The first column from the Daily's first public editor Opinion, page 4 IPt e I~idligan 4Ba IV Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, October 9,2007 michigandaily.com GOP PRIMARY '08 race comig to'U' Republicans to debate in Dearborn; Ron Paul to speak on Diag By EMILY BARTON Daily Staff Reporter The race for the Republican nomination for president is com- ing to the University of Michigan today. At 4 p.m., GOP candidates will debate in Dearborn at a forum sponsored in part by the Universi- ty's Dearborn campus. Republican candidate Ron Paul, a Texas congressman, plans to come to Ann Arbor to deliver a speech from the steps of the Grad- uate Libraryi at 7:30 p.m. Rob.Johnson, chair of the Uni- versity's chapter of Students for Ron Paul for President, said his group only had a week to prepare for the visit, but they've been pro- moting the event since then. Paul, a libertarian Republican, is a longshot to win the Republican nomination. But he has generated intense interest and support from across the political spectrum. He's lured supporters from the left with strong opposition to the war in Iraq and an activist foreign policy. He's lured supporters from the right with strident opposition to tax hikes, abortion rights and many federal government programs. Abdullateef Muhiuddin, the University of Michigan at Dear- See CAMPAIGN, Page 7 0FF-CAMPUS HOUSING Avoiding a dispute over your deposit Playboy magazine held tryouts at Weber's Inn yesterday for its Girls of the Big Ten pictorial, slated to run in May. In A2, dreams of gloss and glory Students try out for Playboy magazine's Girls of the Big Ten By KIMBERLY CHOU Daily StaffReporter "Put your hands in your hair," commanded veteran Playboy mag- azine photographer Kim Mizuno. 'Stretch out." "Smile." Mizuno fed these lines to a tall, blond LSA junior who would only give her first and middle name - Amber Sue - during a tryout yesterday at Weber's Inn for Play- boy's Girls of the Big Ten issue. She smiled, shaking out her hair and turned awkwardly in her stilettos on the plush carpet. "It's just you and me - and a hundred other people," he said, referring to the few local reporters and photographers also crowded into the bedroom suite. One other girl, a School of Nursing junior whose first and middle names are Renee Alison, was scheduled for the morning; at least half a dozen were supposed to show later in the afternoon, said stylist Linda Ken- ney. More are scheduled for today. Playboy representatives advised the candidates not to give their Pull names to the press. All this was uncommon for the beautiful but stodgy Weber's Inn on Jackson Avenue - the mainte- nance men showed up suspiciously fast when called to fix the air con- ditioning. Playboy is on a campus tour of all 11 Big Ten Conference schools in search of models for its annual college girls pictorial. The feature - slated to run in the May 2008 edition of the magazine - will be the first college pictorial to feature Big Ten co-eds since the "Girls of the Big Ten" issue in October 2003. Amber wants to make the pages of Playboy. She attended an open casting call two summers ago in Cleveland, subscribes to the maga- zine and follows the website ("Like everyday," she confessed), where she found out about the tryouts. "I skipped three classes this morning for this," she said. Playboy has also advertised for the pictorial on MySpace and Facebook, Kenney said. The week See PLAYBOY, Page 7 Student Legal Services: Read your lease By SARA LYNNE THELEN Daily StaffReporter Engineering senior Marty Austin wishes he had read his lease more carefully. Austin, whose lease ended Aug. 19, is still involved in a security deposit standoff with his landlord. Austin and his roommates are now awaiting mediation by the University's Office of Student Conflict Resolution to avoid taking roughly $1,000 in dis- puted damages to small claims court. The damages include thumbtack marks exceeding the lease's quarter-inch limit, an allegedly soiled bed and resi- due from stickers that the ten- ants deny ever existed. Austin said he and his five roommates spent lots of time and money hiring a maid ser- vice to clean their six-bedroom house on Prospect Street before moving out. Disputeslike Austin's become more common during October, said Stephanie Chang, a hous- ing law attorney for Student Legal Services. The definition of damage depends on your lease. Melissa Goldstein, a housing adviser GETTING YOUR MONEY BACK Tips formaking sure yougetyour security deposit back at the sad at your lease * Read your lease thoroughly to know what types of damages you will be charged for. * Check to see if your landlord is reg- istered with the Off-Campus Housing Program. Registered landlordsagree to work with Student Legal Services and the University's Office ofConflict Resolution. * Take pictures of any preexisting dam- age when you move in. " Document all correspondencebetween you and your landlord " Provide your landlord with aforward- ing address within four days after you move out. soUncE sTUDENT LEGAL sERVICEs with OSCR, said that many ten- ants simply forget to read the lease, which outlines specific details like whether renters are subject to fines for large nail holes or too much leftover trash. A security deposit can't be more than one-and-a-half times a tenant's rent. State law consid- ers the deposit to be the tenant's property until the landlord claims deductions - at the end of the lease. If no damages are found, the tenant shouldreceive the full deposit back. "Some (repair) issues don't See DEPOSITS, Page 7 On day of gay rights rally, hate on Diag Daniel Pipes, a controversial Middle East columnist and scholar, drew a crowd at tl Modern Language Building last night. Pipes: West must work to'modernize' Islam A Dani Middle] a crow Buildin ing rad modera winnin Pipe the can focused it "Isla fighting modera against Pipes Islaimic cent, ai cholar draws stressed that it is this small group that poses a "threat to us all." small protest "It is these ten to fifteen per- cent, I believe, that are the enemy By ANDY KROLL of Muslims and non-Muslims," said Daily StaffReporter Pipes, who described radical Islam as "terroristic," "suicidal" and el Pipes, a controversial "hegemonic." Eastscholarandauthor,told Pipes said the goal in defeating d at the Modern Languages radical Islam must be a "transfor- .g last night that combat- mation of the enemy" as was the ical Islam and empowering case with Nazi Germany in World te Muslims are critical to War II and the Soviet Union in the g the war on terrorism. Cold War. s's speech, sponsored by "Our goal in the case of the cur- mpus group Israel IDEA, rent war is the modernization of I radical Islam - he called Islam," said Pipes, founder of the mism" - as the enemy in Middle East Forum, an American g terrorism and empowering, think tank studying Middle East- te Muslims to take action ern political and economic policy. their radical counterparts. Pipes, a columnist for the New s said only a minority of all York Sun and the Jerusalem Post, people, about 10 to 15 per- said that the empowerment of re radical Muslims, but he See PIPES, Page 7 As students come out of closet, preacher draws anger By DANIEL STRAUSS Daily StaffReporter Two clusters of people stood on opposite sides of the block 'M' on the Diag at about noon yesterday. On one side, students from the Office of Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Affairs were handing out buttons publicizing National Coming Out Week, which is this week. On the other, Michael Venyah and Chris Lemieux of Soulwin- ners Ministries International were preaching that anyone who mas- turbates, lies, engages in same-sex relations or is Jewish, amongmany other things, will go to hell. Venyah explained to the crowd of roughly SO students that one of the girls in the crowd was going to- hell for wearing a low-cut shirt. "If she was a Christian she would be covered up - her chest would be covered up like my wife's," Venyah said. Venyah and Lemieux aren't strangers to controversy on cam- pus. A year ago, they preached the same message. Yesterday, they received nearly the same agitated response from students as they did last fall. Venyah turned to LSA junior Piotr Picz, asking him if he was Jewish. When Picz said yes, Venyah told him he was going to hell. "He's misinformed," Picz said. "He misinterprets the Jewish bible to propagate his own agenda. He takes the old scripture and doesn't read it correctly and tries to come up with something really hateful and he probably also forgets that Jesus himself was a Jew." When people in the crowd reminded Venyah that Jesus was Jewish, he responded: "Jesus was a Jew, but unlike you," he said, pointing aimlessly into the crowd, "he didn't sin." To show their displeasure, stu- dents in the crowd began to chant "asshole" at Venyah and Lemieux. As the circle of spectators sur- rounding Venyah swelled, a more subdued group congregated on the steps of the Hatcher Graduate Library to watch a coming-out rally. The commission kicked off the rally by prominently displaying a rainbow flag on the steps of the library and singing "Hail to the Victors." The group also chanted, "Hey hey ho ho, preacher guy has got to go." At about 1 p.m., after the crowd began to disperse, students who identified as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender walked through a closetdoorsetuponthestepsofthe library. The walk through the door symbolizes the student revealing his sexuality to the world. Some students said Venyah and Lemieux brought much-needed attention to the kickoff of National Coming Out Week. "We're kind of excited because it brings out a crowd," said Ashley Schwedt, co-chair of the Universi- ty's LGBT Commission. "It makes people realize how ignorant some people can'be. We just want to stress the importance of visibil- ity because silence never gets any- thing done." LSA senior Kolby Roberts, a programming intern at the Office of LGBT Affairs, said he was glad he attended the rally, even with the controversial preachers. "It showed why we do what we do," he said. - Cole Merkel contributed to this report. ZACHARY MEISNER/Daily After Michael Venyah, right, called LSA junior Jeneanne Orlowski a "whore" and University alum Nick Stadts a "homo," the pair started dry-humping and kissing each other on the Diag yesterday TODAY'S HI:72 WEATHER LO: 48 GOT A NEWS TIP? call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS The Booze News sweeps college campuses MICHIGAN DAILY.COM/THEPODIUM INDEX NEWS.................2 CLASSIFIEDS............6 olTCX hllaNo.2 n OPINION............................4 SUDOKU...... ... .........10 7TheMichiganDaily ARTS........ .... SPORTS.... michigondaily.com 5 S O T ...............1