The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 4, 1986 - Page 3 Students life 'U; city integration By ROB EARLE "It's impossible to tell where the town leaves off and the college begins," observed Colleen Handy, a recent visitor to Ann Arbor. Handy, on her visit here, noticed an important aspect of the University campus - the integration of the city and campus. Other schools, like Michigan State University in East Lansing, are clearly separate from the town. But Ann Arbor and the University are symbiotic. To most people, they are the same place. "I really don't think about it as being two different places," LSA sophomore Denny Clark said. She ad- ded that she liked the feeling of not being penned in by the campus. The border between the campus and the town is not always clear - it's more imaginary than physical. Cen- tral campus buildings like the Perry Building and Lane Hall are closer to Krazy Jims Blimpy Burgers and Olgas respectively than to the Modern Language Building or Angell Hall. "It's neat," said LSA senior Jeonette Tanner, "You can get a bite to eat between classes." Integration convient The integration is also convenient for students living off-campus. Some locations are closer to class room buildings than many dorms. The student ghetto area just north of Huron Street is less than five minutes from the MLB and the Frieze Building, closer even than the Hill dorms. "I can roll out of bed about three minutes before my eight o'clocks (classes)," boasted Randy George, an I really don't think of (the city and the campus) as being two different places.' -Penny Clark LSA sophomore Jurisdiction problems City police and University security officers also find problems of having no clear boundary seperating their domain. The University pays the city for fire and police services, but main- tains its own security force. The arrangement has brought complaints from the city that they're not being paid enough, and from the University that they're not getting enough ser- vices. The two security groups often work in tandem, bringing questions about the proper role of Ann Arbor police on campus. For example, protestors have complained that batallions of police in riot gear are often called in during protests, a sight they claim is a form of intimidation against political dissent. Not all parts of the Ann Arbor cam- pus though are integral with the city. The mammoth athletic/service com- plex between Hoover and Stadium streets is one continuous unit of playing fields, offices, and shops. The colony on north campus is almost alone in the area, keeping a quiet that Bursley and Baits dormitory residen- ts are thankful for. City planner E.L. Weathers said the integration of the University and city was accidental. "The majority of the property was privately owned, then was donated to or bought by the University," he said. Weathers said most University buildings are set farther back from the property line than commerical buildings, which try to be near the sidewalk to attract customers. LSA senior who lives on Thayer Street. While many students find the arrangement convenient, others find it a headache. "I hate fighting crowds on State Street," said LSA senior Heidi Schuler. Some University students complain that local teenagers harass them. One local teenager said she thought having the University close by was an advantage, but felt that University students are arrogant. 'Students urged to beware of crimes By MELISSA BIRKS Candy Buie came to the University two years ago from Manhattan and thought Ann Arbor was "a nice town. So nice that one day she entrusted her book bag to two men while she went to get a pop. She returned to find the men, and her bag, gone. "It seems like the friendlier the place, something like that wouldn't happen," Buie said. "I didn't think anybody really did it. It doesn't cross your mind. Especially if you don't have anything to steal," she added. This is typical, according to Det. Jerry Wright of the Ann Arbor Police Department. Students "allow them- selves to be selected" as victims for crimes ranging from ' theft to rape by not following basic safety precautions. Wright said students last year lost almost $2.5 million in property. At the University, there were 107 reported misdemeanor larcenies of under $100, according to Leo Heatley, director of Campus Safety. While orientation leaders take out about fifteen minutes to discuss safety on campus - like locking doors when you leave your dorm room - some students don't think such precautions are necessary, according to campus safety officials. Heatley said that many students are victims of theft when they first move into their dorms, leaving their fur- niture, cloths, stereos, and other articles unattended. "If you put something down, and leave it, don't expect it to be there when you get back," Heatley said. "I think the University could make students more aware" of crime off-campus, said LSA senior Jermore Lee. "They give you some basic things; don't leave the door unlocked. There's a whole town outside the Univer- sity; people who don't have anything to do with the University. You have to watch out for the rest as well." Preventing rape While thefts, according to Wright, are the most prevalent crimes in Ann Arbor, the University has recen- tly tried to increase awareness of more serious crimes like sexual assault. Last February, the University's new Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center opened under the direction of Julie Steiner. Last year, there were two reported first degree rapes on campus, and Steiner has already counseled five sexual assault survivors even though her office is not yet equip- ped with a rape couseling center. But Steiner warned against creating paranoia about the possibility of sexual assault. Although statistics show that the threat of rape is real on campus, Steiner says that women should be aware of their vulnerability in certain situations and act how they feel most comfortable. "If you just tell women they can't walk alone, that's making them victims," Steiner said. She said that women should not feel tied to their dorms and afraid to venture out after dark, but should be ready to use services like the Nite Owl bus, the emergency escort service provided by campus safety, and the Night Ride taxi service, if they don't feel comfortable walking home alone. She encourages women to be aware of certain strategies that can help in avoiding crimes. These include walking in the middle of the street, carrying a whistle with your keys, and always confronting someone who may be following you. "I refuse to compromise my whole life," said LSA junior Pam Kisch, a student aide in Steiner's office, of walking home alone at night. "I know other women who won't do it. They have to weigh that for themselves." Assailants familiar Steiner pointed out that in a campus safety survey con- ducted by her office, 90 percent of rape victims knew their assailants. "A big problem relative to sexual assaults is operating under the myth that most rapes happen by a tall dark strange guy hiding in the bushes who's going to grab us, and that's just not true," Steiner said. Men, Kisch said, have a responsibility to recognize that they can be threatening when inadvertently approaching a woman on a dark street. Things like crossing to the opposite side of the street and not walking with your hands in your pockets are impor- tant to not be threatening, Kisch said. Men should "think about what it feels like for a woman to walk alone. Think about what could be frightening," she added. However, "all these things to prevent being assaulted are not going to prevent assaults from taking place," Steiner said. "If you're assaulted, the most important thing to remember is it's not your fault." Daily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBeR Two of Ann Arbor's homeless eat dinner at St. Mary's church on the corner of William and Thompson streets. The meal was provided by the Hunger Coalition of Ann Arbor. Risin homeless groupl Fake ID: A license to buy By ROB EARLE "Could I see some ID please?" As a six-pack of beer, a fifth of cheap liquor, or a bottle of wine sits on the counter, the next few seconds will determine the course of the evening. Students 21-years-old and older nonchalantly pull out their driver license, toss it face-up on the counter and resume their conversation with a cocky smirk plastered on their face. For those still too new to the world to buy and consume alcohol under Michigan's 21 and above drinking age, the reactions vary. "I forgot it." "I always buy here." "ID? I haven't been carded in two years." False IDs Young, would-be drinkers soon discover there is little chance of coming up with an original excuse. Store clerks, bartenders, ushers, and waitresses have heard them all. The best way around the law seems to be fake IDs. Fake IDs come in many varieties. Some are merely altered driver licenses. Michigan licenses are easily altered with a little make-up and a sharp pencil. A driver can thus add years to his age. One LSA junior uses his brother's driver license with his own picture on it. "A friend made it," he saidproudly, with a newly-purchased case of Bud- weiser Light on his shoulder "I don't use it anyplace they check more than one piece of ID," he said. Despite his precautions, he doesn't worry about using his fake ID. "A lot of places don't check me anyway," he said. "I never have any problems during happy hour." Other fakes through legal channels by illegal means - like using an altered birth certificate to get a driver's license. While this appears to be the most ef- fective fake, it is also the most dangerous. The bearer could be prosecuted for perjury. Problems with Prosecution In Ann Arbor, fake IDs are fairly common. While enforcement agencies don't keep statistics, police seize two or three fake IDs every month, accor- ding to Detective Lt. Paul Buten, of the Ann Arbor Police Department's special investigations unit. Despite confiscations by the police and. underage "plants" who secretly Union. But many local retailers don't even bother to confiscate fake IDs. "It doesn't do any good," Tice said. Another who agrees is Gil Holbrook, manager of Campus Corner. Holbrook's store keeps a large bound volume with samples of all legal U.S. and Canadian IDs to compare. Lt. Buten said recent undercover sweeps by police have indicated that liquor dealers have checked IDs more closely. Bars more lenient Bars, which check IDs only about half the time, are not as careful, Buten said. Such laxness has tem- poses problemisI By JERRY MARKON Locally, both shelter and city of- "All I want is a job, my son back, ficials agree the numbers of homeless and my girlfriend back," the man are on the upswing. "From the num- who calls himself "Terry" groans bers of people in the shelters, you'd through brown, crooked teeth. definitely say it's increasing," said His eyes wander nervously around Gene Flening, a frequent volunteer at the room - a cold lobby at the Ann the Huron St. Shelter. Arbor Shelter for the Homeless. Like Built to house only 15 people each many of the city's several hundred night, the facility now averages 40 homeless residents, Terry is mentally guests, and workers are expecting as ill. many as 55 next winter. A Vietnam veteran, Terry's story In addition, Arbor Haven shelter, has been documented before. He says which opened in 1981, is nearly always he developed a "nervous condition" filled to its capacity of 18-22 people, after arriving home from the jungle. according to Red Cross officials who He has since proven unable to hold a run the facilty. job. Controversy surrounds shelter After failing as an assembly line The Ann Arbor Shelter for the worker for Ford Motor Co., he took to Homeless was established in 1984, but the streets, with the additional burden the controversy that has surrounded it of a son born out of wedlock. highlights several underlying causes Eventually, the courts took away of homelessness. his son, and his girlfriend moved in Pressure for creating another with her mother. Lacking a job, shelter started in 1983 when workers money, and hope, he now views his at St. Andrews Church noticed that situation as desperate. many of the people they were feeding "I don't like it here," he says. "I want to get out of this shelter. I want my son and my girlfriend back. I want HISTORIC my life back. Anything I have to do, I'll do it." BUILDINGS Sleeping his nights away in the shelter, located on 420 West Huron St., Ann Arbor, Michigan Terry is joined by a myriad of people, ranging from those temporarily out of work, to delusional schizophrenics. Shelter officials divide their residents into three categories: the "temporary" homeless, thg "typical drifters", or the chronic homeless, one quarter of whom are substance abusers and mentally ill. More than half of shelter residents are afflicted t= with mental health problems, accor- ii- ding to an Ann Arbor Shelter for the - Homeless survey earlier this year. Numbers of homeless rising The numbers of homeless are rising both nationally and in Ann Arbor. Homeless Americans number anywhere from 500,000 to two million. 4l S t 7 0 s s ,y e t t s r 5 t or City at a breakfast program for the needy were also homeless. Creating a temporary shelter in the church's basement, church officials lobbied City Council members to ad- dress the problem. After a long debate, the council finally created the non-profit Ann Ar- bor Shelter Association to run a per- manent shelter and contributed a $25,000down-payment in April 1984. Before the decision, local residents voiced concern that shelter residents would pose a safety hazard to neigh- See HOMELESS, Page8 'What they need is a law that does something against the kid who's trying to buy.' -Dennis Tice manager, Tice's Liquor test sellers, Buten said the number of. fake ID users has not dropped in recent years. "There are every bit as many fake IDs as there have been in the past," said Ron Gill, district supervisor for the state Liquor Control Commission (LCC). Gill said the only way to reduce fake ID usage is through prosecution. "The means for prosecuting fake ID users is in the law," he said, but local police departments often enforce the law only against the sellers. "What they need is a law that does something against the kid that's trying to buy," said Dennis Tice, manager of Tice's Liquor on State Street. .porarily closed such bars as Dooleys, and brought fines for the U-Club. According to U-Club beverage manager Don Dentling, drinking age policies differ from bar to bar, "We have a more alert management that stresses checking ID over selling drinks." For other bars, he said, the profit motive often comes first. All U-Club employees are told to stress alcohol control, Dentling said, and on especially busy nights, the club may have "a batallion of people" watching for underage drinkers. The U-Club has also taken a unique approach to controlling alcohol .n- derage and non-members are required to sign a statement saying they are not entering the club "with the intent nf hivina lcenhn1" PREGNANT? * Free Pregnancy Test * Abortion Information * Confidential A handy pocket-sized guide book to Ann Arbor's land- marks. Photographs and stories on over seventy marked buildings, plus reference guide to architectural st vles andr