2 - Friday, February 23, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com MONDAY: TUESDAY: The Extremist Arbor Anecdotes WEDNESDAY: Before You Were Her How does the University end a tradition? For one, its methods included committees, cops and e-mail Some campus rituals fade away. Others are put down with a massive police presence. The latter is how the University ended the Naked Mile, a two-decade old campus tradition, in 2002. Traditionally, on the last day of classes, outgoing seniors would strip down and jog naked from Washtenaw Avenue up State Street and across the Diag to Regents Plaza in front of the Fleming Administration Building. The tradition seems to have started innocently enough in the early 1980s, but by the late '90s it had grown into a media spectacle. In 1999, the Depart- ment of Public Safety estimated that some 800 students streaked across campus during the event, while thou- sands of spectators lined the streets. But city and University officials were growing uncomfortable with the growing spectacle and decided to crack down. The University formed a special committee to try and reign in the popular event. DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said the University cracked down on the run after police began receiving a growing number of reports of sexual assault, groping and harassment. The Ann Arbor police department led the initial effort. The Ann Arbor Police arrested some students for indecent exposure duringthe run in2000, The Michgian Daily reported at the time. In 2001, the University launched a full-scale campaign targeting the tradition. They printed posters and sent e-mails outlining the potential dangers of the run. DPS also tried to keep runners off University property by extending the construction fenc- ing around the Mason Hall construc- tion site. That same year, AAPD Sgt. Michael Logghe threatened arrests. "We going to make all the arrests necessary to shut it down," he told the Daily at the time. The crackdown worked. In 2001, Brown estimated only a few dozen students ran. The following years, even fewer students participated. By 2003 the event had been subdued so much that the University and AAPD were able to cut back on police presence at the run. In 2004 a small cadre a students staged one last attempt to revive the dying traction. They staged a naked run a day before the traditional date to avoid expected police interference, and arranged an elaborate network of safe houses they could flee to in the event of trouble. Their efforts proved futile. WALTER NOWINSKI Senior Nate Kuzma leads the pack of Naked Mile run- ners down South University Avenue in April of 2003, 413 E. Huron St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com KARLSTARPFL ALEXISFLOYD Editor in Chief Business Monger 734-647-3336 734-704-0508 stampfl@michigandaily.com Loyd@michigandaily.com CONTACT INFORMATION Newsroom Office hours: Sun.-Thurs. 11a.m. -2a.m. News Tips news@rnichigandaily.com Corrections corrections@niichigandaily.com Letterstothe Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Photography Department photo@michigandaily.com Arts Section artspage@mnichigandaily.com 734-763-0379 Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@mnichigandaily.com 734-764-8585 Display Sales display@michigandaily.com 734-764-0554 Classified Sales classifiedmichigandaily.coni 734-764-0ss7 Online Sales onlineads@michigandaily.com 734-615-0135 Finance finance@michigudaity.com EDITORIAL STAFF Jeffrey Bloomer ManagingEditor bloomer@michigandaily.com AndrewGrossman ManagingNews Editorgrossmarn@michigandaily.corn NEWUS EDITORS: Kelly Fraser, Dave Mekelburg,Gabe Nelson, Walter Nowinski lmran Syed Editorial Page Editor syed@michigandaily.com ASSOCI ATE EDITORIA L PAGE EDITORS: Gary Graca, Jessi Holler, Theresa Kennelly, Whitney Dibo Scott Bell Managing Sports Editor bell@michigandaily.coni SEIO SORSEDITOR:H.oeBsh Dan Bromwich SPORTS N IG H T EDITOR S: Dan Feldman, Chris Herring, Mark Giannotto, Dan Levy, Ian Robinson, Nate Sandals AndrewSargus Klein ManagingArts Editor klein@michigandaily.com ASSOC IATE ARTS EITORS: Kimberly Chou, Kristin MacDonald ARTS SUB EDITORS: Abigail B. 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Subscriptionsforfallterm, startingin September, viaU.S.mail are$110.Winterterm (January through Aprl)is$1t5, yearlong (Septemher throughApril)is $95.Univemsity afiliatesaresubettoareducedsubscrptionrate On-campussubscriptionslfrfoll term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Pressand The AssociatedCollegiate Press. - 6 CRIME NOTES Carr harrasser strikes again WHERE: Schembechler Hall WHEN: Tuesday at about 12:30 p.m. WHAT: A Wayne State Uni- versity student sent an obscene and unintelligible e-mail to a staff member in the University of Michigan Athletic Depart- ment, the Department of Pub- lic Safety reported. The same student was arrested in Octo- ber for brandishing a baseball bat outside the Michigan Union while shouting about Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr. The e-mail is a violation of an ear- lier restraining order. Third Reich symbol drawn WHERE: Mott Hospital WHEN: Wednesday at about 6:15 p.m. WHAT: Someone drew a swas- tika on the inside of an eleva- tor, DPS reported. There are no suspects. Student may have filed false mugging report WHERE: 400 block of Washt- enaw Avenue WHEN: Wednesday at about 12:30 p.m. WHAT: A student said two college-age males accosted her while walking underneath the bridge near the CCRB, DPS reported. She said one grabbed her around the neck and the other struck her across the face. The men stole the bag of groceries she was carrying, making off with some cook- ies, juice and rubbing alcohol, the student reported. The case is under investigation. There are currently no suspects. DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said police now believe the stu- dent filed a false report. CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Midday piano Art exhibit performance about changing WHAT: Pianist Franklin Jen will preform a selection of works. WHO: University Unions Arts and Programs WHEN: Today at 11:30 a.m. WHERE: Leo's Room, Pier- pont Commons Photo display of oldest black town in nation gender Identiy WHAT: A series of51black and white photos chronicling the three-year transforma- tion of a transgender person. The exhibit also includes other photos as well as text docunments. WHO: Institute for Research on Women and Gender WHEN: Today from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. WHERE: Room 1136, Lane Hall CORRECTIONS * Due to an editing error, a story on page lA of yesterday's Daily (Last dance for Chief Illiniwek) misspelled the acro- nym NCAA. Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@ michigandaily.com. Microsoft was ordered to pay $1.52 billion to Alcatel- Lucent in a patent dispute about the MP3 digital music format, The New York Times reported. The verdict is the largest patent award ever. A Pennsylvania woman filed a lawsuit against her son's school district after the principal there allegedly prohibited the boy from wear- ing a Jesus costume during a Halloween parade last fall, the Philadelphia Inquirer report- ed. The mother said her son wore the costume to protest pagan holidays. Planned Parenthood is offering its own celluar phone service to raise money, according to the Work- log Assets website. Working Assets is a company helps organizations raise money by offering phone service. 6 0 WHAT: A photo exhibition about individual and collec- tive identity in Eatonville, the oldest incorporated black town in the United States WHO: University of Michi- gan Museam of Art WHEN: Daily 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. WHERE: University of Michigan Museum of Art temporary location, 1301 South University Ave. Taglit-birthright Israel provides the gift of re, ten-day educational trips to Israel for Jewish young adults 18 to 26. Regiternowfor summer trips at wwwbirthrightlsraelacom TAGLI - T1fl'3fT birthright israel www.birthrightisrael.com 14