2A - Monday, March 29, 2010 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.cam 41 2A - Monday, March 29, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 6 TUESDAY: Professor Profiles WEDNESDAY: Before You Were Here THURSDAY: FRIDAY: Campus Clubs Photos of the Week 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com JACOB SMILOVITZ DAN NEWMAN Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-647-3336 734-764-05a8 smilevitz@michigandailycom rmdbusiness@grnaitcom " A L.IGHTT AOF HOPE At Cornell, fences added to bridges Temporary fences are currently being installed along campus bridges at Cornell University in response to the suspected suicides of three Cornell students earlier this month, The Cor- nell Daily Sun reported on March 24. In addition to the fences, the arti- cle reported that security guards will be stationed by the bridges until about April 2. Security is expected to increase when students return to cam- pus from their spring breakthis week. "(They'll only be) in place until a longer-term solution is ready to be implemented," Cornell spokesperson Simeon Moss said in the article. According to the article, the three students that died earlier this month are thought to have committed sui- cide in Fall Creek Gorge. PROTESTERS CAUSE LECTURE CANCELATION Numerous protests forced conser- vative activist Ann Coulter to leave CRIME NOTES Apple computer Ve stolen from Val Bursley IT site WH WHI WHERE: Bursley Residence WH Hall was 1 WHEN: Friday at about 6 p.m. Univ WHAT: An Apple computer It wa was stolen from the Bursley item< Residence Hall computing site, then University Police reported. It suspE was stolen sometime between Mar. 23 and Mar. 27. There are no suspects.La Pills pilfered La from Hospital WH W HI WHERE: University Hospital WH. WHEN: Saturday at 1 p.m. wass WHAT: Vicoden was stolen Quas from the University Hospital, Mar. University Police reported. repo There are currently no suspects. no st her speaking engagement at the University of Ottawa, according to a March 24 article in the Fulcrum. Several activist groups, including the Student Federation of the Univer- sity of Ottawa, were responsible for the protest, according to the article. Shortly before Coulter was scheduled to speak, protestors pulled the venue's fire alarm. The event was canceled because it was deemed "physically dangerous," according to the article. "It is an embarrassing day for the University of Ottawa," Canadian con- servative activist Ezra Levant told the Fulcrum. UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS MAY REMOVE GUEST HOURS The Residence Hall Association at the University of Texas at Austin recently passed a resolution to allow guests to stay in student dormitories at all hours, according to a March 23 article in The Daily Texan. Bobby Jenkins, RHA president at UT and sponsor of the legislation, said in the article that the current policy deters students from living in residence halls on campus. According to the article, residents cannot have guests between midnight and 9 a.m. on weeknights and 2:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. during the weekend. "We're not able to compete with off-campus entities or attract return- ing students to the dorms because of this policy," Jenkins said. Some students said they weren't pleased by the new resolution. "People will be louder, people will stay longer...people may not report violations," Minae Noh, the president of Kinsolving Residence Hall Council, said in the article. The article reported that the RHA is currently trying to convince UT. officials to adoptthe new policy. - NEETHISRINIVASAN CONTACT INFORMATION Newsroom office hours:Sun.-Thurs.117.m. -24a.m. - 734-763-2459 News Tips news@michigandaily.com Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Letters tolthetEditor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Photography Department photo@michigandaily.com Arts Section artspage@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com SportstSection sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales display@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classified@michigandaily.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaity.com Finance finance@michigandaity.com EDITORIAL STAFF Matt Aaronson Managing Editor aaronson@michigandaily.com Jillian Berman Managing News Editor berman@michigandaiy.com ENIO sEWS TnTORS kicole Aber, Mallory Jones, Stephanie Steinberg, Kyle Sanssohn, ha hj,,nv,kkaasu ASSISTANT NEWS'EDITORS: Dylan Cinti, Darryn Fitzgerald, Joseph Lichterman, Veronica Menaldi, Annie Thomas, Devon Thorsby, Elyana Twiggs Rachel Van Gilder Editorial PageEditor vangilder@michigandaily.com SENIOR EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS:BrianFlaherty, ErikaMayer, Emily Orley, Laura ASISTANTEDITORIALPAGEEDITORS:MichelleDeWitt,Alexschiff,MatthewShutler Ryan Kartje Managing Sports Editor kartje@michigandaily.com SENIOR SPORTS EDITORS: Nicole Auerbach, Mark Burns, Gon Juncaj, Chris MeszarosJoe Stapleton ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS: Michael Florek, Alex Hermann, Ryan Podges, Zak Pyzik,TimBohan,Amy Scarano Jamie Block ManagingArtsEditor block@michigandaily.com SENIOR ARTS EDITORS: Carolyn Klarecki, Andrew Lapin, Jeff Sanford ASSISTANT ARTS EDITORS: Leah Burgin, Sharon Jacobs, Emma Jeszke, Mike Kuntz, KaviShekharPandey Max Collins and photo@michigandaily.com Sam Wolson ManagigPhtEditos SNIORHOO EDTO RORULTIMEDIA:ChanelVon Habsburg-Lothringen SENIOR PHOTO EDITOR: Ariel Bond ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITORS: Aaron Augsburger, Jake Fromm, Marissa McClain, SarahSqure and designmichigandaiy.com AnnaLein-Zielinski ManagingDesignEditors SENIOR DESIGN EDITOR: Allison Ghaman Trevor Calero Magazine Editor calero@michigandaily.com DEPUTY MAGAZINE EDITOR: Allie White Melanie Fried and copydesk@michigandaily.com Rachel Phillips CopytChiefs MIA MARINO/Daily The Alliance For Justice conference ends in a candle light vigil on the Diag Friday. To read more about the event check out michigandaily.com/blogs/The Wire. CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES nding machine Lecture on nrdalism transitionh ERE: Mason Hall Shakespeai EN: Friday at 3:30 a.m. AT: A vending machine WHAT: Royal Shak broken into overnight, Company Director C ersity Police reported. Doran and Sir Anthc is unclear whether any a British playwright s had been stolen from and director, will sp machine. There are no transitioning Shakes ects. from the stage to the WHO: Office ofthePi to lifted in WHEN: Tonight at 7 WHERE: Blau Audi w Quad Women's se ERE: Law Quad health semi EN: Saturday at9 a.m. AT: A caller's MacBook stolen from the Law WHAT: Victor Hola d between Mar. 26 and at the University Ho 27, University Police will discuss women' rted. There are currently health as part of Pris uspects. work Health Awarer Prison politics ng and policy panel re at Ford School espeare Dreg ony Sher, , actor eak on peare escreen. resident - ':30 p.m. torium xual nar a, a nurse spital, s sexual de Net- ne ss eLibraries 4:30 Hospitals WHAT: A group of experts will discuss the Michigan Prisoner ReEntry Initiative. WHO:Ford School ofPublic Policy WHEN: Tonight from 7 p.m to 10 p.m. WHERE: Palmer Commons CORRECTIONS 0 A Mar. 26,2010 article in The Michigan Daily ("MForward's Armstrong elected MSA president") incorrectly stated the number of grievances filed against MForward. There were six grievances. " Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michi- gandaily.com. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev) acci- dentaly voted against the health care reconciliation bill on Thursday, The Washington Post reported. Reid quickly realized his mistake and cor- rected the error. Yesterday's win by the Michigan women's bas- ketball team in the WNIT marks the first time the Wol- verines have advanced to the semifinals of anynational tour- nament. FOR MORE,SEESPORTSMONDAY,lNSIDE Apple has run out of iPads, CNNMoney.com report- ed. The shipping date for pre-ordered iPads was pushed back from April 3 to April 12. Customers who had previously, pre-ordered the devices should get theirs on schedule. BUSINESSSTAFF Katie Jozwiak sales Manager SAsLES FORCE MN~AGER: Mlly Twigg MARK EGMANAGER: Michaechotenboer Ryan BUsinski Classiied Manager CLASSIFEDeoASnSIATMANAGER:KlayLaata Jason Mahakian Production Manager Allison Santacrea Layout Manager Vivian Lee Finance Manager Brittany Morales circulationManager Brad Wiley Project Coordinator The Michigan Daily (SSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and wintertermsbystudentsattheUniversityofMichigan.onecopyisavailablefreeofcharge toal readers. Additionalcopiesmaybe pickedupat theDaily'sofficefor$2.Subscriptionsforfall term, starting in September,viaU.S.mailare$110. Winterterm(Januarythrough April)is$115, yearlong (September through April) is$195.University affiliatesaresubject toareduced subscription rate. On-camps subscriptioenfs 1 sermares 5Subcriptien sunst be prepaid.TheMichiganDaily ia membersofTtheAssooted Press and Tie Asscited Collegite Pres. 0 MORE ONLINE Love Crime Notes? Get more online at michigandailyxcom/blogo/the wire Week 2010. WHO:HealthScience WHEN: Today from p.m. to 5:30 p.m. WHERE: University' Lawyer wants to question Pope Benedict XVI under oath Documents reveal Pope may have hid molestation case ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - Jeff Anderson has filed thousands of lawsuits alleging sex abuse by priests and won tens of millions of dollars for his clients, but he has had a bigger goal in mind for nearly two decades. He wants to bring his career-long legal crusade against misconduct in the Roman Catholic Church right to the top. He would love to question Pope Benedict XVI himself under oath. Though that is extremely unlikely given that the pope is a head of state, documents Anderson has unearthed have the potential to take a scandal that has plagued dozens of dioceses around the world and place it at the doorstep of Vatican leadershio. The documents, which became publicly known in the past week after Anderson shared them with The New York Times, show that a Vatican office led by the pope, then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, halted a church trial against a Wisconsin priest accused of molesting some 200 boys at a school for the deaf. "This is a tipping point," Ander- son said. He found the documents in handling one of the dozens of lawsuits he has pending against various church officials, and hopes to use them to bolster a separate federal lawsuit against the Vatican itself. Since 1983, Anderson and the five other attorneys at his down- town St. Paul firm have sued thou- sands of Catholic priests, bishops, and dioceses over allegations of sexual abuse by priests and other church leaders. He claims to have no idea how much he has won in settlements: in 2002 he estimated that it was around $60 million. "It's not about the money," Anderson told The Associated Press. The self-described "former athe- ist" who rediscovered faith in God through his recovery from alcohol- ism professes a deep empathy with abuse victims - he calls them "sur- vivors." More than a decade after his legal battles with church officials began, Anderson's adult daughter revealed that as an 8-year-old she was molested by a therapist she was seeing as Anderson and his first wife were going through a divorce. The therapist, Anderson said, was a former Catholic priest. Anderson, 62, said the pain of that revelation "brought another dimension to the experience." But he said he concluded years earlier that the responsibility for shuffling around problem priests and cover- ing up their indiscretions would extend to the Vatican. "I came to the stark realiza- tion that the problems were really endemic to the clerical culture, and all the problems we are having in the U.S. led back to Rome," Ander- son said. "And I realized nothing was goingto fundamentally change until they did." The Wisconsin documents tie Benedict, who as cardinal led the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, to the deci- sion in the mid-1990s not to defrock the Rev. Lawrence Murphy despite allegations that the Milwaukee priest molested some 200 deaf boys from 1950 to 1975. The Vatican is defending that decision, saying the case reached the Vatican only in 1996, two years before Murphy died. Church offi- cials also say Murphy had repented in a letter to Ratzinger, and that the case's statute of limitations had run out. They decry criticism over the case as an effort to smear the pope. The Milwaukee lawsuit does not name Pope Benedict or other Vatican leaders as defendants, but Anderson hopes to use it to bol- ster a separate lawsuit filed eight years ago in U.S. District Court in Oregon. In that case, an unidentified plaintiff claims he was sexually abused as a teenager in 1965 or 1966 by the Rev. Andrew Ronan at St. Albert's Church in Portland, Ore. According to court documents, Ronan was accused of abusing boys in the mid-1950s as a priest in the Archdiocese of Armagh, Ireland. He was transferred to Chicago, where he admitted abusing three boys at St. Philip's High School, and after that was sentto Oregon. The church removed Ronan from the priesthood in 1966. He died in 1982. The lawsuit says the Vatican had to approve the international .~1 DUGIDE WHAT -uES NER The Michigan Daily Advertising Design Department is hiring a Layout Designer. Applicants should have a knack for spacial relationships and a distinct attention to detail. Experience with Adobe InDesign is a plus. Begin this summer and work a couple hours every weekday. E-mail mahaklaj@umich.edu transfer. The Holy See claims it is protected by the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, which prohibits U.S. lawsuits against foreign coun- tries. Several lower courts have pro- duced differing rulings on the suit, and the Holy See has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to settle the question. The high court has not decided whether it will hear the case. Anderson said his legal team will attempt to use documents from the Milwaukee lawsuit to show the Vatican was heavily involved in decisions about how to deal with problem priests. Legal scholars have long been skeptical of Anderson's chances of penetrating the Vatican's foreign sovereignty. He said it may be diffi- cult to persuade judges to consider documents from another lawsuit, but added that he feels "closer than we've ever been before." "If there's anyone to press this case, it's Jeff," said David Clohessy, national director for Survivors Net- work of those Abused by Priests, a longtime ally of Anderson. "Jeff doesn't get sole credit, and he wouldn'tclaimit, buthewas among the very first to see the magnitude of this cover-up and is still among the most dedicated to its undoing." Jeffrey Lena, the Berkeley, Calif.-based attorney for the Holy See in the Oregon case, declined to comment for this story. Andrew Eisenzimmer, a lawyer for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, has sparred frequent- ly with Anderson and declined to be interviewed. In earlier inter- views with the AP, he described Anderson as "prone to exaggera- tion" but also said he's been unde- niably successful. Anderson has always had a flair for the public relations aspect of his work, and a visit to his office the day after the Milwaukee story broke found him fielding interview requests from numerous media outlets as lawyers and researchers combed through documents on the large, dark wood table in his office. Anderson was raised Lutheran and his first wedding was in the Catholic Church, though he said his spiritual journey no longer involves church attendance. His office, however, is full of religiously symbolic art and sculpture, as well as items salvaged from churches - including a kneeler and confes- sional booths. H0RH i i