NEWS The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 10, 2006 - 3A 0 ON CAMPUS Author to discuss religion, morality Students of Objectivism will host Andrew Bernstein, author of "The Capitalist Manifesto," today at 8 p.m. in Auditorium D of Angell Hall. Bern- stein will give a lecture titled "Religion vs. Morality ." A question-and-answer session will follow. The event is free. Sudanese prof to speak on Darfur Hamid Eltgani, an economics profes- sor at Texas State University, will speak on the humanitarian crisis in Darfur today at 7 p.m. in room 150 of Hutchins Hall. Eltgani, who was born in Sudan, will respond to questions on the magni- tude of the conflict and lack of interna- tional intervention. Author to speak on human rights and environment in West Bank Anna Baltzer, author of "Witness in Palestine: Journal of a Jewish American Woman in the Occupied Territories," will share her personal account of her travels in the West Bank today at 7 p.m. in room 1040 of the Dana Building. Baltzer has supported Palestinian and Israeli nonviolent activism through the International Women's Peace Service. CRIME NOTES Racist graffiti found on door S A vandal left racist graffiti on the door of a room in Mary Markley Residence Hall Saturday night, the Department of Public Safety reported. Residents dis- covered the markings at about 9:45 p.m. and officers filed an incident report. Students removed from softball game . Officers ordered six disorderly stu- dents to leave the women's softball game at the Alumni Softball Field Fri- day at about 4:30 p.m, DPS said. The students received a verbal warning. * String of MIPs hits campus Officers cited a total of eight minors for possession of alcohol Saturday between 12:45 a.m. and 1:30 a.m, DPS reported. One of the minors was transported to University Hospital for treatment. Painting of former dean stolen from music school Sometime on Thursday or Friday, thieves stole a painting of a former dean from the Earl V. Moore Building of the School of Music, DPS reported. Police have no suspects. THIS DAY In Daily History Students protest toxic bug spray April 10, 1990 - Students bugged by exterminators' intentions to use two toxic chemicals to kill cockroach- es in the Dana Building successfully stopped the insect purge yesterday via an early-morning protest. Harry Morton, associate dean of the School of Natural Resources, called off the extermination at about 6 a.m. because of student outcry over the planned use of Dursban and Diazanon, pesticides that some sci- entists say can cause harmful side effects. Although the chemicals are thought to be less toxic than other similar substances, their use can cause head- aches, sweating, nausea, vomiting and mce twitches said Ed Delha- UWs lack of diversity criticized Companies looking to recruit minorities say they shy away from Madison campus because of 10-percent nonwhite enrollment rate MILWAUKEE (AP) - The lack of diversity in the University of Wisconsin-Madison student body makes the school an increasingly disappointing campus at which to seek talent, a growing number of corporate recruiters are saying. Companies frequently target students with diverse back- grounds. But UW-Madison is one of the least diverse schools in the Big Ten. In 2005, only 10 percent of UW-Madison students iden- tified themselves as black, Hispanic, American Indian or Asian. At the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, that figure was 32 percent. UW-Madison has a larger enrollment of Asians in its Col- lege of Engineering, but less than 5 percent of the other stu- dents there are minorities. In recent years, Alcoa, General Motors Corp. and a divi- sion of Proctor & Gamble Co. said the lack of diversity in the school's College of Engineering is the reason they stopped recruiting there. Proctor & Gamble has since resumed but other corporations are threatening to look elsewhere unless the university increases its minority enrollment. One reason the university has few minorities is because the state has few minorities. State law mandates that 75 percent of UW-Madison under- graduates must be state residents. But blacks and Hispanics make up just 10 percent of the population. The city of Milwaukee has a high minority population but its public school system, with its high dropout rates and low student performance, doesn't feed large num- bers of graduates to Wisconsin's flagship university. . Lawsuit planned over 911 response Detroit woman died after operator ignored 6- year-old's emergency call DETROIT (AP) - A boy who called 911 to report his mother had col- lapsed and was told by an operator that he shouldn't be playing on the phone recounted the call yesterday on NBC's "Today" weekend show. By the time authorities arrived follow- ing Robert Turner's calls on Feb. 20, his mother Sherrill. Turner was dead. "She thought I was playing on the phone," Robert, who turned 6 last month, said of the operator. Robert was joined on the show by lawyer Geoffrey Fieger, who is best known for defending assisted-suicide .advocate Jack Kevorkian. Fieger plans to file a wrongful death lawsuit today against the city on behalf of the family of Sherrill Turner, 46, of Detroit. "This indicates an endemic prob- lem," Fieger said. "There's a discount- ing of children. Robert did exactly what he was taught to do." Fieger said Robert's mother, who had an enlarged heart, would have survived if help had been sent immediately. After the interview, Fieger said additional details would be released Monday. Detroit police are investigating the 911 response. In a statement Friday, Police Chief Ella Bully-Cummings said it was important not to rush to judgment and she indicated she would have no further comment "due to imminent or pending litigation:" A message was left yesterday with a Detroit police spokesman seekingwcom- ment. After Turner collapsed in a bedroom at her apartment, Robert placed two calls to 911. In the first call about 6 p.m., Robert told an operator that his mother had passed out, but an operator asked to speak with an adult. When he called back later about three hours later, an operator told him: "You shouldn't be playing on the phone." 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