NEWS ON CAMPUS b Expert on breast cancer to speak Dr. Susan Love, one of the key players in the breast cancer aware- ness movement, will speak on mar- keting and disease today at 1 p.m. in the Rackham Auditorium. The lecture series was named in honor of breast cancer victim Vivian Shaw. Prof to delve into medieval Arab erotica Everett Rowson, an associate pro- fessor of slamic studies at New York University, will speak on Medieval Arabic Erotica today at 11 a.m. in room G333 of Mason Hall. The lec- ture is sponsored by the Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies. Can personal ethics, public policy mix? There will be a discussion on personal ethics and public deci- sion making today at 2 pm. in the Annenberg Auditorium of Weill Hall. Panelists include Nancy Kas- senbaum, a former U.S. senator fromKansas and a University alum, and Alice Rivlin of the Greater Washington Research Program and the Brookings Institution. CRIME NOTES Men on crime SWFPT AWAY _________________Friday, October 13, 2006 - Thu Michigan Daily - 3 - i I'' II [F 1 [I a -v i ; 7 s rah; i:: r Nursing sophomore Kimberly Schmidt and LSA junior Rachel Brown blow for a prank in which balloons are hung all around their neighbor's house. Detroit opes Tigers' shie rubs off on city City officials say The Tigers have a 2-0 advantage accelerated the exodus of middle- as they head into Game 3 of the class whites to the suburbs and fans' civility projects American League championship came to define Detroit for the rest good image series on Friday against the Oak- of the nation. land Athletics at Comerica Park. Detroit again erupted into DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit All they need is to win two more chaos in 1984, following the Tigers brought joy to fans when games, and they'll be back in the Tigers' World Series victory they won the World Series in 1984, World Series. over the San Diego Padres. Riot- but a post-victory riot brought "From a national standpoint, it ing left one man dead and doz- shame to the city. does nothing but help our image ens injured. The iconic image of Twenty-two years later, the and begins to change the conver- the day was an Associated Press Tigers are once again competing sation about what people say and photo of a beer-bellied teenager for baseball glory. This time, civic think about the city of Detroit," from the suburbs holding up a leaders say the exposure will help said Larry Alexander, president of Tigers pennant in front of a burn- burnish Detroit's image, instead of the Detroit Metro Convention & ing police car. giving outsiders another reason to Visitors Bureau. There hasn't been a riot since knock it. They hope to build on the For decades, that conversation then, but the image of chaos in success of February's Super Bowl, has been about violence, racial Detroit has become so ingrained which won widespread praise for tension and an abandoned urban that officials find it necessary to the city, despite some skeptical core. Riots that left 43 dead in point out when local fans behave grumblings ahead of the game. 1967 intensified racial divisions, themselves. a- ... _..._ ., .,_._ ...,_ _.... t,.. _... spree attempt break-in Gov hopefuls appear Four or five men tried to break into an apartment in the North- wood IV apartment complex on North Campus Wednesday at about 8:30 p.m., the Depart- ment of Public Safety reported. The men fled when the resident asked them what they were doing. Police located two of the men and arrested them. The group had been involved in various incidents throughout the night on- and off- campus, including larceny. Wanted man found sleeping in Rackham A man with several pending arrest warrants, including one for retail fraud in Pittsfield Township, was found sleeping in the East Lounge of the Rackham Building Wednesday at about 12:30 p.m., DPS reported. He was arrested and is being held in Pittsfield Township. together at Detroit event DeVos, Granholm invigorating Michigan's troubled and away from the economic ste economy. used in the past. decry MCRI, agree on DeVos blamed Granholm for "I believe our greatest compe e else the state's financial difficulties tive value in the state of Michig and vowed to make immediate is our people. In fact, it's the stu DETROIT (AP) - Democrat- improvements if he is elected, that's between the ears;' she sai ic Gov. Jennifer Granholm and promising to do more in his first "I want to make Michigan a hig Republican challenger Dick DeVos 45 days in office than the governor skilled opportunity state. I wa agreed that a proposed amend- has accomplished in 45 months. to invest in our human capital ment to the state constitution that "You like the governor but you order to make us competitive." would ban some types of affirma- just don't know whether you want The candidates appearedc tive action programs should be to trust her to run state government stage together, but yesterday rejected. for another four years;' the Ada event was not a debate. Each ca But that is where similari- businessman told the audience of didate spoke separately, with Gr ties ended as the two appeared business professionals and elected nholm going first. The appearan together yesterday at a meeting of officials. came only two days after thi the Detroit Economic Club, where Granholm said she has concrete second debate of the campaign they described their plans for plans to move Michigan forward Grand Rapids. Husband F~ admits he LJtreate Lwe AcowAsc ,Mw ox Wedtsc at 8-1Q lied after BEANER ps ti- an ff id. 7h- nt in on y's n- a- ce eir in is HEADAUT ARi A COBRASTARSHIENVY ONITHE COASTMCNWOMENAND H DRFN Would-be narc s , e triggers fruitless weed search Someone in Alice Lloyd Resi- dence Hall caught a pungent whiff of marijuana smoke Wednesday at about 8 p.m., DPS reported. Officers investigated but found no signs of drug use. THIS DAY In 'U' History Bomb scare shakes up Grad October 13, 1982 - Fifty employees evacuated the Hatcher Graduate Library yesterday morn- ing after campus police received a threat about a bomb in the library's basement. The Ann Arbor Police Depart- ment's bomb squad found a suspi- cious-looking box, but no explosives were found inside. At 9 a.m. yesterday, an uniden- tified man handed a written bomb threat to a campus police officer. By the time the officer opened the note and read it, the man was gone. The note said that a bomb had been placed in a box on the east side of the mail room in the library's basement. When police located the box, the bomb squad was brought in and the library was evacuated. Employeeswereallowedtoreturn to their offices at about 11 a.m. Man says he never saw wife kill their adopted son LANSING (AP) - A day after Tim Holland testified his wife killed their 7-year-old adopted son, the defense attacked his credibility yesterday by focusing on numerous lies he told the police and public. Under cross-examination at Lisa Holland's murder trial, Tim Holland said he never saw her hit their son in the head with a ham- mer despite telling that to detec- tives in January. He said he never saw Ricky lying in a pool of blood in their house and never wanted him to stay with relatives because of abuse he suffered at the hands of his wife - contrary to statements he previously made to police and during a recorded phone call with his mother. Holland also said he lied when he told police his wife dumped Ricky's body in a marshy game area. The 37-year-old testified Wednesday that he returned home from a quick errand July 1, 2005, to find Ricky dead in the boy's bed and his wife screaming she "didn't mean to do it" He said his wife told him in December that she had struck Ricky with a hammer. Tim Holland, who now says he disposed of the body, told the defense yesterday that he never asked his 33-year-old wife what she had done to cause the boy's death. BUY 1drink wwhenrco free MonF 6am-12am Ga tttm bonoi l y, c o so t A noeod t'gtf ite, 5 o ,,o s no t mis C P01wi naaccepted