Wednesday, November 16, 2005 Ti TESSiTT FCWP RLS.~1 K FOR i, AA!N.:TY . Tl';...i , News 3 Prosecutor says no charges in Cox- Fieger case Opinion 4 Jeff Cravens: the problem with Kansas LIMV t Blood Battle Update 1079 1082 pints pints to donate visit www.givelife.org Arts 5 Walker Evans highlights poverty in the Depression One-hundredfifteen years ofeditorialfreedom www.michzgandai/y.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXVI, No. 32 62005 The Michigan Daily Fed pick to stay course Bernanke to follow Greenspan's economic direction during his term WASHINGTON (AP) - Ben Ber- nanke, the president's chief economist, told senators yesterday he'll continue the policies of Alan Greenspan if con- firmed as Federal Reserve chairman and will make sure the central bank remains free of political influence. At a three-hour hearing on Presi- dent Bush's choice to head the Fed after Greenspan retires, Senate Bank- ing Committee members largely expressed confidence in the man who would take over a position seen by many as the second-most-influential job in America. Maintaining continuity with Greenspan's policies is a top priority, Bernanke said. "I intend to be flexible and to learn from experience," he said. "But I believe the right starting point is the point where we currently are, that Chairman Greenspan has demonstrat- ed in his policymaking." Bernanke also sought to assure law- makers, investors and the public that he would make decisions on interest rates and other matters based on eco- nomic considerations, not political ones. "I will be strictly independent of all political influences," he said. If confirmed as expected, Bernanke will lead the Fed at a time when the economy faces challenges, including bloated budget and trade deficits and worries about whether the high-flying housing market will crash. There are also concerns about high energy prices and the lackluster jobs market. "All of your intellectual horsepower is going to be needed," said Sen. Debbie Stabenow, (D-Mich.) Bernanke, 51, is a former Princeton pro- fessor and Fed governor who now serves * as chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers. Lawmakers and the administration want him ready to take over when Greenspan retires Jan. 31, after 18-plus years at the helm. Senators intend to act on Bernanke's * nomination "as soon as possible," said committee chairman Richard Shelby, (R-Ala.) Bernanke said he would move slowly and seek to build a consensus on the notion of inflation targeting - that is, numerically spelling out acceptable bounds for inflation. Deadly disease hits'U Freshman living in Markley Residence Hall contacts bacterial meningitis By Anne VanderMey Daily Staff Reporter The University reported its first case of bacterial menin- gitis in 10 years after a freshman living in Mary Markley Residence Hall checked into a Detroit-area hospital with symptoms of the disease last weekend. Robert Winfield, director of University Health Services, said the student is recovering well but could not speculate on when he would be released. So far, no other cases of the disease have been reported at' the University. The strain in Markley has been identified as meningococ- cal meningitis, a deadly bacterial disease that can only be transmitted through throat secretions, according to Internal Medicine Prof. Sandro Cinti. Although not highly contagious, bacterial meningitis inflames the membranes lining the brain and spinal cord and can cause brain damage and death. Symptoms include severe headache, stiffness in the neck, sudden fever and rashes along the arms and legs. Winfield said the afflicted individual identified six stu- dents with which he was in close contact, all of whom will be treated with antibiotics to prevent them from contracting the disease. He said that to the best of his knowledge, none of the students has exhibited symptoms of meningitis. Winfield said he believes this is an isolated incident but did not know how the student contracted the infection. "If you get on top of it quickly and get all of those close contacts, it's most typical to only have one case," he said. People who have bacterial and viral meningitis exhibit the same symptoms, but unlike bacterial meningitis, viral men- ingitis is highly contagious and only rarely fatal. UHS offers a vaccine that safeguards against most strains of both forms of the disease, but about one-third of reported cases involve a vaccine-resistant strain. Doctors at the Michigan Department of Community Health are currently conducting tests to determine whether the incident in Markley involved this vaccine-resistant bacte- ria. Winfield said the affected student received a meningitis vaccination during the summer. Despite the infrequency of reported meningitis cases, the bacteria that causes the disease is fairly common, said Stan Reedy, medical director of the Washtenaw County Public Health Department. Reedy said that up to 20 percent of the population carries the bacteria in the nose and throat but never becomes infected. The reason why some develop the disease and others do not is still largely a mystery to scientists, but Reedy said stu- dents in residence halls have a slightly higher risk of becom- ing infected. He attributed this increased susceptibility in part to a densely populated living environment. Nationally, about 5 out of every 100,000 students living in residence halls contract bacterial meningitis each year, compared with only 1 out of every 100,000 in the general public, according to the University. In 1997, the vaccine-resistant strain of bacterial menin- gitis claimed the lives of two students at Michigan State See MENINGITIS, Page 7 STEVEN TAI/Daily Ryan Bates speaks at the Raise the Wage Campaign held at East Quad last night. Organizers of the campaign hope to increase Michigan's minimum wage by $1.70. 1ntitive seeks wage icrease Coalition of University groups fights to increase Michigan's minimum wage By Bo He Daily Staff Reporter It's only a $1.70 more, but for some Michigan residents, it's the difference between slipping into poverty and being able to make ends meet. Last night in East Quad Residence Hall, members from an array of Univer- sity organizations, ranging from labor unions to activist student groups, gathered to kickoff the start of the Raise the Wage Coalition and advocate for an increase in minimum wage. The coalition is trying to push a ballot initiative that would raise Michigan's mini- mum wage in 2006 from $5.15 to $6.85. To reach the ballot initiative process, the coalition needs half a million or more sig- natures for its petition by June. If successful with the petition signatures, then the mini- mum wage issue would be directly voted on by Michigan residents in 2006. Former U.S. Rep. and political science Prof. Lynn Rivers joined the students in their campaign last night, adding that the initiative would combat America's linger- ing poverty. Rivers said, "Poverty is a very real issue in this country. We are in a very affluent community, so we don't know what it's like. "People don't understand that there are many families who work hard every day for minimum wage and they still can't keep body and soul together," she said. While Rivers supported the initiative, she warned that major businesses would oppose the coalition's efforts to raise the minimum wage. Rivers said, "Businesses always like to use the argument that the only people who are actually on minimum wage are single adults, students and younger teenagers with their first jobs. However, they don't under- stand the real difficulty many families are faced with when living on minimum wage." Although Congress sets the national min- Too low? Michigan's minimum wage is $5.15. The Raise the Wage Coalition seeks to increase this to $. " by sponsoring a ballot intiative. Coalition members want the intiative to accomodate rising re t arnd gas ices, The intiative needs half a mil- lion signatures by June in order for it to be voted on in 2006. imum wage, states still have some jurisdic- tion to change it as they see fit. It has been more than eight years since Congress raised the minimum wage. During this time, rent and gas prices have increased consider- ably. The coalition wants an increase of the minimum wage to $6.85 in 2006 and then indexed to keep up with inflation. See WAGE, Page 3 Historic 'U' mansion put on the market Gordon Hall, which hosted two U.S. Presidents, is being bidded on by interested buyers DEXTER (AP) - The University is mov- ing ahead with plans to sell a 162-year-old mansion that is listed on the National Reg- ister of Historic Places and once hosted two U.S. presidents and many fugitive slaves. The University has owned Gordon Hall, a white mansion on a 67-acre site that over- laps Washtenaw County's Webster and Scio townships, since 1950. The school has been considering selling it for many years. The site is in a rapidly growing area and is attractive to developers. It is worth about $2 million, said University spokesman Jim Kosteva. The university was closing a sealed bidding process for the property yesterday. While the school does not have to take the highest bid, it has a responsibility to the public to be financially responsible, Kosteva told the Detroit Free Press. He said the University wants to sell the land and the house together and use the money for schol- "It's destruction would "be a cultural disaster." -Jean Ledwith King Advocate for preserving Gordon Hall and James Buchanan at the home. The Dexters also gave shelter to more desperate guests, escaped slaves seeking a path to freedom. "Slaves frequently came up from Ken- tucky, Tennessee, Ohio. Station masters (including the judge) put them on wagons, covered with hay, and at night they were sent to Canada," Jean Ledwith King, an advocate for preserving Gordon Hall, told The Ann Arbor News. She said its destruc- tion would "be a cultural disaster." Historians say the slaves on what was known as the Underground Railroad entered through a trap door on the mansion's veran- dah and hid in secret basement rooms. For at least five years, the Dexter Area Historical Society has been trying to raise money to buy the site and restore the man- JUSTIN BASS/Daily Sisay Asefa, a professor at Western Michigan University, speaks at a panel that discussed violence, civil unrest and democracy in Ethiopia. The event was organized by Nebyat Demessie, a University graduate student in the school of Health Management and Policy. TeachingEthiopla democracy Graduate students and , , * ,1 itics. But in her home country of Ethio- pia, this lesson is being put to the test. that Zenawi's administration rigged the election. i