V w v -w- - . 3. - .- . go: Wedesay Mach5,200 -Th Mihian- aiy 3 ABOUT CAMPUS From Page 2B Lowenstein said he has encoun- tered some customers who've been put back by the concept of the can- tina. Common issues, he said, are people who try to buy alcohol after 2 a.m. or who buy several drinks at last call only to have them thrown out by BTB employees at 2:15 a.m. "At 1:45 a.m., if they want to buy 10 drinks and have 8 of them taken, that's their prerogative," he said. Lowenstein said complaints about the cantina's limited bar partly stem from people's unfamil- iarity with tequila. It's a foreign L - -m notion for students who associ- ate the alcohol with Spring Break blunders and licking salt off their arms, but top-shelf tequilas are meant to be sipped and savored. Tequila has only become a gourmet alcohol in the last 20 years, when new aging and mixing techniques brought about a wide breadth of tequila flavors, Lowen- stein said. Two of those tequilas are 1800 Coleccion, priced on the cantina's menu at $230 for a shot, and Gran Patron Bordeos, priced at $85 per shot. A few customers have tried the Gran Patron Bordeos, atequilathat were used to age Bordeaux wines, absorbs flavor from barrels that but the cantina is still waiting on a bottle of the rare 1800 Coleccion. tSo a svA e AT7 er O When the order finally comes in, ) FREE C the cantina will be the only res- taurant in Michigan to offer the PRACTICE tequila, Lowenstein said. A distinguished liquor shelf EST might put the cantina above the F 6typical college dive, but it hasn't e igelHa, quite mastered the Dominick's- LSAT:10O0AM-AUDA -- GMAT : A -AUD C **AiSACCESSIBILITY From Page 4B the accessibility of campus, the disability-rights discussion stalls when it comes to any sort of bot- tom-up movement. Students are especially uninterested and often times ignorant on even the most basic disability issues or courte- sies. "People don't know a lot about what it means to be a wheelchair user," said Rackham graduate so that every row, column student Jolene Pemberton, who ins the igits 1 jto9. is a wheelchair user. t di tO 9.i Although there are fledgling signs of improvement in student g or math involved, groups, there is concern that the attention span of groups on k dcampus is too short to affect any 5 change. Pemberton said that the Uni- versity's Paratransit service, 6 t which offers free door-to-door transportation for students, fac- ulty or staff with disabilities, has "been great," that the office of Services for Students with Dis- abilities was very helpful when she first arrived on campus and that most of the buildings have 9 4 7 accessibility. But other students, she said, are often unsure of how 15 8 to act around her. Since Pemberton is a wheel- 113 5 chair user she needs the acces- sible stall when using the 6 9 bathroom. But students who have taken the stall in front of 6 1 7 her have at times made her wait as long as 10 minutes. Similarly, students love to take the elevator, which is not a problem unless she is in an older building with only R %1,15 Eli. Ve slip g qk --- - --- - ------- QUOTES OF THE WEEK "Um, Medved--Medvedova, whatever." - HILLARY CLINTON, when asked by Tim Russert of NBC News, after her Feb. 25 debate with Barack Obama in Cleveland, to name Vladimir Putin's probable successor to the pres- idency of Russia. Dmitri A. Medvedev won the presidency on Sunday in a landslide victory. "No one likes them." "It's not like it's supposed to mean anything. It's not like I was making out with him or something." - CHELSEA BRANHAM, a 14-year-old student at Shepherd Junior High School in Mesa, Ariz., challenging the school's policy that bans hugs longer than two seconds. The school has always had a "no-hugging" rule, but officials recently began cracking down in response to complaints about hugging and kissing in school hallways style dine and drink experience. LSA sophomore Kelsey Bensch regrets taking her mother there for lunch a few weeks ago. * "There was no one there, but the music was disproportionately loud. And bad," Bensch said. She said the blaring 90's pop that assaulted her and her mother made her think the cantina doesn't easily transition from night to day. one elevator that students over- crowd, forcing her to wait. While these are just inconveniences, they reflect students' obliviousness to the needs of their peers with dis- abilities. Teddy Dorsette, who is a deaf student and the co-chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Dis- abilities Committee, expressed similar concerns. "People have the misconception that we can understand exactly everything that is going on," he said. There is a simple solution, he said: Include everyone in a cohe- sive conversation. After MSA's president resigned in disgrace in December follow- ing revelations that he had created a Facebook group mocking a rep- resentative and making reference to his Aspberger's syndrome, the assembly re-formed its disabilities committee. The committee had been inactive. Undoubtedly, the resurrection of the MSA Disabilities Commit- tee suggests the potential to turn the negative attention into posi- tive action. Dorsette and co-chair Elson Lu seem committed to the task at hand. They also recog- nize that focusing on short-term projects and education, instead of pledging to make campus fully accessible overnight, is a wiser strategy. Lu also told a story that under- scores the personal rewards work- ing for progress on disabilities issues offers. He recalled the time when he was in an upper-level engineering class at the Univer- sity of Arizona and his professor "It's in limbo between being a restaurant and a bar," she said. Bensch is a fan of the bar aspect, though. As a repeatpatron, she said she enjoys the cantina's laidback atmosphere and ample seating. "The biggest appeal is I can go there and just sit and talk and not feel I have to be grinding up on someone," she said. -JESSICA VOSGERCHIAN asked him to be a volunteer note- taker for another student. He said he was inspired by "the fact that it takes so little to help out a student so much." Bernard points out some- thing often overlooked by people without disabilities: Everyone benefits from these resources. No matter if you are riding a bike, walking a stroller or roll- ing a wheelchair, more curbcuts - the places where the sidewalk slants down into the street, forming a ramp - benefit every- one. Elevators benefit everyone. Widescreen computer monitors benefit everyone. "Every single one of us could be that person tomorrow," said Ber- nard. "That is a difficult mirror in which to look." Rackham student Alison Whyte, who is involved with a School of Social Work student affairs task force on disabilities, said many student organizations don't have the patience to fully research the issues before trying to act. "People don't want to be involved," she said. "They want to do something now." on such an issue, which requires a lot of background research, it's tough to keep people's attention because not everyone is on the same page when it comes to their views of disabilities. While disability concerns are still in our campus's collec- tive memory - even if the stories sparking the thought were nega- tive stories - we must seize this opportunity to make this the cam- pus we want it to be. TALKING POINTS Three things you can talk about this week: 1. Public genital-patting in Italy 2. White House aides and their plagiarism 3. Symphonic Diplomacy And three things you can't: 1. Prince Harry's stint in Afghanistan 2. The George W. Bush Presidential library 3. Spring Break tans - MAHMOUD AHMADINEJAD, president of Iran, on Americans serving in the coalition forces in Iraq. The comment came at the conclusion of Ahmadinejad's two-day trip to Iraq, during which he assailed the United States and lauded his country's stronger relations with Iraq YOUTUBE VIDEO OF THE WEEK T-shirt cop threatens skaters with death If the last couple years have taught police anything, it's to avoid acts of brutality when young people with cell phone cameras are around. First, in late 2006, campus police officers at UCLA repeatedly tasered a student after he refused to leave a library. Then, about a year later, a stu- dent at the University of Florida was tasered after he disrupted a speech by John Kerry in a campus auditorium. But Officer Salvatore Rivieri of the Baltimore Police Department appar- ently didn't learn his lesson. He was suspended last month after police saw a YouTube video of him roughing up a young skateboarder in Baltimore's Inner Harbor. After asking a group of teens to stop skating, Rivieri gets mad when one of them calls him "man" and "dude." He grabs the boy by the neck and throws him to the ground. "I'm not 'man,' I'm not 'dude.' I am Officer Rivieri," he says. "The sooner you learn that, the longer you're going to live in this world." Rivieri must have realized what could happen to him. At the end of the video, he asks if he was being record- ed, and the video ends abruptly. "You gotthat camera on? Because if I find myself on -" YouTube. Exactly. - GABE NELSON See this and other YouTube videos of the week at youtube.com/user/michigandaily BY THE NUMBERS Increase in the number of prisoners in the U.S. over the past year Total number of prisoners in the U.S. Average cost, in dollars, to incarcerate a prisoner in the U.S. in 2005 Source: Pew Center on the States THEME PARTY SUGGESTION Melodic group healing - Last week, the New York Philharmonic played a concert in Pyongyang in what many people saw as a thawing of relations between the U.S. and North Korea. Continuing in this tra- dition, you should get all your musically-inclined friends together to mediate any long-standing dis- putes within the group. Fights over girls, unreturned calls, cruel gossiping - it all can be solved with orchestral flourish. Let the overtures begin. Throwing this party? Let us know. TheStatement@umich.edu STUDY OF THE WEEK American teens ignorant of history and literature Fewer than half of American teenagers who were asked general ques- tions about literature and history could answer them correctly, accord- ing to a study released by a research group called Common Core. In conducting the study, researchers contacted 1,200 17-year-olds by phone in January, asking them 33 multiple-choice questions that were taken from a test given by the federal government in 1986. The survey found that fewer than half the students knew when the Civil War occurred, and one-quarter thought Christopher Columbus made his journey to the New World after 1750. In addition, only a quar- ter of students could identify Adolf Hitler as Germany's chancellor dur- ing the Second World War. on the literature section, only four out of 10 students could identify the name of Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man" after hearing a brief sum- mary of it. But about 8 in 10 students correctly chose the title of Harper Lee's "To Kill A Mockingbird" after hearingthe story's premise. - BRIAN TENGEL