Michigan brews Dexter's Jolly Pumpkin is part of a local beer community that's winning national and international acclaim. PLUS: How Facebook could go beyond party photos THE B-SIDE ~I1E*Midigan Di~ I Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, November 29,2007 michigandaily.com BUILDING A BETTER BAG OFF SIV FACBOOK G ROUP FALLOUT LSA-SG could oust rep for being in group CHANEL VON HABSBURG-LOTHRINGEN/Daily Engineering senior Steven Agacinski talks to Art and Design senior Domonique Mayhawk about the Triport, a cart he helped design, in Pierpont Commons yesterday. The Triport was designed as part of a challenge sponsored by the University's Tauber Institute for Global Operations. Seven student groups presented prototypes for bags that could carry heavy loads with minimal user effort at yesterday's Integrated Product Development Trade Show. StudentDarfur aidaffrtean MSA rep. mocked in group says he'll quit assembly if president doesn't By SCOTT MILLS and DANIEL STRAUSS Daily StaffReporters The student government for the University's largest college will decide next week whether to oust Michigan Student Assembly Rep. Kenneth Baker for being a memberofan offensiveFacebook. com group that he made public at last night's MSA meeting. LSA Student Government voted last night in favor of hold- ing a trial for Baker, which could result in Baker's removal from MSA. Baker announced at Tuesday night's MSA meeting that he belonged to a private Facebook. com group making fun of MSA Rep. Tim Hull, who has Asperg- er's syndrome. The group - "I waste more time reading Tim Hull's code amendments than I do on Facebook" - was started a little over a year ago by MSA President Zack Yost. The descrip- tion Yost wrote included a refer- ence to Hull's Asperger's. It said: "I'll give that kid a fucking dis- ability he can write home about if he keeps sending these code amendments to everyone." Because Baker was appointed to his position as MSA represen- tative, he serves on the assembly at the leisure of his school's gov- ernment - in this case, LSA-SG. The group will try Baker for violating an article of the LSA-SG constitution that allows the body to remove anyone from office for "inappropriate actions that jeop- ardize governmental affairs." Hull has publicly called for both Baker and- Yost to resign from their positions on MSA, and yesterday issued an ultimatum. "If Yost doesn't step down, and the assembly refuses to take all the steps it can to remove him, then I'll step down," Hull said. "I don't feel comfortable serving on a student government where the president is someone who attacked me about my dis- ability." Yost wouldn't disclose wheth- er he would resign in the face of Hull's comments but stressed that Hull was an important mem- ber of the assembly. "Tim's one of the hardest working and most principled kids on MSA," Yost said. "I'd be sad to see him go." Baker said he would be willing to resign if Hull personally asked him to do so. "If that's his honest desire, I'm willing to do that," he said. Some people attacked Baker for revealing the group at a public meeting more than a year after it was created, calling the move politically motivated. After Yost made the group, Baker sent him a Gmail chat message praising the idea. Baker said in an interview last night that there were four mem- bers ofthe Facebook group, but he See MSA, Page 7A Will Work For Food hopes to start chapters at other schools By CATHE SHUBERT Daily StaffReporter University student group Will Work For Food has raised about $3,000 in relief funds for Sudan's Darfur region through its unique formula for fundraising and advo- cacy. It's also looking to expand the model to other colleges and high schools. The group raises money by sell- ing Will Work For Food T-shirts. Buyers of the shirts then agree to do one hour of work for $10 and donate that money to help victims of the bloody conflict in Darfur. Estimates of the number of people killed in Darfur range from 200,000 to 450,000. Davidson said the funds raised will go directly to relief efforts through the American Jewish World Service, an international humanitarian group. The group also helps students contact their local congressmen about the issue, either by phone or with preaddressed postcards, Davidson said. This semester, Will Work For Food has been focused on working out the logistics of its group at the University and finding a systematic plan to expand the group across the country. "We want to perfect it for a large university, because we know if we get it to work here it should be able to work anywhere," Davidson said. Students from universities across the country have contacted Davidson to apply for a chapter of the group at their own campuses. Davidson and LSA junior Josh Cohen, the group's co-founder, said they hope to implement similar programs at places like Ann Arbor's Pioneer and Community high schools, Michigan State University and Wayne State University. Ruth Messinger, president of AJWS, will deliveralecture tonight sponsored by Will Work For Food which highlights stories from her travels in Darfur. It will take place at 7:30 p.m. in Hutchins Hall at the Law School. As the brutal conflict in Darfur rages on for a fifth year, the possible impact of student involvement or aid becomes even more important, said Messinger, a leading advocate for ending the crisis in Darfur. She praised Will Work For Food for its efforts to increase awareness about the Darfur crisis and said the See DARFUR, Page 7A On Facebook, group Za's closed after fire ' takes on Facebook breaks out in basement MoveOn.org pushes to get rid of new feature that tracks user web purchases By ZOE BAMBERY DailyStaffReporter No good advocacy campaign is complete without a group on Facebook.com - even when the campaign is taking on Facebook itself. Liberal advocacy group MoveOn.org is using Facebook to campaign against the network- ing site's newest marketing fea- ture. The group has launched a campaign against Facebook Bea- con, which tracks Facebook users when they purchase items from 44 online retailers including Fandango, Hotwire and Over- stock.com. If the user doesn't click a but- ton denying the site permission, Facebook Beacon either displays this information on the site's News Feed, a feature thatupdates users on their friends' activities, or places the purchaser's profile picture next to the purchased item as an advertisement. MoveOn, which focuses its campaigns on privacy and media reform, has an advertising page on Facebook with more than 845 users listed as fans. It also has a Facebook group dedicated to protesting the Beacon feature. The group, which has more than 30,500 members, urges members to sign MoveOn's petition against Facebook Beacon, saying the fea- ture violates consumers' privacy. Facebook spokeswoman Malo- rie Lucich said in an e-mail that 44 websites are currently par- ticipating in Beacon, and the site plans to add more. "Facebook wants to give users the stories that they'll find the most interesting and relevant," she said. "The interesting actions users and their friends take hap- pen both on and off of Facebook. Depending on the privacy set- tings of everyone involved, News See FACEBOOK, Page 7A Ow whi 6a Lunc ian Caff were tr day, wb baseme the res ing In- store. Robe in the A said th 12:45 p. tibles - er and t water h Ann Ar burnini the thi. the buil Thes houses whichv ners don't know There was extensive smoke damage throughout the building. en E. University The fire was discovered by Za's employee Bo Stover, an LSA senior, fe will reopen who said he was taking out the trash when he saw smoke coming By JULIE ROWE out of the basement from under the DailyStaffReporter door. "The smoke was pouring out htime patrons at Za's Ital- of the basement," Za's manager e on East University Avenue Renee Marino said. eated to a surprise yester- Stover told Marino about the hen a fire in the building's smoke as soon as he saw it. She nt forced the evacuation of immediately called the fire depart- taurant and the neighbor- ment and evacuated the restau- N-Out Pizza convenience rant, which was about 75 percent full because of the lunch rush. rt Vogel, a battalion chief "We're lucky it didn't happen nn Arbor Fire Department, at night," Vogel said. "The whole e fire, reported at about building would have gone up in om., was caused by combus- flames." specifically, a plastic cool- LSA freshman and Za's employ- owels - left too close to the ee Jennifer Elledge said she con- eater. Reka Farrackand, an tinued cleaning tables after she 'bor fire inspector, said the heard about the fire. g cooler was responsible for "I wasn't sure if it was serious or ck black smoke that filled not at first," she said. Elledge and ding. other employees then helped cus- second floor of the building tomers box up their meals. offices and a ballet studio, Several flammable items - were also evacuated. See ZA'S, Page 7A A firefighter stands outside Za's Italian Cafe on East University Avenue yesterday after putting out a blaze that caused the building to be evacuated. An official said the fire started with towels left next to a water heater in the restaurant's basement. TODAY'S WEATHER HI: 32 GOT A NEWS TIP? L0: 21 Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. 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