The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com New Student Edition - 3C Student organizations pay big bucks for Diag use By CHARLES GREGG-GEIST Daily StaffReporter Mar. 13, 2008 - Yesterday on the Diag, studepts bounced off the walls of an inflatable moonwalk, people in bright blue shirts gave away free sandwiches and coffee and an a capella group serenaded passersby. Off to the side, away from all the commotion, two students stood behind a folding table, almost com- pletely overlooked. "Free condoms!" they called as only a few people stopped to listen. Thetwostudents,fromthe office of Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Trans- gender Affairs, were trying to pro- mote safer sex. They weren't happy to see Diag traffic diverted by the much flashier Cancer Awareness Week kickoff, hosted by University Students Against Cancer.. "It's definitely hurting us," said LSA senior Jenny Gutsue, who was working at the table as part of the office's Pride Week. The problem Gutsue faced - competing for students' attention on a crowded Diag - is one of a few obstacles student groups deal with when they try to get their mes- sage out on the University's central square. Another concern for many organizations is cost. The price of holding events on the Diag can be steep. Gutsue said her organization would love to hold more attention- grabbing events, but that they sim- ply didn't have the resources. Diag Administrator Jaden Felix, who reviews every application to hold events on the Diag, said it costs nothing for groups to use the space. But he acknowledged that the costs that normally accompany such events can add up quickly. Upon receiving an application, Felix estimates how much addition- al items and services like a podium, electricity and amplification will cost. After he makes sure that the group applying can pay, Felix files a work order with the University's Plant Operations Division. Seemingly minor items some- times come with major price tags. Renting a single trash can costs $80 because groups have to pay for a" vehicle to transport the receptacle to and from the Diag. Music at an event is even more costly. Felix estimated that an hour of amplified music would cost more than $300. He said that electricity for things like USAC's inflatable moonwalk runs about $60 an hour, or $360 for its six-hour long event. Felix said the prices cover not only the equipment rental, but also the cost of labor from the Univer- sity's Plant Operations Division, whose employees set up, monitor, and take down the equipment. The average event hosted by a student group costs $333, he said. LSA senior Lexi Mitter, who helped organize the Cancer Aware- ness Week's Diag Day, said dona- tions of supplies, fundraising and funding from the Michigan Student Assembly made holding the event affordable. However, she said that they would rather the hundreds of dollars they pay the University go to charity. Gutsue said scheduling was a problem because when they regis- ter with SAL, groups aren't told if any other groups are organizing events for that same day. Gutsue laid that when she inquired about " other activity on the Diag that day, Felix wouldn't tell them. When asked why, Felix cited pri- vacy issues. "We don't reveal any student organization information," he said. To help prevent one event from overshadowing another, the Uni- versity does promote a "shared space protocol," which asks event organizers to be considerate of other groups on the Diag, Felix said. Accordingto LSA senior Stepha- nie Somerman, the co-president of the Roosevelt Institution, the Uni- versity's policies usually work well. She said her organization tries to use the Diag "as much as humanly possible." But while most of their events have gone smoothly, they have encountered occasional diffi- culties sharing space. Once when they were gathering signatures for a petition, she said that members of the notoriously loud pro-affirmative action group By Any Means Necessary were holdinga protest at the same time; "It was the worst thing ever," she said. "It's really hard to get peti- tions signed when people are run- ning around yelling." Though Gutsue and other group members had planned yesterday's information table as a one-time event, she said they would schedule another day on the Diag. "We think that if we do it again, we'll be able to reach more stu- dents," she said. The Diag is always one of the most active places on campus during the day. Your taxicab conversations may not be as private as you might prefer By ARIKIA MILLIKAN Daily StaffWriter Oct. 17, 2007 - Think back on all those nights when you had a few too many drinks and the ability to self-censor was gone. You call a cab, and you expect that the driver will regard you with the same indiffer- ence that you do them. "When people get into the car, they don't know who we are," said Linda, an Ann Arbor cab driver who would only speak on the condi- tion of anonymity. "They make this assumption of what our intellectual capabilities are and what our limita- tions are." But the cab drivers that circulate the Ann Arbor area have your num- ber, University of Michigan student. And they had a lot to say about you. THE BEST AND BRIGHTEST Daryl Johnson, who moved to Ann Arbor this year, has been working for Yellow Cab for about a month. In that short time, he's been around the block more than once. So far, he says, he's been impressed by the academic achievements of the people he drives around. "I am just amazed all day long at the caliber of students at the Uni- versity of Michigan," he said. "I haye met some amazingly bright people here. And it makes me think, you know what? This world's gonna be all right." On the whole, students seem to make good customers, but there's more backseat debauchery you than you mightthink - especiallyaround closing time. Johnson, who doesn't drive late at night, misses that side of student nightlife. "I take 'em to the club and then I'm ready to go home," he said. The experience is different for other, more seasoned drivers. Linda says she has seen a side of University students that makes her more pessimistic. She's met graduates of the Uni- versity's medical and law schools who act more like Miss Teen South Carolina than a doctor or a lawyer. "Everybody thinks they're here on their superior intellect, but that's not true," Linda said. "There are alot of students who are here, not neces- sarily because they're the best and brightest. They're here because their parents have a big-ass pocketbook." THE HOOKUP Driving the night shift isn't all bad, though. "A lot of (the passengers) are really fun and entertaining, wheth- er they know it or not," said Bruce Nielson, a driver for Yellow Cab. Nielson said he often hears snip- pets of locker-room talk *hile driv- ing students around at night. It's late, it's the weekend, and many of the conversations revolve around the one thing always on the typical college-student mind: hooking up. "You try to pin them down as to what exactly hooking up means," Nielson said. "I stillidon't know." The common perception may be that men are the predatory gender, withsexconstantlyonthebrain,but cab drivers know this isn't the case. "The girls are just as bad as the guys are," said 15-year Yellow Cab veteran Alex Persu. He said that while groups of men he drives speak frankly about their opinions of potential "dance- partners," the groups of bar-bound women often divulge even more intimate details. And while the single guys may have a lot to say about how the night will end up oi the way there, Persu said the cab conversations are much different on the way back. "The girl dictates everythingthat goes on once they get in the cab," he said. "It's all 'Yes honey. Yes baby. Where do you wanna go? Sure, no problem.' It's definitely a woman's world after 2 a.m." Although the TV show "Taxi Cab Confessions" may suggest oth- erwise, but Persu said the couples keep it tame - for the mostpart. "There's been some couples that have gotten to second and third base," he said. "But they usually get out before they go all the way." DAZED AND CONFUSED Although he's seen plenty of wild things inhis cab,Persusayshe's never kicked a passenger out or refused to someone ride. That's impressive because, judlging from the number of people Persu says can handle their alcohol, itseems like it would be wise to start screening customers. Persu said a passenger in his cab vomits about once a shift, and he's the one who has to clean it up. "It really ruins your night," he said. Johnson said the worst for him are Football Saturdays. "That's when I think, some of these folks ain't gonna make it," he said. After a point, the rowdy routine ceases to be amusing. "If I had a snapshot of the idiots that get in here, it would be that they're drunk and they need help," Linda said. "But do Iuse that in con- versation and treat them badly? No. But they do that to me." BAD BACKSEAT BEHAVIOR Linda says she has no problem kickingstudents out of her cab. At the Sept. 22 Penn State game, she picked up some students who started insulting her, calling her a stupid bitch. So she turned the cab around. The passengers asked her if she knew she was going back to where they started. "I'm taking you back to where I picked you up," she recalled saying "You're not gettingthis ride. Sorry." While drivers like Alex are fine with being a fly on the wall, there's a limit to what Linda will tolerate. "I've kicked out people who were talking about other people usingthe N-word andstuff," she said. She said people are entitled to their opinions, but sometimes they forget they're not alone inthe car. She has also been solicited for sex while driving. There's a big differ- ence, Linda said, between the expe- rience of male and female drivers. "They don't get asked how much for a little sugar at the end of the ride," she said. Linda says she has degrees in two different fields from EasternMichi- gan University and Arizona State University in Temple, Ariz., but because she's driving a cab, she said she encounters endless stereotypes. "For example, people think I'm See TAXI, Page 4C