8A - Monday, February 18, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 4 Shooter called girlfriend before killing 7 students As trash violations pile up, many students say city officials unfairly target their houses 4 Kazmierczak said 'Don't forget about me' on tragic day WONDERLAKE, Ill. (AP) - The girlfriend of the man who killed five people and himself at Northern Illinois University said Sunday that he called her early on Valentine's Day, the day of the shooting, to say, goodbye. Steven Kazmierczak "called me at midnight and told me not to for- get about him," Jessica Baty, 28, told CNN from her home. She said she had no indication he was plan- ning anything. Investigators still haven't deter- mined why Kazmierczak, 27, opened fire in a lecture hall at his and Baty's alma mater, and she shed no light on a motive yesterday. "The person I knew was not the one who went into Cole Hall and did that," Baty told CNN. "He was anything but a monster. He was probably the ... nicest, (most) caring person ever." The day of the shooting or the day after, Baty received a package from Kazmierczak containing two textbooks, a cell phone and what she characterized as a "goodbye note." "You've done so much for me," the note said, according to Baty. "You will make an excellent psy- chologist and social worker some- day." Another package contained a gun holster and ammunition. She confirmed that he had stopped tak- ing an antidepressant about three weeks ago because "it made him feel like a zombie," but she denied that his recentbehavior was unusu- al. "He wasn't erratic. He wasn't delusional. He was Steve; he was normal," said Baty, who had turned down Associated Press requests by phone and in person for an inter- view. TRASH From Page 1A of the officer issuing the ticket. To avoid a citation, all trash needs to be stored for collection in bins provided by the city. Addi- tional bins cost $75. If the property is a rental, land- lords have the choice of taking ticket prices directly from a ten- ant's security deposit or collecting the fees before the lease ends. If the fees are not paid, the property owners will be taxed by the city. This has angered some city land- lords. Copi Properties manager Sam Copi, who rents out about 20 houses around the city, including some on East University Avenue, said the trash code is "bad public policy." "It seems to target areas that are known to be tailgating, when there are no complaints from neighbors," he said. "I'm not saying it's never justified. But you can park 10 cars in your lawn on a football Saturday with no interference from the city, and if you have 20 red cups, the city will come by and cite you. It seems to counter the football spirit." The fact that ticket prices vary and citations are issued on a com- plaint basis confuses many stu- dents. "There's no one on this street that would call in," said LSA senior Greg Goldring, who lives with Wicker. "Everyone's having a party." Ann Arbor resident Cynthia Nixon, who chairs the Oxbridge Neighborhood association - an area that includes Zeta Beta Tau, a house that received13 trash tickets in 2007 - said the neighborhood has a watch system that keeps trash under control. "The city is very responsive," she said. "That's why there's more violations, the city has given peo- ple a vehicle to complain." Nixon said neighbors regularly monitor the cleanliness of the stu- dent houses in the neighborhood and call the city when they find trash. "We just don't feel that young boys can maintain a historic house," she said. Engineering senior Joseph Lee has lived at Lambda Phi Epsilon, also part of the Oxbridge Neigh- borhood, for the past three years. He said he was surprised to hear about the messy reputation of Zeta Beta Tau, because the house is far from the road and is surrounded by trees. "You really have to go in there to see if they're, like, trashed or something," he said. Lee and his 12 housemates were ticketed eight times in 2007. He said the house decided to split the cost of a dumpster with neighbors after the repeated tickets - which he and his fraternity brothers paid for themselves - got "really annoying." "We got ticket after ticket because our yard was 'not cleaned up enough,' " he said. "Usually, small bits and pieces you couldn't pick up by hand." Lee agreed with other students, saying his house might have been under surveillance. "I've always thought they put us like on watch or something, tar- geted our house out of nowhere." he said. Lee said his house hasn't received a ticket since buying the dumpster in April of last year. IFC spokesman Ryan Spotts said the IFC has tried to reduce the number of citations written to IFC fraternities by bringing in Community Standards supervisor Mike Rankin to speak to campus chapters. He said that one problem is that fraternity leaders often don'tthink to pass on the city's trash regula- tions during officer training. "I predict it willbecome less of a problem," he said. "We are always eager to fix things that are detri- mental to the community." Wicker said he and his house- mates hosted football pre-parties in the first three weeks of the sea- son, receiving trash citations for all of them. "We deserved it," he said. But when the guys started making an effort to be cleaner, he said, it didn't seem to make a difference so they stopped hosting parties alto- gether. After Wicker and his house- mates received a fine the weekend of the Ohio State game, they fought the ticket in court and the charges were dropped thanks to photos they took that day as evidence. The debris in their yard consisted of two pieces of a pumpkin, a red cup, and a newspaper in a bag. Despite resident complaints of targeting, Hieftje said he hasn't heard negative feedback about the program. "Things look 1,000 percent bet- ter than they did in some neighbor- hoods,"he said. 4 { I a I TAGLIT -r lO BIRTHRIGHT ISRAEL www.birthrightisraelcom I Taglit-Birthrght Israel provides free, ten-day trips t Israel for asmna elh-niern, n nomto ehooy ban Jewsh young adult ages IS to 26. Register now at wwupi~o -0-7-55k WWWBIRTHRIGHTISRAEL.COMz:7A U':z 0 NZ F' Join a company where you'll have the flexibility to reach your goals. Whatever your career goals, you'll find a path that helps you reach them at Ernst & Young. We've created a flexible work environment that provides opportunities for managing your personal and professional growth and success. Visit us at ey.com/us/careers and our Facebook.cor group. 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