Wednesday, October 6, 2004 Weather Opinion 4 Spanish-lan- guage website an important step Arts 7 Taye Diggs stars in UPN's "Kevin Hill" £o a:4tg HI: 70 LOW: 43 TOMORROW: 75/48 One-hundredjourteen years of editoridfreedom www.mch9gandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXV, No. 6 @2004 The Michigan Daily DPS sees overall drop in crime By Ashley Dinges Daily Staff Reporter The University's Department of Public Safety announced yesterday a decrease from 2002 to 2003 in the number of major crimes reported on campus, in all catego- ries except one. Statistics released in the 2004-2005 Campus Safety Handbook break down crimes by type and number of reported instances, and show that among the largest decreases was burglary, both in residence halls and in other campus buildings. The only category that showed an increase was forcible sexual offenses. DPS has jurisdiction over all Univer- sity-owned buildings, residence halls and property including the Diag. Statistics include all reported crimes that occurred Reported on-campus burglaries down 55 percent within DPS jurisdiction, which does not include sorority or fraternity houses, or off-campus housing. On campus, 150 reports of burglary were reported to DPS in 2002, while in 2003 only 67 were reported, for a total drop of 55 percent. Within residence halls, there was a 52 percent decrease in reported burglaries, which University Housing spokesman Alan Levy said is due in part to DPS efforts and new security initiatives installed in the halls. "The drop in residence hall crime is related to the action that University Hous- ing took in terms of installing of the auto- matic locks on student rooms, combined with effective patrolling by DPS and hous- ing security," Levy said. He added that none of the DPS reports of home invasion occurred in any residence hall room that had already been installed with the new electronic locks. Installation of automatic locks was recently completed in all residence hall rooms and bathrooms, and video surveil- lance cameras were recently added outside residence halls. Levy said the installations in total cost about $4 million and have been in progress for the past three years. Levy said nearly 6,000 room and bath- room doors have received the new locks. "That project is complete with the exception of the last repairs making sure everything is working according to speci- fication," Levy said. DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said there are still some halls scheduled for installation of cameras. In addition to the new locks and video surveillance, a 24-hour controlled-access program was implemented in 2003 requir- ing students to always use an Mcard to enter a residence hall. In the statement released yesterday, DPS Director William Bess also attribut- ed the drop in reported crime to increased DPS patrolling. "In addition to the residence hall ini- tiatives, we also increased foot and bike See CRIME, Page 5 Crackdown on crime In 2003 67 burglaries were reported on campus, compared to 150 the year before, according to the 2004-2005 Campus Safety Handbook. University Housing attributes the drop in report- ed crime to increased DPS patrolling efforts and automatic locks installed on all residence hall room and bathroom doors. Alcohol-related incidents dropped from 485 reports in 2002 to 465 in 2003. All nine reported forcible rapes or assaults with an object involved an acquaintance situation, and overall most forcible sexual offenses also did. 1B BA TTLCONTWUBS.. Medication tied to student death By Melissa Benton Daily Staff Reporter The Washtenaw County Medical Examiner's Office released the autop- sy results on Monday for Kinesiology sophomore Kristi Anne Sprecher, who was found dead in her West Quad Resi- dence Hall room on Sept. 6. The coro- ners determined that a complication with medications caused her death. Medical Examiner Office Manager Donna Tokarczyk said Sprecher died of medication toxicity, which occurs when a person who is taking multiple medi- cations consumes too much of one or more of them. "Kristi Sprecher was taking various medications. The toxicology results indicated that she had taken too much of one or more of her medications, which ultimately caused her death," said Roger Simpson, chief investigator at the Washtenaw County Medical Examiner's Office, in a written statement. Simpson said, however, that the cause of her death was accidental. "While there was a higher-than-nor- mal level of medication in her system, it was not high enough for a conclusion that this was a suicide by overdose," Simpson said. Kristi Sprecher's father, David Spre- Death due to abnormally high level of medication, but cause was accidental. cher, said she had Ehlers-Danlos Syn- drome, which is a connective tissue disease. The disease results in weak- ness and sometimes excessive flexibil- ity of the connective tissues of the body, such as the skin, muscles, tendons and ligaments. "All the medication (she was taking) is related to the problem she had with that disease," Sprecher said. Simpson said this cause of death is not uncommon for people who are tak- ing multiple medications for "chronic medical problems:' Department of Public Safety officers found Sprecher in her single occupancy room in Cambridge House while per- forming a welfare check at her parents' request. The parents requested the check after not being able to get in touch with Sprecher for about 24 hours. Investigations by both the Medical Examiner's Office and DPS determined that the women's death was uninten- tional, Simpson added. AP PHOTO Democratic vice presidential candidate John Edwards, right, responds to Vice President Dick Cheney during the vice presidential debate In Cleve- land yesterday. From debate's opening bell, VP candidates throw jabs ELECTIONS '04 More youth to vote in election By Andrew Kaplan and Jameel Naqvi Daily Staff Reporters If Thursday's presidential debate seemed point- ed, last night's debate between Vice President Dick Cheney and Sen. John Edwards came across as needle-sharp. From the get-go, the vice presidential candidates jumped more frequently at opportunities to call one another on what they judged to be policy incon- sistencies and - unlike in the matchup between Democratic presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and President Bush -just plain inaccu- racies in their responses to debate questions. Both candidates jockeyed for position throughout the evening. Cheney at one point denied Edwards's allegation that his administration had ever proposed the idea of any ties between Iraq and the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, executed by al-Qaida operatives. In fact, he said, the administration has said Saddam Hussein "had established relationships with" the terrorist organization sometime during his dictatorship, which ended following U.S. forces' invasion of Iraq in 2002. University students and other local residents gathered ... last night to watch with the Arts of Citizenship Program. During the debate, Edwards (D-N.C.) several times used the word "distortions" to characterize Cheney's arguments that Kerry is not fit to fight a war on terror, and that Edwards' voting record in the Senate was "not very distinguished." "The vice president, I'm surprised to hear him talk about records," Edwards said. "When he was one of 435 members of the United States House, he was one of 10 to vote against Head Start, one of four to vote against banning plastic weapons that can pass through metal detectors." The more heated atmosphere of last night's debate - which preceded two more presidential matchups over the next week - originated from a sharper line of questioning from moderator Gwen Ifill of PBS's "NewsHour" than was delivered by the moderator of the previous debate, "The NewsHour" Executive Editor Jim Lehrer. While Lehrer's first question of last week's presi- dential debate asked Kerry if he could keep the coun- try safer than could the president, Ifill focused her first question to Cheney on recent finger-pointing from Paul Bremer, former head of the U.S. Coalition Provisional Authority, that the Bush administration did not send enough American troops to Iraq. Some of the most impassioned moments of the foreign policy section of the debate came in a dis- cussion of the burden of casualties in Iraq. Seeking to rouse disdain toward the administra- tion's handling of the war, Edwards said U.S sol- diers represented 90 percent of the casualties borne by international coalition forces in Iraq. Cheney immediately attacked Edwards for not considering the sacrifice of Iraqi National Guards- men that have served alongside coalition troops. While the candidates were barred from asking questions of one another, they nonetheless entered See DEBATE, Page 5 Many students will have their first experience voting for a president on Nov. 2, and they will play a vastly different role than young voters did in the last election in 2000. Statistics show that voters aged 18 to 29 will be more active in this upcoming election than they were in 2000. Polls conducted last month by the Pew Research Center, a Wash- ington-based agency that surveys American politics, reported that 57 percent of people under age 30 say they are giving a lot of thought By Amber Colvin For the Daily to the election. At this point four years ago, that rate was only at 41 percent. Furthermore, in 2000, 67 percent of registered young voters said they planned to vote in November. This year, that number has climbed to 85 percent. This is despite the fact that yout typically turn out to vote in lower numbers than any other group. The increased political aware- ness and activity among young voters is visible on campus in the efforts of Voice Your Vote, the Uni- versity's official voter registration center, and numerous other voter See VOTERS, Page 6 Islamic scholar explains religion's ties to blacks in United States By Victoria Edwards Daily Staff Reporter With a recent poll showing that 25 percent of Americans have a negative opinion of Muslims, Islam scholar Umar Farooq Abdullah faced an uphill in explaining the history of Islam in America, last night at Hutchins Hall in the Law Quad. In response to these numbers, Abdullah stressed the importance of American Muslims defining themselves, instead of letting the media - or anyone - else do it for them. Abdullah added that although the media often portray Muslims in America as being Arabs, 33 percent of Ameri- can Muslims are South Asian, 30 percent are black and 25 percent are actually Arabs. With leaders like Muhammad Ali and even more con- troversial figures such Malcolm X converting to the reli- gion, black Muslims have become a growing and prominent population in the Islamic world. Engineering junior Chris Blauvelt said the connection between blacks and Muslim Americans was especially pertinent, because it's specifically in the black community - not the white community - where he feels the religion MIKE HULSE$US/ DAILY Dr. Umar Farooq Abdullah gives a speech titled "Roots of Islam in America," an explanation of the history of Islam in Amawirae