EIie Midigan &aiI )NE-HUNDRED-NINETEEN YEARS OF E IL FREEDOM Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, March 31, 2009 michigandaily.com CREAMED CORN CONSTRUCTION UNDERAGE DRINKING Bill to alter MIP laws proposed KRISTA BOYD/Daily To celebrate Greek Week, members of the Team Iron Man pose with their winning canned food sculpture. The Canned Food Castle contest pitted members of campus sorori- ties and fraternities against one another to see who has the greatest architectural prowess with creamed corn, green beans and crushed tomatoes. To compete, members of the sorority and fraternity groups had to bring in a minimum of 250 cans to build their castle. The entries were then judged by kids from the Peace and Neighborhood Center. ANN ARBOR'S NATIONAL BOOKSELLER Tough day ahead for Borders Plan would protect underage drinkers who bring sick friends to hospital By BENJAMIN S. CHASE Daily StaffReporter Under current Michigan law, underage party-going students who bring a drunk friend in need of medical attention to a hospital are fair game to be charged with a minor in possession. But state Sen. Liz Brater (D-Ann Arbor) introduced a bill in the Michigan Senate last week that could change that. Senate Bill 408, which is being considered by the Senate Judi- ciary Committee, would protect minors who seek help for individ- uals in need of medical attention as a result of excessive alcohol consumption - regardless of age. Though Brater said she hopes the bill will help save lives and keep minors from fearing the repercussions of calling 911 or taking a friend to the hospital, she added the bill is not designed to excuse underage drinking. "The bill is very narrowly con- structed. It physically allows a safe harbor for a minor in pos- session who goes for medical assistance for another minor in possession in need of medical assistance," Brater said. "It in no way allows underage drinking and it does not condone underage drinking." Though this is Brater's second attempt to get the bill through the Michigan legislature, it comes several months after 134 college presidents and chancel- lors expressed their support for the Amethyst Initiative - which called for a reconsideration of the national drinking age of 21 - as a means of cutting down on under- age binge drinking. According to the U.S. Depart- ment of Health and Human Ser- vices, more than 1,700 college students between the ages of 18 and 24 die every year from alco- hol-related causes. The statistics also show that more than 12 per- cent of people between the ages of 18 and 20 have alcohol depen- dencies. Brater said the bill is not designed to encourage minors to drink, but rather to protect those who make the mistake of consum- ing too much and putting them- selves in a potentially dangerous situation. "We want to make sure that people in need of medical care are able to receive it," Brater said. Dr. Jeffrey Desmond, the emer- gency medicine service chief at the University of Michigan, told the Daily in2007that University Hospi- tal does not have a policy of contact- ing police when underage drinkers seek medical attention. Desmond added that police are only contact- ed if there is evidence to suggest See DRINKING, Page 7 Company expected to release weak fourth quarter report today By MATT AARONSON Daily StaffReporter Ann Arbor-based book giant Borders Group Inc. will release its fourth-quarter earningsreport after the market closes this afternoon. Anticipation for the report is high in the midst of financial turmoil for the once-dominant retailer. Borders management will address investors and analysts in a conference call tomorrow at 8 a.m., where it is expected that officials will outline the company's new business strategy. Already facing sliding sales and a daunting debt load, Borders tried to find a buyer and failed last March. In early January, shortly after revealing that sales for its usually stellar 9-week holiday period were down 11.7 percent from the previ- ous year, the company replaced its CEO and a number of other high- level managers. With the economy working against them, the new team has so far struggled to turn things around. Since the beginning of the year, nearly 900 Borders employees have lost their jobs. The company has also announced several store closings, including high-profile locations in Chicago on Michigan Avenue and in downtown Detroit. Borders Group stock, which traded mostly in the $20 to $25 range between 2004 and 2006, has been on the decline since. The stock closed at $.65 per share yesterday, and is facing the possibility of del- isting from the stock exchange. At the annual meetingscheduled to be held in May, shareholders will be asked to approve a reverse stock split, which would consolidate individual shares to increase value See BORDERS, Page 7 THE STUDENTS' ADMINISTRATOR After long search, 'U' names dean of students Valuing flavor, Comet Coffee hones its craft one cup at a time Year-long process ends with selection of former U. of * Oregon official By CAITLIN SCHNEIDER Daily News Editor More than a year after it began searching for a new dean of stu- dents, the University named Dr. Laura Blake Jones to the position. Pending approval by the Board of Regents - simply a procedural step - Blake Jones will become the associate vice president for stu- dent affairs and dean of students. Blake Jones is currently the interim dean of students at the University of Oregon. In a press release, Vice President for BLAKE JONES Student Affairs E. Royster Harper said Blake Jones is well prepared for the job. "Dr. Blake Jones brings a wealth of experience in student affairs and leadership," Harper said. "Michi- gan students and the University will benefit from her previous involvement in emergency and critical incident management, stra- tegic planning and diversity educa- tion and support." The selection of Blake Jones fol- lowed a second round search by the advisory committee, which failed to find a candidate to fill the spot last year. At the time, a number of candidates visited campus to inter- view, but no hire was made. The committee resumed its efforts in October with the help See DEAN, Page 7 EXPLAINING THE RECESSION In subprime lending meltdown, 'U' professor faults statistical models Each cup ofjoe at Nickels Arcade shop is made to order By ANNIE THOMAS Daily StaffReporter Joining the ranks of specialty stores in Nickels Arcade, a recent- ly opened coffee shop is brewing something new for Ann Arbor and taking the city's mass-produced coffee scene head on. Touching on his 16 years of experience asa barista, Ann Arbor native Jim Saborio, owner of two- week-old Comet Coffee, brings an individual focus to his new estab- lishment, brewing each cup as customers order it. "Comet Coffee is just about tak- ing a real quality focus on coffee and not making any compromises in terms of that," Saborio said. Compared to traditional coffee- brewing methods, Saborio takes more of a scientific approach, using Asian traditions to hand brew each cup to perfection. Inthetealwalledshoplastweek, Saborio said that even though he isn't completely sure of the exact method behind the Asian brewing concept, he improvises and learns along the way. The coffee is prepared using water at precise temperatures and filtered through porcelain cones imported from Japan. According to Saborio, the concept of brew- ing each cup individually allows Customers near the recently opened Comet Coffee in Nickels Arcade. Reliance on hard data painted inaccurate portrait * of loan applicants By VALIANT LOWITZ Daily StaffReporter One University professor claims he has identified a main culprit of the housing collapse at the center of the country's current economic crisis. In a study, Uday Rajan, an associ- ate professor of finance at the Ross School of Business, found that the statistical models used by banks to assess which loan applicants may default on their loans played a para- inount role in undermining many of this country's financial institutions. In determining which loan appli- cants would likely default on their loans, Rajan found that many of these models relied too heavily on 'hard' information (credit scores, etc.) as opposed to 'soft' informa- tion (situational factors in the appli- cant's life). Rajan's study concluded that models tended to rely so heavily on hard information because it was thought to be more credible than soft information when risky loans were repackaged and sold to investors. See SUBPRIME, Page 7 the coffee to hold its more subtle flavors. The process begins by grind- ing the beans and placing them in a wet paper filter. Inside of the porcelain cones Saborio uses hot water heated to 204 degrees, a temperature he says home coffee brewers rarely reach, and pours it slowly over the grounds. At first only a little water is poured over the grounds, allowing the water to infuse with the coffee preventing a weak cup. A stream of the water is then poured over the grounds, stirring the coffee as it slowly drips into the cup below. From bean to cup, the process takes about four minutes. Because of the individual brewing meth- od, the coffee has no hold time between creation and consump- tion. This is where the store most radically differs from mass brew- ers - including Starbucks - who hold coffee for up to 24 minutes. "Most coffee shops will take coffee and put it into some ther- mal carafe or something that holds it at a certain temperature without adding heat," Saborio said. "I find that within 15 minutes a lot of the more delicate notes in the coffee will start to wither away." Looking at the coffee in the fil- ter, Saborio explained that coffee aficionados can read signs about See COMET, Page 7 WEATHER HI: 51 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail TOMORROW LO: 36 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ON MICHIGANDAILYZC6M Reward now $1,000 for info about W. Quad arson MICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEWS................... 2 ARTS..................................5 Vol. CXIX, No.120 SUDOKU ...........................3 CLASSIFIEDS ...................... 6 ©2009TheMichigan Daily OPINION... . . 4 SPORTS.................. . ..9 michigondailycom I i