a NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 14, 2004 - 3 ON CAMPUS Engineering society's open skate to benefit charity The Biomedical Engineering Soci- ety will have an open skate today from 10 to 11:45 p.m. in Yost Ice Arena. The event is not restricted to members. The cost of attendance is $2 or two cans of food, and proceeds will go to a charity. Last year, the society collected 150 cans of food. For more information, contact Dhruv Aggarwal at dsud@umich.edu. Michigan Union to host 'Great Union Study Break' The Michigan Union will host the "Great Union Study Break' today at 8 p.m. There is no charge to attend. For more information, contact Student Activities and Leadership, Michigan Union Arts and Programs or the Stu- dent Organization Resource Center. 'U' Symphony Orchestra to perform at Hill The University Symphony Orches- tra will perform at Hill Auditorium today at 8 p.m. Conductor Kenneth Kiesler will lead the orchestra in a program titled, "Mozart-Symphony No. 32." Contact Rachel Francisco at 764-0594 for more information. CRIME NOTES Hockey player injured at Yost A hockey player suffered a neck injury in a game at Yost Ice Arena on Sunday night. The player was trans- ported to a hospital in a Huron Valley Ambulance. Suspects break car window in parking lot theft Suspects stole speakers from a car parked in a lot on 500 Thompson St. The incident was reported to DPS at about noon Sunday. In the process, a window was broken. There are currently no suspects in the case. Parking patron spits on attendant in spat A person spit on an attendant because of a dispute Sunday at the Fletcher parking lot on 201 Fletcher St., according to DPS. The suspect has not been identi- fied. The nature of the dispute is not known. THIS DAY In Daily History Power failure produces mass pandemonium Dec. 14, 1961 - Darkness and pan- demonium hit the corridor between the lecture rooms of Angell Hall yes- terday morning when a power failure hit Central Campus. A mass of stu- dents tried to extricate themselves from the asphyxiating atmosphere of cigarette smoke. But all was in vain. The students who had just been released from the four pitch-black auditoriums were caught in a human blockade that refused to budge. "For 15 minutes I was caught there, fighting to get out, but when I felt someone pinch me, then I had no trouble finding an exit," one girl said. Not until the personnel at the Uni- versity power plant checked to see whether equipment was intact did the 1electricitv return "I am concerned because it is hateful speech - it is a cowardly act."- MESA Director Patricia Aqui Pacania Racist graffiti on stalls upsets students By Magaly Grimaldo For the Daily Students using some of the bathrooms on the first floor of Angell Hall have noticed and been upset by racist graffiti on the stall walls. Located in the women's bathroom next to the Fishbowl and the men's bathroom near the Mason Hall entrance, the graffiti includes offensive stereo- types about Indian and Asian women, as well as hateful remarks toward Arabs and Jews. The graffiti includes sexually explicit and violent language, along with expletives. "This is a reaction of people who have dissat- isfaction with multiculturalism," said Patricia Aqui Pacania, director of the Office of Multi-Ethnic Stu- dent Affairs. "I am concerned because it is hateful speech - it is a cowardly act. It goes beyond stereotypes and creates ignorance. It goes against our values as an institution," Pacania said. While the graffiti angered many students, the Department of Public Safety was unaware of the racist remarks on the stall walls until Friday. Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Diane Brown said the University doesn't tolerate any type of graffiti unless it is written outdoors on a horizontal surface with chalk. Regarding the violation of the graffiti policy in the bathrooms, Brown said the University follows state law when deciding a course of action. Under Michigan law, a person who draws graffiti on a surface can be charged with mali- cious destruction of property. Depending on the amount of destruction, a person may either be jailed or fined up to three times the amount of the damage. "Custodians clean bathrooms everyday. They clean what can be removed. When dealing with graffiti, custodians must write a report to Risk Man- "We are concerned about the students' safety and where freedom of speech becomes a violation of civil rights. We don't want anyone on campus to feel unwelcome," Walesby said. But the University wasn't the only once voicing disapproval of the graffiti. Members of student orga- nizations were also upset. "Sexist, racist and anti-Semitic graffiti are not acceptable in any circumstance, and these recent examples in Angell Hall are no exception," said Stephanie Chang, co-chair of the United Asian American Organizations. "It disturbs me on several different levels. One, that people even feel the need to write about their sexual experiences on bathroom walls. Second, that people objectify Asian and Asian Pacific American women as passive and sexual objects," Chang said. Neal Pancholi, president of the Indian American Student Association, said it was awful that students still think this way, even in the diverse society that the University has strived to create. "These people hold society back because they are placing blame on people who didn't have a choice to be born where they were. They make blames with- out having significance, and it only shows their own ignorance," Pancholi said. "The comments on these bathroom walls can- not be taken as 'just comments' - it's a public place, lots of people walk through there and any comments like these affect the way people think about women and specifically women of color. It's important to remember that these comments are in the public sphere and this is a campus community. These comments shouldn't be considered in isola- tion," Chang said. The University has commissions that deal with reports of hate crimes. These include the Office of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Affairs, DPS and the Office of Institutional Equity. Graffiti scribbled on an Angell Hall bathroom stall yesterday. agement, the University's insurance company. Risk Management assesses the damage and then pays a company to paint or replace the property," Brown said. DPStook photographs of the graffiti Friday to check if it contained racist remarks. "DPS took a report on the graffiti in the bath- rooms and requested maintenance clean-up," Brown said. DPS reported the crime as malicious destruction of property with a hate bias. "They don't have any suspects," she added. Brown also said building services is exploring a material that can be applied to the bathroom stalls to prevent the adherence of markers and pens on the stall walls. Anthony Walesby, senior director of the Office of Institutional Equity, said the graffiti statements were not something the University supported. City deficit could lead to police, fire cuts By Carissa Miller Daily Staff Reporter The city's need for cuts may lead to layoffs of 20 people from the Ann Arbor Police Department and the closure of a fire station. Ann Arbor safety services could potentially undergo more cuts thanks to the city's budget problems, city offi- cials say. The tentative cutback for the 2005-06 fiscal year is about $6 million out of a $77 million general fund. Unless the city can devise ways to increase revenue, the fire and police departments may have to make inter- nal reductions in order to meet the projected 5 percent cut being asked of all city departments, said City Admin- istrator Roger Fraser. Other segments that could be affected are parks and recreation, the 15th District Court and community development. City officials said budget recom- mendations will not be proposed until February or March, and it will take until the end of May to resolve the budget, which will become effective in July. The city's need for cuts means that the Ann Arbor Police Department may have to slash more than 20 jobs in the force. While University property is under the jurisdiction of the Department of Public Safety, the diminished AAPD force would affect students who live off campus, Police Chief Dan Oates said. "We can't lose people and deliver the same services," Oates said. "There are some services we wouldn't be able to deliver." Oates did not specify which ser- vices would have to be discontinued, emphasizing that the city has only begun discussing next year's budget, and everything is still speculative. "Things are tough and we will deal with it," Oates said. "No one is pro- posing cuts in the police department, or any department, yet. There are only estimates and ideas on how to fix the budget cap." Discussions with the City Council will continue for another month or so, he added. "We are going to explore many options concerning how to fix the problem," Fraser said. "Cuts in the fire and police (departments) are not likely - that is the worst-case scenario." For the Ann Arbor Fire Depart- ment, a 5-percent slash would result in the closing of Station 3, located on Jackson Road. Due to previous budget cuts, Station 2 was closed in 2002, and the minimum number of firefighters on duty was reduced from 20 to 15. "Ninety-three percent of my budget goes toward personnel and salaries," Fire Chief Joseph Gorman said. "This leaves around $800,000 to operate stations, vehicles and machines. The only option I have is to close a sta- tion." If Station 3 is shut down, firefight- ers would need more time to respond to emergencies in the entire com- munity, including the University and businesses on campus. The AAFD's response time could increase by up to eight minutes, Gorman said. He added that he hopes a drastic action like closing another station will not have to be taken. "We are going to be proactive and find solutions," he said. In the first week of December, city ew.t n officials like Fraser, Gorman and Oates met with the City-Council to x discuss the financial situation and per- form exercises to come up with ideas }........... on how to fix the budget. "It is too early to speculate on any- thing," Gorman said. 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