The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, November 15, 2007 - 7A MOS DEF From Page 1A two years ago and worked with artists like Common, A Tribe Called Quest and Erykah Badu. OAMI Program Associate Theda Gibbs said Mos Def's socially con- scious attitude makes him a good choice for the symposium. "He is an artist who definitely talks about social injustices and is a very socially conscious artist," Gibbs said. "That definitely ties into the theme because we want people to be more conscious of the positive things that are happening, as well as any problems or injustices." Engineering freshman Eric Kuykendall, who plans to attend the concert, said he likes Mos Def's softer sound. "I like that he's not as hard core as some other rappers," Kuykendall said. "He raps about real issues." Jacobson said Mos Def embodies what is best about hip hop. "He really represents what is meaningful and what is good, and he shines the light on a lot of what is positive in hip hop," Jacobson said. Jacobson said he was impressed by a previous Mos Def Big Band concert he attended, where live instruments and spoken word poet- ry replaced DJs and turntables. "It framed hip hop, and it show- cased the best of what hip hop is," Jacobson said. Pre-sale tickets, costing between $25 and $45, will be available exclusively to students until Friday at www.ums.org. TICKETS From Page 1A game, the highest price on stub- hub.com was $4,500 and $3,095 on ticketsnow.com. LSA freshman Jamie Keith waited to list his ticket on face- book.com until after Saturday's game against Wisconsin, hoping a victory would inflate prices. "I waited until after this week- end to sell my ticket because I thought we were definitely going to beat Wisconsin," Keith said. "But the loss just kind of messed up my plans of making money." Engineering freshman Ian Hughes said he got the idea to sell his ticket from one of his friends. His friend was able to get $550 dollars, but the maximum offer MSA From Page 1A Court, prosecutor Anthony Kend- rick mentioned that the deal was contingent on Schweitzer testify- ing at Vuljaj's preliminary exami- nation next week. Although Schweitzer's sentenc- ing is Jan. 9, the agreement pro- vided that he would most likely receive probation and the charge would be stricken from his record once the probation ends. In court yesterday, Kendrick asked Schweitzer about his role in the March 2006 attacks. Sch- weitzer said he gave Vuljaj a pro- Hughes received was $250, he said. The offer was not what he was expecting. "I was thinkingI was goingtoget $350, but no one really offered that much," he said. Hughes ultimately decided not to sell his ticket. Keith, though, still plans to sell his ticket. He said he is willing to take less than he expected as long as he makes money. "I think the base price is $200 but I think I might end up selling it for $150," he said. "I wanted to sell the ticket for the money. I can get more money for the one ticket than I paid for the entire season." This year's football student sea- son tickets cost $194. Whether he makes as much money as he is hopes or not, Keith said one thing is for sure: "If we do gram that could be used to crash a website by repeatedly download- ing a single file and overloading the server. "I provided the software to an individual knowing what he would do with it," he said. Kendrick then asked Schweitzer toname the indi- vidual. Schweitzer named Vuljaj. Schweitzer said Vuljaj told him he was going to use the software for a denial of service attack on a website. Schweitzer said he wasn't present when the attack was launched. Kendrick then asked Schweitzer to explain why his computer's IP address had been used for one of the attacks. But before Schweitzer lose to OSU I'm pretty much going to laugh at all my friends who told me not to sell." The state of Michigan has stricter laws governing the resale of tickets than Ohio. Last year's game was in Columbus. Michigan prohibits sellers from selling their ticket for more than face value. Ohio is not among them. Two University departments are responsible for monitoring ticket holders' adherence to the anti- scalping law, Athletic Department spokesman Bruce Madej said. The Department ofPublic Safety finds scalpers on the streets of Ann Arbor while the Athletic Depart- ment tracks listings on websites like eBay, he said. Ticket scalpers who get caught can face the loss of their season could respond, his attorney, Jef- frey Collins, cut him off. Col- lins said there would be a private meeting held after the hearing to discuss the details of Schweitzer's account, and Schweitzer didn't need to answer any further ques- tions. Collins's objection was upheld. The charges against both Vul- jaj and Schweitzer came from the March 2006 student government elections when a denial of service attack crashed the Michigan Pro- gressive Party's website duringthe election period. Vuljaj was a mem- ber of rival party Students 4 Mich- igan. S4M narrowly beat MPP in almost all races. IFC From page 1A policy," he said. Mitteer also said there is a need for better-run hazing task force programming, which are anti- hazing workshops that IFC mem- bers go through. "It was an hour of blow-off because it was run by our peers," he said. The president of each of the 27 IFC fraternities votes on the can- didates after each candidate makes a speech and answers questions. LSA junior Cole Portney, a member of Phi Kappa Psi, said the IFC has done a good job promot- ing the Greek system on campsls. He said an important issue for the next board to tackle is increasing unity among fraternities on cam- pus. "They should be planning ways to foster better interfraternal rela- tions, like maybe planning events for different houses to partake iri," he said. UAW workers ratify historic Ford deal DETROIT (AP) - Ford Motor Co. no longer can complain about being hamstrung by high U.S. labor costs that prevent it from making money domestically. The automaker's hourly work- ers on yesterday ratified a historic four-year contract that sets lower pay for new hires and puts Ford's huge retiree health care liability into a trust run by the United Auto Workers. The UAW represents about 54,000 Ford workers, and 79 percent of those voted in favor of the pact, the union said Wednes- day. The UAW typically does not release vote totals. Workers at General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC already had ratified similar deals, with the contract passing at Chrysler by only a small margin. The deals, all similar, are historic because they will he.p to rescue the troubled Detroit Three and make them more competitive with Japanese rivals who build cars in the U.S., said David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor. "It's just a recognition we're, at a brave new world. The business model has changed. The bench- mark has shifted to the interna- tional manufacturers," Cole said. The companies said going into the talks they have about a $25- per-hour labor cost gap with Toy- ota Motor Corp., Honda Motor do. and Nissan Motor Co. the michigan AVAILABLE 2008 RENTALS; 8 bdrm.; 540 Packard/May/$4150 503 E. Ann/Fall/$4200 6 bdrm.; 932 Greenwood/Fall/$3600 411 Washtenaw/Fall/$4200 545 Packard No. l/Fall/$3900 1018 Church/Fall/$3900 1110 Church Judson/May/$3600 1361 Wilmont/May/$3900 516 Walnut/Fall/$3900 517 Benjamin/Fall/$4000 419 Benjamin/May/$3400 410 Benjamin/Fall/$3400 501 Linden/Fall/$3400 1016 Michigan/May/$3900 5 bdrm.; 1101 E. 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Best Prices Guar- anteed! Call for group discounts. 1-800- 648-4849 or www.ststravel.com For Thursday, Nov. 15, 2007 SCORPIO ARIES (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) (March 21to April 19) Travel plans or anything connected Once again, you'll have an opportu- with publishing and higher education nity to finish up things at home, espe- could be delayed now. You might have to cially renovations or domestic projects. go back and redo something. And so it Old differences might suddenly surface goes. again with family members. (Yikes!) SAGITTARIUS TAURUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) (April 20 to May 20) Negotiations with others, especially In the next month, you can finish related to inheritances, osurance matters negotiations that are already on your and debt might get bogged down in the plate, or once again convince someone months ahead. However, perhapsthis is to agree with you about something. It's your chance to improve things for your- as if you have a second chance at some- self? thing. CAPRICORN GEMINI (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) (May 21to June 20) When dealing with partners and close Your efforts to earn money might slow friends, old arguments seem to be back down now. Alternatively, you might find on the table again. You might just b6 that an old idea you once considered is beating a dead horse. Is this all really now looking quite doable. necessary? CANCER AQUARIUS (June 21to July 22) (Jan. 20to Feb. 18) Today Mars goes retrograde in your If your production slows down a sign. You might feel a bit stymied or work, don't worry. Consider this an stalled in the water. During the next opportunity to really do something in A month, you have an opportunity to better way. This time you can repair mis. finish things or correct how you did takes and recover losses. something. PISCES LEO (Feb. 19 to March 20) (July 23 to Aug. 22) Old flames and romantic interestl Take care of messy details with the from the past could re-enter your life in government and large institutions. You the next month. Don't kid yourself about can wrap up something that you've anything. Quite likely, nothing has really beenepostponing. Leave nothing to changed. chance. YOU BORN TODAY Because you VIRGO are intense, you often have intense (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) encounters with others. You are fair; Old differences with friends might minded and brave. You're patient, hard- suddenly start to surface again in the working and extremely independent! 1t month ahead. Ask yourself, Are they the next year, you'll likely wrap up worth losing a friendship over? something with which you've been LIBRA involved for the past nine years in order (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) to make room for something new to Your ambition to achieve a certain enter your world. project seems to be stalled at the Birthdate of: Georgia O'Keeffe, moment. Instead, focus on finishing painter; Beverly D'Angelo, actress; what needs to be redone or repaired. Kevin Eubanks, guitarist. 2007 King Features Syndicate. 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