NEWS Friday, September 8, 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 3 ON CAMPUS Ark to hold free concert for 'U' students The popular Ann Arbor music venue The Ark will host a concert tonight at 8 p.m. Alternate Routes, a young rock band with an empha- sis on storytelling, will perform. The concert is free for anyone with a an Mcard. Theater group to perform and recruit in Union So You Say Productions, a multicultural theater group, is holding a performance at 8 p.m. in the Michigan Union. The event is free for students. More infor- mation on how to get involved with the group will be available at the event. Chappelle film to show on Trot- ter House lawn Students are invited to recline on the front lawn of the Trotter House today at 8:30 p.m. to watch the film "Chappelle's Block Party." The Office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs and Black Welcome Week are hosting the event. CRIME_ Trespasser removed from Union food court Campus police found a tres- passer in the food court of the Michigan Union yesterday at about 1 a.m., the Department of Public Safety reported. An offi- cer removed the trespasser from the building after reading him a warning. Purse looted at bus stop Someone stole three credit cards from an unattended purse at about 6 p.m. Wednesday, DPS reported. The purse had been left at a bus stop in front of C.S. Mott's Children's Hospital. Thief slips into dental school Cash was discovered missing from an office in the School of Den- tistry Wednesday at about 9:30 p.m., DPS reported. The theft occurred sometime during the week. THIS DAY In 'U' History Students rally on Diag to protest steep 'U' Housing Sept. 8, 1965 - High Univer- sity housing prices drove about 200 student protesters into the Diag yesterday at about noon. Later that night, several student representatives met with adminis- trators to discuss what many stu- dents say are unaffordable prices for University housing. Vice President for Student Affairs Richard Cutler has agreed to start working today to establish a student advisory committee to participate in planning future housing proj- ects. The rally, organizers say, was in essence preparation for the meeting later that night, intend- ed to give the students' cause maximum leverage. The group agreed to present their demands to the business and finance offices this week and asked that an adminis- trator publicily acknowledge the receipt of the students 'requests. If the administration does not respond within a week, stu- dents will vote on what course of action to take Friday. Another rally will be held today at noon on the Diag to try to drum up additional support for the movement. BLOW HARD Schools hurt by strike, judge told Teacher strike hinders schools trying to dig out of debt DETROIT (AP) - A strike by 7,000 Detroit Public Schools teachers is causing parents to switch their children to suburban and charter schools and threatens to derail the district's efforts to eliminate a $105 million deficit, administrators told a judge yes- terday. Michigan's largest public school district seeks a back-to-work order for the Detroit Federation of Teachers, which struck after rejecting a proposed two-year contract with a 5.5 percent pay cut and health care copays of up to 20 percent. "The strike continues to restrict our ability to turn around the image of the Detroit Public Schools," Superintendent William Coleman told a judge considering the request. To get a back-to-work an order, the 130,000-student district must show that the strike is causing it irreparable harm, Wayne County Circuit Judge Susan Borman told lawyers for both sides yesterday. Borman has ordered intensive bargaining while considering the district's request. The talks con- tinued yesterday afternoon. A union lawyer pressed Cole- man on why the district had not taken other moneysaving steps, including closing underused buildings, leasing or selling prop- erty, and trimming non-personnel costs. "You chose, for a variety of reasons, not to close 30 (schools) this year, to close them next year," Eileen Nowikowski told Cole- man. Nowikowski also cross-exam- ined the superintendent about rev- enue increases that could offset the proposed pay cuts. Coleman acknowledged that some recent increases in state aid were not included in the budget. He said he postponed more school closings to assure parents that their children's new schools offered a better educa- tion than the ones they were leaving. The teachers walked off the job Aug. 28 at the start of what was supposed to be a week of prepa- ration for classes, which had been scheduled to start this week. School administrators opened classes Tuesday, then canceled them indefinitely. Administrators are seeking $88 million in concessions from the union, which also represents about 2,000 non-teaching employees, to help balance the district's $1.36 billion annual budget. Detroit schools have lost about half their enrollment over the past two decades, and the district has been fighting to stem continuing losses, Coleman testified. The schools earlier projected a loss of 7,300 students this fall, and the strike could significantly increase that number, he said. Many surrounding districts have open enrollment policies, and there also are about 70 pub- licly funded, independently run charter schools in the city, Cole- man said. "Parents have stopped me and told me they're enrolling their children in suburban school dis- tricts," Coleman said. "The strike continues to restrict our ability to turn around the image of the Detroit Public Schools." Oak Park schools Assistant Superintendent Carlos Lopez said the district had about 200 students from neighboring Detroit last year but now has about 800, 266 of whom have applied since the strike started. ANGELA CESERE/Dauly LSA junior Fadi Dawood, president of the Chaldean American Student Association, blows Nargila bubbles at Festifai yesterday. Nargila bubbles are made by inhaling smoke and exhaling through a bottle dipped in a bubble solution. State police: Michigans homeland security better EAST LANSING (AP) - Gas masks and hazardous material trucks, mobile decontamination units and robotic probes have taken their places next to fire trucks and handcuffs for Michigan's first responders in the five years since the 2001 terrorist attacks. But the biggest and most impor- tant change since the Sept. 11,2001 attacks may not be the new high- tech gear bought with more than $260 million in federal grants. It could be the improved communi- cation between the state's various police and emergency response agencies, Michigan State Police director Col. Peter Munoz said in an interview with The Associated Press this week. "Cops are notorious for hoard- ing their information and hanging onto it. And probably one of the good things to come out of all of this is it has made us realize infor- mation sharing and interoperabil- ity are key components not only to homeland defense, but to how we approach crime in general"; Munoz said. "We can't do things in a vacuum. Now we have a way to go, but we are miles ahead of where we were." Munoz was named the leader of the Michigan State Police in May. He replaced Col. Tadarial Sturdi- vant, who retired from the depart- ment and took a job with Wayne County government. Another of Michigan's top homeland security officials also is new in his position. Capt. Eddie Washington Jr. was appointed commander of the department's Emergency Management and Homeland Security Division in August, replacing Lt. Col. Kriste Etue, who was promoted to a dep- uty director. Munoz and Washington have nearly 50 years of combined state police experience. The last five years have been particularly dramatic as Michigan, like other states, has shifted focus to anti-ter- rorism and disaster preparedness. Critics in both political parties say some northern border states have not always received their fair share of money when Con- gress doles out homeland secu- rity cash. Despite being a border state, Michigan - which has three key border crossings with Canada - received less federal homeland security money per person than states such as Wyo- ming, Iowa and Nebraska in fiscal year 2005. Nationwide, federal homeland security grants will decrease in fiscal year 2006. Michigan's funding is expected to drop more than 20 percent to $46.9 million, but that reduction is less severe than the national average, state police said. The state's homeland security grant money peaked at $75.7 mil- lion in fiscal year 2004. The priority for funding proj- ects has changed. Soon after the 2001 attacks, much of the funding went to buy basic equipment for local police and fire departments across Michi- gan. Gas masks and chemical suits became standard gear, and many agencies beefed up their hazardous material teams with new trucks and technology. The state police bought big- ticket items such as emergency response vehicles and robots that can investigate the scene of a ter- rorist threat without putting an officer at risk. Now the emphasis is more regional. The state is divided into seven regions, and agencies within each area decide who will operate high-end bomb squad equipment, mobile decontamination trucks and other technology that it doesn't make sense for all local level agen- cies to possess. "That was a huge step,' Wash- ington said. "We have been impressed with their ability to take their local hats off and put their regional hats on, and make deci- sions that really make sense." Michigan has 16 regional emer- gency response teams set up so that at least one should be able to reach a disaster scene anywhere in the state within two hours. The state also plans to open two "fusion centers" late this year or in early 2007. Join us fhis Sunday for Great Bible Teaching! Our van will pick you up for the services! see our web page for the schedule. ANN ARBOR BAPTIST CHURCH 2150 9. Wagner Rd. * Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Pastor Gary 0. Hirfh * 734-995-5144 www.aabaptist.com