46F 46F 4*1 4,3 4c ic4i an at Im Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, January 30, 2009 michigandailycom CANDY, CARDS AND CONDOMS 'illANO-KAMPFER CONFRONTATION Hearing begins in Milano court case Pamphlets, buttons, condoms and candy were available to the public at Sexpertise on the terrace of East Hall last night. The two-day long event brings in local experts to discuss matters of sexual health and relationships in conversations and activities. ICE HOCKEY AFTERMATH Yost tightens security meas'ures Kampfer, two others testify about incident in detail By TREVOR CALERO Daily News Editor A preliminary hearing for the former University athlete who allegedly attacked a hockey player in October began yester- day morning in the Washtenaw County 15th District Court. Mike Milano is charged with aggravated assault and assault with intent to commit great bodily harm less than murder, a felony carrying a penalty of up to 10 years in prison and a $5,000 fine. Milano, a former walk- on running back, is accused of assaulting hockey player Steve Kampfer on the morning of Oct. 12 on a Church Street sidewalk near East Quad. Three days after the incident, the football team suspended Milano indefinitely. The hearing was adjourned after almost four hours yester- day and will resume Wednesday, Feb 4., allowing the prosecutor to prepare for an additional witness from the defense. There were also witnesses who were unavailable for yesterday's hearing. Judge Elizabeth Pollard Hines is expected to make a decision Wednesday on whether to order Milano to stand trial on the assault charges. Three people took the stand yesterday morning, including Kampfer, his long-time friend Mike Anderson who was with him the night of the incident, and Engineering senior Neil Patel, the prosecution's primary witness. Milano did not testify during yesterday's hearing. Kampfer testified for -over an hour during the hearing. He said he went to meet his ex-girlfriend the night of the incident because someone was "creeping her out" at Rick's American Cafe. Kampfer testified that when he arrived at the Church Street bar he found his ex-girlfriend stand- ing outside on the sidewalk with a few friends. Milano, who Kamp- fer said he had never met before that night, was also outside with two of his friends. Kampfer said that he and his ex-girlfriend got into an argu- ment. They then walked across the street to hold a private con- versation. Kampfer testified that he grabbed her arm to try and calm her down after she got upset. Milano then crossed the street with two of his friends and con- fronted him, Kampfer said. "He was angry, upset," Kamp- fer said, "with the intention of arguing." Anderson, Kampfer's life-long See HEARING, Page 3 Kampfer's father not allowed in most University buildings By COURTNEY RATKOWIAK and JULIE ROWE Daily StaffReporters dent in the visitor's locker room, the Central Collegiate Hockey Associa- tion announced the implementa- tion of increased security measures at Yost Ice Arena. Throughout the season, the visitor's locker room, located on the south side of the arena, was .expanded with temporary walls and curtains to give teams more outside the curtain and another a few feet away, near the door to the team buses. Starting at this Saturday's game against Notre Dame, the University will increase the number of police- men and security guards at Yost, according to a statement from the CCHA released yesterday. - The University will also require credentials to enter the visitor's locker room and will have the "abil- ity to utilize an overhead steel door between the locker-room area and spectator walkway," according to the press release. The new measures come after last Saturday's incident. Bruce Kampfer, father of Michigan hockey player Steve Kampfer, is now banned from most University buildings as a result of a confronta- tion with a Michigan State player in the visitor's locker room. With less than a minute left in See YOST, Page 3 Five days after the parent of a space. Before the new security Michigan hockey player was given a measures, one Department of Pub- trespass order due to an off-ice inci- lic Safety officer typically stood In third annual event, student groups raise $5,200 for charity Stars from 'The Wire' discuss the show's characterization of America's inner cities By VERONICA MENALDI Daily StaffReporter "Take it off," a crowd of 300 students shouted to Arab Student Association President Jad Ibrahim. "Your sweater, take it offt" Ibrahim was one of 18 students who participated in a date auction at the Michigan League Ballroom last night. Bringing in $625 for Project Suyana - a organization that aims to improve health care and reduce poverty in Puno, Peru - a date with Ibrahim fetched the highest bid last night. The Hollywood-themed event was hosted by Comco, a student com- edy group. The University's Bhangra team performed, along ~ with the Harmonettes a capella group and Groove, a percussion group. The auction raised $5,200. The second-highest bid went to Michi- gan Student Assembly President Sabrina Shingwani. Michigan hockey captain Chris Summers auctioned off a hockey lesson for $340. In addition to auctions, the group sold 50-50 raffle tickets and beaded necklaces. The person who purchased the most necklaces was auctioned off at the end of night. Last night's event was Project Suyana's third date auction in as many years to raise money for the group's efforts in Peru. Project Suyana manager Grace Li said the funds raised by the auc- tion this year will be going toward constructing a shelter for expectant mothers in the rural Andean regions. "The shelter, called a Casa de Estar, will accommodate high-risk women prior to their scheduled delivery date to provide adequate gynecologic and obstetric care See DATE AUCTION, Page 3 TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER The five highest prices bid for dates tad Ibrahim, ArabStudent Association, $625 2 Sabrina Shingwani, Michigan Student Assembly,$600 3 LatiftAl-Roumi, Arab Student Association, $430 4 MinaPirzadeh, Persian Student Association, $300 5 Ashwin Ramanath, Indian American Student Association, $210 Audience members questioned panel on plot, season finale By MALLORY BEBERMAN For theDaily More than 250 students, pro- fessors and community members crammed into an Angell Hall audi- torium last night to hear the stars of "The Wire," a hit HBO drama, discuss the show's commentary on the racial and social realities of life in inner city Baltimore. Two of the shows stars, Clark Johnson and Sonja Sohn, kicked off "Heart of the City Symposium: Black Urban Life on 'The Wire' " with a casual discussion of the show and its take on the current state of racial issues in America as the nation's first black president takes office. The event was part of a two- day symposium on how the show addressed the systemic dysfunc- tions that plague the modern American inner city. The evening's event was com- prised mostly of a back-and-forth conversation between the actors and members of the audience. Robin R. Means Coleman, an asso- system and the media's portrayal of it all, "The Wire" has been criti- cally acclaimed for its insight into the modern day black urban expe- rience. While the event was meant to focus on how "The Wire" speaks to race issues after Obama's elec- tion, the conversation quickly moved to the shows intricate plot and much anticipated series finale, which aired in March. One ofthe maintopics discussed was how accurate the show's por- trayal of Baltimore was in the eyes of its audience members. When asked about her relation- ship to the city, Sohn said that when she first moved there to begin filming the series, she saw "a really segregated city." However, she said that as she began to get a better sense of the city, she saw a community divided along socioeconomic lines, rather than strictly racial barriers - a nuance she said the show was able to portray accurately. "The essence of the show was to keep it real and to make it real," Sohn said. . She added: "The show itself is an ode to Baltimore." When an audience member asked how a show about drug cul- See THE WIRE, Page 3 Actress Kima Greggs (left), LSA Prof. Robin R. Means Coleman and Actor Clark Johnson speak at an event about "The Wire" in Angell Hall last night. ciate professor of communications margins of society, a subject rarely studies, moderated the discussion. shown on television. Through the "The Wire," which aired its fifth complex interactions between law and final season last spring, is a enforcement,governmentofficials, series about how people live on the drug dealers, the public school WEATHER HI:27 TOMORROW LO:22 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and letus know. NEW ONM ICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEWS................................2 ARTS....................................5 Former MSU player talks for first time since clash. Vol. CXIX, No.84 S U D OKU....... ........ 3 CLASSIFIEDS ....................6 THEGAME.BLOGS.MICHIGANDAILY.COM 29 TheMichiganDoily OPINION..............................4 SPORTS................................ 7 I