LOCAL/STATE CRIME Leaf fire forces evacuation of Music School A fire began near the Earl V Moore School of Music Building on Wednesday evening when a cigarette butt ignited a pile of leaves, according to Department of Public Safety reports. The building's ventilation system began drawing smoke from the fire onto the first floor, forcing evacuation of the building by the Ann Arbor Fire Department. AAFD ventilated the building and property damage occurred. Patient alleges sexual assault A patient at University Hospitals alleged being touched by a nurse's aid Tuesday morning, DPS reports state. DPS officials are investigating the inci- dent under the premise of second ree criminal sexual conduct. calper cited on North Campus A man asking $100 for football tick- ets Wednesday morning outside the Herbrt H. Dow Building located on Hayward Street was cited for scalping, DPS reports state. The tickets were seized by DPS offi- cers as evidence. fish tank taken from office A fish tank was reported stolen Monday afternoon from an office at the Arbor Lakes Building, DPS reports said. The occupant of the office stated that the tank had been stolen sometime on Thursday, Nov. 11. There was no sign of forced entry and has no suspects in the incident. Graffiti found in Seh ool of Dentistry Racist graffiti was found Monday evening in a bathroom stall on the sec- ond floor of the School of Dentistry by a custodian cleaning the area, DPS reports state. The custodian said that the graffiti appeared to be written with rmanent marker. aundry stolen from East Quad A female resident of East Quad Residence Hall had her laundry stolen Tuesday night, DPS reports state. The launiy had been in a basement laun- dry room, DPS has no suspects in the ineident. Anknown woman assaults janitor A custodian at the School of Social Work Building reported making con- act Monday evening with a female subject who the custodian believed had vCmited in the second floor restroom of he building on numerous occasions in he past, DPS reports state. When the custodian asked the sub- if she wanted an ambulance or a t to University Hospitals' emer- ency room, the subject declined and ushed the custodian before leaving the rea. She was last seen headed in the li*tion of the School of Education ilding. The incident is being treated as non- ggravated assault. ubject arrested a breaking parole A subject was taken into custody onday afternoon for breaking parole, PS reports state. The subject had been paroled after >eing caught driving without a icense, and was in violation of the >role on a charge of delivery, posses- ion and manufacture of non-nar- Otics. Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Dave Enders. National 'Smokeout' The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 19. 1999.- 3 encourages quitting By Risa Berrin Daily Staff Reporter LSA sophomore Steve Sharpe doesn't usually wear stick- ers on his chest inviting people to kiss him. But in honor of American Cancer Society's national "Smokeout" day, Sharpe wore a sticker yesterday featuring a frog that stated "Kiss Me! I Don't Smoke!" The stickers were distributed on the Diag by members of University Students Against Cancer in honor of the day devoted to encouraging smokers to quit. "The stickers are not just cute, they serve a purpose to remind people of the harms of smoking," Sharpe said. In addition to stickers, USAC members distributed pamphlets with facts about smoking and incentives to quit. Business junior Anna Spencer, a USAC member, said the day is supposed to encourage smokers to quit - one day at a time. "A lot of smokers say, 'I'll quit tomorrow,"' Spencer said. "We're here to tell them that there is no other option but to quit today. You cannot put that off." The idea for the Smokeout was initiated in 1971 when Arthur Mulvaney created an event in Randolph, Mass. where he asked people to give up cigarettes for a day and donate the money they would have spent on cigarettes to a high school scholarship fund. Five years later, the event spread to schools and businesses across the nation. Matthew Kantor, project coordinator of the Washtenaw County area chapter of the American Cancer Society, said a 1998 study conducted by the ACS con- cluded that Smokeout is an effective tool in helping smokers to quit. He said that 19 percent of the country's smokers reported they had participated in the 1998 Smokeout. Of the 19 per- cent, 10 percent said they had quit or smoked significantily less during the week after the Smokeout. "This day is a time to make a pledge to yourself," Kantor said. "This first day is a foundation for building many days after." According to the American Cancer Society's Website, an estimated 48 million adults in the United States smoke. The Website also states that diseases caused by tobacco is responsible for nearly one in every five deaths. LSA first-year student Kristin Rittler said she wanted to help coordinate USAC's booth on the Diag because her father has lung cancer. "I want college students to know that smoking is truly going to affect them and their families down the line," she said. "I see no positive benefits from smoking." Rittler said her father started smoking while he was in the sixth grade. "My dad did not know the dangers of smoking when he started," she said. "I don't even understand why people still smoke today. They know the dangers. It makes me very frus- trated." According to the Website, 90 percent of new smokers are under the age of 18. The Website also states that active smok- ing is the largest cause of preventable death in the United States. Spencer said many students are listening to the warnings. "One guy came by and said he wanted some literature for his girlfriend that smokes," Spencer said. "And one of the frat boys on the Diag came over and said he wanted a sticker because he quit smoking eight weeks ago." KIMITSU YOGACHI/Daily LSA junior Stacy Dover, LSA first-year student Kristin Ritter and LSA senior Himani Patel out on the Diag yesterday for the Great American Smokeout Day. Economic boom resonates in excessive student Yoon Shim Kim, who survived life as a military comfort woman in World War II, shares her story at the School of Education yesterday. WW I captives used as sex slaves By Anand Giridharadas Daily Staff Reporter As an agent at Council Travel ran through some of the more exciting stu- dent getaways for this spring, he men- tioned Australia and New Zealand but curiously omitted European destinations. "Well," travel agent Dan Lawing explained, "a lot of people have been to Europe a few times." At the Espresso Royale Cafe on Central Campus, an LSA sophomore sipped a cup of coffee while catching up on homework. Amy Biehl described her- self a regular of the coffeeshop. "It's very indulgent, she said. "Coffee can cost $3, and no one blinks an eye." And at the University Golf Course, Clubhouse Manager Charles Green rem- inisced about the 1960s, when 18 holes cost $1.25. Today, some students will pay up to $44 for a round. "I see a lot of stu- dents with a lot of money," he said. From California to Kalamazoo, the U.S. economy is booming. The signs are clear: a soaring stock market, trace unemployment and a trillion-dollar fed- eral budget surplus. And by any measure - from the bus- tle at area coffeeshops to the proliferation of cell phones on campus to the tight stu- dent labor market - the boom is res- onating throughout the University. Although it is impossible to obtain exact figures for the expansion's local impact, students and area businesses describe a phenomenon that is transform- ing campus life. As their parents pocket record dispos- able income, much of that money trickles down to students, but some parents may be unaware of where that money goes. "If my parents knew how much I spent on cigarettes, beer and coffee they would be disgusted," Biehl said. Students are spending at record levels and fueling a thriving local economy. "Business is great;' said Kim Barr, a manager at the Southern Exposure tan- ning salon on South University Avenue. The salon raised its prices this fall, she said, and business still increased. An annual tanning package runs in the hun- dreds of dollars. Just down the street, at Council Travel, which claims a 70-percent market share of student air-travel, signs of record spending are everywhere. Earlier this year, when the agency offered roundtrip European packages for $300 each, nearly 300 sold, Lawing said. For the millennium, he said, London and Australia are "big-time." "A lot of people are doing bigger things than New York," he explained. The travel agency has hired an agent to focus exclusively on trips around the world, which can span several months and cost several thousand dollars. Trying to make sense of the cash influx, Lawing said, "I guess people are willing spend more money." The boom, even as it injects dollars into area establishments, is tightening the labor market and making hiring a night- mare, as fewer students work. "Our staffing is worse than it's ever been," said Ron Buhl, the manager on ;pending duty at Good Time Charley's on South University Avenue, trying to survive a busy lunch hour with only three servers. "No one wants to work this year," he said. "People just don't need to." The most abstract, but perhaps the most enduring, consequence of the eco- nomic boom is its transformation of tra- ditional images of the college student. In popular culture, a latte-sipping, SUV-driving, designer-clad student is replacing notions of the poor, struggling college co-ed. "I think students are not so strapped for cash today," said Leonard Edick, a salesman at the Van Boren clothing store on State Street. "Madison Avenue is pounding away at (students) because they know you have the money." Even as millions of Americans have profited from the recent economic expansion, prosperity has yet to touch many families across the country. Locally, University, President Lee Bollinger called for increased sensitivi- ty to the wide range of socio-economic backgrounds on campus. "There's no question .that the boom has worked its way through some parts of the country, but not all;" he said. "That leaves' aeepeniing divide, and the University has t6 be attentive . to that." On the upside4 he~said philanthropy has surged during the boom, giving a big boost the University's fundraising effort. "This is definitely giving it momen- tm;' he said. By Jody Simone Kay Daily Staff Reporter "All these years I have lived in secret, shame and in pain," said 69- year-old Yoon Shim Kim in a writ- ten statement, one of few women who survived the tortures of being a military "comfort woman" during World War II. Kim was 13 when she was abducted and subsequently subject- ed to daily rape and torture by the Japanese military. About 200,000 women and girls, known as "comfort women," were forced into sexual slavery from 1932 until 1945 in East Asia, according to the , Washington Coalition for Comfort Women Issues, Inc. Many of the women were lured with the promise of employment or kid- napped, and then raped up to 40 times a day and held like prisoners, WCCW literature states. Last night, Kim shared her testi- mony with 150 students in the Whitney Room of the School of Education Building. "I was really shocked when I heard about this. This is something that I can't believe many people haven't heard about," said Korean Student Association President David Hong, an LSA senior. "Every evening soldiers queued up in front of my cubicle and one by one raped me all night long. Their bodies were filthy and they didn't speak a word. I couldn't sleep and cried all night long. I could not survive, they said, even if I escaped, because there was no place to run to in an empty open field," Kim said. Kim was joined last night by a translator and WCCW President Dong Woo Lee-Hahm. "I didn't know that something this horrible happened in Korean history," said Korean Students Association External Public Relations Chair Judy Na, an Engineering junior. Only 10 years ago the first "com- fort woman" survivor came forward with her story, according to WCCW "It makes me think about how much of history we don't know and how much of history hasn't been brought to the surface," said Ann Pham, a MESA coordinator. After the war, no one talked about the "comfort women" and the women remained silent out of shame, Lee-Hahm said. The women were publicly humiliated and denounced as prostitutes, Lee- 14ahm added. According to Lee-Hahm, the Japanese government initially denied that services of comfort women were used during the war. In 1993 the Japanese government admitted involvement in the crimes, according to a WCCW pamphlet. "Regardless of what race someone is, it's hard to believe that one human being can do that to another," said Woo-Jin Kim, an LSA senior. "I say this because you never know what's going to happen -there could be another war," Kim said. I What's happening in Ann Arbor this FRIDAY ard Psychic Jim Karol," Sponsored by Michigan Union Arts and Programs, Michigan Union, Pendelton Room, 6:30 p.m. L "First Instruments Musical Concert," Sponsored by Adventist Students for Christ, Michigan League, Vandenberg Room, 7 p.m. JTerah Study: Chassidic Masters and I.. ., " I . - - .. 1 :1 _ Ann Arbor, Kiwanis Activity Center, 200 S. First, 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. J "Native American Skies," Sponsored by the Exhibit Museum of Natural History, Exhibit Museum Planetarium, 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 and 2:30 p.m. J "Tenant's Rights Teach-in," Sponsored by Ann Arbor Tenant's Union, MIchigan Union, Anderson Room. 11 m - Sn~m Q"Palden Gvatso speaking about China and Tibet," Angell Hall, Aud. B, 6:30 p.m. SERVICES J Campus Information Centers, 764- INFO, info@umich.edu, and www.umich.edu/-info on the World Wide Web U Northwalk, 763-WALK, Bursley 2.5.1,zi.... Eidnim I