LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 11, 1998 - 3 CRIME Smelly boxes found in custodians' cart Custodians in the Medical Science i I building found boxes labeled "vertebrates" in a custodian's cart Wednesday evening, Department of Public Safety reports state. The Custodian Services supervisor said he found the two "extremely smelly" boxes in his custodian's clean- ing cart. The supervisor said he did not know if the boxes were a biohazard. Occupational Safety and Environmental Health officials onded to the scene. thletic equipment stolen from stadium An unspecified amount of athletic equipment was stolen from Ray Fisher Stadium on Monday afternoon, DPS repdrts state. mA icaller reported uniform equipment misig from the lockerroom of the sta- m, bit he did not know exactly what a d been taken. No report was filed. Entrance button stolen from Angell A handicapped entrance button to the hite Street entrance of Angell Hall was stolen during the weekend, DPS reports state. An Angell Hall custodial supervisor said one of his employees noticed the e silver disc, which is used to open t 1e low-voltage handicap entrance, missing Monday morning. There are no su$peets in the case. Students' painting creates harsh smell Students found painting Tuesday evening in the G.G. Brown Building on jorth Campus were asked to move to a erent area, DPS reports state. Building services staff found the stu- dents painting in a room in the building. The staff member said the students were warned the previous night not to paint in the room. The students allegedly were being "very messy" with the paint, which w4s creating a harsh smell in the area. DPS officers met with the students wh'o were advised to move to a differ- ent Ulcation. tuspect attempts to steal hat A male suspect attempted to shoplift a hat from the University Hospitals' gift shop Tuesday afternoon, according to DPS reports. Hospital security officers said gift- shop cameras tape recorded the man removing a hat from a display rack and Sting the price tag off the hat before platcinAg it on his head. The suspect then proceeded to leave the store without paying for the hat. Officers arrested the suspect for retail fraud "and trespassing. Officers also found a stolen sweatshirt and sweat parWS in the man's possession. Student refuses to pay for pizza '"local pizza delivery driver told DPS officers a subject in Couzens Residence Hall did not pay for a pizza Tuesday afternoon, DPS reports state. The driver said the subject offered him a S50 bill for the $11.50 pizza wlerrhe arrived at the residence hall. -he driver gave the subject the pizza biredjdnot accept the money because he sold he needed to return to his office jget change for the bill. #Vhen he returned to the residence hall for payment, no one would answer the telephone to pay for the order, he said. Bus shelter mdow breaks A window in a North Campus bus shelter broke accidentally Monday morning, DPS reports state. The- window, located on Hubbard 9et near Vera Baits II, apparently oke from wind damage during a storm Sunday night. The winds spread the broken glass into a nearby parking lot. There was no sign. of any object that may have struck the 18-foot six-inch sheet of Plexiglas, valued at $150. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jennifer Yachnin. E-mail message upsets student group By Jody Simone Kay For the Daily An e-mail consisting mostly of a repeated swear word that was sent last week to the Chinese Students and Scholars Association has prompted emotional reactions from members of the group. , The message, sent from a Hotmail account, went out in response to an e-mail car advertise- ment. It included five printed pages of the phrase "fuck you" and warned the sender "you better stop using this means as an advertising agency or you'll be sorry." The original car advertisement was sent to more than 30 groups, but CSSA is the only group that has reported receiving the angry response. Because the reply was sent only to CSSA, some members of the group said they feel it unfairly tar- gets their ethnicity. "I was very upset because from the message it is very clear they are targeting our group, the Chinese," said Jun Cao, an Engineering fourth- year graduate student. The e-mail, however, does not mention any eth- nic groups. "Just because he didn't use the word 'Chinese' doesn't mean he isn't targeting our group," Cao said. The obscene response prompted a flood of concerned e-mails between CSSA members. Qiping Zhang, an Information fourth-year stu- dent, said "My impression is that this is an intentional response not only just an angry mes- sage." But Virginia Rezmierski, a representative from the information Technology Division, points out that because the e-mail makes no spe- cific mention of the group, it does not appear that it was intended to target CSSA as an ethnic group. Rather, it was a just an angry reaction to a mass mailing of an advertisement. Attempts to contact the sender of the response via e-mail were unsuccessful. According to ITD policy, e-mail sent to more than one or two groups is an inappropriate use of computing resources. Mei Lu, a communications graduate student, said that many of the members of CSSA "are new to this community. We don't fully know the norms using e-mail." Qi Ding, a Rackham student on the CSSA e- mail list, said he didn't see the message as dis- criminatory at first until he read e-mails from members of the group who saw the message as tar- geting the Chinese people. If the message was just sent to deter e-mail advertisers, he said, then he doesn't think it should be classified as discriminatory. First Amendment rights, Rezmierski said, make it difficult to regulate e-mail that is sent from an external source to an internal University e-mail account. Cao said many of his colleagues are "ivery angry about the message because it is not sent from an account in the University, (and) it cannot be tracked down." Rezmierski also said ITD is involved in working on policy and educational programs to educate the University on the proper uses of telnet. Evan Caminker, a visiting law professor from the University of California at Los Angeles, point- ed out that freedom of speech laws apply to any form of speech, including electronic mail. "Messages of speech, even if it might be viewed as hateful, (are) generally protected by the First Amendment," Caminker said. "Most statutes against it have been shot down." Caminker added that speech cannot be punished or censored by its content only. If there is an immediate threat sent to a group or to an individual, ITD contacts the Department of Public Safety to investigate. Rezmierski said. U curators travel south to aid in museum clean-up By Gerard Cohen-vrignaud Daily Staff Reporter When Hurricane Georges hit the Carribean with destructive force in late September, island inhabitants were not the only ones left without shelter. Much of the Dominican Republic's natural history and plant collections were damaged. As part of the clean-up effort, two University curators traveled to Santo Domingo to assess the losses accumulated by the National Botanical Gardens and the National Museum of Natural History. Iiigo de la Cerda, assistant curator of the University Herbarium, witnessed the damage done to the botanical gar- dens, which lost many exotic species of plants and trees to the 180 to 200 kilometers per hour winds. While most of the trees in the gardens were uprooted, many of the collections housed inside of greenhouses, includ- ing a wide variety of orchids, were saved by being stored safely before the structures were destroyed. The Center for Marine Conservation, a private envi- ronmental protection foundation based in Washington, D.C., funded de la Cerda and Zoology Prof. Phillip Myers, associate curator of the Museum of Zoology, as part of a $50,000 grant to help repair the hurricane's dev- astation. "In general, it's important to us to protect biodiversity in the Carribean," said Michael Smith, director of the Carribean Biodiversity Program. "When the hurricane hit, it did a lot of damage to institutions we support." Most of the Dominican Republic was left without power, and an estimated 2,000 inhabitants died from flooding. The storm also transformed the island's appearance. "Walking along the streets was really devastating," de la Cerda said. "Santo Domingo is a city with a lot of very old trees. In terms of economic and social damage, it was terri- ble." While de la Cerda visited the botanical gardens, Myers observed the ravages the storm had wrought on the Museum of National History, which houses a large research collection of preserved species. "Research collections are what is important to support conservation efforts," Myers said. In addition to structural damage, the museum suffered from water cascading down the stairs from the roof and flooding the basement, where many of the preserved insect and fish specimens were housed. With CMC funding, the museum already has rebuilt a wall that threatened the stability of the building. In addition, the CMC is shipping basic supplies such as cabinets, alcohol and jars to preserve specimens. Another problem the museum and botanical gardens faced was that many members of their staffs were preoccu- pied with having lost their homes to the hurricane. The recent cooperation between the CMC and the University was not the first time the two organizations worked together. The CMC currently collaborates with the University in a joint effort to promote conservation efforts in Cuba. DANA LINNANE/Daily Shirley Stuve, an advocate of the Alliance for the Mentally Ill, spoke out In support of human rights activism In the Diag yesterday. Human rights advocates speak on the Diag SURF THE DAILY AT http:I/wwwmichigandaily.cor S I BEFoxu3You Go PI Go Haim. * Revolutionary Anti- Imperialist League led the rally yesterday By Adam Cohen Daily Staff Reporter Set against a clear blue sky, the American flag waved in the cool December breeze by the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library yesterday. Beginning at about noon on the steps of the Grad, several human rights activists spoke to passersby and a crowd of about 30. "Did I ever think this would hap- pen to little old me?" asked Shirley Stuve, an advocate of the Alliance for the Mentally I. "Well, it can happen to you too." On a megaphone, Stuve spoke of the inhumane treatment some men- tally ill people receive in prison, including her son. "I couldn't W*lieve this happened - not in my United States!" Stuve exclaimed. The student group Revolutionary Anti-Imperialist League organized yesterday's Fight for Human Rights Rally. RAIL member and LSA senior Corey Fielder encouraged listeners to get involved with human rights issues, speaking on such issues as prisoner rights. "We want to raise awareness of continued U.S. human rights vio- lations in this country and throughout the world despite the fact that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights marked its 50th anniversary" yes- terday, Fielder said. University alumnus Jamie Ballew stressed current problems related to police involvement with substance abusers. "We need health education on a massive scale," Ballew said. "Drug use should be a health issue, not a criminal issue" Some listeners held up posters to voice their message. LSA first-year student Jami Spamer's poster read, "Each month: U.S. sanctions kill at least 7,000 Iraqi children under 5." Another poster read, "Prisoner rights are human rights" American Friends Service Committee member Charlie Grose concluded his speech on prisoner rights by quoting Nelson Mandela, "Prison is designed to break one's spirit." Other topics of the rally includ- ed U.S. militarization in the Philippines and the School of Americas in Georgia. Amnesty International members addressed their Human Rights for All cam- paign and the problems with the death penalty in the United States. RAIL will be holding informa- tion sessions next week. They can be contacted at railaa@mim.org. I4{L CLLLIL>; What's happening in Ann Arbor today FRIDAY S11 NDAY World Wide Web Q 1998 Winter Commencement FRIDY.SNDA 9' !!6 #Ik. F #IF awwewwr +wwwet