The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, April 16, 2010 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Executive Patterson withdraws lawsuit on Oakland County smoking ban Oakland County Executive L. Brooks Patterson on yesterday backed off on a legal challenge against the state over funding for enforcement of a smoking ban that's set to take effect May 1. The lawsuit was filed with the Michigan Court of Appeals, but Patterson shortly afterward decid- ed to withdraw it because of oppo- sition to the move from more than 100 residents of his county, which includes Detroit's northern sub- urbs. "I work for the people of Oakland County and through their c-mails and phone calls they have unani- mously told me they are opposed to the lawsuit," Patterson, a Repub- lican, said in a statement yesterday afternoon. Patterson said he supported the smoking ban to keep the pub- lic from being at risk from the ill effects of secondhand smoke but described the law as an unfunded mandate and wanted a court order for funding. PORTLAND, Oregon Oregon rules that workers can still be fired for medical marijuana use The Oregon Supreme Court has ruled that workers can be fired for using medical marijuana even if they have a card from the state pro- gram authorizing its use. The case involves a worker in Eugene who was fired after telling his boss before taking a drug test that he was using medical marijua- na approved by his doctor. In a 5-2 opinion, the court said state law is trumped by federal law that classifies marijuana as a drug with no proven medical value. A dissenting opinion said federal law did not bar Oregon from setting its own policy on medical marijuana. The ruling overturned a state Bureau of Labor and Industries decision that said the employer had to make a reasonable accommoda- tion for a worker with a physical or mental impairment. WASHINGTON Supreme Court refuses audio in upcoming case For the first time in four years, the Supreme Court has gone an entire term without granting the quick release of audio recordings of high-profile arguments. The court said Wednesday it has rejected a request from four broad- casters for the same-day audio in an important First Amendment case next week that pits a Christian campus organization against the University of California's Hastings College of the Law. With television cameras and reporters' tape recorders barred from the court, the availability of audio provides the public with a chance to hear the justices at work. The last time the court provided audio the same day as an argument was in September in a key case about limits on campaign spending by corporations and labor unions. PARIS Official confirms * French bishop hid sexual abuse case A letter confirmed by the Vatican shows top Holy See official in 2001 congratulated a French bishop for shielding a priest convicted of rap- ing and sexually abusing minors. The Sept. 8, 2001 letter from Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, then the head of the Vatican office in charge of priests, praised bishop Pierre Pican for risking prison time to defend the Rev. Rene Bissey. French Catholic publication Golias published a copy of the letter on March 30. The Vatican has faced accusations of secrecy that allowed priests to rape and molest children unchecked for decades. Vatican spokesman the Rev. Fed- erico Lombardi yesterday called the letter "proof" that cases of sexual abuse of minors must be handled by the Congregation of the Doctrine of Faith. They have been since 2001. - Compiled from Daily wire reports REGENTS From Page 1 At the signing ceremony, Haas said the partnership will help the schools continue to offer benefits to Michigan. "We have wonderful diversity and we're providing(what) the state needs, and that's an educated work- force, citizens for this state and citi- zens for this nation and the world," Haas said. "So I'm very thrilled to see how this collaboration is going and I know there will be others alongthe way." Because GVSU doesn't have a pharmacy school, the agreement willallowstudentstopursueoptions they didn't necessarily know about, Frank Ascione, dean of the Univer- sity of Michigan's College of Phar- macy, said in a press release. "This program allows the U-M College of Pharmacy to tap into a new pool ofin-state talent," Ascione said in the release. "At the same time, it creates opportunities for outstanding Grand Valley students who may not have considered this to be a possible career path." WEBSITE From Page 1 roommate, possibly with the aid of uroomsurf.com or other roommate finding sites. While developing the new pro- gram, officials consulted LSA Student Government and the Resi- dence Halls Association. LSA-SG junior representative Adam London worked on the proj- ect last year and said LSA-SG's role in the project provided input from a student perspective. "It was certainly a collabora- tive process," he said. "University administrators at all levels were very willing to meet with LSA-SG to discuss nuances of the plan." The resulting University pilot program acts as a self-contained networking site, allowing users to send and receive messages and to create personal profiles based on their responses to a survey. However, unlike other online social networking tools, the Uni- versity process still maintains some degree of "blindness." Stu- dents are given anonymous iden- tification numbers instead of being labeled by name. They can choose to give out personal information only after messaging anonymously with another user. University Housing spokesman COUNCILS From Page 1 members. The largest IFC organi- zation - Alpha Epsilon Pi - has roughly 150 members. Moreno-Koehler wrote that holding events boils down to a "numbers game" but shouldn't prevent both organizations from workingtogether. "Past and current e-board mem- bers from IFC and MGC have started to work together to cre- ate relationships and educate each other so that functions can and willihappen inthe future with little logistical problems," he wrote. But Moreno-Koehler wrote that members of both councils now have definite plans to have more joint events in the near future. "Since a huge part of being in Greek life is community ser- vice/philanthropic activities," Moreno-Koehler wrote. "New members and e-board members from both councils feel that participating in a day of com- munity service involving the Greek Community would allow us to help out and build future Serving Ann Arbor since 1980 The firstcgroup of GVSU students will be admitted to the program in the fall of 2011. This agreement marks the first of its kind made by the College of Pharmacy, though the University has already made a similar partnership with GVSU. An agreement reached in 2009 allows University students graduating from the School of Kinesiology to enroll in GVSU's master's degree program in occupational therapy. LEO REPRESENTATIVES ADDRESS REGENTS Two representatives from the Lecturers' Employee Organization spoke to the regents yesterday at their monthly meeting regarding different aspects of the ongoing contract negotiations between the union and the University. Elizabeth Axelson, the lead nego- tiator for LEO and a lecturer in the English Language Institute, spoke pointedly against potential pay cuts for lecturers. If enacted, she said, the University would be slashing the lecturers' salaries, which she said are already too low. "Minimum salaries are $30,000 Peter Logan said this system allows students to portray themselves free from social pressure, in a way that other sites don't allow them to do. "Facebook pages are not always the best judge of a real personal- ity," Logan said. By eliminating all external fac- tors like photos and other media, the process allows students first to find people they are compatible to live with and then to learn every- thing else about them. In addition to the anonym- ity, the University Housing option avoids excessive hobby and interest questions, like music preferences, instead focusing on "background- neutral questions" like study and room organization habits. Michael Zabriskie, director of the Housing Information Office, said the office likes to focus the questions onroominghabitstopre- vent students from seeking room- mates exactly like themselves. "We value the differences that are present within our student population," he said. "And we hope students will take advantage of those opportunities too." Logan said the questions are constructed to be extremely open- ended, forcing students to be as genuine as possible. "The key thing is framing ques- tions so that you don't predispose students to answer in a certain networks between individuals on each council." Scheduled for the upcoming fall, Greek Community Service Day will be a collaborative effort between all four Greek groups - IFC, MGC, Panhellenic Associa- tion and the National Pan-Hellenic Council. Moreno-Koehler added that events like the community service day allow Greek life organizations to work together to "showcase the positive impact" the Greek com- munity has on the University. Friedman echoed Moreno- Koehler's sentiments, writing that the difficulty with both organi- zations is not their ability to co- sponsor events but rather that a in Ann Arbor, $26,000 in Dearborn and $25,000 in Flint," Axelson said. "The median fulltime lecturers sal- aries is $44,000 - this is less than new, inexperienced, high school teachers with master's degrees. It's also less than the national aver- age as reported by the AAUP. They announced $53,112." Axelson said LEO is proposing an annual 3-percent, or $2,000, pay raise, which she said in 10 years would bring lecturers' salaries to the median salary of professors at the University, minus monetary gains from research. Catherine-Daligga, a laid off lec- turer, spoke tothe regents on behalf of LEO Vice President Kirsten Her- old, who was ill.University officials decided not to reappoint Herold earlier this month, much to the cha- grin of LEO. Daligga discussed how lecturer layoffs, which result in fewer dis- cussion sections for classes, make it more difficult for undergraduate students to fulfill their distribution requirements and force them to take upper level courses for which they are ill prepared. "This winter time for the first way," he said. Another important element of the University service is that it doesn't automatically match stu- dents, instead implementing a "self-selection process" that asks students to browse other profiles before making a selection. Zabriskie said instead of click- ing a single button and generating a roommate, students embark on a search that forces them to reflect on what behaviors they truly can and cannot live with. "We're not looking for anything like eHarmony where you click, and we find the perfect match for you," he said. He added that another advan- tage of the self-selection process is that students are more involved in the process, which strengthens the relationship between roommates. "If they feel like they've been invested in the process they'll try harder to make it work," he said. Despite past measures to revamp the roommate system, Logan said the pilot program is the Univer- sity's first "controlled effort" at involving social networking tools in University Housing because it statistically measures the effec- tiveness of the project. This week marked the fourth data collection from participants in the program, comparingits success with a population of students who large number of opportunities for "collaborative programming" are overlooked. He added that the chapters in each council work on independent levels with a different set of rules and regulations issued by the two disparate governing bodies. "This is a significant barrier that prevents collaborative social events between chapters in dif- ferent councils," he wrote. "If an individual chapter feels they'll benefit in terms of manpower and resources by partnering with another organization, they'll often reach out to a fraternity within their council." Past event collaborations between the IFC and MGC time in my eighteen years of teach- ing here, we experienced serious shortages of 100 and 200 level courses in LS&A," Daligga said on behalf of Herold. "For the first time ever, first year winter writing courses were completely full, with students waitlisted even for classes that met Mondays at 8a.m." She continued, "Yet, no further sections were open. This left most lecturers with a reduced load - two, instead of three, courses - and students having to delay their first year writingcourses until their sec- ond year. We saw the same picture across the college." LEO representatives and Univer- sity officials meet weekly to negoti- ate the contract. According to an article in The Michigan Daily last month, the parties hope to reach an agreement by the end of May. REGENTS APPROVE THE TRANSFER OF FORD ESTATE The regents authorized the trans- fer oftheHenryFord Estate-Fairlane tothe Edsel and Eleanor Ford House. Donated to the University by the Ford Motor Company in 1956, the did not participate from the same key demographic. Zabriskie said the program was offered to upperclassmen during housing sign-up this year, with about 200 participants, though it is still in the process of being evalu- ated. "We don't want to not offer the service while we're figuring out if its effective or not," he said. "If nothing else we are offering stu- dents more options, which I think is always good." While the program is being assessed, University Housing offi- cials said they still are unsure which population of freshmen will be offered the program next year and how it will be implemented. Uroomsurfcom is a relatively new roommate finder tool simi- lar to the University's pilot pro- gram. The site was created by Dan Thibodeau and Justin Gaither afterthe pair observed hundreds of incoming college freshmen search- ing for roommates on Facebook. "At that point we had an, 'aha!' moment, because we knew there could be an easier way to find com- patible roommates," Thibodeau wrote in an e-mail interview. The resulting site matches incoming freshmen based on their responses to a survey that includes topics like "hygiene, spiri- tuality and study/party time split." include Greek Week, Greek Awards Night, Taste of Michigan, the Greek Life t-shirt and the flyer mailed to incoming first-year stu- dents over the summer. Events like these, Friedman wrote, are part of a recent trend as previous council members have Ford Estate, and a subsequent gift of $6.5 million, allowed the Uni- versity to establish the "Dearborn Center" that evolved into the Uni- versity's Dearborn campus. The Dearborn campus pays over $300,000 annually to maintain the estate. If the University had kept the property it is expected that it would have had to pay in excess of $12 million in order to do necessary renovations to the estate's infra- structure and critical buildings. The University will transfer the estateto the Ford House, which will operate the estate like a museum. The University will not receive any type of payment for the transaction, Timothy Slottow, executive vice presidentand chief financial officer, told the regents. "The transfer of the Henry Ford Estate to the Ford House is expected to enhance program partnerships and to promote shared initiatives of the University and the Ford House," Slottow wrote in a letter to the regents. "In addition, the Ford House will commit to raising suffi- cient funds to enhance the steward- ship of the property and to achieve this level of museum practice." Users can choose to enhance their uroomsurfcom profiles by upload- ing profile photos or videos and by including additional information about their hobbies and interests. Students make official room- mate requests through their schools' housing systems after beingmatched. The site launched on Feb. 1, 2009, and attracted 3,000 users by the end of its first day. The counter at the bottom of uroom- surfcom's homepage continues to click upwards as thousands more students sign up each week. As of April 9, 2010, uroomsurfcom boasted more than 45,000 users and networks from over 700 col- leges and universities. Thibodeau wrote that the posi- tive response to uroomsurfcom has been overwhelming. "We get e-mails almost every day from students thanking us for creatingthe site," he wrote. Of the site's current users, 364 are incoming University of Michi- gan freshmen. Handschuch said she first heard about uroomsurf. corm from others in the accept- ed University student Facebook group. "I haven't made an account, but I checked it out briefly to see what it was about," she said. "If I hadn't already found someone to live with, I'd definitely consider using it." shied away from joint projects in the past few years. "There's been no grassroots pull for such initiatives," he wrote. 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