LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 12, 2001-'3A Brater announces bid or state Senate Peeping toms * spotted in two residence halls A student said she saw a man looking at her while she was taking a shower in Stockwell Residence Hall Sunday, DPS reports state. The peeping tom pulled the curtain back and watched her. On Wednesday morning, a Mosher-Jordan resident told DPS that an unknown man had peeked over the partition while she was showering. She did not know the identity of the suspect. DPS did not report whether the incidents were related and had no suspects. Pills taken from parked vehicle A woman reported the theft of several pills from a prescription bottle which she left in her vehicle Wednesday afternoon, DPS reports state. The vehicle was parked on the basement level of the West Medical Center Street carport and had been unattended for several hours. DPS had no suspects. Unattended bag near pool stolen Aswimming bag was stolen between 5 and 7 p.m. Saturday from the North Campus Recreation Building, according to DPS reports. The bag had been left unattended in the pool area. DPS had no suspects. Office forcibly * burglarized An office located in the 1200 block of Eisenhower was burglar- ized between Sunday evening and Monday morning, according to DPS reports. A window was shat- tered in order to enter the building and a laptop computer was removed. DPS had no suspects. Man robbed on South U. A man reported that he was robbed Monday afternoon by an unknown person at the corner of South University and Forest Avenues, according to DPS reports. His hat and $40 cash was stolen from him. The information was turned over to the Ann Arbor Police Depart- ment since the incident occurred off campus. Study group leader assaulted A female student was spit on by another student in the Chemistry Building Monday afternoon, according to DPS reports. The incident occurred while the student was leading a study group. Fire started on Mitchell field DPS officers located a small fire n Mitchell soccer field on Fuller Road early Tuesday morning, DPS reports state. The officer found an alcohol bottle with a rag as a cork on fire. 'Man injured by wooden beam A man in a construction pit on Geddes- Avenue was injured by a dislodged wooden beam Tuesday morning, according to DPS reports. He was transported. to the University Hospitals' emergency room by an ambulance for treat- ment. &Three credit cards nabbed Three credit cards were stolen from the North Ingalls. Building Tuesday afternoon, DPS reports state. One University of Michigan purchasing card, a personal Visa and a personal MasterCard were taken. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Jacquelyn Nixon. By Margaret Engoren Daily Staff Reporter Former state Rep. Liz Brater hopes to return to Lansing next fall as a state senator. Brater held a press conference at Washtenaw Community College yes- terday to announce she is launching a campaign for the state Senate. "If I am elected to the state Senate, I will work to call attention to the'crim- inilization of people with mental ill- nesses. Fifteen of Michigan's 21 mental health hospitals were closed during the 1990s," Brater said. "It is a good objective to get the mentally ill out of hospitals and into society. How- ever, the money did not follow them out of the hospitals. Many people with mental illnesses fall through the cracks and end up in homeless shelters or in prisons. One of every eight general fund dollars goes to corrections. Much of this money should be rerouted to mental health." Brater joins state Rep. John Hansen of Dexter in the race to replace state Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith in the November 2002 election. Smith, who can't run for the 18th District seat again because of term limits, is a can- didate for governor. Other than mental health, Brater lists slant oil drilling in the Great Lakes, water and air pollution, the problem of urban sprawl, public edu- cation and campaign finance reform as key issues of her campaign. "I am firmly against slant oil* drilling in the Great Lakes. Slant oil drilling and urban sprawl are the most pressing environmental issues in Michigan," said Brater, an Ann Arbor Democrat. "Urban sprawl is the cause of all environmental problems in Michigan. If we continue the current trend, between 1990 and 2020 there will be a 12 percent increase in popu- lation and a 70 percent increase in land use. This drains central cities' populations and causes stress on our environment." Through a campaign website, lizbrater.com, Brater plans to supply her supporters with information con- cerning her platform and campaign events before the Democratic primary in August. "It's going to be a busy 10 months. I am looking forward to getting back into the streets to talk to the people of Michigan -- and I am looking forward to continued support from the people of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti," said Brater, whose husband Enoch is an English professor at the University. In December 2000, term limits put an end to Brater's six years in the Michigan House of Representatives, where she served the 53rd District. Brater entered politics in 1988, when she was elected to the Ann Arbor City Council. In 1991, she became the first woman elected mayor in the city of Ann Arbor. "I never decided to get into politics - that's not really a rational thing to do - instead I got involved because I am passionate about the issues," Brater said. DAVID KATZ/Daily Former state Rep. Liz Brater announces her bid for the State Senate yesterday afternoon at Washtenaw Community College, Smart Girl.org receives hep from gU' irorram Pillar of strength S By C. Price Jones Daily Staff Reporter Z- CIS Steered in a new direction under the leadership of the Institute for Research on Women and Gender, the website SmartGirl.org will cooperate with many University departments in the upcoming year. Only in June did the University adopt the website from founder Isabel Walcott, and since then, many departments have shown interest in working with SmartGirl. "We're changing our site from a dot- com to a dot-org because we want to stress the educational interests rather than only market research," said Tiffany Marra, program director of SmartGirl. "A company or magazine might tell girls what to think. SmartGirl encour- ages girls to express their views; the content is driven by the girls." SmartGirl focuses on letting adoles- cent girls express their opinions and read peer-written reviews on products, movies, books, magazines, music and other topics. Also featured are sections concerning love letters, poetry and gen- eral information about surviving ado- lescence. These sections are supplemented by a place for girls to anonymously submit their impressions. The site's monthly newsletter is received by more than 25,000 people from countries including Canada, Great "Also, you can only put so much into magazines.... This is compiled and comprehensive." - Smitha Vilasagar LSA freshman Britain, Australia and Saudi Arabia. University students who visited the site had much to say about its quality and focus. "SmartGirl is very informative," said LSA freshman Smitha Vilasagar. "I like how there were subjects such as eating disorders which are relative to adolescent girls. Also, you can only put so much into magazines. ... This is compiled and comprehensive." "Over the Internet people don't have to sign their name to it, so they can anonymously share their thoughts with other girls," said Rachel Kennett, an LSA freshman. Walcott started the site in 1996 and suffered from the blow to the online industry with other dot-com organiza- tions. No longer able-to sponsor the site, Walcott began looking for a recip- ient of SmartGirl. At the time, the site was primarily involved with girls' writ- ing and market research. "One of the benefits of working with the University is no longer needing to do market research for companies just to keep the site alive," said Marra. Walcott contacted Abigail Stewart, director of IRWG, who saw the potential for connecting SmartGirl with Using Math: Girls Investigate Real Life, a Uni- versity program with goals similar to the opinion area of SmartGirl. Marra predicted that the site will eventually coordinate with the Sweet- land Writing Center, the psychology department and the School of Educa- tion. With the help of these depart- ments, Marra hopes to transform SnartGirl into a more educationally- based organization that can accept more University students as interns. "We want to make SmartGirl interdis- ciplinary and to make the website's mis- sion fit in the educational and institutional mission of the University," she said. ETHAN ORLEY/Daily Though students walking to and from class see the University of Michigan Museum of Art on a daily basis, few ever walk through its doors. Clinton: Democracy can stop terrorism BENTON HARBOR (AP) - Democracy can stem the tide of terror- ism in the "battle for the soul of the 21st century," former President Clin- ton said last night. Jordan probably has the most stable government in the Middle East because it has a democracy with open elections, Clinton told about 3,000 people who came to hear him speak to the Econom- ic Club of Southwestern Michigan. Islamic extremists sometimes run for public office in Jordan and when they win, they have to learn how to compromise, he said during the speech at Lake Michigan College. "It changes a whole culture and it's very important that we continue to do more of this," the former president said of promoting democracy. Clinton, speaking on the one-month anniversary of the terrorist attacks in New York, Washington and Pennsylva- nia, said Americans need to put their full support behind President Bush and the nation's allies in the fight against ter- rorism. It's also important to undermine the conditions that breed potential terror- ists and to build a strong feeling of community within the country. "You have to understand, this is truly a battle for the soul of the 21st century," Clinton said. While acknowledging the presence in the audience of boxing great Muhammad Ali, a Muslim and resi- dent of nearby Berrien Springs, Clin- ton said Americans must be clear about who was responsible for the Sept. 11 acts of terror. "You cannot blame the Muslims of America or the world for these acts," the ex-president said. "We have to prove in America that we're bigger than that." He said suspected terror mastermind Osama bin Laden and his followers are deluded in their thinking and don't believe that they are committing evil acts. There kind have been around since the dawn of time, Clinton said. "What a dreary world it would be if Mr. bin Laden got his way," he said. During a session of the program where the former president answered questions from the audience, Clinton said he believes it is again safe to fly commercially. "One of the things this guy (bin Laden) wants is to make you afraid to get on an airplane," he said. Bin Laden won't get his way, how- ever, because the people of the United States won't bow to terrorism, he said. That became apparent in the wake of the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Clinton said. "It all begins with the breaking of the spirit of America," he said. "I can look out there (in the audience) and tell you're not going to give him per- mission to win." THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor this weekend FRIDAY Friday Night Live Featur- ing The Electronic Dance Coalition; Spon- sored by the Michigan League Programming Department, 4:00 p.m., 250 Hutchins Hall Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, Sponsored by the University Musical Society, 8:00 p.m., Hill Arb, 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., Meet at the west end of Dow Prairie SUNDAY U Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra; With Artistic SERVICES Campus Information Centers, 764-INFO, info@umich.edu, or www. umich. edu/.info Northwaik.76,3-WALK. F ,