The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 21, 1994 - 5 .L.A. views damage in earthquake aftermath LOS ANGELES (AP) - Scores of building inspectors fanned out over a jittery city yesterday, and found hundreds of homes and offices made unsafe by this week's earthquake and powerful aftershocks. "We're finding the damage is not just concentrated in areas near the epicenter," said Nick Delli Quadri, senior structural engineer at the Los *Angeles Department of Building and Safety. Delli Quadri said his department is receiving up to 300 calls an hour from homeowners and apartment dwellers worried about returning home. Building inspectors from San Francisco and San Diego were brought in to meet requests for inspections. "Our concern right now are the occupants of buildings who don't want to go home until they are inspected," he said. A series of rainstorms was pre- dicted to hit this weekend. U.S. Housing Secretary Henry Cisneros said damage to residential buildings appeared to be more severe than first thought. "I think this is a bigger housing 4 roblem then we envisioned," he said in an ABC television interview yes- terday. Delli Quadri said 4,000 buildings had been inspected by the end of Wednesday and 250 buildings had failed inspection. He estimated it would take weeks just to check the tens of thousands of structures in the city of Los Angeles alone. First priority goes to public *buildings like hospitals and fire sta- tions. Inspectors also must respond quickly to citizen requests for checks of their homes. The demand for safety checks was complicated by waves of aftershocks that often require reinspections of weakened buildings. "It's a horrendous job, working dawn to dusk," Delli Quadri said. Beyond safety, the inspections are Oseen as a key part of returning the city to normal. The green inspection tag, certify- ing a building as safe, has become a talisman for residents. Buildings are "red-tagged" if judged unsafe even for entry. A yel- low tag permits limited entry, but no habitation, until repairs are made. Being 'out' is a different story in Flint, Dearborn By JUDITH KAFKA DAILY STAFF REPORTER Five members of the committee studying the impact of recently amended Bylaw 14.06 - the University's anti-discrimination policy - held open "town meetings" on the University's Flint and Dearborn campuses yesterday. Last fall, the University Board of Regents amended the bylaw to pro- hibit discrimination based on sexual orientation. University President James Duderstadt then set up a com- mittee to study the issues involved and to make recommendations on the bylaw's implementation. The committee held an open meet- ing in Ann Arbor last semester to solicit community views. While the turnouts in Flint and Dearborn were small, Dentistry Dean Bernard Machen, committee chair, said he was pleased. "I'm glad that we went because the situation at those campuses seems totally different from here," he said. Specifically, because Flint and Dearborn are commuter campuses, the issues of confidentiality and openly acknowledging one's homo- sexuality are particularly sensitive. "Being 'out' is a lot different if you go home every night to Mom and Dad, instead of just seeing them at Thanksgiving," Machen explained. In Dearborn, only four people at- tended the meeting, all of whom were faculty members. About 20 commu- nity members came to Flint. The primary concern voiced at the Flint meeting was how the University will determine if a same-sex relation- ship is "committed." Unlike hetero- sexual couples, same-sex couples can- not prove serious commitment through a legal marriage license. The committee is looking into ways to extend the benefits married couples receive - such as health in- surance and family housing eligibil- ity - to committed same-sex couples. In contrast to the Ann Arbor meet- ing, which featured strong opposing views and hissing, Machen said, "the tenor was totally positive (at yesterday's meetings)." Machen said he expects the com- mittee to submit its recommendations within the next month. CHUCK BABINGER/Special to the Daily LSA senior Chuck Babinger witnessed damage caused by the Los Angeles earthquake firsthand. student shakesn L.A. quake By KAREN TALASKI DAILY STAFF REPORTER LSA senior Chuck Babinger has his life mapped out for the next few years - graduate in August, travel and then apply to medical school. But if you look at his daily plan- ner, he did not have "experience the Los Angeles earthquake" penciled in for Jan. 17. The Ann Arbor resident did not have a choice. When the earth starts to move, you move with it. Even more surprising is where Babinger was when the quake hit. He, along with four of his friends, were driving on the Santa Monica Freeway when the bridge under them collapsed. Their car was third from the edge. "Even now I don't feel my life was threatened. It was more of an experi- ence," Babinger said. Babinger was visiting California because he was working for General Motors in an auto show. Because it was his last night there, Babinger and his co-workers decided to tour the area before he took an early flight home the next day. Someone suggested Las Vegas, but Babinger wanted to see the Pa- cific Ocean before he left for home. "A lot of people were asking me, 'What were you doing at four in the morning?"' Babinger said. "I told them we were sightseeing, visiting all the things we couldn't see during the day because we were working. We didn't want to go to bed." As they maneuvered their car onto the freeway, the ground under the vehicle began to move. Babinger said the car seemed to tilt as the road took motion. "(My friend) Neal didn't know it was an earthquake and neither did I at the moment. I thought it was an air raid. It looked exactly like the footage from the Persian Gulf," Babinger said. He and the others got out of their car and stood on the freeway as it buckled under them. "If you shook a carpet and you get that wave, that's what the road looked like." Babinger said he saw the lights on the freeway and across the landscape begin to shut off in succession. Be- cause of the tremors, many buildings were losing power due to falling elec- trical lines. "Skyscrapers, the downtown area, suburbs, then the more distant cities all shut off. It was all in a sequence," Babinger said. "This is one, two min- utes after the original quake. Every- thing was bright blue, as bright as daylight. It was from all the electric- ity (in the air)." He and his companions were lis- tening to the radio when the earth- quake started and soon noticed just how serious the tremors were. Babinger said the disc jockey was stunned at first, but managed to sput- ter, "Whoa, dude. What's going on?" Returning to the car, the group entered the freeway to try to get back to their hotel. Heavy traffic forced them to slow down. A police car was sweeping the road with its lights to check for possible breakage. When the police suddenly stopped, Babinger realized the bridge they were crossing had collapsed. A semi and another car had fallen off the edge. No one was sure the drivers were safe or if they were in need of aid. "The police told us to get out of there (because) there was nothing we could do to help," Babinger said. "We drove back into (Los Angeles). At every intersection, it was chaos. The sound of emergency alarms, car alarms just rang through the city." Babinger's hotel was evacuated and his return flight cancelled. He was finally able to book anotherflight and return to Ann Arbor Tuesday morning. "Hindsight shows me I'm lucky I didn't go to Vegas that night. You can gamble anytime," he said. "How of- ten do you get to feel an earthquake?" State Rep. Schroer speaks to local Dems. on school finance By JAMES NASH FOR THE DAILY State Rep. Mary Schroer was drawn into last summer's debate over school financing against her will, but the Ann Arbor Democrat said she's generally pleased with the results. Schroer voted against the July leg- islative bill that eliminated property taxes as the primary source of funds for Michigan public schools. The first- term legislator said the measure - which passed in a wave of bipartisan support - would jeopardize the fu- ture of the state's school system. During a speech to the Ann Arbor Democratic Party last night at the city's Community Center, Schroer gavethe school-finance package posi- tive reviews. But many activists ex- pressed reservations about the plan. "In retrospect, I'd have to say this has come out a lot better than I thought it would," Schroer told a group of about 20. "But I think if we had not passed (the July bill cutting property taxes), we could have worked out a better plan." Michigan voters will decide March 15 how to replace most of the lost property taxes. A proposal to raise the state sales tax from 4 to 6 percent and instate higher cigarette and property- transfer taxes will appear on the bal- lot. If voters reject the measure, in- come taxes will assume most of the burden of funding the state's 535 pub- lic school districts. Schroer encouraged Democrats to reject the March 15 proposal. In an interview before the meeting, she said University students would be harmed more by the ballot proposal than the alternative plan. Schroer said renters won't realize savings under the ballot proposal, and instead will pay an extra 2 percent on purchases. "lril71..,,.Z? Media follows quest for Kevorkian * Second-year Rackham student Dennis Denno is accosted by reporters as he discusses his wish to have Dr. Jack Kevorkian speak at commencement exercises at the University this spring. By KAREN TALASKI DAILY STAFF REPORTER Baby, you're a star. As television cameras and radio micro- phones crowded his face, second-year Rack- ham student Dennis Denno realized his per- sonal cause had become the focus of a media blitz. Reporters from all over Ann Arbor and Detroit came to see the man who wants Jack Kevorkian - also known as "Dr. Death" - to speak at his graduation. And they came in droves, pushing, shov- ing and making frantic calls to producers. Reporters barely spent more than five min- utes talking with Denno and his supporters. Denno began his stellar rise to fame when he announced at a recent Michigan Student Assembly meeting he wants to bring Kevorkian, a University alum, to campus. Yet Denno wants the University to do more than ask Kevorkian to pay a visit. He thinks Kevorkian should receive an honor- ary degree and be invited to speak at Spring Commencement. Kevorkian, who has assisted in 20 sui- cides since 1990, is currently under house arrest until his trial next week. Soon after he was contacted by local newspapers, Denno found the demand for his tale was greater than he imagined. So he held a press conference yesterday afternoon to inform students and the media community about his plans for Kevorkian and to discuss his next steps. Students walking into the Union for lunch were assaulted by camera crews, nosy re- porters and a few hopeful members of "Stu- dents for Dr. Kevorkian," who passed out flyers promoting their group. Denno criticized University administra- tors for their attempts give students little input in choosing commencement speak- ers. Denno circulated a petition he wants to fill with 100 signatures from students to indicate their support of his Kevorkian quest. "(The administration) told me to pretty much forget the whole idea," Denno said. "All students, all parents, all alumni need to support us in this petition. We have a right to bring who we want, don't we?" Some may accuse Denno of trying to create as much press as Kevorkian has with his right-to-die campaign. Yet Denno's spirit cannot be crushed. "I haven't done anything yet," he said with a smile. Corrections Due to severe winter weather, a power outage occurred in the Scio Township neighborhood where Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison and Director of Public Affairs Lisa Baker live. This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. The University research studying students' smoking habits was conducted in early 1993. The results were published in a report in September 1993. This was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Daily. Mike Christie is a member of LSA student government. This was incorrectly reported in Wednesday's Daily. U I BINDERS, EPES Friday Q Collage Concert, sponsored by the School of Music, Hill Audi- torium, 8:15 p.m. Q Comedy Company Auditions, Michigan Union, Room 1209, 6-10 a.m. Q Demonstration for the Anni- Saturday Q Comedy Company Auditions, Michigan Union, Room 1209, 6-10 a.m. Q Interviewing, sponsored by Ca- reer Planning and Placement, 3200 Student Activities Build- ing, 11:10-12 p.m. 3200 Student Activities Build- ing, 10:10-11 a.m. Sunday Q Ballroom Dance Lessons and Dancing, CCRB, main dace room, 7-9 a.m. 1h \ ,U 9 U I I n A ! - ER.IYW.i l / ! I=