The Statement rIe tidigan hail Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, November 21,2007 michigandaily.com A COOPERATIVE THANKSGIVING STADIUM CONTROVERSY Justice Dep't asks to join1suit against'U' After Ed. Department rejects compromise, feds want in on paralyzed vets lawsuit By GABE NELSON Daily News Editor The Department of Justice asked a federal court yesterday to let it join the Michigan Paralyzed Veter- ans of America in its suit against the University that challenges whether Michigan Stadium meets federal accessibility standards. In a hearing at the U.S. District Court for the East- ern District of Michigan in Detroit scheduled for this morning, Justice Department officials will also request permission to send a team of Justice Depart- ment investigators to survey the stadium nextweek. "It is critical that the United States perform this survey as soon as possible," the Justice Department wrote in a motion filed yesterday. "The University has begun a large-scale renovation of the stadium and the work could destroy important information about the existing stadium." The department chose to step in after the Depart- ment of Education's Office of Civil Rights rejected a compromise offered by the University of Michigan yesterday and referred its concerns to the Justice Department. The University offered in a letter sent to the office on Monday to build removable platforms around the seating bowl that would have added as many as about 300 additional wheelchair-accessible seats with differentvantage points to the stadium. According to a statement by Education Department spokeswoman Samara Yudof, the proposal was reject- ed by the Education Department in part because it wouldn't have provided permanent wheelchair-acces- sible seating to the stadium bowl or resolved concerns about the other problems with stadium facilities. University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham said in a statement released yesterday that the University has always shown commitment to the needs of dis- abled fans. "The University of Michigan is disappointed See STADIUM, Page 7A PETER SCHOTTENFELS/Daily LSA junior Stephanie Washell waits for Thanksgiving dinner to be served at Nakamura co-op on State Street. Two of the co-op's residents organized the dinner for the house's 29 residents. For a video of the co-op's festivities, visit michigandaily.com/allvideos. LEASE SIGNING oRDNANCE Landlords offer cash to get around law Incentives entice tenants to sign waivers By DANIEL STRAUSS Daily StaffReporter Ann Arbor landlords are offering tenants money or free home cleanings to get them to sign a lease for next year or to sign a waiver givinglandlords per- mission to show the home to other pro- spectivetenants. Theincentives,offered in letters to tenants, are an attempt to get around the city's lease signing ordi- nance, which prohibits landlords from showing a residence before 90 days of the current lease period are up. Some landlords have also been send- ing letters requesting information by a certain date - sometimes as early as Oct. 25 - saying that, if there is no response given, they can begin showing a residence to prospective tenants. For many of the near-campus leases that start on Sept. 1, the ordinance prohibits landlords from showing the property before Dec. 1. But landlords seem to have found a loophole in the ordinance. By asking tenants to sign a waiver, and sometimes offeringmonetary incentives, landlords have gotten many students to agree to allow landlords to show their apart- ments before Dec. 1. Engineering junior Aaron Sachs said he and his roommates began think- ing about where they would live next year after receiving this type of letter in early October. Sachs said because he and his friends didn't know the request was voluntary, they felt rushed into making a decision to lease another house or renew their existing lease. "Honestly, that decision kind of has to do with the rush," said Sachs, who said he was offered up to $200 by his current landlord if he renewed his lease by Nov. 1. "It's definitely not possible to find another place in that short a peri- od, especially because most other peo- ple are in the same boat, and they are, of course, waiting for the last second to decide." See LEASE LAW, Page 7A STEM CELL RESEARCH Discovery could help scientists get around ban State law prohibits embryonic study From staff and wire reports Scientists have made ordi- nary human skin cells take on the chameleon-like powers of embryonic stem cells, a startling breakthrough that might some- day deliver the medical payoffs of embryo cloning without the con- troversy. The discovery could be a boon to researchers in Michigan, where regulations against embryonic stem cell research are strict. "It's possible that in future we'll use this reprogramming approach instead of, for example, doing nuclear transfer to derive embry- onic stem cell lines for therapeutic cloning," said Sean Morrison, the director of the University's Center for Stem Cell Biology. Laboratory teams on two con- tinents report success in a pair of landmark papers released Tues- day. It's a neck-and-neck finish to a race that made headlines five months ago, when scientists announced that the feat had been accomplished in mice. The "direct reprogramming" technique avoids the swarm of ethical, political and practi- cal obstacles that have stymied attempts to produce human stem cells by cloning embryos. Scientists familiar with the work said scientific questions remain and that it's still important to pursue the cloning strategy, but that the new work is a major coup. "This work represents a tre- mendous scientific milestone - the biological equivalent of the Wright Brothers' first airplane," said Dr. Robert Lanza, chief sci- See STEM CELLS, Page 7A UNIVERSITY E-MAIr Some outsource, but 'U' still on its own ROBMIGRIN/Daily LSA junior Julian Lizzio is an employee at Maison Edwards tobacconist in Nickels Arcade. Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr frequents the shop, according to its owner. Carr wins fans off field, too At Northwestern, in an attempt to keep up with the changing needs of students and a switch to Gmail evolving Internet technology. The University of Michigan isn't one of those schools. By JULIE ROWE . While Northwestern Univer- Daily StaffReporter sity made the switch to Google Apps for Education - a collection Many universities around the of free Google applications for world are no longer offeringe-mail colleges - after its undergraduate services to students - at least not student government requested a directly. Instead, some schools change, the University of Mich- are now outsourcing student e- igan's Information Technology a mail to Gmail and Windows Live Central Services is sticking with its current web mail system. Only 5 percent of University undergraduates forward their mail to other accounts, according to ITCS. The University currently pro- vides web mail through an open source program released by the Horde Project. Horde's Internet Messaging Program is one of the most widely used web mail sys- tems, especially on college cam- puses. See E-MAIL, Page 7A Around town, coach quiet but imposing By DAVE MEKELBURG Daily News Editor Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr has walked the sidelines at Michigan Stadium for 13 seasons. He's also been a fixture around Ann Arbor. Even after his retire- ment announcement on Monday, Carr will stay in Ann Arbor as an associate athletic director. Still Carr hasn't been as visible around campus as his mentor, for- mer head coach Bo Schembechler, who was often an oversized pres- ence around campus. As the sister of the owner of Angelo's restaurant owner Steve Vangelatos, Vickie Brooks has seen Carr come into the Catherine Street dining establishment quite often. Brooks said the restaurant sometimes hosts coaches' meetings or coaches will bringrecruits to the restaurant. Brooks called Carr an understated person with an enor- mous presence. When he came into the restaurant, she would make sure he had his space but would always be excited. "It was always the highlight of the day," she said. "It was like a movie star walked in." His order, though, is decidedly un-movie star. He usually orders oatmeal, Brooks said and he usually brings his own black coffee to accompany it. Beyond his stature of coach, Brooks said he has a command- ing - albeit subdued - presence, See CARR, Page 7A TODAY'S WEATHER Hl: 49 GOT A NEWS TIP? 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