LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 29, 2002 - 3 __ Clergy exempt from sexual disclosure Dollar reported stolen from a desk A caller reported to the Depart- ment of Public Safety that he had one dollar stolen from his desk sometime in the previous week, DPS reports state. Gang-like graffiti found in garage A DPS officer found possible gang graffiti in the south stairwell of the Church Street parking garage, according to DPS reports. DPS has no suspects. Wallet missing from Frieze Building A person was arrested in the Frieze building for stealing a wallet, DPS reports state. The man was later released pending charges. Laundry stolen from Couzens A caller reported that their laundry had been stolen from the laundry room in Couzens Residence Hall after being unattended for a short time, according to DPS reports. Unattended VCR taken from Pierpont A VCR was stolen from the Pier- pont Common's Building on North Campus Monday, DPS reports state. The VCR was left unattended. DPS has no suspects. DVD movies stolen from West Quad A caller reported to DPS that an unknown subject entered his room in West Quad Residence Hall on Tuesday and stole nine DVD movies, valued at $150, according to DPS reports. The room was unlocked at the time. Student awakes to find graffiti A person entered an unlocked room in Mary Markley Residence Hall on Tuesday and wrote "I am gay" on the desk while the resident was sleeping, DPS reports state. The event occurred between midnight and 1 a.m. Jeans, cell phone taken from backpack A caller reported to DPS that some- one had stolen their blue Polo jeans from his back pack in the Central Cam- pus Recreation Building Wednesday night, according to DPS reports. One jean pocket contained a silver Motorola cell phone. Hockey fan's hair pulled during game A caller reported to DPS that several fans had climbed the glass at Yost Ice Arena at the hockey game Saturday, DPS reports state. The caller said one of the fans grabbed her hair after she asked them to get down. Trespasser found in unlocked MLB A DPS officer found an unlocked door at the Modern Languages Building Wednesday, according to DPS reports. The officer arrested a trespasser in the building. The suspect was later released. Vending machine left open, cash stolen A vending machine was left unse- cured in Mary Markley Residence Hall Wednesday night, DPS reports state. Some of the cash may have been stolen. Car forgotten during winter months A caller reported that a car had been parked in a University lot all winter, according to DPS reports. 'U' Hospital worker harassed A caller reported that a person threat- ened her while at work at the University Hospital, DPS reports state. The caller left the area before filing a report. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Rob Goodspeed. LANSING (AP) - Michigan health care workers, social workers and educators must tell police if they suspect a child has been sexually abused. But clergy don't face the same requirement. That fact troubles some Michigan resi- dents, especially in light of revelations nationally that some Catholic leaders allowed priests who sexually abused children to move from parish to parish rather than reporting them to police. But others caution the government should- n't be involved in handling such concerns. Paul Long, the Michigan Catholic Confer- ence's vice president for public policy, said yesterday that he hopes the current "media frenzy" doesn't result in a rush to bad law. "Our biggest concern is with regard to the issue of confidentiality of the confessional. If the state gets into the business of mandat- ing and regulating that abuse cases be report- ed, what effect would that have?" he said. Only 15 states at the end of 2000 required clergy to report child abuse, and some that did exempted reporting if clergy learned of the abuse through confession or in their capacity as spiritual advisers, according to the National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect Information. Eighteen states required anyone who learned of suspected child abuse to report it to police. Among those, Utah exempts cler- gy if they become aware of the abuse through confession or in their role as spiritu- "If someone is breaking the laws, you have to go to the autho rities, - Tom Shields Dewitt Episcopalian member al advisers. Nina Williams-Mbengue, senior policy specialist with the Denver-based National Conference of State Legislatures, said some states - including Massachusetts - are beginning to look again at clerical reporting requirements in light of reports of sexual abuse by priests. But she said lawmakers are reluctant to wade into areas such as confession that don't apply to others already required to report sexual abuse. "It's (being) debated in states whether that area is so private ... (it should) be outside the scope of mandatory reporting," she said. Long is among those who contend that it is. "Government intervention in this case would tend to tread on First Amendment issues," he said. "We have a very delicate concern as to how the state comes into play in these regards." Long also said many clergy may not inter- act with children in the way health care workers, social workers and educators do, and may not even know sexual abuse is going on. AP rPHOT Cardinal Roger Mahony celebrates the annual Chrism Mass in Long Beach, Calif. yesterday. Mahony defended his handling of alleged child abuse by priests Monday. Bush's approval j drops in Michigan Life on the wild side LANSING (AP) - The number of Michigan voters who think President Bush is doing a good or excellent job has dropped slightly since January, but Bush still gets relatively high marks, according to a new poll. Sixty-nine percent of 600 likely Michigan voters statewide gave the Republican president a good or excellent rating in a March 19-24 poll, compared to 76 percent in January, a drop of 7 per- centage points. Those giving him a fair or poor rating rose from 20 percent in January to 30 percent this month. Only 1 percent were undecided in the latest poll, which had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 per- centage points. Economic uncertainty is among the reasons for the drop, said Ed Sarpolus of Lansing-based EPIC/MRA, which conducted the poll. So is the return of non-Republicans who flocked to sup- port Bush after the Sept. 11 attacks to the Democratic and independent fold, he added. "The people who have moved are independents who didn't vote for him in Michigan in 2000, and African-Ameri- cans and Catholics," Sarpolus said. "These people voted for (Democratic Sundayis 1 presidential candidate Al) Gore on the domestic issues." The poll showed that Michigan voters still give Bush high marks on fighting terrorism, with 84 percent approving of the job he's done. But a much smaller 56 percent approve of how he's handling the economy. Tom Shields of the Lansing-based Marketing Resource Group, a consultant to several GOP campaigns, said that even at 56 percent, Bush is doing well. The president apparently has side- stepped the problems his father faced as president a decade ago, when the elder Bush got sky-high approval ratings for his handling of the Gulf War but much lower marks on the economy. "People thought he failed to grasp the problems that were happening back home. That doesn't appear to be happen- ing with (George W.) Bush at this time," Shields said. "For an elected leader to be getting 56 percent in the throes of the recession ... those numbers are very pos- itive for him." Political consultant and former United Auto Workers official Paul Masseron of Southfield, however, said the poll shows a vulnerability not just for Bush but for all Republicans on the economy. The problem of clergy preying on children isn't limited to the Catholic church. Earlier this month, a jury found a suspend- ed Salvation Army minister guilty of raping a young girl and molesting at least one other during sleep-overs at his Owosso home. Randall VanLandingham was commander of the Salvation Army's Owosso Corps. He faces trial on eight more counts of second- degree criminal sexual conduct concerning five other girls. Tom Shields of Dewitt sits on the vestry of his Episcopalian church and said he and other church officers are required to sign a document agreeing they are obligated to pre- vent child abuse within the church. They - along with Sunday school teachers - also get four hours of training in how to detect child abuse. Church leaders are charged with looking into allegations of child abuse. But Shields said if those allegations are borne out, he thinks wrongdoers should be turned in to police. "If someone is breaking laws, you have to go to the authorities. It doesn't matter if you're a clergyman or a garbageman," Shields said. -Lansing to look at State law could make schools responsible for monitoring hazing incidents COLDWATER (AP) - Under a package of bills proposed by a state legislator, school districts would be required to implement anti-hazing policies. Michigan is one of eight states that does not have a law specifically dealing with hazing. Currently, policies and repercus- sions for hazing are left to an indi- vidual school district's discretion, according to a recent story in The Daily Reporter. The legislation, introduced by Rep. Dave Woodward (D-Madison Heights) would establish a set of cri- teria to help school officials deter- mine if an incident constitutes hazing. It also would present a range of aily possible consequences for the haz- 1, ing, allowing the school districts themselves to specify punishments. The legislation was introduced in December 2001 and remains in the s education committee. It also includes a provision that allows victims of hazing to seek )ara- damages in a court of law for physi- fall cal and mental pain. 1 3.5 "Michigan, in my opinion, is cer- tainly a little behind (when it comes ne's to anti-hazing policies)," Woodward plor- said. war- Woodward said he thinks that incidents of hazing are on the rise. t on In December, three members of tone the Bronson High School wrestling ated team were charged with harassment ups. in Pennsylvania after being accused Hugh of holding a 15-year-old down while one, a rock was pressed to his clothed the buttocks. main The team had been participating in a summer wrestling camp at Lock e we Haven University in Lock Haven, year Pa. when the incident occurred. Two utive of the teens pleaded guilty and each paid a $282.50 fine. The third has hief yet to settle his case. d at Woodward said he became tone involved in the anti-hazing effort any's after a school board member from his district told him of a hazing inci- ping dent in which girls' panties were and strung up on flag poles. h - "When it starts seeping down to those early elementary and high tting school years, then it's something we dis- have to worry about" Woodward said. f the "I think we need to take a hard s the line against this." LEL A/D Kristen Vallancourt of Animal Discovery shows a group of students a cayman which is a reptile found in South America, in West Quad Residence Hall. ast day for recall on Firestone tire WASHINGTON (AP) - Firestone tire owners have until Sunday to get free replacements as Ford Motor Co. ends a recall that was among the costliest in corporate history and damaged the reputations of two of the most venerable names in American business. Ford says it has spent about $3 billion to replace 10.6 million Firestone tires, though demand has waned. "For quite some time now, dealers have had tires in stock, and they aren't getting many calls at all," Ford spokesman Ken Zino said. Ford and Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. are eager to close one of their darkest chapters. More than 250 people were killed and hundreds more injured in accidents involving Firestone tires. In most cases, the tire lost its tread, causing an Explorer to roll over. Ford issued Firestone tires as standard equip- ment on a number of its vehicles, most notably the Explorer, the world's best-selling sport utility vehicle. Hundreds of wrongful death and personal injuries lawsuits are pending against the compa- nies. A law passed in response to the accidents allows criminal prosecution and stiffer penalties for executives who hide automotive defects. It also strengthens standards for tires, requires tire pressure monitoring systems in all vehicles and creates a rating system for vehicle rollover risk. And the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration will begin collecting claims, war- ranty and other data from manufacturers that could provide an early indicator of defects. Crit- ics said had that information been available, the Firestone problems could have been caught sooner. "What you have is a better mechanism to deter corporate lawbreaking and to catch the auto companies when they do bad things," said Clarence Ditlow, head of the Center for Auto Safety. "Groups had been working for 30 years to get criminal penalties in the safety act, but if it weren't for Ford and Firestone, we wouldn't have gotten them." NHTSA began investigating the tires in May 2000 after receiving reports some would sudden- ly fail. Three months later Bridgestone/Firestone announced a recall of 6.5 million ATX, ATX II and Wilderness AT tires. Bridgestone/Firestone and Ford, partners for 95 years, had a very public falling out during congressional hearings on the recall. The tire- maker said the design of the Explorer was partly responsible for the rollovers. Ford officials denied that and insisted it was solely a "tire problem." Bridgestone/Firestone severed ties with Ford last May. The next day, Ford responded by offer- ing to replace 13 million Wilderness AT tires on its vehicles, saying it was concerned about their safety. Some questioned whether Ford's move was a prudent business decision. Ron Pinelli, an ana- lyst with Autodata Corp., said the company had little choice. "I'm sure there were a lot of people out there who felt uncomfortable driving their Explorer with Firestone tires on them, and I think it was in Ford's best interest to take care of them," said Pinelli, whose company does research for the auto industry. Federal investigators eventually found the design of the Wilderness AT and the ATX pro- duced before May 1998 could cause higher stress at the edge of the steel belt and lead to a sep tion. NHTSA closed its investigation last after Bridgestone/Firestone agreed to recal] million more Wilderness ATs. The agency denied Bridgestone/Firesto request to open an investigation into the ExI er, saying there was insufficient evidence to rant it. The recalls have had a profound impac Nashville, Tenn.-based Bridgestone/Fires and Ford. Both sustained huge recall-rel expenses and underwent management shake- Sales of the Explorer fell last year, th they have rebounded. Bridgestone/Firest which set aside more than $1 billion for recall, says Firestone sales are rising but rer below pre-recall levels. "Eventually we hope to get back to wher were before, but that's going to be a multi. task," Bridgestore/Firestone marketing exect Phil Pacsi said. Both companies are using their new c executives in advertising campaigns aime improving their images. Bridgestone/Fires CEO John Lampe was featured in the comp "making it right" ads. Ford Chairman Bill Ford muses about cam trips taken by his grandfathers Henry Ford Harvey Firestone - he's a descendant of bot in ads touting the Explorer. A further indication the companies are pu the recall behind them: They are meeting to cuss a possible reconciliation. "We hope again to be a valued customer o Ford Motor Company," Pacsi said. "Just as Ford commercials say, the two companies intertwined from way back when. It has bee important part of our history and hopefully be an important part of our future. THE CALENDAR What's happening in Ann Arbor this weekend FRIDAY Women in a Changing Recital; Sponsored by the SERVICES "Holl 2002"; Sponsored World"; Sponsored by Hel- School of Music, 8 p.m., Campus Information by the Indian Students lenic Students Associa- Centers, 764-INFO, Association, 3 p.m.-1, tion, 5:30 p.m., Michigan Hill Auditorium info@umich.edu, or a.m., Michigan Union Union, Anderson Room D The House of Obatala - A * S.A.F.E. Walk, 763-WALK, THIS TWEI(IN Michigan Daily HISTORY March 26, 1952w -A Russian magazine, the "literary MIHIAN DAILY.COM * J " " a For the Ann Arbor Community Cosponsored by - St Mary Student Parish Gi- artc