NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 16, 2005 - 3 * ON CAMPUS University prof discusses health care rationing Dr. Peter Ubel, an associate professor at the University's Internal Medicine Department and director for the Uni- versity's Program for Improving Health Care Decisions will be speaking today as part of the events under the Bioethics Grand Rounds. His lecture "What is Wrong with Health Care Rationing?" will explore the area of health care rationing many people believe to be "unnecessary and immoral." The event is today from noon to 1 p.m. in Room F2304 of the C.S. Mott Children's Hospital. Lecture to focus on library changes The School of Information is spon- soring a lecture today from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Alumni Center Founders Room. The lecture, "Human Connection: Words, Power and Change in the Bib- liotech Age," will be presented by speakers Frank Kurt Cylke, director of the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped of the Library of Congress and Margaret Wolfe, coordinator of the Washtenaw County Library for the Blind and Physi- cally Disabled, in Ann Arbor. The event is to "further help the public understand how the digital age affects retrieving, storing, and using information wisely." Student athletes to hold discussion on gender issues The third event in a series of five pre- ceding the production of the Vaginal Monologues on Sunday is set for today at 8 p.m. in Room 124 of East Quadran- gle Residence Hall. The event will fea- ture a discussion by University athletes about gender issues. CRIME S NOTES Caller reports fraudulent use of parking permit A caller reported a fraudulent use of a parking permit at 508 Thompson St. on Monday afternoon. A report was filed to the Department of Public Safety. Woman with warrant turns herself in to DPS DPS reported that a subject turned herself in to the court on Monday after- noon because there was a warrant out for her arrest for obstructing justice. Subject loses vehicle, later found A subject in the Thayer Street Carport reported to DPS that he had misplaced his vehicle late Monday night. An officer assisted him, and the vehicle was later located in the carport. THIS DAY In Daily History Students abandon Ann Arbor arcades Feb. 16, 1983 - The sounds of video games echo through Ann Arbor's arcades these days. Strobe lights flash, but not on crowds of people. The "video craze" is p subsiding and it shows. The once-packed video rooms are no longer bursting with customers, and local arcade managers say that the decade's biggest fad thus far is fading fast. With today's dismal economy, many students say they cannot afford to spend quarters on video games. "I'd rather save my quarters for laundry machines than to spend them on video games," junior Karen Lauhoff said. Todd Bradford, a visiting Alpha Tau Omega member from Indiana University, said his fraternity "wanted to cut the cost 10 of spending so much money at arcades cn we used cnmp hnse funds to huv an Panel discusses famous Islamic poem By Amber Colvin and C.C. Song Daily Staff Reporters While studying abroad in Morocco, Fareeha Khan entered a mosque and heard a recitation of a famous ancient Islamic poem, the Burdah, which is now being made into a musical - the first Muslim one to be produced in America. At the time, Khan said she did not know Arabic very well. "Even though I couldn't understand it, it was very beautiful." She said her immediate love for the poem led her to help develop the first Islamic Ameri- can musical in history. The musical, "The Poem of the Cloak," will premiere March 17 at the Ford Community and Performing Arts Center in Dearborn. The story applies the precepts of the Burdah to the struggles of a Muslim American family. Khan, a doctoral student in Near Eastern Studies at the University, was joined by Parvez Ahmed and Jonathan Glasser in the Rackham Building last night for a panel discussion of the Burdah called 'Changing Voices for the Poem of the Cloak: Cross-cultural Adaptations of Qasidah al Burdah.' Parvez Ahmed, a student in the Department of Asian and Near Eastern Studies at Wayne State University, discussed the historical aspects of the poem. Written in 1212 CE by al-Busiri, an Egyptian- born poet, the Burdha has been translated into many languages. It has been set to pop melodies in Egypt and South Asia, sung at wedding cer- emonies, memorized by children and recited at conversion ceremonies and on Ramadan. The poem was inspired by the story of al- Busiri's miraculous cure by Muhammad. Accord- ing to the tale, the Prophet appeared to al-Busiri - who was paralyzed from a stroke - in a dream, tossed him a cloak and cured him. The 160 to 165 lines of the poem, varying with the translation, praise Muhammad for his act of kindness. Ahmed described it as the ecstatic love that Muslims feel for the founder of their religion. "It's really a deep sense of love and venera- tion," Ahmed said. Jonathan Glasser, a Rackham student in Near Eastern Studies, played different samples from a recent recording of the Burdah in Morocco and explained the variety of arrangements. Glasser also examined the conflict between restrictions on music in the orthodox practice of Islam and the way the Burdah is performed. He said controversy arises when the Burdah is performed with instruments, contravening the beliefs of some Muslims. LSA sophomore Azmat Khan said she appreciated the way the event was centered on the Burdah. She said people at the University need to discuss the poem more. "Islam is (not only) a religion of peace, but (also) a religion of art," she said. Rackham student Ali Hashmi said he appre- ciated the University's willingness to discuss the Burdah. "I think overall the message is so very popu- lar," Hashmi said. Hashmi said the need for discussion of the Burdah comes from its themes of love and gratefulness. "That's really the backbone of Islam," Hashmi said. The event was the first production put on by the Office of Diversity Affairs, which is part of the Rackham Graduate Studies Program. Patricia McCune, the director of the Office of Diversity Affairs, organized a series of events after discov- ering the theme of the semester would be Cultural Treasures of the Middle East. Tashara Bailey, a doctoral student in higher education who works at the Office of Diversity Affairs, hosted the show. "I thought it was wonderful, a good chance for students to learn about the literary form," Bailey said. Abused women speak about time in prison By Laura Frank Daily Staff Reporter Mary Heinen was sentenced to life in prison for a robbery in which her husband shot and killed several people 30 years ago. While serving her sentence, Heinen earned four university degrees, including one from the University, and started a law library through which she and other prisoners attempted to find ways to appeal their cases. The inmates sought to get out of a place where they said they faced constant abuse. Heinen succeeded in getting out and, along with India Stewart, who also spent time in prison, spoke about abuse within the prisons, both by guards and by other inmates at the Michigan League last night. Abuse by guards - which included touching female prisoners inappropriately or watching them undress - is widespread, Stewart said. Both women spoke about the need for increased legal advocacy for battered women in prisons. Heinen added that while there has been legal action taken in some prisoner abuses cases - one was settled for $3.8 million - there is still rampant abuse within prisons. "A case that was settled a few years ago will have no impact on what goes on in the (prisons)," she said. Heinen also spoke of being threatened with retaliation and intimidation by prison offi- cials who learned of her legal efforts to leave the prison. With her hard work, Heinen was granted clemency and released after serving 30 years in prison. The event was part of a weeklong campaign sponsored by the Michigan chapter of V-Day, an international organization that works to end violence against women. According to RC senior Erin Kaplan, one of the event's organizers, women - especially black women - are the single fastest-growing prison pop- ulation in the United States. In addition, Kaplan said that 95 percent of impris- oned women have been abused at one point during their lives, either before or after being incarcerated. "I don't know anybody who hasn't been abused," Stewart said. Both women also talked about abusive relation- ships they had been in. Both were married as teenag- ers to men who later abused them, and each spoke of the emotional damage and life-changing conse- quences they suffered during these relationships. While some laws have been passed to protect women from being prosecuted for crimes against abusers, Heinen said these laws are not retroactive, and there are many women currently in prison who should not be there - either because they were forced to participate in crimes by violent partners or because they killed abusive partners in self-defense. "I was able to litigate myself out," she said, "But that's a real unusual situation." Stewart, who said that her abusive boyfriend robbed a bank and forced her to drive him away, served three years in prison. Two of her daughters still live with the man, and she is currently fighting for custody, but she said that transitional programs for people returning from prison do not do enough to help women regain their families. "Most of the programs cater to men," she said. Heinen said she believes that violence against women is often accepted and that it is promoted by video games, the media and the government. "Women have been seen traditionally as property," she said. Community High School junior Christine SHUBRA OHRI/Daily India Stewart and Mary Heinen, abused former prisoners, speak to a group in the Michigan League yesterday about the injustice they suffered in and after prison. Martin-Buck said that while she has heard of some of the issues surrounding female prison- ers, the speakers "put things in a whole new perspective." Stewart and Heinen also offered advice to others who may be involved in abusive rela- tionships. "Don't be afraid to ask for help if you're a victim," Stewart said. "I thank God every day that I was able to get away." This is the first year V-Day has sponsored this event, and organizers were very pleased with the turnout. LSA senior Kyle Stock said she was especially impressed given the difficul- ty of advertising and reaching audiences about such a difficult issue. Heinen and Stewart concluded the dialogue by urging people to support petition drives and the Michigan Battered Women's Clem- ency Project. "You're more powerful out here than you think you are," Stewart said. :'f::