Thursday, March 10, 2005 Weather Opinion 4A Sports 9A Zac Peskowitz: the rise of the baddCEO The men's hoops writers break down the Big Ten Tourney LENDING A HEILPING Hl 11A 1 ND DV iLN) \,AGA INE fit ll31 21 TOMORROW: One-hundredfourteen years ofeditorialfreedom www.mic/ziandatly.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXV, No. 94 X2005 The Michigan Daily Horton on probation ior z Basketball player sentenced after pleading guilty to charge of domestic violence By Eric Ambinder Daily Sports Editor Washtenaw County District Court Judge Ann Mattson sentenced suspended Michigan basketball player Daniel Hor- ton to 24 months of probation and a year of counseling yester- day. Horton pleaded guilty on Feb. 14 to a misdemeanor domestic violence charge stemming Horton from an incident with his girlfriend on Dec. 10. Horton, 20, had been suspended indefi- nitely from the basketball team since Jan. 25, a day after his arraignment. After the junior pleaded guilty on Feb. 14, Univer- sity officials extended Horton's suspension through the rest of the season. Horton declined to comment when asked if he was upset that he was not reinstated to the basketball team this season. At the time of the alleged incident, he was sentenced under the Holmes Youth- ful Trainee Act. As a "youthful trainee," Horton's conviction will not be placed on his permanent record if he completes the sentence. Before Mattson sentenced Horton, there had been a discrepancy about when the victim initially contacted police. Horton's attorney, Gerald K. Evelyn, said the victim did not report the incident to police for upwards of two weeks after the years incident, but the prosecution contended that the victim contacted police just four days after the incident. Evelyn told Mattson that Horton "can't hide" from the speculation of the commu- nity and the negative attention Horton has been receiving the University would not happen at other schools. Evelyn said Hor- ton's environment at the University is like a "fishbowl." In response, Mattson told Horton, "You do live in a fishbowl." And she added that there have been "privileges" and "with benefits come responsibilities." In addition to the probationary sen- tence, Horton must attend a weekly batter- ers intervention class, is subject to random drug and alcohol tests and may not leave the state of Michigan. Horton has also been in counseling for more than two months. When a reporter asked Evelyn, about Horton's recent coun- seling, Horton interrupted. "Me being in counseling has nothing to do with me having a problem," Hor- ton said. "It's just to talk about different things and clear my head about difficult situations and issues that are going on in my life. To say that I have a problem is not fair at all. But I will say I did have things going on in my life that I did need to talk about, and that's not necessarily having problems." Evelyn said that Horton did not need two years of probation and that a request will be made to shorten the probationary terms of the sentence when Horton is scheduled to appear in court again on April 6. If it appears that Horton has fulfilled the obli- gations of his sentence, he will not have to appear in court on that date. "I'm happy that it's coming to an end," Horton said. "Now it's just up to me to do my part and do what I'm suppose to do as far as the legal system is concerned." ALEXANDER DZIADOSZ/Daily Cliff Davidson, legal counsel for MSA Chief of Staff Elliott Wells-Reid, listens to arguments made at last night's debate between MSA and PIR- GIM regarding the creation of a University chapter of PIRGIM and if It would cause MSA to lose Its tax-exempt status. MSA still undecided on funding for iners group By Karl Stampfl Daily Staff Reporter No decision had been made in the debate with- in the Michigan Student Assembly over whether funding a University chapter of the Public Inter- est Research Group in Michigan would threaten the assembly's tax-exempt status. No verdict was decided last night by MSA's Cen- tral Student Judiciary because of time constraints. Discussion with the three-member CSJ went until around I a.m. today and will continue tomorrow to decide whether MSA can vote to give Student PIR- GIM a grant of $20,000. PIRGIM is an activism group that tackles issues such as environmental preservation and high prices for college textbooks. An MSA vote to grant Student PIRGIM the money was scheduled for Feb. 21, but MSA Chief of Staff Elliott Wells-Reid filed an injunc- tion against MSA to halt the vote, citing concerns that the group would threaten MSA's tax-exempt status because part of PIRGIM's parent group is involved in lobbying efforts. Student PIRGIM, though, has said it will not be involved in lob- bying and is instead aq advocacy group - a dif- ference based on the fact that lobbyists address legislators directly. Yesterday afternoon, MSA General Coun- sel Jesse Levine - who represented MSA until withdrawing from the trial last night for personal reasons - came to an agreement with Wells- Reid. The agreement stipulated that the $20,000 not be released to Student PIRGIM until MSA could establish guidelines for groups that could threaten MSA's tax-exempt status. "MSA has no funding guidelines that apply," MSA Vice President Anita Leung said. But Students for PIRGIM thought the agree- ment was unfair because it would not allow the MSA vote to take place as soon as possible, delaying the groups objectives. "This settlement will cause us harm," said Carolyn Hwang, chair of Students For PIRGIM, the group that would become Student PIRGIM if the MSA approves funding. "We have worked See PIRGIM, Page 3A Staff attempts to form union By Carissa Miller Daily Staff Reporter Despite failed attempts to unionize in the past, Uni- versity staff members are moving forward in their efforts to form the Union of Professional Office Workers, which would represent the more than 3,700 office and clerical workers employed by the University. U-POWER would be the ninth labor union formed to negotiate employment con- ditions directly with the University. U-POWER expects to gain enough support to form the union by the end of the calender year, said Peter Schermer- horn, a U-POWER organizer and research secretary in LSA. Teresa Smith, a member of the U-POWER organizing com- mittee and clerk for the University's health system, said she feels the process will ultimately be successful because there is discontent among staffers due to the lack of advancement available to clerical and office workers within the University. Moreover, these workers are unable to meet their needs finan- cially she said. "People are having to take a second job to make ends meet and are tired of not being recognized for the work that they do," Smith said. "I've been at the University for almost 24 years and I don't even make $30,000 a year. I want to be able to not live my life paycheck to paycheck." Smith also said because of the state of the economy, many workers are looking closely at a union and the possibility of better support. Unionization efforts began with help from the Michigan Federation of Teachers & School Related Personnel, the state chapter for a national union, which offered its support and advice to organizers behind U-POWER. Since its creation last summer, U-POWER's organizing committee has worked to reach workers and talk to them about what issues they think are important, as well as to help them understand the ways in which a union would be beneficial, Schermerhorn said. "We are trying to get a collective bargaining unit together so we can preserve and protect the rights of clerical and office workers who haven't been represented in the past," Schermer- horn said. "We are noticing that the University is getting less and less money from the state, and from my perspective, this means more and more cuts. (Office workers) are a high spec- ter of expense for the University, and I am concerned that we might lose people and expertise through these job cuts." Schermerhorn said the cost-cutting is already apparent in changes to health benefits. If successful, U-POWER would bar- gain for decent and fair wages, better benefits and job security. See UNION, Page 7A Granhohn plan aims to increase aid, Critics say proposal threatens lower-income students by decreasing total grant money By Julia Homing Daily Staff Reporter GRAPHIC BY ASH LEIGH HEATON Former employees say A2 News was anti-uion timer was not surprised for long. He said the move was typical of the newspaper's anti-union attitude. Other former employees echoed his sentiment adding that under Petykiewicz, the newsroom environment was hostile and uncomfortable. "I have never seen any place that was as viciously anti-union as the Ann Arbor News," said a former Ann Arbor News reporter who wished to remain anonymous. The reporter, who said he was fired without explana- tion after working at the News for 16 years under both Petykiewicz and his predeccessor Brian Malone, said the hiring of Petykiewicz in 1988 was an attempt to limit the power of reporters. Petykiewicz did not return The Michigan Daily's telephone calls, and publisher David Sharp was unavail- able for comment. Entertainment editor Bob Needham but all were swiftly squashed, Mortimer said. "The management was very crafty in (avoiding unionization)," he added. Former Ann Arbor News writer John Beckett, who worked at the paper for 18 years under Petykiewicz and Malone, said there was some discussion of unionization but that employees were paid well and given relatively lib- eral vacation time. But Beckett criticized the management's treatment of its staff or its editorial philosophy during Petykie- wicz's tenure. "We spent a lot of time going after angles generated from management instead of actually getting out and seeing what was going on," Beckett said. "Directives were coming from the top and there was less input in feedback from reporters." Mortimer also left the Ann Arbor News two years In an attempt to reduce the college drop-out rate and strengthen the economy, Gov. Jennifer Gra- nholm has proposed changes to the state's merit scholarship program that could boost the amount of financial aid in-state students receive. Despite the promise of increased aid to more stu- dents, some critics assert that lower-income students will see a decrease in the merit aid they can receive. Announced last month in Granholm's State of the State Address, the program involves the termination of the Michigan Educational Assistance Program exam, known as the MEAP, taken by Michigan high school students who wish to receive merit-based aid. In addition, under the new plan, students who qualify for the award would receive $4,000, instead of the current $2,500 scholarship. But the biggest change will be the timing of the award, which will now be received after completing two years of higher educa- tion, instead of prior to admittance. Granholm how- ever, has yet to determine how students would qualify for the proposed merit-based award. Granholm's plan enacts the recommendations of the Cherry Commission, an advisory board that worked to bring about higher standards in education and the economy. State officials said they have seen problems with the current merit scholarship. Spokeswoman for the governor's office Heidi Hanson said the cur- rent system does not effectively deal with the high drop-out rate in the state. "Students (often) enroll and take a couple of classes and then drop out. We're not rewarding them for the results that we're looking for," she said. According to } I