NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 14, 2005 - 7 * PRAYER Continued from page 1 But more rooms are needed. The room in the League is well used: On Monday afternoon there was even a line, as two students waited in * the hallway. Noha Elmouelhi, president of the Muslim Engineering Student Asso- ciation said students on North Campus have time to pray, but no place to go. Elmouelhi and other members of her group began talks with the Office of Student Affairs back in January to find a place for a second Reflection Room in Pierpont Commons or the Duderstadt Center. Efforts continued during the semester and into the sum- mer, to no avail. The group gathered 179 signatures on an online petition to show the Univer- sity that the issue was important. So far, six additional student groups have sup- ported the petition, and Elmouelhi said when it reaches 200 signatures, they will take it to the administration. Despite the petition, the response may still be the same - wait. It's not that the University doesn't see reflection as a priority, University officials said. Frank Cianciola, senior vice president of student affairs, said the University recognizes the issue as a legitimate need and is committed to finding a space. The problem? "There is no space here that is not being used," said Michael Swanigan, director of Pierpont Commons. With space in Pierpont and the Dud- erstadt Center already dedicated to other student groups and pressure on the administration to open more food services, Cianciola said his hands are momentarily tied. "It's very difficult when you have limited space and legitimate, com- peting needs," he said, adding that in order to open a reflection room in Pier- pont or Duderstadt in the near future, another student group would have to be evicted. To find a creative solution, the Mus- lim engineering students and the Office of Student Affairs are considering other buildings on North Campus, such as the old media center or a classroom within one of the schools. But "there is no 'space czar,' " Cianciola said. The space on North Campus is controlled by a number of departments. To open a room in a building not controlled by the Office of Student Affairs, Cianciola and his staff must persuade other departments to reserve a room. While Cianciola said he and his staff are working diligently to find a solu- tion, he said they have no timeframe for opening a reflection room. The Muslim Students' Association has also raised the possibility of open- ing additional rooms on Central Cam- pus, namely in Angell Hall and the Chemistry Building. "We asked for the Chem Building because there are labs that are four hours long, and you don't have a 10 min- ute break in between," Shuttari said. "It is a key location." Part of the petition states that a reflection room would benefit "students of all faiths and beliefs." Loren Rowry, a custodian who works in the Michigan League, agrees. Although he is not a student, Rowry, who said he is spiritual but not religious, visits the reflection room five days a week. "It's a chance to get away, calm down and gather my thoughts," he said. "I value that time highly. This is the only job I've ever had where I could do something like this." ALEXANDER DZIADOSZ/Daily Clockwise from top left: Evacuees pick up medical supplies from volunteers in the Brown Convention Center; a family of evacuees sits outside of the Reliant Center in downtown Houston, waiting for a ride to the train station so that they can make their way to Baton Rouge, where they hope to start a new life; a makeshift tent is transformed Into a chapel as evacuees sing and pray with a gospel choir and preacher outside the Astrodome in Houston. HOUSTON Continued from page 1 well as the Federal Emergency Manage- ment Agency's oft-criticized job han- diing the crisis. One passing evacuee yelled "George W. Bush is a criminal, he doesn't give a damn about us, he stole our money and our homes." The main protester, evacuee Gloria Rubac, chanted "Get the troops out of Iraq - get the money to the people of New Orleans" and "Justice to New Orleans, justice to the victims of Hur- ricane Katrina." Other evacuees criticized FEMA's ongoing recovery efforts. Evacuee Lisa White said she blames FEMA for being unable to find her temporary housing. White said FEMA told her an apartment in Houston was available to her, free of charge for the next two months. But upon attempting to move into the apartment, White said "FEMA is stealing my money." - Lisa White Katrina evacuee the landlord wanted her to pay for the rent. With barely any money on her, White said she had no choice but to return her shelter in Reliant Center. "FEMA is stealing my money," she said. Similar criticisms caused-FEMA Director Mike Brown to step down Monday. He had already been stripped of his duties to supervise the rescue efforts in New Orleans the week before. Most of the evacuees The Michi- gan Daily interviewed described a difference between the government relief available in Houston and those in News Orleans. Many applauded Houston's hospitality. But there were some exceptions. Thea Elder, who is black, carried a sign at the Sunday protest that read "Impeach Bush, Race Matters." Elder said she and her fiancee Nich- olas Miller, who is of mixed ethnic- ity, had been given "No apartment, no help" despite promises that they would receive housing since they evacuated New Orleans, when authorities told them to do so. Elder said she believes the reasons they have received little aid are because of racism. On Monday in New Orleans, Bush denied that poor black victims of the hurricane were ignored because of their skin color and economic situa- tion, the Associated Press reported. Bush: Govt responsible for recovery failures WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush for the first time took responsi- bility yesterday for federal government mistakes in dealing with Hurricane Katrina and suggested the calamity raised broader questions about the government's ability to handle both natural disasters and terror attacks. "Katrina exposed serious problems in our response capability at all levels of government," Bush said at a joint White House news conference with Iraqi Presi- dent Jalal Talabani. "And to the extent that the federal gov- ernment didn't fully do its job right, I take responsibility. I want to know what went right and what went wrong," said Bush. Facing sharp criticism and the lowest approval ratings of his presidency, Bush scheduled a speech to the nation from Louisiana for tomorrow evening. It will be his fourth trip to the devastated Gulf Coast since the storm struck two weeks ago. It was the closest Bush has come to pub- licly faulting any federal officials involved in the hurricane response, which has been widely criticized as disjointed and slow. Some federal officials have sought to blame state and local officials for being unprepared to cope with the disaster. Sen. Mary Landrieu, (D-La.), welcomed Bush's conciliatory remarks. "Accountabil- ity at every level is critical, and leadership begins at the top," she said. Other Democrats were less charitable. "The season has come for Americans to look homeward ... instead of continu- ing to spend billions of dollars in Iraq," said Sen. Robert C. Byrd, (D-W.Va.). And Louisiana's Democratic gover- nor, Kathleen Blanco, accused the Fed- eral Emergency Management Agency of moving too slowly in recovering the bod- ies. The dead "deserve more respect than they have received," she said at state police headquarters in Baton Rouge. Meanwhile, R. David Paulison, in his first full day on the job as acting FEMA director, told reporters in Washington the government would step up its efforts to find more permanent housing for the tens of thousands of Hurricane Katrina survivors now in shelters. "We're going to get those people out of the shelters, and we're going to move and get them the help they need," Paulison said. Bush selected him to replace Michael Brown, who resigned on Monday after being recalled as the top onsite disaster- relief coordinator. Brown, a Republican lawyer with little previous disaster-man- agement experience, drew fierce criti- cism for his handling of the crisis. SOLE Continued from page 1 tee was a "standard University tactic," because the committee is not yet in ses- sion and there are no students among its members. "There should be student presence on the committee when it meets," Rah- man said. He added that SOLE's future plans include educational events in the next few weeks to put increased pressure on the University to act. LSA-SG Continued from page 1 to take Korean, but she said some students might not want to take the extra semesters of a different lan- guage just for fun. "(The require- ment) punishes people who want to try new things," she said. Paige Butler, LSA-SG vice presi- dent said, "I think as elected mem- bers we need to think about what the greatest good of students is, and I think that is to give them an option." - Chastity Rolling contributed to this report. the michigan daily COLLEGE STUDENT NEEDED for 11 yr. old girl. After school, Mon.-Thur., 3-5 p.m.- flex. 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Must have some toddler care exp Ready to start immediately, Send resumes tc tasha@umich.edu MEDICAL SCHOOL FACULTY and wife seek babysitter for a 6 and 8 year old for oc- casional evenings and wknds. on an as- needed bases. Please call 332-4256. P/T NANNY IN South Lyon area, flex. hrs & light hse. keeping is a plus. 248-437-4535. /' 3:i%: 3 WKND. DAYS/MO. and/or 2 morn./wk. Transportation, responsible. Refs. 769-1462. A2 CHILDCARE NEEDED. 3-4 days/wk. 3-6PM. Must have car. $10/hr. 662-4805. oA TIr7 R ' N vvrn CrAEnv- A SPRING BREAK 2006 with STS, America' #1 Student Tour Operator. Hiring campu. reps. Call for group discounts. Info/Reserva- tions, 1-800-648-4849. www.ststravel.com SPRING BREAKERS WANTED Sun Splash Tours Now Hiring Campus Rep- resentatives. EARN FREE TRAVEL AND CASH. FREE MEALS BY 11/7. __-__s_ 1 O, Aor1 'r,,m