The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, March 16, 2007 -- 8 Maneuvering begins on tax hike LANSING (AP) - Even though Republicans largely have come out against Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm's proposed 2 percent tax on services, they set it up for a pos- sible vote in the GOP-controlled Senate next week. Majority Leader Mike Bishop decided yesterday to discharge the measure and bring it to the full Senate because he felt Democrats broke an agreement to keep details of negotiations secret until a deal was reached. The Rochester Republican said he's bringing up the tax plan in the -GOP-controlled Senate - where it's almost sure to fail - because :the House has failed to act, even though Democrats hold the major- ity there. "You've got the governor's office and you've got an entire chamber of this Legislature and nothing has been done to move that plan for- ward," he said. "Why? Because you don't have the votes." Democrats leveledsimilar charg- es as the two sides wrangled over how best to address the $900 mil- lion shortfall in the current budget. Minority Leader Mark Schauer (D-Battle Creek) said Republi- cans say they want to make up the entire shortfall with cuts, but won't say publicly what those spend- ing decreases should be. He heard Republicans may propose cutting the payments that communities get from the state for police, fire and other services by 20 percent, as well as reducing aid to K-12 schools. "It could have devastating impacts on our communities," Schauer said. "I don't think they've got the votes for it. ... That's why they've not been willingto put their plan on the table." GOLDEN APPLE From page 1 University Teaching. Bronstein and three other SHOUT members then descended the stairs of the lecture hall in the Dennison Building, a bouquet of maize-and-blue balloons in hand, to present Markovits with the 17th -annual Golden Apple Award, given each year to the teacher a student committee selects as the best professor on campus. "If I had known this, I would've put on a jacket," said Markovits - clad in a pair of brown cordu- roys and a merlot-colored hooded sweatshirt - after the strong applause of his students died down and he had a moment to collect his thoughts. Once the honor had sunk in, Markovits returned to the day's lecture on the history of the National Hockey League in North America and its wider global sig- nificance, which he delivered, seemingly from memory, as his notes lay spread before him on the large lab table at the front of the room. "I thought someone didn't like what I said about the Red Wings," he said in an interview once most of his students had left the lecture hall after class. Just before the SHOUT team appeared, he had mentioned the Detroit Cougars, who wouldn't become the Red Wings until 1932. Later, in his office, where bulg- ing shelves of books line the walls, Markovits reflected on the after- noon's excitement. "I'm so flattered, and I'm so humbled, and I'm so honored," he said. "It was perfect that it happened inthe sports class," Markovits con- tinued. "I love that class. Sports is still not treated with the same aca- demic respect. I am very commit- ted to fighting that." Markovits called himself an "LSA man," referring to his joint appointment with the German and political science departments and his partnership with the sociol- ogy department in developing the sports course. "I'm using sports as a vehicle to explain and illustrate larger social and political phenomenon," Mar- kovits said. "You can do this with film, once can do this with pretty much anything that you study at a university. It so happens that sport, to me, is a very good vehicle to look at all these things." "It's not just a class about schmoozing about the Yankees," he said. Still, the topic attracts students to the class in droves. Rackhamstudent JeffreyLuppes is one of two GSIs who are assist- ing Markovits with the course for the second time and was one of the students who nominated Markov- its for the Golden Apple. The com- mittee accepts nominations from the student body. Luppes said that the first few weeks of the class are hardest on the GSIs because of the number of students who want to enroll. He said it isn't uncommon for waitlists for discussion sections to include more than 10 people each. "His excitement is genuine, and it's infectious," Luppes said of Markovits's passion for his mate- rial. "He makes students want to learn more about the topic and understand it like he does." Luppes said Markovits extends this enthusiasm beyond the class- room and is quick to write a rec- ommendation for a student. "Everyone knows him in the German political world, so if you have his recommendation, you'll probably get what you're applying for," he said. "His voice carries a lot of weight." According to Bronstein, though, Markovits popularity doesn't come from letting students slack off. "Students look to him because he is challenging," Bronstein said, citing the nominations that SHOUT received on behalf of Mar- kovits. In addition to his mid-lec- ture visit, Markovits received an assignment from SHOUT: to give his ideal last lecture. Bronstein explained that this is a corner- stone of the Golden Apple award because it gives all students the opportunity to listen to a profes- sor who they may never have the opportunity to take a class with. Markovits will deliver his ideal last lecture on April 12 at 8 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium. Recent recipients of the award include English professor Eric Rabkin in 2006, English profes- sor John Rubadeau in 2005 and history professor Matt Lassiter in 2004. The Golden Apple has been awarded since 1991, when psychol- ogy professor Drew Westen won the first one. STOCKWELL From page 1 as Mosher-Jordan and Stockwell undergo major renovation and North Quad - U-M's first new residence hall since 1968 - is con- structed to carefully review and assess all of our current residential configurations and demographics," Levy said in an e-mail interview. He said officials probably won't make a decision for at least a year. A community learning center will replace Stockwell's dininghall. Students will be able to eat in the Hill Dining Center, which will be connected to Mosher-Jordan Hall when it reopens in Fall 2008. Stockwell's renovations will also include work on the building's plumbing and electrical systems. Air conditioning, updated fire alarms and fire sprinklers will also be installed. The building will also have wireless Internet in common areas and faster Internet access in the dorm rooms. Housing officials said the resi- dence hall will hold about 415 stu- dents after the renovations, about the same number it does now. The bathrooms will also be rede- signed. "The infrastructure has probably exceeded its lifespan," Levy said. The final schematic designs for the renovation will go in front of the regents in early 2008, said Kathy Comisiak, a housing capital planner for University Housing. Parts of the dining hall will probably become an informal performance space, music practice room, a lounge, and a laundry room, she said. The building's historic exte- rior will remain mostly the same, Comisiak said. Goody Clancy & Associates, the same firm that is managing the renovation of Mosh- er-Jordan Hall, will design the Stockwell renovations. Comisiak said focus groups Uni- versity Housing conducted with students indicated a demand for the features of the new Hill Dining Center, like increased variety and longer hours. "You can offer those in a dining center venue a little better than individual halls," Comisiak said. The design team is considering putting kitchenettes on each floor of Stockwell and a larger kitchen else- where inthe building, Comisiak said. LSA freshman Sarah Yi, who lives in Stockwell, said she thinks the dorm needs updating. She said the paint in her room is chipping and the screen on her window won't stay on. Yi also recommended com- pletely rebuilding the bathrooms. "A bigger study area would be good," she said. LSA freshman Husnah Khan, who also lives in Stockwell, said she doesn't think Stockwell needs to be renovated. She said the noise from the Mosher-Jordan renovations has bothered her this semester. College of Engineering sopho- more Mary Kay DuBay, who has lived in Stockwell for the past two years and plans to live there again next year as a resident advisor, said it would be inconvenient to have to walk next door for meals. "Students want this food ser- vice that looks like a cafeteria in a shopping center or something," said DuBay, who serves asa student coordinator in the Stockwell dining hall. "It's impressive, but really it's kind of inconvenient." Levysaid students won't care about the shortwalk once they see whatthe Hill Dining Center has to offer. "We think the contrast between the old and the new will take care for most students of any concern about a short walk," said Levy. LEBANON From page 3 said. Abssi has recently taken on a communications adviser, Abu al- Hassan, 24, a journalism student who dropped out of college to join Fatah al Islam. His current project: a newsmagazine aimed at attracting recruits. The arc of Abssi's life shows the allure of al-Qaida for Arab mili- tants. Born in Palestine, from which he and family were evicted by the Israelis, Abssi, 51, said he stopped studying medicine to fly planes for Yasser Arafat. He then staged attacks on Israel from his own base in Syria. After he was imprisoned in Syria for three years on terror- ism charges, he said he broadened his targets to include Americans in Jordan. The Times arranged to speak with Abssi through a series of inter- mediaries, who helped set up meet- ings in his headquarters at the Nahr al Bared refugee camp. Abssi, a soft- spoken man with salt-and-pepper hair, was interviewed in a bare room inside a small cinderblock building on the edge of a field where train- ing was under way. About 80 men were in the compound, performing various tasks, including one who manned an anti-aircraft gun. As Abssi spoke, two aides took notes, while a third fiddled with a subma- chine gun. Abazookaleaned against the wall behind him. In a 90-minute interview,his first with Western reporters, Abssi said he shared al-Qaida's fundamental- ist interpretation and endorses the creation of a global Islamic nation. He said killing U.S. soldiers in Iraq was no longer enough to convince the American public that its govern- ment should abandon what many Muslims view as a war against Islam. "We have every legitimate right to do such acts, for isn't it America that comes to our region and kills innocents and children?"Abssi sad. "It is our right to hit them in their homes the same as they hit us in our homes. "Wearenotafraidofbeingnamed terrorists," he added. "But I want to ask, is someone who detonates one kilogram a terrorist while someone who detonates tons in Arab and Islamic cities not a terrorist?" When asked, Abssi refused to say what his targets might be. This week,Lebanese lawenforce- mentofficials saidthey arrested four men from Fatah al Islam in Beirut and other Lebanese cities and were charging them with last month's bombing of two commuter buses carrying Lebanese Christians. Abssi denies any involvement and says he has no plans to strike within Leba- non. FERTILE SOIL FOR MILITANTS Inside the Palestinian camp, Abssi seems to be building his oper- ation with little interference. Maj. Gen. Achraf Rifi, general director of Lebanon's Internal Security Forces, said the govern- ment does not have authority to enter a Palestinian camp - even though Abssi is now wanted in Leb- anon, Jordanand Syriaonterrorism charges. To enter the camps, Rifi said, "We would need an agreement from other Arab countries." He said that instead the government was tight- ening its cordon around the camp to make it harder for Abssi or his men to slip in and out. Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon .have long been fertile ground for militancy, particularly focused on the fight against Israel. But militants in those camps now have a broader vision. In Am el Hilwe camp, an hour'sdrive south of Beirut, another radical Sunni group, Asbat al Ansar, has been sending fighters to Iraq since the start of the war, its leaders acknowledged in interviews. "The U.S. is oppressing a lot of people," the group's deputy com- mander, who goes by the name of Abu Sharif, said in a room strewn withKalashnikovs."Theyarekilling a lot of innocents, but one day they are getting paid back." A leading sheik in the camp, Jamal Hatad, has a television studio that broadcasts 12 hours a day with shows rang- ing from viewer call-ins to video of bin Laden's statements and parents proudly displaying photographs of their martyred children. "I was happy," Hamad Mustaf Ayasin, 70, recalls in hearing last fall that his35-year-old son, Ahmed, had died in Iraq fighting American troops near the Syrian border. "The U.S. is against Muslims all over the world." On the streets of the camp, one young man after another said dying in Iraq was no longer their only dream. "If I had the chance to do any kind of operation against anyone who is against Islam, inside or out- side of the United States, I would do the operation," said Mohamed, an 18-year-old student, who declined to give his last name. Hussein Hamdan, 19, who keeps a poster of Osama bin Laden in the bedroom he shares with two sisters, is a street tough attuned to religious fundamentalism. He dropped out of school at age 10, spent 18 months in jail on assault charges, and earlier this month -- "just to make a state- ment," he said -- took a razor and repeatedly slashed both his fore- arms. "I want to become a mujahe- deen and go to jihad in any country where there are Jews or Americans to fight against them," he said. Lebanonhasincreasinglybecome a source of terror suspects. One of the Sept. 11 hijackers came from Lebanon, as did six men charged with planting bombs on German trains last summer. Two other Leb- anese men and a Palestinian were among those accused last spring of plotting to blow up the PATH train tunnels beneath the Hudson River in New York. Rifi said officials were trying to learn as much as possible about Abssi's operation from sources and surveillance, but it was clear that their information was limited. In questioning people, security offi- cials are showing a photograph of Abssi that is 30 years old, though it displays his most distinctive feature - two moles, one on each side of his nose. The apparent inability to appre- hend Abssi provokes fury in the men who are hunting him. A security official in one of the countries where he is wanted scowled when asked why Abssi was operating freely: "I can go lots of places to grab people, but I can't grab him." Inthe interview with The Times, Abssi said he had been largely warmly received in the Palestinian camp, and that he was optimistic about his cause. "One of the rea- sons for choosing this camp is our belief that the people here are close to God as they feel the same suffer- ing as our brothers in Palestine," he said. "Today's youth, when they see what is happening in Palestine and Iraq, it enthuses them to join the way of the right and jihad," he said. "These people have now started to adopt the right path." Parks estate to be split DETROIT (AP) - A settlement reached last month between two groups fighting over Rosa Parks' estate stipulates they will have to work together to control the mar- keting of the civil rights icon's lega- cy, according to a published report. A gag order imposed in the case has been lifted, and terms of the settlement were sealed Monday by Wayne County Probate Judge Fred- die Burton Jr. But the Detroit Free Press, citing people familiar with the settlement that it did not name, revealed some of the details of the settlement on Thursday, including that a portion of proceeds from the sale of Parks' likeness will go to her heirs for col- lege tuition and scholarships. The newspaper also said the fam- ily will represent her during dedica- tions of memorials or when schools and parks are named for her, and a Detroitnonprofitshe co-founded will receive outside oversight in the hope of returning it to financial solvency. Parks' 13 nieces and nephews have feuded for years with the people she appointed to handle her affairs. The relatives filed a legal challenge to Parks' will in May. She died Oct. 24, 2005 in Detroit at age 92. BEER From page 1 different beers their distinctive looks and flavors. Greff pointed out one called a caramel malt. "It tastes a little like Grape Nuts," he said. It's the time of year for Guinness, with its distinctive black color. Stouts - Guiness among them - are loaded with specialty malts, Greff said. Roasted malt is barley that has been treated like coffee, he said. It's no accident then that this grain smells a little like fresh coffee beans. Chocolate malt - which, as Greff said, has nothingto do with choco- late other than the color - and black malt are also added to the mixture to give certain beers their distinc- tive dark color. What distinguishes these grains from their paler counterparts is simply the amount of kilning they get. That's what gives Guinness and other stouts their dark color. These malts are mixed in the proportions the brewer desires with 150-degree water in a metal vat known as a "mash tun." ABC's mash tun holds 7 barrels, which is 217 gallons. The hot water causes the enzymes to break down the starch- es in the malt into fermentable sug- ars. The malt steeps for about an hour, Greff said, after which the liquid, nowcalled the "wort," filters into another metal tank called the "brew kettle." Here the brewer adds the spice of his product - hops. Hopsarefloweringplants.Greff's have been ground and formed into pellets for easier shipping and stor- age. In general, hops are what give beer its bitterness. Greff said that he mostly uses a variety called "cascade" hops, which give his beer a citrusy fla- vor. While the wort is boiling for an hour, Greff adds his hops. Putting them in the mix earlier releases more acids from the hops, he said, creating a bitterer brew. Adding them later, however, pre- serves the grapefruit-and-flower- like aroma common to beers like pale ales. After an hour, the mixture is cooled to about 75 degrees and sent to fermenting tanks. Yeast is added, which feeds on the sugars released from the malt during the mashing process. Greff said that as the yeast mul- tiplies, it creates two byproducts - carbon dioxide and alcohol. The yeast creates so much carbon diox- ide, in fact, that some has to be vent- ed during fermentation. At the end of the process, Greff closes the valves to the tank and the carbon dioxide is trapped in the beer, creating the carbonation. After about a week in the fer- menter, the now-alcoholic and bub- bly mixture is sent to serving tanks in the basement, where it cools and waits for you to come order a pint. A mixture of carbon dioxide and nitrogen creates pressure in the servingtanks, so when the bartend- er pulls the tap handle, the cold, bubbly beverage travels up from the basement and into your glass. a 0 I 0 I I 4 4