NEWS The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 15, 2005 - 3A ON CAMPUS Gargoyle Humor Magazine to hold mass meeting The Gargoyle Humor Magazine will be having its Critical-Mass Meet- ing today at 7 p.m. in the Student Publication building located at 420 Maynard St. Anyone who is interested is encouraged to stop in and visit. Visiting artist will display sculpture made of bread Lloyd Hall Scholars Program's visit- ing artist, Beili Liu, has created a deli- cious addition to the art world. The artist has made a site-specific sculpture, "Breadth" in the DineArts gallery locat- ed in the Dining Room of Alice Lloyd Residence Hall. Beili's work is com- posed of individual slices of bread from 500 loaves. The artist will be present- ing her work to the general public today from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Alice Lloyd din- ing room. Society of Physics Students to hold meeting today The Society of Physics Students will be holding its first meeting of the year today at West Hall, room 337, at 6:15 p.m. for prospective physics students and incoming students that are new to the organization. At 7 p.m., the meeting will continue with all returning members. Various items will be discussed, including theme semester happenings, the upcoming breakfast with Jocelyn Bell Burnell and department- sponsored tutoring sessions for introduc- tory physics courses. CRIME NOTES Parking pass stolen, suspect not yet charged On Tuesday, a University, paflging pass was stolen from a vehicle in a parking lot at 1100 block of the West Medical Center. A Department of Pub- lic Safety officer found a stolen park- ing permit in someone else's car, which wtasfound at 12:20 p.m., nearly an hour after the crime was committed. The owner of the car with the stolen park- ing permit was interviewed. Until the Washtenaw County Prosecutor's Office sees grounds for a warrant of arrest, the owner won't be charged with larceny, S according to DPS. Laptop stolen from Hatcher Graduate Library, no suspects On Tuesday, a laptop was stolen in the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library at 9:56 p.m. The incident took place in the third-floor stacks. The Sony laptop was left unattend- Unemployment rate lowest since spring of 2004 LANSING (AP) - Michigan's unem- ployment rate dropped to 6.7 percent in August, the state announced yesterday. The seasonally adjusted rate was the lowest since April 2004, but still likely among the nation's highest. Michigan's July jobless rate was 7 percent, highest among the 50 states. A state-by-state breakdown was not yet available for August, but the national unemployment rate was 4.9 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. "Michigan's labor market in August displayed some positive movement," Rick Waclawek, direc- tor of the state's Bureau of Labor Market Information and Strategic Initiatives, said in a statement. The jobless rate was helped last month in part because temporarily laid- off employees in the auto industry were called back to work. The state added 5,000 manufacturing payroll jobs in August, according to a monthly survey of employers. That is a rarity in Michigan, which has lost 32,000 manufacturing jobs in the past year. Government also added 5,000 jobs, partly because of higher employment in public schools. Employment in the gov- ernment sector is down by 7,000 jobs compared to a year ago, however. Because of those summer employ- ment trends in Michigan, economists cautioned against reading too much into yesterday's report. "I was not one of those dismayed by the numbers last month, nor will I be one of those celebrating the numbers this month," University of Michigan econo- mist George Fulton said. "Michigan has been sitting around 7 percent (unem- ployment) for a long time. We're going to sit around there for a while yet." About 3,000 jobs were lost in retail trade in August. About 2,000 jobs were lost in education and health services. Most other employment sectors stayed about the same. Professional and busi- ness jobs slipped by 1,000 in August, making the year-to-year decline about 8,000 jobs. Some economists say that is a particularly troubling trend for Michi- gan because it shows job loss is broader than manufacturing. The total number of non-farm payroll jobs, according to the monthly survey, was up by 8,000 in August to 4.35 mil- lion. But the payroll jobs total was down by 49,000 compared to a year ago. Sheriffs: county jail system oul LANSING (AP) - Michigan's 17,878- bed county jail system is running out of space, and sheriffs say it would help if judges and state lawmakers found alterna- tives for handling drug users and the men- tally ill who crowd their cells. In metropolitan Detroit, the state's three largest counties all have released prisoners early in the past two months. Wayne County releases hundreds each month, Oakland County released 179 prisoners in August and is facing another release and Macomb County released 200 in July and about 100 in August. Yesterday was the 14th day of a crowd- ing emergency at the Macomb County jail, meaning that some nonviolent offend- ers must be released early until the jail's population falls below 1,413. "We're using all other options available to us for incarceration (but) it's not look- ing pretty," Sheriff Mark Hackel told The Macomb Daily of Mount Clemens. "The situation just keeps repeating itself." In the northeastern Lower Peninsula, the 63-bed Iosco County Jail faced crowd- ing recently, said Sheriff Michael Fischer. "I had to house out 10 prisoners this L of space week to other jails," Fischer told The Detroit News for a story yesterday. "We've been packed for quite a while. There's talk of adding 60 beds, and we could use them." Most of the beds in Michigan's 83 county jails system are occupied by people awaiting trial or sentencing, or convicted of lesser crimes that come with a year or less of jail time. About 80 percent of county jails are at or above capacity and about 40 percent have declared crowding emergencies or are near doing so, said Terrence L. Jungel, executive director of the Michigan Sher- iffs' Association. "There's no room at the inn," Jun- gel said. Sheriffs say many county prisoners are drug or alcohol abusers or mentally ill and belong in programs other than jail. Some sheriffs have asked judges to consider alternative sentences for non violent misdemeanors. That could clear space for those with mandatory jail sentences for drunken driving, spouse abuse and nonpayment of child support. Lawsuit filed against law barring selling and renting of violent games LANSING (AP) - As expected, the video game industry says it will file a lawsuit challenging Michigan's new law that bars retailers from selling or renting violent games to those 17 and younger. The Entertainment Software Asso- ciation, a trade group representing U.S. computer and video game publishers, announced its intent to sue yesterday. The suit is expected to be filed soon. ESA President Douglas Lowenstein said the law, which takes effect Dec. 1, is unconstitutionally vague and limits residents' First Amendment rights. "How can you treat a video game based on James Bond any different than a book or movie based on the same subject matter?" he said. The announcement came after Dem- ocratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm signed two more bills aimed at keeping adult- rated games with sexually explicit or violent material away from children yesterday. The governor had signed two other video game bills Monday. "This is a commonsense law that provides parents with the tools they need to protect their children from the effects of violence and graphic adult content," Granholm said. In July, the industry filed suit to block a similar video game ban approved in Illinois. Federal courts, have struck down video game bans approved by Washington state, Indi- anapolis and St. Louis County 'in Missouri, saying they encroached on the First Amendment. The video game bills received broad bipartisan support in the Michigan Legislature. They were sponsored by Senators Alan Crop- sey (R-DeWitt) and Gerald Van, Woerkom (R-Norton Shores) and Representatives Phil Pavlov (R- St.Clair Township) and Tom Pearce (R-Rockford.) ed. There are no time according to of Public Safety. suspects at this the Department *THIS DAY In Daily History Students gather and hold vigil for world peace Sept. 14, 1983 - On Monday, 14 mem- bers of the Progressive Student Network began a 24-hour peace vigil that did not conclude until Tuesday at noon. The group initiated the vigil to protest the deployment of nuclear weapons in Europe during the Cold War, as well as the research the University is conducting to assist in the creation of these weapons. Until late Monday evening, more than 25 students gathered around a red can- dle and sang songs by Neil Young, Arlo Guthrie and Bob Dylan while gathered by a red candle. m