also give the candidates mock interviews. An interview at the state level is the next step in the competition, with two ofthe 10 to 12 people interviewed going on to the regional level. With eight regions, 32 scholarships are awarded across the country. Students who are awarded the Rhodes Scholarship are given two years of study at Oxford University in England. Novick also has been endorsed by the Univer- sity for the Marshall Scholarship, which awards two years of study at any En- glish university. "These are the most prestigious schol- arships you can get when you gradu- ate," said Associate Provost Susan Lipschutz. "It's a great honor (to be nominated)," Novick said. "It's a long road ahead, but I'll try my best." 'y ?S a 1 >a ~ r ' ... R ::. j ti ELIZABETH LIPPMAN/Daily Pumpkin drive LSA sophomore Dave Black joins fellow members of Fiji fraternity and Chi Omega sorority selling pumpkins in the Diag yesterday to benefit the National Institute for Bum Medicine. Rescued BENTON HARBOR (AP) - young brothers rescued after a 10. kidnapping enjoyed their first full of freedom yesterday by sleeping1 Their father pledged to visit a chu because "we're thankful to God." "They're OK, they're getting onv their lives," Martin Alvarado said o sons, Adan, 11, and Eleazar, 3. 44x my sons to rest." With his family inside, Alvarado stood on the porch of a wooden hut camp for migrant farm workers, w friends had celebrated the brothers' turn to southwestern Michiganc hours earlier. Thanks to a tip, the Alvarado b and their alleged abductor were fo Tuesday in New Orleans' French Q ter. The discovery ended a nation search forthe brothers. whodisappe boys get first full day of freedo [wo *' day Cases of stranger kidnapping rare, traumatic .day late. DETROIT (AP) - It's every rare in that the boys were found alive widely. Based on what is known ab urch parent's worst nightnare: A stranger and relatively quickly. Authorities have the Benton Harbor case, the boys st kidnaps your child off the street in not said ifthey were physically abused. a good chance of recovering, he s with broad daylight and they vanish. But But even in cases where there is no Miller said the children's ages, h fhis such cases are extremely rare. physical abuse, the trauma of forced well they understand what has N Nant The most recent government study separation from the child's parents can pened, and their relationship with ti on child abductions estimated there be long-lasting, Miller said. Symptoms parents also affect their reaction; ,43, were only 200 to 300 "stereotypical can include anxiety, fearfulness, night- "It's hard to know how the your at a kidnappings" by strangers nationwide mares, distrust of strangers and a ten- one would have understood it a here in 1988 out of 63.8 million children. dency to cling more to their parents. years of age. The older one is re- "While this is everyone's worst fear, "For these two children, they know enough to imagine all kinds of thi only the most likely kidnapper is someone it actually can happen," Miller said."It that could happen." the kids know," said JerryMiller, a really interferes with a basic sense of Barnett said he was dismayed boys clinical psychologist and University security and safety about the world." some reporters' insensitive, ambu lund Center for the Child and the Family Douglas Barnett, an expert on child style questioning of the boys asF uar- director.' trauma and assistant professor of psy- agents escorted them and their pare The case of two brothers abducted chology at Wayne State University, through an airport following their wide near Benton Harbor:was all the more said children's reactions to trauma vary union Tuesday in New Orleans. ared I r t- N t K Y i i t bout and aid. how hap- heir nger at 3 old ngs Jby ush- FBI ents r re- Yang agreed. "It's certainly i ible to reach this point." The University has endorsed students for the Rhodes Schol this year, but candidates Jon Phillips and Irit Kleiman have a graduated and were unable to yesterday's tea. ncre d fo arshi nath lrea atte' Oct. 14 after buying potato chips at a convenience store while their mother, Maria, washed clothes next door at a coin laundry, near Benton Harbor. Boyd Dean Weekley, 24, an ex-con- vict from South Dakota, remained in federal custody in New Orleans. The FBI offered no new details on his odys- sey from the upper Midwest to Michi- gan and then the Deep South. "We're trying to put together a timeline," Agent George Burttram said in Louisiana. Adan stayed home from school, but three brothers helped erect a banner on the front of the building that said, "Wel- come Home Adan and Eleazar. We Love You!!!" When he decides to return to his front-row seat in Peg Frisch's sixth- grade classroom, Adan will be greeted with a pizza party and affection from teachers and students. "Adan probably won't stand still for hugs. He's all boy," said Jean Stroud, principal at tiny River School in Berrien County's Sodus Township. "The day before he left, his class was playing kickball and he was clowning around. "Kids call him the class clown, in a positive way," she said. The disappearance of Adan 'and Eleazar was starting to show last Thurs- day at the 77-student school. Counse- lors encouraged students to unleash their emotions. "I felt guilty that it happened to them and not us," said Jesse Edwards, an eighth-grader. "We were home with our families and they weren't." The boys' father insisted that they were not physically abused during the ordeal. Doctors examined Adan and Eleazar, but the FBI has declined to discuss the findings. "We're going to go to church, where they speak the word of God," Martin Alvarado said yesterday after the fam- ily had spent the night back at home. "Thanks be to God, we're thankful to God." The Alvarados are migrant farm workers from Mission, Texas, who have traveled to Michigan the past four years to pick fruits and vegetables. Weekley, meanwhile, is due to ap- pear today in front of U.S. Magistrate Louis Moore in New Orleans. He even- tually will be transferred to Michigan to face federal kidnapping charges. He faces up to life in prison if convicted. Weekley was charged in August with fondling an 8-year-old girl at a Sioux Falls, S.D., swimming pool. He was re- leased in September after relatives and a prison chaplain, the Rev. Larry Rucker, raised $500 to secure his $5,000 bail. Know of news? Call 76-DAILY Sd- ur hip an dy nd a I -'lu 7777 777 what's happening n Ann arbor today New rock & pop Free billiards. Retro Rock Dance dance night! No cover. Night w/DJ Chuck. Free billiards. Drink specials Drink specials all night. No cover. all night. Cover just $1 THURSDA FRIDAY SATURDAY GROUP MEETINGS Q AIESEC Michigan, international Student Happy Hour, 662-1690, Ann Arbor Brewing Company, 9 p.m. Q Archery Club, 930-0189, Sports Coliseum, Hill Street, 7-9 p.m. U Campus Crusade for Christ, Real Life, 930-9269, Dental Build- ing, Kellogg Auditorium, 7-8:15 p.m. U Japan Student Association, third general mass meeting, 663- 3047, Modern Languages Build- ing, Room B116, 8 p.m. Q Muslim Students Association, meeting and halaqa, 665-6416, Michigan League, Henderson Room, 7 p.m. U Pie-med Club, Alternatives to the MD, 764-1755, Michigan Union, Anderson Room, 6 p.m. Labor Action Coalition, Rackham Building, East Lecture Room, 7 p.m. Q "Grads and Young Professionals Coffee Talk," sponsored by Hillel, Cava Java, corner of East Univer- sity and South University, 8 p.m. U "Helping to Heal Workshop," sponsored by SAPAC, South Quad, West Lounge, 12:30- 1:30 p.m. U "informationMeeting About Study Abroad in Beijing, China," sponsored by Office of International Programs, Mod- ern Languages Building, Room B137, 5-6 p.m. U "Marketing Your Graduate De- gree," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, Frieze Building, Room 3065, 12 noon- 2 p.m. t "an : E... Ei C.ESn. U "Shulchan ivrit Hebrew Table," spon- sored by Hillel,. Cava Java Cafe, comer of East University and South University, 5:30 p.m. Q "Social Security Financing," C.J. Nesbitt, sponsored by Math Club, Angell Hall, Room G239, 5 p.m. U "The Tortilla Curtain," T. Coraghessan Boyle, sponsored. by Borders Books, Rackham Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Q "Writing Your Resume," sponsored by Career Planning and Placement, 3200 Student Activities Building, 4:10-5 p.m. STUDENT SERVICES Q CampusinformationCenters, Michi- gan Union and North Campus Com- mons, 763-INFO, info@umich.edu, IM.Events on GOpherBLUE. and "... Ann Arbor, traditionally 'the city where commerce and educa- tion meet,' was not all sweetness and light last night. "The occasion for Ann Arbor's transfer from the educational and commercial column to the modified gang warfare category was the an- nual Black Friday uprising, and this year's Black Friday proved to be replete with the genuine old-style ducking-in-the-Huron, hosings, forced plunges into the Union pool, de-pantsings, and simple smashes to the jaw, lips and eyes...." vip I Owl great scores. Law School Business School Denta School