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Badger Herald Photo
NEWS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2007 Professor suffers Russian mugging THE BADGER HERALD, PAGE 3 DO A LITTLE DANCE Slavic languages department chair becomes victim of drugging, spends 8 days in hospital (AP) — A University of Wisconsin professor has returned to the United States and is recovering from being drugged, robbed and dumped in a remote Russian park. David Bethea, 59, chairman of the university’s Slavic languages department, said he has Bethea visited Russia more than two dozen times but made mistakes he hopes other tourists can learn from. A cab driver who offered him a cup of coffee apparently laced it with a date-rape-like drug, he said. A stranger found him in a remote park in St. Petersburg about 12 hours later. Bethea’s liver had dangerously high levels of toxicity. He spent eight days in a St. Petersburg hospital before being flown to UW Hospital on Nov. 1. He spent a night there and then two weeks in bed at home. He still tires easily, he said. Bethea thinks he was a random target of a robbery ring. He vaguely remembers several people taking his leather jacket, watch, wedding ring, cell phone and wallet. They later charged several thousands of dollars on his credit cards for items such as fur coats. Russian police interviewed him, but no arrest has been made in the case, Bethea said. News of his disappearance sped through academic blogs after he failed to show at a conference the morning after he was robbed. Colleagues panicked. “This kind of thing isn’t unheard of in the Wild West that is the new Russia,” said Judith Kornblatt, a Slavic languages professor at UW. “I thought the worst.” “This is going to make me more cautious, but it hasn’t soured me...” David Bethea Department Chair Slavic Languages UW-Madison But Bethea said the experience hasn’t turned him off Russia. “This is going to make me more cautious,” he said, “but it hasn’t soured me on the people or the place.” JAKE NAUGHTON/Herald photo Chris McIntosh and Petrovnia Charles, left, and Carol Buelow and University of Wisconsin Hebrew professor Michael Fox dance away as part of the Madison Scottish Country Dancers Sunday night at Memorial Union. UW examines sick leave concerns More than $1 million in federal money set to help projects across Fox Valley district Committee discusses policy revisions; faculty report less absence than other state employees Petri secures state transport funding CARL JAEGER day if his class is covered by College Editor another faculty member. “What the committee A special committee met recommended was ending earlier this month to address that part of the sick leave concerns that University of policy so there is still great Wisconsin System faculty report encouragement for faculty less sick days than other state to cover each others’ classes when they’re sick,” Sadler said. employees. The University of Wisconsin “When you’re sick, you will System Board of Regents report … that you were sick, committee discussed a recent even if you have a colleague audit by the Legislative Audit cover your course.” Sadler said he was not sure Bureau that investigated the if the current policy caused a lack of sick day reporting. UW-Stevens Point professor significant problem, citing that Chris Sadler, who serves on each year, faculty contracts the committee, said faculty are cover only the academic year, not reporting a “significant use which would explain why they of colleague coverage,” when report fewer sick days. “I think part of that is that a professor has another faculty member cover when he is not more of us are on nine month contracts, and so if you have to able to teach. According to the current have something done where you policy, Sadler said, a professor need to go to the hospital, you is not required to report a sick can lots of times schedule that BY Kettle, from page 1 often entertain by singing holiday tunes. “I have a terrible singing voice; it would scare people away,” he said. The money donated during the Red Kettle Campaign funds the Salvation Army programs run in Dane County, Moore said. “We have 31 separate programs, like tutoring for elementaryand middle schoolaged students, case management for homeless families, a food pantry and a family shelter that can house 150 people a night,” Moore said. He added the amount of donations people give during the bell-ringing campaign has grown over the years. Breakthrough, from page 1 could be used to treat diseases like Parkinson’s, diabetes and spinal cord injuries. Terry Devitt, UW director of research communication, said the recent developments certainly have a large political and ethical significance, but that shouldn’t take anything away from the scientific achievement. “[The research] has tremendous implications for medicine, for drug discovery [and] for transplantation therapies,” Devitt said. “It eliminates the problem of immune rejection.” The cells were obtained by introducing a set of four genes into human skin cells, which are easy to obtain and grow in culture. Through this method, researchers are able to manipulate the outcome, and cells can be custom-generated for therapeutic purposes. “When you have a heart transplant, you’re getting tissues from another person and your immune system recognizes those as foreign cells, and it attacks them,” Devitt said. “When you receive a heart transplant, you’re normally “It’s typical for most locations, including State Street, to make between $3,000 and $5,000 each season,” Moore said. According to the Salvation Army, a kettle that is tended by a bell-ringer brings in an average of $40 to $100 per hour and in 2006, more than 1,750 volunteers collected a total of $438,000. “How much money the kettles make really all rests on the volunteers,” Moore said. “A kettle without a bell-ringer won’t get any donations.” The Salvation Army’s annual campaign will run until Dec. 24. Individuals willing to ring bells around Dane County can sign up on the Salvation Army’s website at www.ringbells.org. given drugs [and] often you need to be on those drugs for life.” In 2001 President Bush formulated a policy limiting the number or stem cell lines available for research and funding for labs, and the procedures to obtain stem cells were rather expensive. “Now this brings it into a situation where these new cells can be used in just about any moderately sophisticated molecular biology laboratory,” Devitt said. The research, however, is in its beginnings, and the cell lines obtained are strictly experimental. The current technique may create the potential for developing cancer, the Associated Press reported. “None of them are even close to what might be considered for therapy,” Devitt said. “This is an important step, but there’s still a lot to be done.” Devitt and Thomson are optimistic and said showing these cells could be reprogrammed is already an accomplishment. “I do, nonetheless, think the world has changed because of these results,” Thomson said. over the summer when you’re not working,” Sadler said. The new policy will require faculty to report sick days even when other faculty members cover classes. “We’re simply trying to kind of have an equitable system for all the people who work on a campus so when a nonfaculty member is sick, they take a sick day,” Sadler said. “When a faculty member is sick, they take a sick day and what this is going to do is it’s going to more accurately reflect the number of sick days.” UW System spokesperson David Giroux said with the new policy clarification, the UW System will “be in a better position to preserve these retirement benefits for all of our employees.” “There were valid concerns raised by people, certainly some Forum, from page 1 they have always had.” “The guidelines for making those allocable funding decisions will be clarified as to what constitutes a student-run organization and what doesn’t and what kind of guidelines are in place when there is not space on the campus and we have to look elsewhere for the space,” Giroux said. “These decisions should be left up to students at the campus level to ensure that each campus can serve the needs of its students as the students deem necessary.” David Giroux Spokesperson UW System UW Student Rights Campaign chair Rachel Butler said students should be concerned about the segregated fee policy changes, as they are the ones providing the funding. “Students should and do care about this because we, as students, determine which Txt, from page 1 the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association, an international organization of wireless communications industry members, text messaging has been increasing with the growing use of cell phones. In 2006, 158 billion text messages were sent, almost twice the number sent in 2005. And according to Lasee, a survey of 16- and 17-yearolds conducted by American Automobile Association and Seventeen magazine found that 28 percent of young drivers send text messages while driving. Lasee said he was inspired to of our faculty members have concerns about … their benefits and impact,” Giroux said. “What we think we’re doing here is a means of preserving a very, very important retirement benefit in a state where our compensation lags behind other states comparing our university campus to other university campuses.” “These kind of fringe benefits are very valuable and they are often things the one thing that makes us competitive in an otherwise slanted field,” Giroux added. The clarification, Giroux said, will ultimately show the UW System is accountable for their policies, while “at the same time [they] preserve that competitive benefit package.” The Board of Regents will vote on the policy change at its December meeting. services we need on this campus and we pay for them with our segregated fees,” Butler said. “It’s our money and our campus experience, and we need to be the ones making these decisions.” Butler also said she was worried that the proposed segregated fee policies could potentially take segregated fee decisions from the students and into “the hands of the chancellor.” “This new policy draft, if passed as is, will have effects that reach not only UWMadison, but campuses across the UW System,” Butler said. “These decisions should be left up to students at the campus level to ensure that each campus can serve the needs of its students as the students deem necessary.” After Tuesday’s meeting, the Segregated Fee System Committee’s policy change recommendations will be forwarded to UW System President Kevin Reilly. “The president will analyze those recommendations and then share with the [Board of Regents] at the December meeting his decisions,” Giroux said. This year, students paid $429.08 in segregated fees, which funds various student organizations throughout campus, as well as such programs as the ASM Bus Pass and University Health Services. write the bill by recent accidents involving text messaging, including the deaths of five New York girls who were killed in a car accident after the driver had been sending text messages on the road. Lasee added the rising popularity of text messaging particularly among young people means it’s just a matter of time before a tragedy occurs. “Kids in schools — they all have cells, they all use text messaging, they’re growing up with it,” Lasee said. “To them it’s an activity that would be commonplace, to hop in the car and start driving and sending messages.” BY TERESA WELSH yard, people can be stuck State Reporter at the rail crossing for quite sometime,” Wright said. Wisconsin will receive “That’s both inconvenient for more than $1 million from the regular citizens and it can be federal 2008 transportation a tragedy for ambulances and spending bill for a number of police cars.” projects in the Fox Valley, a U.S. representative from Fond du Lac announced last week. U.S. Rep. “We appreciate Tom Petri, R-Wisconsin, anything that the said the money senators can do to would be used for three help get transportation separate funding...” projects in Petri’s district. Mike Goetzman He is the former vice Petri Office of Public Affairs chair of the Wisconsin Department Transportation Committee of Transportation and is currently the ranking Republican on the Aviation Subcommittee. “There were a few things Money will also be used that needed to be done in Wisconsin and [Petri] was able to repair part of State to convince the colleagues that Highway 44 that runs through Petri secured they were a legitimate project,” Oshkosh. said Petri’s press secretary Niel $400,000 for this project. The remaining $100,000 will Wright. The largest portion of the be used for the Sheboygan money, $600,000, will be used Development Corporation’s to conduct an engineering Great Lakes Aerospace Science study for the construction a and Education Center. “[The Center] has a lot of bridge across the North Fond local support and we see it du Lac rail yard. as an opportunity to keep Wisconsin in the high-tech game,” Wright said. The Transportation Bill was passed by the House but has “There were a not yet been passed by the Senate. According to Wright, few things that President Bush is expected to veto the bill because of the high needed to be done number of projects it funds. Also included in the bill is in Wisconsin...” $3.35 million for buses and bus stations statewide. Mike Goetzman of the Niel Wright Office of Public Affairs at the Press Secretary Wisconsin Department of U.S. Rep. Tom Petri Transportation, is very pleased R-Wisconsin Petri was able to secure funding in his district and for the entire state of Wisconsin. “We appreciate anything that the senators can do to help get transportation funding to help “A bridge there is important support the projects we have because when a long train is here in the state,” Goetzman going into or out of the rail said. Bonnie Sesolak, development director for drivers’ rights organization the National Motorists Association, said it is excessive to ban individual behaviors that may lead to inattentive driving. “There’s certainly a lot of other distractions out there as well,” Sesolak said. “You can’t have laws for every specific thing. If we have a law against text messaging, why not outlaw drinking coffee while driving?” Text messaging needs its own law, Lasee said, because it is an activity that requires drivers to take their eyes off the road in order to read messages and punch keys. Steve Siglinsky, a recent University of Wisconsin graduate, said he agrees with Lasee’s observations, having seen it a number of times himself. “I know a handful of people who can text without looking at their phone, but not many, and even if they can, it still takes attention off of the road,” Siglinsky said. Even though Siglinsky occasionally sends text messages while driving, he said he tries to minimize the danger. “I specifically choose not to text when I can call someone,” Siglinsky said. “But sometimes texting gets quicker results with certain people.”