The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 17, 2011--- 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, February 17, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING, Mich. Gov. Snyder names new director of Michigan DELEG Gov. Rick Snyder has appointed the managing partner of a Detroit law firm the new director of the Michigan Department of Energy, Labor and Economic Growth. The Republican governor said in a statement yesterday that Ste- ven Hilfinger of the Detroit office of Foley & Lardner LLP will begin serving Feb. 28 and replaces Andy Levin. The statement says Hil- finger is an expert in corporate acquisitions, restructurings and regulatory affairs. Like Snyder, Hilfinger is a certi- fied public accountant and lawyer. He received his bachelor's degree in 1984 from University of Michi- gan and law degree from North- western University in 1987. Snyder thanked Levin, appoint- ed by former Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm, for his service and says he played an important role during the transition. WASHINGTON, D.C. GOP seeks to cut funds for consumer protection agency The House Republican budget- cuttingbillwould shrink spending for the Obama administration's newly created agency designed to protect consumers who have mortgages, credit cards or use other financial services. The legislation would limit spending for the Consumer Finan- cial Protection Bureau to $80 mil- lion. The agency was created by the financial overhaul law that President Barack Obama and the Democratic-run Congress enact- ed in July. Nearly all Republicans opposed the legislation. Now that they con- trol the House, the GOP is propos- ing cuts in the budgets of agencies that would carry out the new financial regulatorylaw. Without the Republican cuis the consumer protection agency was on track to receive $134 mil- lion this year. Obama has request- ed $329 million for the agency for next year. DENVER, Colo. Rescued lions from Bolivia arrive at wildlife sanctuary Twenty-five lions, most of them rescued from Bolivian circuses, arrived in Colorado on yesterday to start their new lives at a wildlife sanctuary. The 14 males and 11 females landed at Denver International Airport around 4:30 p.m. The jet- liner pulled into a maintenance hangar and police officers armed with assault rifles stood by as a precaution. The animals were rescued from deplorable conditions after a law was passed last year in Bolivia pro- hibiting all performances involv- ing animals, Animal Defenders International said. Most of the lions were dehydrated and suf- fered from eye and foot infections when rescued, the group has said. BANDA ACEH, Indonesia * 129 people fleeing Myanmar found starving in boat Indonesian marine police say they have picked up 129 starving, dehydrated people whose boat engine broke down while they were fleeing Myanmar. Police Col. Muhammad Zaini says fishermen discovered the rickety, 45-foot (14-meter) boat off the coast of westernmost Aceh province and towed it to shore earlyyesterday. He says the passengers - all males belonging to the ethnic Rohingya minority - had run out of food and water and were severely dehydrated and weak. One man-told investigators they were fleeing violence and pressure by Myanmar's government. -Compiled from Daily wire reports ROTC From Page 1A of the bill by Obama, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Con- gress, the U.S. military is begin- ning to educate military members about the LGBT community and foster tolerance in the pre-repeal phase, according to the Depart- ment of Defense website. Jan Malaikal, chair of the Army Officer Education program at the University, said she could not comment on the current pol- icy for treatment of LGBT ROTC members due to the changing nature of the law. LSA sophomore Adam Kouroupas, who is in the Uni- versity's ROTC program, said he hasn't noticed many changes in the ROTC Air Force branch in anticipation of the law. "It hasn't come up, and I think that's a good sign," Kouroupas said. "Everyone here is smart enough to realize that times aren't like they used to be, and things are changing." Kouroupas also said he thinks the University's ROTC would accept any members who revealed their sexual identity. "Our captains always tell us that diversity in the military is the best thing for it," Kouroupas said. "I think (if someone came out) it would be fine. People are afraid of the stereotype...We've been getting up at 5 a.m. together for the past couple of years now. We've gotten pretty close, so I don't think that would change anything." Ariana Bostian-Kentes, the University's Spectrum Center programming coordinator, said she thinks little will change within military operations if DADT is certified. "I think that the day that it's actually repealed is going to be a non-event," Bostian-Kentes said. "I don't think that there's going to be any sort of mass comings- out. I think the only thing that will really change is that they'll have one more class on some sort of diversity training." Bostian-Kentes said her for- mer partner was a member of the U.S. military. In her experience, Bostian-Kentes said many ser- vicemen and servicewomen have already disclosed their sexual- ity to close co-workers and even larger groups of people within the service. "(This) is not something that's new and radical," Bostian-Kentes said. "A lot of people knew about me. I attended two military balls as her date, and we did not catch a lot of flack for it. The bottom line was that she did her job well, and that's what mattered." David Halperin, a W. H. Auden Distinguished University Prof. of the history and theory of sexual- ity, said when he was teaching at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the 1980s, he learned of a gay student who was kicked out of ROTC for reveal- ing his sexual orientation after enrolling in the program. "The ban on non-heterosex- uals serving openly in the U.S. military is one of the last instanc- es of formally institutionalized homophobia at the federal level," Halperin said. "There has never been any coherent reason provid- ed for kicking non-heterosexual people out of the military or pre- venting them from serving." To help solve any potential problems, Bostian-Kentes said she is planning to offer the Spec- trum Center's resources to the ROTC program and the signifi- cant others of any ROTC mem- bers. "Military partners are even more invisible than LGBT active duty service members," Bostian- Kentes said. "I'm looking ahead and seeing that there is room for programming around that." Halperin added that the repeal would also affect the scholarship guidelines of ROTC programs on all college campuses if the pro- gram is open to gay or lesbian members. "People who want to take advantage of ROTC scholarships to finance their college education will be able to do so regardless of their sexual orientation," Hal- perin said. "There will no longer be a certain kind of inequality written into law." BORDERS From Page 1A Borders will continue to allow customers to use gift cards and its Borders Rewards program, according to the press release. John Pottow, a professor at the University's Law School, said Chapter 11 bankruptcy involves a reorganization of the debts of a company. "You get a protection from all your creditors so they can't sue you for not paying your debts," Pottow said. "You get to hide for about a year or so." Edwards will be able to con- tinue to run the company, Pot- tow said, but on behalf of Borders Group's creditors rather than its shareholders. The money the company has borrowed from GE Capital should help Borders with financ- ing while executives accomplish their reorganization plan, Pot- tow said. He added that the reor- ganization plan is like a "haircut on debt," in which Borders agrees to pay its creditors a fraction of what they owe. "Bankruptcy is not good," Pot- tow said. "Some people are going to lose their jobs." Keith Taylor, coordinator for the University's Undergraduate Creative Writing Program, was an employee at Borders from 1981 to 1989. He worked at the first store brothers Tom and Louis Borders opened on State Street in 1971. Taylor said the initial Borders store was a unique concept and was very popular. "The whole idea of a book superstore was brand new," Tay- lor said. "In the early ages, Bor- ders was one of the first ones." Taylor said he left Borders because he felt uncomfortable with the company's corporate atmosphere. He said he thinks that starting in 1985, the book- store began to make poor busi- ness choices which ultimately led to the company's downfall. "They ruined themselves," Taylor said. "They made all the wrong decisions." Taylor said he feels no sym- pathy for the store because of its financial troubles. "It's a junk store now," Taylor said. "It doesn't deserve to live." He added that he's concerned about the financial security of the book industry in general. "The book business has changed entirely," Taylor said. "The music business disappeared almost overnight; it's taking the book business a lot longer." LSA senior Aneka Kaul said she is upset that Borders and other bookstores are having fis- cal issues since more people are buying books online. Kaul, who grew up in Ann Arbor, added that the Arborland Borders store has sentimental value to her. "I've been going there since I was little," she said. SUSTAINABILITY From Page 1A letter. Rackham student Devi Glick, who studies in the School of Natural Resources and Envi- ronment and isa member of SSI, said she hopes the letter will encourage Coleman to further her commitment to sustainabil- ity. "Coleman is always saying that she wants to hear what the students want, she wants to see students work for something," Glick said. "She's not going to go out and initiate it if there isn't demonstrative student sup- port." The letter doesn't make new propositions, Glick said, but instead pushes for the Univer- sity to take stronger stances on current sustainability opera- tions throughout campus. "We took the goals that are already being discussed, and this letter basically encourages them to be aggressive and bold with whatever they want these goals to be," Glick said. "The value added in this letter wasn't something new, it was us say- ing, 'Don't just do what you're on track to do, but do something that really shows leadership."' Glick said the organization has been successful so far in generating support for sus- tainability efforts on campus. She credited the SSI's involve- ment with the yearlong Cam- pus Sustainability Integrated Assessment project, which is a combined effort between the SSI, the Office of Campus Sus- tainability and the Graham Sustainability Institute to eval- uate sustainability on campus. At the end of the semester, the partnership plans to present a recommendation reportto Cole- man on how to improve the Uni- versity's sustainability efforts. Glick said the SSI is hoping the letter will benefit from the "momentum" and "involve- ment" generated by the Inte- grated Assessment project. Glick said the group's letter isn't meant to be critical of Uni- versity administrators, but it is intended to further the University's commitment to sustainability. "The tone of it is complete- ly positive because (Coleman) responds to positiveness and student encouragements, so we're not going to write a let- ter that's negative or critical because that's not the correct venue, and that's not how we see it," Glick said. Glick said Coleman's sup- port is vital to foster the growth of a more sustainable campus. "A lot of the changes that are needed are operational things at the University," she said. "Those aren't things that a club would raise money for. Those are things that the University has to provide the money to do." The organization's letter will demonstrate to Coleman that students are passionate about sustainability efforts, Alexan- der said. "I think what President Cole- man is looking for is a well- rounded look at sustainability, so that it's not just the faculty or the operating people on cam- pus, but that it's also the stu- dents that are involved," he said. "So I think this letter will be very effective in showing thai we've had this broad coopera- tion between the major groups on campus." SIGN UP ONLINE TO RECEIVE THE DAILY'S N EWS LETTERS Breaking News Weekly in Review Michigan Football Around Ann Arbor Daily Arts Weekly GEtUfta 1 Adobe Now Available at the t-M Computer Showcase - ;showcase.tes.wnlch.edu Central Campus - Michigan Union North Campus - PierpontCommons