6A - Tuesday, November 2, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6A - Tuesday, November 2, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom BARS From Page 1A ders." A new drunk driving law took effect over the weekend, which increased legal consequences for drivers caught with a Blood Alco- hol Concentration above 0.17. While police use breathalyzers to measure a person's level of intoxication, bar employees can only use their own judgment. BTB provides a party bus to trans- port patrons home. As part of his TAM training, Wilson said he gives intoxicated patrons water and time to sober up before leaving. He said he also talks to friends of the intoxi- cated customer and the management at Good Time Charley's-- a bar locat- ed beneath BTB - to make sure the patron is cared for and does not seek drinks downstairs. School of Public Health gradu- ate student Christopher O'Rourke was at BTB Friday night and said "there's a strong divide" between the South University Avenue bars, where undergraduate students frequent, and Main Street bars, where gradu- ate students tend to go. "I would say that around here, in the undergrad area, they are much more unlikely to cut off someone, and I've seen many people that should be cut off that are not cut off," O'Rourke said. University Law School student Matthew Zita, who is friends with O'Rourke and was at BTB Friday, said he agrees that bars don't inter- vene when they should. "I probably should have been cut off a couple times and have not been," Zita said. "I've never seen anybody get thrown out." Kyle Froelich, the night manager at Charley's, said the bar doesn't have a specific policy for cutting off intoxicated patrons, but employees use their discretion. Charley's head bartender Michael Pangbornsaid patronsafetyis a"con- stant thing" on his mind. Accord- ing to Pangborn, Charley's staff - including bouncers, bartenders and managers - may cut off about 30 intoxicated patrons on abusynight. "We don't want to have people here that are too drunk in here,"Pan- gborn said. "It's just bad business." Katie MacDonald, a bartender at The Brown Jug on South University Avenue, said that balancing business and safety is an issue. "You don't want to lose a custom- er, but you don't want someone to get sick," MacDonald said. MacDonald said she and the rest of the bartendingstaff at The Brown Jug are certified by Training for Intervention Procedures - another state-approved program that pro- vides alcohol service education. MacDonald said staff usually have to cut off about one patron each week- end. "It's South U., so you're going to have a lot of drunk college kids," MacDonald said.. Chris Hesse, Rick's American Caf6 bar manager, said Rick's takes a different approach when it comes to intoxicated patrons. Hesse said the staff is certified by ServSafe - another alcohol service program approved by the state - and is told to keep intoxicated people from enter- ing Rick's. "The biggest thing for us is stop- ping those people before they get in the bar," Hesse said. Engineering graduate student Chris Schoeps, who was at The Brown Jug Friday night and was dressed as a penguin for Halloween, said the bar is one of his favorites in Ann Arbor. Schoeps said the South University Avenue area is "dominat- ed by undergrads." Rackham graduate student Erik Ventura was dressed as a caveman and sat next to Schoeps at the bar. "I could arguably say that the SouthU.areaisalittlebitmorerowdy than for instance Main Street," Ven- tura said. He said he thinks some patrons aren't cut off when they should be, but that it happens "everywhere." VOTE From Page 1A cal activist and wife of United States Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.), who is currently up for re-election. Demo- cratic candidate for the Univer- sity's Board of Regents Paul Brown, Democratic candidate for Attorney General David Leyton and Brenda Lawrence, Democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor, also spoke at the rally. The candidates spoke to an almost full Pendleton Room, liven- ing up the crowd and generating cheers from the audience. Dingell spoke abouther anger over polls that are already claiming Democrats will lose a larger number of seats across the country. "Are you outraged like I am about the polls and how everybody thinks the votingstarted three months ago and everybody writing off what's going to happen already?" Dingell asked the crowd. "We cannot let that be the story." Dingell argued that Republi- cans who claim President Barack Obama's administration has failed to help the ailing economy are ignor- ing the job growth and economic stimulus that has occurred since he took office, when the nation was in a dire state. She said voters must elect Democrats in order to continue pro- pelling Obama's agenda forward. "We've just begun," Dingell added. "Are we going to let (the Republicans) go backwards?" Dingell lauded the importance of community and unity within the Democratic Party and scoffed at Republicans who have tried to cre- ate schisms within the party. "Community is the strength of democracy," Dingell said. "One of the things that I dislike the most about this election is the way the Republicans have tried to divide us. It's not right." Warren, the state Senate candi- date, highlighted the importance of the student vote and encouraged students to use social networking to encourage friends to vote. She said all efforts leading up to tomorrow have "been a practice round" and tomorrow determines which poli- cies will actually be enacted. "What we do now sets the course for the next decade," Warren said. "We need a Democrat in the gover- nor's mansion. We need Congress- man John Dingellbackin Congress." Chair of College Democrats Brendan Campbell said the group's intention in planning the event was to generate excitement and give stu- dents more information about the candidates before they went to vote. "We thought there's no better way for studentsto get excited about voting - and voting for Democrats - than bringing in these candidates onto campus," Campbell said. Democratic contenders in this year's election view student voters as a crucial part in winning their seats, Campbell said, and look at campus events as opportunities, to show student voters why they are important to the state and how the Democratic Party aims to serve them. "They know that students are the key for Democrats to win tomor- row," Campbell said. "Without student support and the support of young people across the state, Dem- ocrats face a much more difficult road." Recent polls have shown that Republican candidates in Michi- gan are expected to win many key offices in the state, most prominent among them is the race for the gov- ernor's mansion that pits Republi- can candidate Rick Snyder against Democratic candidate VirgBernero. Campbell said these polls aren't necessarily accurate because they fail to include student voters, who are often left out because they are believed to have a low tendency to vote in non-presidential elections. "When you look at polls, you have to recognize a key distinction," Campbell said, "and that's that a lot of these polls are using likely voter models that are based off the fact that students and young people will not turn out to vote tomorrow. " "I think if students come out strong for Democrats like they did in 2008, we're going to see polls at the end of election night wildly different from the polls right now before the election," Campbell added. Republican gubernatorial can- didate Rick Snyder and Republican lieutenant governor candidateBrian Calley spoke to College Republicans earlier in the evening. In addition, Republican Secretaryof State candi- date Ruth Johnson and Republican candidate for Supreme Court Jus- tice Mary Beth Kelly were among those in attendance. Charles Bogren, chair of the Uni- versity's chapter of College Repub- licans, said the candidates focused their speeches at the rally on how best to fix the issues plaguing the state rather than placing blame on anyone. "They don't want to focus on the blame or the problems, they want to focus on the solutions," Bogren said. "And they were talking about what they're going to do once they're in office to fix the state of Michigan, to reinvent the state of Michigan." "It's a really positive message and it's something they're going to bring to Lansing in January," Bogren added. Bogren said while he supports the College Democrats rally last night and their other get out the vote efforts, he thinks their attempts to garner support are futile as demon- strated by their losing projections the latest political polls. "I think it's too little too late for the Democratic ticket," Bogren said. "It's great that they're having a rally, I just think it's sort of alittle party for the end of their campaign because they're not going any farther." Bogren said tomorrow's elec- tion will provide an opportunity for students to elect Republican candi- dates who will reverse problems he believes were created by the Obama administration. He said an increase in Republican power in the U.S. Sen- ate and House of Representatives would be a major step toward re- establishing a more traditional form of government. "The best way to save our genera- tion, to save our country, is to vote in fiscal conservatives," Bogren said. "People who want to restore gov- ernment back to it's traditional and proper role, which is to stand beside you and help you, not stand in your way and tell you what to do:' "It should be a great day for Republicans in Ann Arbor and on campus," Bogren added. STUDY From Page 1A Ybarra added that the findings of his study can be relevant on a daily basis. "I think the cognitive outcomes that we studied are very basic in the sense that they are useful in problem solving and daily life," he said. "These outcomes are a core ingredient in our ability to prob- lem solve." Irene Yeh, a Rackham and School of Social Work Ph.D. stu- dent and research assistant for the study, echoed Ybarra's comments in an e-mail interview. "By understanding the mech- anisms through which our sociality influences general cog- nition, we can develop strate- gies that incorporate the mental benefits of social interactions in problem-solving, education, and mental fitness interventions," Yeh wrote. 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