Friday, February 6, 2004 Sports 10 Women's hoops lose 76-64 to Purdue Opinion 4 Sowmya Krishnamurthy on Nobel Prizes Friday 12 The Daily previews Focus tomorrow's caucuses Ben Aleck speaks about his films, J-Lo and the future ... Arts, Pg. 8 relic4jIUU Weather 4 V HI: 27 LOW; 21 TOMORROW: 31116 One-hundred-thirteen years of editorialfreedom www.michigandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXIII, No. 91 @2004 The Michigan Daily Restaurant stays open despite sewage backup By Victoria Edwards Daily Staff Reporter Despite a sewage backup yesterday in the Earl of Sand- wich store at Pierpont Commons, and the protests of the store's employees, the University decided to keep the store open. A female store employee on the condition of anonymity said that she came in at 11 a.m. to find a serious sewage backup around the drain in the food preparation area of the store. She said a manager told her that they would close for the rest of the day because of the potential health hazard. But then University Catering Manager Shelly Bell ordered the store to stay open, she said. "I asked (the first manager), 'Are you sure this is safe?' And (the managers) said it was fine. ... I'm no Flu outbreak spreads Several hallways in Markley closed off By Ashley Dinges Daily Staff Reporter expert on sewage, but my mom is a janitor, and in gen- eral it just didn't look right," the female said. She said knowl- edge of the sewage backup was kept from the customers who entered the store yesterday. "We were not supposed to tell any- one. If anyone asked why there weren't as many sandwiches, we weren't supposed added. "They stayed open because they wanted money, but in the process they endangered the health of the students:' - Lacey Babcock LSA senior and Pierpoint Commons Espresso Royale employee to tell them what happened," she The University's Occupational Safe- ty and Environmental Health depart- ment confirmed yesterday that a total of 43 students have now contracted the contagious viral gastroenteritis, also known as the stomach flu, in Mary Markley Residence Hall during the past four or five days, said Alan Levy, Director of Housing Public Affairs. The virus, which as of Tuesday was confined to the fourth floor of Reeves house in Markley, now appears to have moved to other areas of the building. "There are some students who are sick who were not on the floor. There does not appear to be a pattern yet," Levy said. Other floors housing infected stu- dents include third Reeves, a women's hall, and first Reeves, a men's hall. But Levy pointed out that not all 43 students were sick today - the esti- mate also includes students who were (Top left) Engineering freshman Tom Cho washes his hands, at temporary hand-washing stations In front of the cafeteria at Mary Markley Residence Hall yesterday. JEFF LEHNERT/Daily (Bottom left) A mask lies on the landing on the 5th floor at Markley Hall. JEFF LEHNERT/Daily sick earlier this week, but only recently notified authorities of their illness. The entire first and fourth floors of Markley were quarantined as of early this morning. Signs were posted near fourth Reeves warning non-hall residents tc avoid the floor, because of the conta- gious nature of the virus. Instruction for proper hand washing have alsc been posted in all Markley bathrooms. The University set up waterless hand-washing stations in the Markley dining hall yesterday with sanitary handwashes and towelettes. The stations have also been setur throughout the hall in locations such as the front desk and lounges. So far. Markley is the only residence hall with such stations. "We are working to get the sick stu- dents individual containers of this liq- uid so they wouldn't have to leave their rooms to wash their hands," Levy said. Students who contracted the virus See OUTBREAK, Page 5 LSA senior Lacey Babcock, who works across from the Earl of Sandwich at Espresso Royale, said she found the way the University handled the sewage situation irre- sponsible. "They stayed open because they wanted the money, but in the process they endangered the health of the students. ... I don't see why the University would do that. They should have respect for the students they're serving," Babcock said. She added that her store experienced a sewage backup and closed. Babcock said that according to her knowledge it was the manager's sole decision to keep the store open. The employ- ees were firmly against it, she added. But Bell said that the incident was not a health hazard, and keeping the store open was completely justified. When asked whether the incident was a sewage backup, Bell would not answer directly, instead calling it a "building mal- function." "There was a building problem in Pierpont Commons. We contacted the Safety and Health Office immediately. We reacted immediately and there was no danger to public health at all," Bell said. She added that after referring their problem to the Department of Occupational Safety and Environmental Health, the department instructed the store to remain open. . Bell said employees cleaned the back of the store for 45 See SEWAGE, Page 7 (Right) Hallways are quarantined because of an outbreak of the flu virus has occurred at Markley Hall. RYAN WEINER/Daily Dean cancels League visit, turns focus to Wisconsin Multiplepresidential candidates skif last minzute campaign stops in Michigan to focus on later prrnari es, caucuses By Andrew Kaplan Daily News Editor Following a boisterous town-hall gathering in Royal Oak yesterday morning, Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean laid out the bones of a speech he had pre- pared for a rally at the Michigan League today. "The things the students care the most about are environ- ment, the deficit ... and college loans and how to afford col- lege," Dean said in an interview with The Michigan Daily. But within hours of leaving 200 of his supporters in Royal Oak, officials from the Dean campaign announced that Dean would, in fact, skip canvassing Michigan and ship out to Wisconsin - a state where the former Vermont gov- ernor has more campaign "resources," as Dean put it. Dean is not the only candidate who is bypassing Michigan to seek victories in other states. Retired Gen. Wesley Clark and U.S. Sen. John Edwards have also chosen to sidestep the state this weekend. Although some of the candidates had planned to attend a town- hall meeting at the Detroit chapter of the National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People last night, as of 6 p.m. all had withdrawn except for Rev. Al Sharpton. Dean campaign officials said their Dean decision to skip over Ann Arbor reflected the reality that Dean's prospects in Michigan are not hopeful enough to keep him from trying his lot in other states. "However, this is a delegate-rich state," said Chrissy Setzer, Dean's Michigan spokeswoman, referring to a wealth of delegates to the Democratic National Convention that Dean can claim without a first-place finish in the cau- cuses. "I think we can come out with a sig- nificant amount (of delegates)," Dean added. A new elections schedule may also have been an ingredient in candidates' decisions to pull out of Michigan. One campaign official, who spoke under the condition of anonymity, said the timing of the caucuses affect- ed the duration of his candidate's stay Edwards in Michigan this weekend. This year's caucuses mark the first of the party's elections in which Michigan voters can cast ballots on the Internet. Although Democratic supporters can still vote by mail or at more than 400 traditional voting stations throughout the state, about 20,000 voters - perhaps one seventh of the total turnout, Democratic Party Chairman Mark Brewer said - have already submitted ballots online. State Democrats have not officially tallied the current leader in state mail-in or Internet ballots. But it is possible that Michigan be well on its way to select- ing a candidate before the polls have even opened. If Internet voting has sailed the state into a premature decision, it would dovetail with an early primary/caucuses schedule the Democratic National Committee has arrayed for this election Clark year. In order to hasten the party toward endorsing a candidate that can compete with President Bush, most states, including Michigan, will hold their cau- cuses or primaries more than a month earlier than during the See CAUCUSES, Page 7 Study: A2 police do not practice racial profiling By Ashley Dinges to them takes into account a measure, o and Adhiraj Dut that is similar to a margin of error, they Daily Staff Reporters appear to practice racial profiling. Speaker pushes for abortion activism f error do not By Rebecca Kraut and Lucille Vaughan For the Daily Ann Arbor police probably do not practice racial profiling against blacks, according to a three-year study presented to the Ann Arbor City Council this week. The study was conducted by Lamberth Con- sulting - a private consulting firm who was hired by the council after the city received com- Still, some in the Ann Arbor community are not convinced that racial profiling is not happen- ing here. "I just have some concerns about what the data is telling us about the stops that occurred," City Councilwoman Wendy Woods said. "Presumably, if no racial profiling is happen- ing, then the odds ratio which the Lamberth firm Thirty-one years after Roe v. Wade became part of American law, last night's event in Hutchins Hall showed that abortion is still a wildly controver- sial issue. Several abortion rights supporters shared their own experien~fces. in a~ddi- in November. "If the president sits in the White House for another four years, the right to choose as we know it will be lost." A Michigan alum, Michelman encouraged students to become more involved in the political sphere, invit- ing them to the upcoming March for Women's Lives on April 25, in Wash- ineton. m EWWI