Page 12 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 8, 1988 STUDENT LIFE sorry - they do have rules i BY PATRICK STAIGER Welcome to Dormland: a fantasy world where the hallway lights are never turned off, the heat is always on, the word "privacy" is unknown, and while you might not be near your parents, you'll still find plenty of rules. Alterations: Asbestos out, disabled in Student Life "It's part of the college experience. In a university this size, its important to call someplace BY PATRICK STAIGER Preparing the residence halls for a new group of students usually in- volves mass dusting, mopping, and rearranging furniture. But last summer the University had more serious problems to deal with: ridding the residence halls of asbestos and making dorms more accessible to disabled students. George SanFacon, director of housing physical properties, said his department will cover all exposed asbestos in student rooms and areas by fall. Until the early '70s, builders used asbestos as an insulator because the substance is fireproof, durable, and long-lasting. But if asbestos chips are exposed and crumble, its micro- scopic fibers can cause lung lesions and cancer. About three-fourths of all University buildings now contain the hazardous insulation. U -p home, to have a place which pro- vides a support system," said Leroy Williams, Dir- ector of Housing Information. UNIVERSITY Residence Halls house 10,000 of the university's 35,000 students - 99 percent of first-year students and 40 percent of returning sophomores. For many, residence halls are the first place to experience life away from home, and the Housing De- partment's rules attempt to ensure the dorm isn't that different. But most students say it is. "The reality (in the dorms) is your roommate will probably be a manic depressive psycho-moron, your neighbors will listen to Van Halen 14 hours a day, the halls will incessantly be trashed and smell like your worst pair of socks, the bath- rooms will look like a biology ex- periment and the toilet paper will be out when you really need it... the food will make you seek psychiatric help, but by the end of the year you'll have had a good time," said Joel VandeVusse, an LSA junior from East Quad. GENERALLY, though, resi- dence hall staff and administrators lodk at disorder, and student housing code violations, more seriously. Archie Andrews, director o f housing security and student con- duct, said campus security has con- fiscated marijuana, innumerable kegs and bottles, swords, and one .45 Magnum handgun from residence halls. But the University gets in- volved in housing affairs only when ROBIN LOZNAK/Doily Residential college junior 'Kevin Saari, left, and Jay del-Rusario wash dishes in the Mary Markley cafeteria. Sound like fun? Most cafeterias pay starting salaries up to $4.50/hr. Home or headache? other students' rights have been vio- lated, Andrews said. Mary Antieau, South Quad Building Director, said more serious problems include tampering with fire equipment, alcohol, drugs, and re- lated violence. "IN 1977, we had 184 fire alarms," Antieau said. "During the Ohio State football game, every time we got a first down, someone in South Quad pulled the alarm." Antieau said actions taken by staff - such as lease termination and fire alarms that squirt ink when pulled - have greatly reduced the number of false alarms. Antieau said she requests that students tell a staff person when they plan to have a party in their rooms. She said security confiscates any "mass quantities" of alcohol found in public areas or when minors are around, and the students are usually given a warning. "Education is more than aca- demics," Antieau said. "We have a responsibility to develop a commu- nity of people that learn to live to- gether and respect each other." But some question whether the University should be in the business of teaching anything but academics, and point to University rules, for example, that forbid sexual inter- course in residence halls. "WE ARE ADULTS and should be treated as such," said En- gineering sophomore Brian Mulli- gan, a former East Quad resident., But Antieau said cohabitation rules are enforced only when the rights of the roommate have been violated. "We treat students as adults who are still learning," Antieau said. "When students arrive, most think there is a black and white. They ask 'Which is the best class to take?' When they leave, they realize there is a personal interpretation in- volved... Our job is to reach the stage where a student enjoys diver- sity," she said. "In the Big Ten, students in resi- dence halls are treated basically as an adult," Andrews said. "En loco par- entis has gone out the window." BOTH ANTIEAU and An- drews favor the University's new Discriminatory Acts Policy, though both think the rules will not have much effect on dorm policy. "The code is a separate policy (from residence hall rules) with broad parameters," Andrews said. But Andrews said without the code the University could not take action against non-hall residents if they violate a housing rule. "The University could not take action against a student throwing a keg out the window, for example, unless it kills somebody, even if it hits a car," Andrews said. But not all students take the rules so seriously. "THE RULES are necessary because the school needs to present a public image of a 'respectable estab- lishment' on paper," said Scott Lew, an LSA junior and former East Quad resident. "It's a good thing they don't enforce the rules. They'd have to expel every student and lose mil- lions in tuition money." "Reality in the dorms is loud music, security cops, and sleeping in," said Grant Wilcox, an Engineering sophomore and former Mosher-Jordan resident. "I think the rules are necessary in case of emer- gency so the University can cover its ass legally." SanFacon said the University op- ted to cover the as- bestos in Univer- sity buildings in- stead of removing it because "con- tainment" will cost $2 million while removal would have cost $10 mil- lion. The decision to contain the as-. bestos was initially This sum University to spend $ to cover E cancer-cal bestos ini ings and d a response to community pressure, SanFacon said, adding that government rules requir- ing asbestos-free public buildings are "ambiguous." Students said they were not in- formed about the problem until as- bestos surveying began in fall of 1986. They' were shocked when workers wearing white "moonsuits" blocked off restrooms with clear plastic and bright yellow danger, signs. . SanFacon also said the University is trying to make residence halls more accessible to disabled students; ramps have been built at Betsy Bar- bour and Helen Newberry, and the University has converted rooms at Betsy Barbour to make them mote accessible. Dar Vander Beek, director of dis- abled student services, said disabled students - who comprise seven percent of the University population - require special facilities. Rooms for students in a wheelchair, for ex- ample, need to be converted so bath- rooms are accessible, mirrors are lowered, and levers replace door- knobs and faucet handles. Hearing impaired students require visual sig- nals for fire alarms and telephones., Mary Antieau, South Quad building director, said although South Quad is "very accessible, we as a University are shoddy" about taking care of disabled students. But Vander Beek said University housing has been the most cooperat tive of all University departments ii improving facilities for disabled stu dents. .mer the However, Easi> Quad still does nom' planned have a lift for dis 2 million abled students SanFacon said they expose d, University is plan ning to build a lift> using as- connecting two of, ts build- the -four levels of the building, which )rms. would allow these students access to a service elevator. The elevator would connect these students with the rest of the build" ing, but only until the elevato closes at 7 p.m. "I doubt it will happen this fall but it is a priority issue," SanFacon said. Deba Patnaik, East Quad building director, said lack of plumbing blue prints made the lift's construction impossible last year. - Daily news editor Elizabeth Atkins contributed to this story. tr -PASS IT AROUND! Share the news, itit1a F, i U 7 ----1 { k a 1 : .. THE GREAT WALL____ RESTAURANT Specializing in - DINNERS & LUNCHES Szechuan, Hunan CARRY-OUTS Rated the best new restaurant in and Cantonese Ann Arbor of 1988 by The Michigan Daily Weekend Magazine. 747-7006 Monday- 11 am-11 pm 1220 S. UNIVERSITY " AT S. FOREST " ANN ARBOR m~ VS V S e p t. 7:00 PM V 8 The University OMichigan 1 / s Women's . G e ' Club ' ,.. 4 1V1Ll.l pluu. 0 NEXT TO CITY PARKING STRUCTURE FREE PARKING AFTER 6 P.M. MASS MEETING! 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