Monday, December 5, 2005 News 3A Campus leaders urged to look beyond politics MICHIGAN HEADED TO SAN ANTONIO F'OR ALAMO BOWL ... SPORTSMONDAY £iitijuuit~ Opinion 4A Elliott Mallen takes on Paul Courant Arts 8A Law students fight to save 'Arrested Development' One-hundredffteen years of edtorialfreedom www.michigandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 42 02005 The Michigan Daily NAACP consi ers . Oycotting the Daily Group calls Nov 28 cartoon inaccurate and racist because it stereotypes black students By Karl Stampfl Daily Staff Reporter The University chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People may be considering boycotting The Michigan Daily because of an editorial cartoon it published Nov. 28. The cartoon displays a classroom of smiling dark-skinned students with a single white student. The dark-skinned teacher is shown saying that everyone in the class will receive preference when applying to the University because of affirmative action policies, except the white student. NAACP 2nd Vice President Jamila Fair said the cartoon reduced affirmative action to a black-white issue. Affir- mative action policies do not only benefit blacks but also groups such as women and other minorities, Fair said. "It makes it seem like affirmative action is only a black and white issue," Fair said. "To the NAACP it was a slap in the face. It hurt what we are trying so hard to fight." NAACP members said the Daily should not have print- ed the cartoon because they said it is racist. Members Michigan Daily also said that the cartoon Editor in Chief stereotypes blacks as a Jason Pesick minority group that is both normally edits abusing affirmative action the stories on policies and underqualified the front page. to attend the University. Because he was The Michigan Daily edi- in ts torial page supports race- quoted based admissions in all its story, he did not unsigned editorials, which edit it. appear on the left side of the page and represent the viewpoint of the staff. The paper's columns, editorial cartoons and viewpoints (or guest columns) have also often supported affirmative action, even though they do not reflect the opinion of the Daily staff, only of the individual authors. Fair would not comment on whether the group is con- sidering a boycott or what other actions NAACP will take against the Daily. Daily Editor in Chief Jason Pesick - who made the ultimate decision to run the cartoon - defended the paper's handling of the cartoon. "We give cartoonists and columnists on the edit page a great deal of latitude," he said. "Their views don't neces- sarily reflect the views of the editorial page or the paper as a whole." Pesick cited a line in the Daily's code of ethics that says the Daily needs to "support the open exchange of views, even views it finds repugnant." The Daily stands by its decision to run the cartoon, Pesick said. If given the chance again, he would have made the same decision. "I won't deny it's an edgy cartoon, but I would be really dissatisfied if the editorial page only had cartoons support- ing affirmative action," he said. "This is the central issue this campus has faced over the last decade and I see it as the Daily's responsibility to allow a robust debate to take place on that issue." The Daily has listened carefully to what the NAACP has had to say, Pesick said. Last Tuesday, Daily editors held a dialogue with NAACP members about the cartoon and the newspaper's editorial policies. See NAACP, page 3A Fire scorches apartment y *26 to 29 students forced to T move into temporary housing while landlords fix building ailBy Jameel Navi _ Daily News Editor Two fires blazed through three units in a three-story building at 815 S. State St. early yesterday morning, forcing 30 students to spend the next several days in temporary housing in the middle of the December finals crunch. An ambulance transported one student with a burned hand to the University Hospital, accord- ing to the Ann Arbor Fire Department. The hospital released the student at around 4 p.m. yesterday. All other students safely escaped. The Fire Department also said a firefighter was treated for smoke inhalation but will be back on duty today. The first fire occurred at around 3 a.m., students who were inside said. Tenants were allowed back into their apartments an hour after they were evacuated. But another fire erupted at around 7:40 a.m. and forced students to evacuate a second time. AAFD Battalion Chief Greg Hollingsworth said the building caught fire the first time when candles on the second floor of the apartment were placed too close to combustible objects. Hollingsworth speculated that the second fire started when smoldering debris - including a highly flammable mattress - that firefighters had thrown out the window after the first fire reignited the blaze. "It was possibly left a little too close to the building," he said. The fires caused extensive damage to the building's utilities and three apartments - the unit where the fire originated and the units directly above and below. Sue Eklund, dean of students, said ten- ants who were living in the three apartments may not be able to return soon. The 12 other apartments also sustained superficial smoke damage. "A timely call to the Fire Department and their prompt response was a blessing," said University alum Tony Nam, one of the owners of the building. Nam said he hopes tenants in the relatively unscathed units will be able to move back in this week. Family-owned Nam Building Manage- ment must repair utilities and obtain approval from city inspectors before tenants can return. So far, electricity has been repaired,'and pipes are being drained and treated with antifreeze to See FIRE, page 3A EUGENEUOERTSON/Daily TOP: Damage and debris from a fire at 815 S. State last night. ABOVE: Tony Nam, the landlord, checks out the damage and debris from the fire at 815 S. State, last night. RIGHT: Outside view of the building. Black students question DPS protocol U NAACP pushes for University policing agency to revise its crime alert and event surveillance policies By Carissa Miller Daily Staff Reporter Ever feel like you are being watched? It's what Kreston Martin, a Kinesiology senior, feels at on-campus events, whenever the Department of Public Safety is on the scene. Is DPS trying to be sneaky because a bunch of black folks are attending the event, he wonders. Some minority students, especially those in the black community say they are concerned with DPS's practices that seem to come into play only when their communities are involved. These security measures, some students say, are only used when certain groups have dances or parties. One event that has sparked consistent criticism of DPS is the National Pan-Hellenic Council Icebreaker, an annual event held in the Michigan Union to introduce students to the University's black Greek community. Concerns about video surveillance, as well as the pres- ence of six officers and a "paddywagon"- a van used to transport prisoners from jail to court - at this year's Ice- breaker led to an October meeting between DPS, members of various minority student groups and representatives from the Office of Student Affairs. Riana Anderson, president of the campus NAACP, said the organization wanted to push DPS to change protocols that her group feels unfairly target minorities and add to a negative campus climate. These changes included scaling back surveillance of events and making the crime alerts more detailed to avoid singling out a particular racial group. DPS officials addressed student complaints regarding seemingly discriminatory practices. DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said students must understand that the protocols are necessary to ensure the security of campus events. In addition, all groups, regardless of race, are subjected to the same protocols, she added. Brown said that DPS sent about six officers to cover the Icebreaker because one officer is needed for every hundred people at an event in the Michigan Union. "It was helpful once (the students) understood the detail of the dance party policy, which is the policy that any stu- dent group holding an event in the Union has to follow," Brown said. "An exchange of information took place at this meeting, and therefore I think it was beneficial." Brown said a lack of communication between DPS and See DPS, page 7A Students re-enact " Bhopal disaster on the Diag Mock wedding supports same- sex mamage Residential College project aimed to allow students to choose a social justice issue and present it creatively By C.C. song Daily Staff Reporter Michigan's ban on same-sex marriage didn't stop Holly Nice- wander and Rebecka Blose from exchanging vows on the Diag last Saturday. The mock wedding was part of a semester-long project for a Campus group seeks reparations for victims of the 1984 disaster By Joelle Dodge For the Daily They've traveled to Midland, read testimonies of victims and petitioned Dow Chemical senior officials at their performer Jeff Collins, a University alum who works with Students for Bhopal, a student group that supports reparations for victims of the disas- ter. On Dec. 3, 1984, a pesticide plant owned by Union Carbide Corporation in Bhopal, India, leaked chemicals that killed thousands of people. More than 150,000 additional people were injured and 20,000 of those people