NEWS The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 7, 2005 - 3 ON CAMPUS 'Heroin Town' to be shown Director Josh Goldbloom docu- ments the true story of Willimantic, Conn. after it was portrayed in a neg- ative light by a "60 Minutes" report. The award-winning film will be shown in Angell Hall Auditorium B at 7 p.m. tonight, with a chance to meet the director after the showing. RC players present sketch comedy act Tonight the RC players will hold their annual fall performance "An * Evening of Scenes." The show will be held in the RC auditorium at 8 p.m. tonight and will consist of nine short sketches directed and preformed by University students. Admission to the event is free. Physicist to hold lecture on Einstein and God The Campus Chapel Center for Faith and Scholarship will hold a lecture entitled "God after Einstein" tonight at 8 p.m. Dr. Robert Mann, head of the Waterloo University physics department, will examine theoretical conceptions of God as affected by the famed physicist's the- ories. The discussion will take place in room 1028 of the Dana Natural Resources building. - CRIME NOTES Possible pot plants found at Fresh Air Camp A caller reported that marijuana plants were found Tuesday in the Fresh Air Camp, an abandoned area where sick children at the University Hospital used to camp, the Department of Public Safety reported. The caretaker of the area report- ed the problem to DPS and said there was a fence around the suspicious plants. Plants were seized as evidence and taken to the crime lab for further investigation. Man steals 2-liter Pepsi bottle in front of cop An off-duty DPS officer witnessed a subject stealing a two-liter Pepsi from the Speedway gas station on Stadium Boulevard, DPS reported. The Ann Arbor Police Department was notified. Blogger of racial issues reports e-mail harassment A caller said he has been receiving hate e-mails in response to his website, umichstopthehate.blogspot.com, where he discusses the recent alleged incidents of ethnic intimidation and assault. The subject has been receiving harassing e- mails with vulgar language disparaging his opinions, DPS reported. None of the e-mails threatened his life. * THIS DAY In Daily History College finance bill faces debate Oct. 7, 1971 - With the nation's higher education institutions in finan- cial trouble, the House Education and Labor Committee adopted a measure to give colleges almost $1 billion in finan- cial aid. The measure, the first of its kind, would allow institutions to obtain federal money with no restrictions as to where the funds will be used. The bill, soon to be debated by the House, would appropriate money based on number of students and students receiving financial aid. Only universi- ties that discriminate on the basis of sex would be excluded. Smaller private colleges would receive more money Greeks make plans to stymie. campus hazing problems By Amber Colvin Daily Staff Reporter Several student groups will join forces this week to combat hazing in the Greek system. Members of these groups will paint the rock at Washtenaw Avenue and Hill Street, pass out candy on the Diag and hold an anti-hazing banner contest, among other things, to raise awareness about the seriousness of hazing. Because fraternities and sororities on campus have been found guilty of hazing in the past, members of the Greek community are now trying to combat the problem with Hazing Prevention Week. Last February, the University released a report that investigated hazing allegations from Fall 2004 and found three fraternities and one sorority guilty. "Smoking marijuana, induced consumption of food, blindfolding, dressing in arguably humiliating cos- tumes and theft of property and trespassing" were all cases of hazing established by the report, which also confirmed cases of severe alcohol intake, humilia- tion and psychological harassment. "Hazing - while it has been curbed in recent years - is still an issue across the country, and this campus is no exception," said Interfraternity Council spokes- man Jon Krasnov. "We need to increase awareness' about hazing until we have reached the point where it does not exist." Events throughout the week, which started Wednes- day and will continue until next Wednesday, include the launch of a new anti-hazing website, www.umich. edu/~nohazing, and presentations about hazing at the various Greek chapter meetings. Hazing Prevention Week comes at a time when many freshmen are pledging fraternities and sororities. Residence Halls Association President Darla Wil- liams said the events can educate freshmen who may not know what their rights and responsibilities are as fraternity and sorority pledges. "We want to make sure that we're contributing to the healthy lifestyles of those first-year students who don't know any better," Williams said. "They may not know they're being hazed." Williams said it was important for RHA to be involved with Hazing Prevention Week so that infor- mation on hazing could be advertised in residence halls, where the majority of pledging freshmen live. According to the national Hazing Prevention Week website, there has been at least one hazing- related death on a college campus every year. Eighty- two percent of those involved alcohol. When such events occur, there is a place for hazed pledges to go with their concerns. The Hazing Task- force is a group created to investigate instances of hazing after receiving complaints. Amber Lowden, administrative chair for the task- force, said that once a complaint is received, the task- force notifies the fraternity or sorority involved and then interviews the president, new member educator and new members of the organization. The taskforce then convenes to discuss the findings and either dis- misses the case or passes it on to the Greek Activities Review Panel. So far, she said, the taskforce has not received any complaints of hazing this year. Lowden said the taskforce does not decide whether an organization is guilty or what consequences will result, but instead provides a place where hazing can be reported and discussed without bias. "We make no final determination as to guilt or rem- edy in any case," Lowden said. "Hazing is an issue that can be difficult to discuss and emotional for many people. What we do is provide an impartial service." 'U' students promote clemency for battered women By Tiffany Teasley For the Daily At noon today, University students and faculty will stand on the steps of the state Capitol Building demanding clem- ency for the alleged injustice of hun- dreds of battered women imprisoned for acting in self-defense against their abusers. The Michigan Battered Women's Clemency Project, a nonprofit organiza- tion committed to supporting the civil rights of battered women in the state of Michigan since 1991, is organizing the rally. The group acts as a representa- tive for women who it says acted in self- defense or in the defense of their children against an abusive partner. The Clem- ency Project coordinates the event annu- ally, and this year the group is reacting to what its members consider Gov. Jennifer Granholm's slow response in redressing the alleged wrongful convictions. On behalf of the inmates, this year the group is resubmitting 20 petitions requesting clemency that have sat on Granholm's desk for the past two years. "We're getting very frustrated with Gov. Granholm because she professes to be compassionate about this issue but does nothing," said Carol Jacobsen, president of the Clemency Project and a University professor of art and women's studies. "Meanwhile, these women are rotting in prison." Jacobsen has created nearly a dozen films narrated by former battered women inmates. The films document their lives while critiquing the justice system that failed them, she said. As a self-pro- claimed feminist, filmmaker and artist who has been studying all-female prisons for the past 20 years, Jacobsen said she is determined to support these women until their rights are acknowledged. "We intend to keep the pressure on (Granholm) until she acts," Jacobsen said. Jacobsen teaches a course, cross-listed in the women's studies department and the School of Art and Design, entitled "Bodies in the World: Representing Human Rights." A number of Jacobsen's students are participating in the rally and were recently asked to create a project that would reflect the lack of compassion in rectifying this issue. On Wednesday at noon, University students performed a dramatization depicting the struggle of battered women in an effort to publicize the rally and draw attention to the situ- ation. "Law enforcement isn't doing anything to fix (the problem), the government isn't doing anything to fix it, so we need to do something," Art and Design junior Sara Burke said. "It's something that we have the power to take care of, and therefore, we should take care of it." In addition to participating in the rally, the students will perform their dramati- zation before the rally, supplemented by monologues from each character. "I think we all hope that Jennifer Granholm will finally do something with the petitions and grant clemency for these women who have been serv- ing time for something that they should never have been convicted for in the first place." Art and Design senior Anne Nechal said. . Giving a Voice, the two-year-old campus branch of the clemency project, assists in raising awareness for the proj- ect and will also participate in the rally. In addition to students and faculty from the University, friends and family of the inmates will speak on their behalf, while other audience members will read summaries of the experiences of various women who have been incarcerated. Alycia Welch, co-founder of Giving a Voice, said Granholm was not acting on their request for clemency for a number of political reasons. "The rally will put more pressure on Gov. Granholm and the Legislature to really bring the focus to these women and not just a legal decision," she said. 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