LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 15, 2003 - 5A SMOKERS Continued from Page 1A In residence halls, rules can be more flexible than in other University build- ings, Merritt said. "The environment we work in is with a community of smokers. We can work collectively. You know the people smoking outside the dorms - you don't who's smoking in public places, like the library," he said. Libraries, a public place in which smoking students often frequent, have more trouble addressing the issue of second-hand smoke. Associate University Librarian for Public Services Brenda Johnson said the library is too small to fully deal with the issue of public smoking. "Presumably, people observe Uni- versity policy, but just look at the loca- tion of the butts. They are scattered around the entrances - not really a reasonable distance," Johnson said. "We are too shortly staffed to have people policing outside. We'd be pulling someone away from their job to have them go outside and see if people are smoking far enough away from the library," she added. Other universities have instated smoking policies designed to mini- mize the presence of second-hand smoke. Michigan State University has a similar policy to the University's, requiring smokers to maintain a "rea- sonable distance" from buildings. At Central Michigan University, smokers must be 25 feet from buildings, but smoking is permitted in designated residence hall areas. Yamchanchai suggested that the University create specific areas outside dorms designed for smokers so that the smoke itself is in an isolated area. Merritt said the creation of a specific smoking area is fraught with difficulty. "It's like Murphy's Law. Anytime you try and set up a smokers only area near an exit or anywhere outside the building, you'll find that someone (a non smoker) uses that area and has a problem," Merritt said. For now, everyone agreed that the second-hand smoking issue is in the hands of the smokers themselves and that University rules can only go so far. Engineering sophomore Natalie Levy said rules could only affect so much. "You can change policy, but you can't tell people not to smoke," Levy said. FALL BREAK Continued from Page 1A after second-year students took their final exams, he said. "I think the students all appreciate that. Having that extra one day off makes a big difference." Abu-Isa said the administration is very receptive to student voices. Administrators have also been responding to a push for more study days and have added some time for studying, he said. Law School student Umbreen Bhat- ti said the discrepancies in fall break timing did not affect her. "It made absolutely no difference to me," she said. "I'm sure it's probably difficult for people who want to coordinate their schedules with other students." Bhatti said she didn't understand why the fall break comes at different times for different schools. "I've never been able to figure that out," she said. "(The schedules) are really not all that different." She pointed out that the Law School fall semester starts and ends on the same day as most other schools. The only major difference in schedules is that the Law School win- ter term ends on May 6. BUDGET Continued from Page IA Michael Hansen, chief education analyst for the Senate Fiscal Agency, echoed his statements. "For all we know they could spare higher education, but I doubt they will," he said, adding that Michigan's colleges and universities already con- sume nearly a quarter of the budget. But state and University officials said funding cuts to the University could pose problems in the wake of last year's $37 million reductions. "(The state budget deficit) certain- ly puts us at some risk, but again it depends a great deal on the size of the cut and the timing of the cut," said Provost Paul Courant. "Last year we went through a process that had a lot of consultation over a period of about six r nths." In the months following the confer- ence, Gov. Jennifer Granholm will address voters and the state Legislature with her own solutions to the budget problem. Her plan will most likely include a combination of fee hikes for some state services and budget cuts, said Greg Bird, spokesman for the State Budget Office. "This is an extremely huge budget problem - we want to make sure we do it right and not fast," Bird said. "So we're going to work very hard to put something together soon." I don 'tfeel like they respect us as adults' POLICE Continued from Page 1A streets such as Maynard Street, which is where Scorekeepers is located. The anonymous student said she felt treatment by the police outside of Scorekeepers was unfair. "I know police are there to protect and do their job;' she said. "It feels like they treat people unfairly. I don't feel like they respect us as adults, I feel like they treat us like kids. They assume we don't know our legal rights." "I'm unhappy, dissatisfied with the whole thing," she said. Engineering freshman J.C. Conover also said he was dissatisfied with the police presence. "I don't like how they give everybody MIPs," he said. Conover said he also saw a housing security officer threaten a student who had crawled into his window in a resi- dence hall. But not all students feel such ani- mosity toward police. Kinesiology freshman Brad Lathrop, sitting with Conover at the Michigan Union under- ground, said he didn't think the police in Ann Arbor were as bad as his friends thought. He said Arborfest was the only place he had seen police so far and that he didn't know many people who had received MIPs. DPS officers said negative com- ments reflect a minority of interactions between students and police. Weincouff has been with DPS for two years. He was a patrol officer and now works in the criminal investiga- tion unit. He said despite some nega- tive feedback, people in Ann Arbor tend to be friendlier and more likely to say hello to him than in other places he has worked. Housing Security Officer Steve Prussian has been with the DPS housing security staff since January and said his interactions with stu- dents have been positive. "I think it's been very friendly," he said. "The vast majority of the students here know we're there to help them so they can focus on the education they're here to get." "There's a tiny fraction that we don't get along with. Most everybody seems to be very happy that we're here." WOMEN Continued from Page IA they learn to play golf or participate in other traditionally male social activi- ties, said Executive Women's Alliance President Carol Gallagher, whose firm specializes in coaching, consulting and developing female leaders. "It's not a good way to make rela- tionships when you're miserable," Gallagher said. "If we don't act authentically and show up who we really are at work, people don't learn to trust us." Women also must learn that while they have to be effective at their jobs, they should avoid a perfectionist atti- tude by delegating responsibilities instead of trying to do everything by themselves, Gallagher said. She added that one way for women to network successfully is to develop "substantive relationships inside and outside the company." She pointed out that 90 percent of executive women's relationships were devel- oped with workers outside their department, and 18 percent were rela- tionships with professionals outside of their industry. Stacy Stewart, chief executive officer of the Fannie Mae Founda- tion, said in addition to taking risks and expecting adversity, female leaders must discover what their passions are and work hard to achieve their goals. "As women, we cannot be defined by our gender, and we cannot be defined by our expectations of our gender," Stewart said. "If we're going to be defined by anything, it shouldn't be titles or awards, but values." Stewart said as an MBA student at the University, she turned down a prestigious job offer several weeks before graduating because she want- ed to work in the public finance sec- tor, helping expand home-ownership access to minorities. While a receptive audience of sev- eral hundred female professionals, business students and prospective students listened to the speakers' advice and inspirational stories dur- ing the conference, few raised their hands when Gallagher asked how many wanted to one day work in executive positions. Many more indicated that they wanted to work as individual contrib- utors for a large corporation. "There's some barrier out there - some of it is self-imposed and some of it is the culture of the organization," Gallagher said, adding that only 1.5 percent of the Fortune 500 top chief executive officers and 12.4 percent of all board directors are women. Gallagher said a key for women to achieve success in the business world is to realize that "whatever we focus on is what we achieve." I I ar vN 00e, 0;00 * Knowledge is power. 166-- r-, -ril ,,I WPO0 ssit on. 0010110*- lo r \*,o - lmft. Or Join us, and you'll find yourself in an environment where knowledge and learning are shared. An environment where you can expect to learn from your i aL ,