The Statement ~I~ 1R~ian 8ail ()N 1~ NJ)s1I E(~1 fN 'IN( [ I I] ( r !'riq the quiet president. Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, October 17, 2007 michigandaily.com scientists welcome stem cell ban repeal State group considering proposal for 2008 ballot By EMILY BARTON Daily StaffReporter A ballot proposal committee formed at the beginning of October is aiming to overturn the ban on embryonic stem cell research in Michigan. That would be a wel- come change for University researchers who say the law hinders on the develop- ment of medical cures. Michigan law prohibits embryonic stem cell researchers from deriving their own embryonic stem cell lines using federal funding because it destroys embryos. It does, however, allow for research on adult stem cells and existing embryonic stemcell lines. A ballot initiative, if passed, would overturn a 1978 Michigan law and allow researchers to derive their own stem cell lines from embryos that would otherwise be discarded. See STEM CELLS, Page 7A Trial starts in case of slain student Poet Maya Angelou told an audience at Hill Auditorium on Friday to bring poetry into their lives. "It belongs to all of us," she said. "Just like math belongs to each one of us, just like science belongs to each one of us." 'You need it to re-mind yoursel how hum-an you are' Defense says Dickinson was already dead when suspect entered her dorm room By CHRIS HERRING Daily News Editor The trial of the man charged with killing an Eastern Michigan University student in December is underway at Washtenaw County Trial Court on East Huron Street. Orange Taylor III; 21, from Southfield, is charged with open counts of murder - meaning a jury can charge Taylor with either first- or second-degree murder if he's found guilty - in the December death of EMU student Laura Dickinson. Blaine Longsworth, the prosecutor in the case, said in his opening argument Monday that Taylor killed Dickinson in "every woman's nightmare come true." Taylor, a former EMU student is charged with intent to commit sexual penetration, home invasion and larceny in a building in addition to the murder charge. Prosecutors used DNA testing, surveil- lance camera footage, a bag of gifts and a black hooded sweatshirt that Taylor wore during the night in question to show Taylor was present in Dickinson's room on Dec. 13. While investigating, police found both the hooded sweatshirt and a bag of gifts at Taylor's home. Longsworth said Tay- lor stole the bag of gifts from Dickinson's room, and that the gifts had been given to Dickinson during a Secret Santa party ear- lier that evening. Multiple witnesses saidtheydidn'tthink Dickinson and Taylor had met before the night in question. Taylor's defense attorney, Alvin Keel, acknowledged that Taylor had been in Dickinson's room that evening. But Keel argued it couldn't be proven beyond rea- sonable doubt that Taylor actually mur- dered Dickinson. Keel said Dickinson's body showed no physical signs of harm, citing the autopsy report, which listed "probable asphyxia" as a cause of death. "(The autopsy) did not say asphyxia," Keel said. "It simply said probable. Prob- able is one of those terms which does not meet the standard of guilt beyond reason- able doubt." Keel said Dickinson had cardiac prob- lems in 2005. He then suggested that Dick- inson might have been sick the week of her death. Explaining Taylor's involvement in the case, Keel said his client had been smoking marijuana with friends in another dorm and later wandered off by himself to find more when he wandered into Dickinson's room. Keel said Taylor found Dickinson on the floor "in a compromising position" and ejaculated on her. Keel said that doesn't mean Taylor raped or killed Dickinson, though. "(Physical evidence) doesn't even mean you touched the person," he said. Keel finished his arguments by saying that Dickinson lived in a room next door to two girls who were in the dorm the night she died. Keel said neither of Dickinson's neighbors heard any suspicious noises that Dec.13 night. Among those who have testified for the prosecution thus far are Dickinson's boy- friend Travis Scott, Dickinson's rowing teammate Maria Clary and EMU custo- dian Michelle Lockwood, the person who first discovered Dickinson dead in her dorm room. Following the opening arguments Mon- day, Tina Taylor, Orange Taylor's mother, See TRIAL, Page 7A Angelou tells B-School crowd to find a place for poetry By CATHE SHUBERT Daily StaffReporter Poet Maya Angelou urged students and Business School alumni to bring poetry into their lives in a speech Fri- day at Hill Auditorium. Although Angelou's speech touched on difficult moments from her past, including incidents of rape, racism and her son's spinal cord injury, Ange- lou sang, shimmied and smiled in her ornately carved cream-colored chair in the middle of the stage. Angelou said even people with careers unrelated to poetry should embrace it. The humanizing nature of poetry is one of the reasons is it nec- essary even in the business world, she said. "It belongs to all of us, just like math belongs to each one of us, just like science belongs to each one of us," Angelou said. "If you're a business person, you need it to remind yourself how human you are. So are your col- leagues, your clients, customers, stu- dents." Angelou cited African American poetry in particular as a medium that encapsulates this idea. See ANGELOU, Page 7A Tech industry is key for state's futureleaders say PEACE PRIZE I 'U' researchers contributed to Nobel-winning panel University Research Corridor hosts forum on Mich. economy By DANIEL STRAUSS Daily Staff Reporter Economists, academics, and business leaders all agreed that researching new technologies and pursuing new businesses is the key to fixing Michigan's struggling economy at a conference Monday and Tuesday. How to help the ailing state economy was the subject of conver- sation during a conference held at the Rackham Auditorium Monday and Tuesday. The conference, held at Rack- ham Auditorium and hosted by the University Research Corridor - a See RESEARCH, Page 7A C pa limate change call from Oslo, where the prize is .announced. nel shares prize Emeritus Geophysics Prof Henry Pollack was part of a panel with Gore that was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, so he got a By ANDY KROLL 6 a.m. phone call too - except his Daily Staff Reporter was from his excited son in New York, not the Nobel committee in of the hallmarks of being Norway. merican Nobel prizewin- The news, though, was the the early-morning phone See NOBEL, Page 7A SAM WOLSON/Daily University President Mary Sue Coleman said the University Research Corridor's goal is to help revitalize the state's economy. One an Ar ner is TODAY'S WEATHER HI: 72 GOT A NEWS TIP? LO: 56 Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. Squirrel: A local, sustainable meal? 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