* The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT DSO, musicians reach agreement to end strike On the six month anniver- sary of the walkout by Detroit Symphony Orchestra musicians, management and union bargain- ers said yesterday that they have reached tentative agreement to end the long strike. The deal, which was reached after a weekend of lengthy talks, is subject to a ratification vote this week, said musicians' spokesman " Greg Bowens. If approved, he said Detroit Federation of Musicians union members with the national- ly acclaimed but financially strug- gling orchestra could be back at work by this weekend. Bowens and orchestra spokes- woman Elizabeth Weigandt said details of the terms weren't being immediately released. Rehears- als are to resume Thursday in advance of concerts this weekend. LANSING Parents accused of beating 73-year- old crossing guard Two Lansing parents are due in court on accusations that they beat a 73-year-old school crossing guard after he tried to break up a fight between their 6-year-old son and a 7-year-old classmate. Police say the boys got in a fight at Lyons Elementary School last Wednesday. Police say the next morning, the parents told their son to beat the other boy. Police say the couple's son threw a punch, knocking the boy to the ground. When James Thompson intervened, police say the couple attacked him. Twenty-nine-year-old Shareka McKinney and 26-year-old Darell Livingston are charged with assault and battery and contribut- ing to the delinquency of a minor. House GOP plans third stopgap bill to avoid shutdown With budget talks deadlocked, * House Republicans readied a week-long bill to cut spending by as much as $12 billion while averting a government shutdown threatened for Friday, officials disclosed Monday night. The measure also would include enough money to operate the Defense Department through the Sept. 30 end of the fiscal year, the officials added. They said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, told the rank and file in a closed-door meeting he would seek passage of the bill if it became clear it was necessary to avoid shutting the government down. He presented the plan at the end of a day marked by increasing acrimony in negotiations involving the Obama administration, Senate Democrats and Republicans. SANAA, Yemen At least 15 dead after police shoot at Yemeni protesters Military forces and police snipers opened fire yesterday on marchers calling for the ouster of Yemen's embattled president, killing at least 15 people and sending a strong message of defi- ance to U.S. and European envoys seeking to broker a peace deal after months of bloodshed. The melee in the southern city of Taiz - part of an intensifying crackdown on the opposition - underscored the resolve of Presi- dent Ali Abdullah Saleh to cling to power even as protest crowds resist withering attacks and cru- cial allies switch sides and call for his 32-year rule to end. It also showed the challenges facing behind-the-scenes diplo- matic efforts to quell the nearly two-month-old uprising in a nation that Washington considers a frontline battleground against al-Qaida's most active franchise. -Compiled from Daily wire reports BOARD From Page 1A community and its issues." Lampe moved to Ann Arbor in 2007 when he was hired as the University's vice president of communications from 2007 until now. Before joining the Univer- sity, Lampe worked at Harvard University Business School as the executive director of market- ing and communications. University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald said he doesn't think Lampe's duties with the Uni- versity will affect AnnArbor. com's coverage of the Univer- sity because Lampe won't be involved in editorial board dis- cussions pertaining to campus affairs. Fitzgerald added that he thinks it is important for the University to better connect with the Ann Arbor community, and Lampe's new position will help facilitate that. Tony Dearing, the chief con- tent organizer for AnnArbor. com, said other University facul- ty have served on the paper's edi- torialboard inthe past, including David Canter, executive director of the North Campus Research Complex, who was the director of health care research at the ONE From Page 1 on campus." She said the procla- mation will serve as a means to expand the group's programs in the city. "I think it's a really good step toward broadening our outreach beyond (not) just campus, but to the entire Ann Arbor city," Par- rish said. "It's good to know we have a public official's support." PANHELLENIC AND MSA REPS. ADDRESS COUNCIL ABOUT LIGHTING ISSUES In light of increased crime in off-campus areas, two repre- sentatives from the Panhellenic Association and the Michigan Student Assembly Student Safety Commission were present at city counciltodiscuss their concerns regarding street lighting near campus. In their addresses to council, LSA senior Katie Rosenberg, for- mer Panhel president, and LSA sophomore Stephanie Hamel, vice chair of the MSA Student Safety Commission, appealed to the city to work with the Uni- versity and Greek community to improve lighting on and near campus. Rosenberg and Hamel serve on the Student Safety Commis- sion, which was recently formed by MSA to work with University administrators and public safety officials to increase campus safe- ty, and encourage awareness of resources on campus. Rosenberg said two recent armed robberies in the Oxford area have raised concern in the Greek community, since 13 fra- ternities and sororities are locat- ed in the neighborhood. She said Panhel and the Interfraternity Council have allocated funding for fraternities and sororities to install lights on trees in the areas University's William Davidson Institute at the time. "It's always been true of board members that they do not participate in any topic in which they would have any personal or professional conflict of interest," Dearing said. Fitzgerald said Lampe's deci- sion to serve on the editorial board is a personal issue. "People engage in their com- munities on a lot of different lev- els," Fitzgerald said. "Whether it's a short-term assignment like this on an editorial board or sit- ting on a board of directors for a non-profit organization, those are all individual decisions peo- ple make about how they want to use their time and how they want to engage in the commu- nity." Lampe could not be reached for comment after several attempts by The Michigan Daily. Dearing said Lampe was approached to be part of the editorial board because he brings insight as a former jour- nalist. Dearing wrote in an e-mail interview that members are invited to join the editorial board based on their involve- ment in and knowledge of the Ann Arbor community. "He brings an interesting surrounding their houses. Hamel told council that the city had already replaced stan- dard street lights in areas sur- rounding South Forest Avenue, Hill Street, Packard Street and Wells Street in a collaborative effort with DTE energy. She added that the venture is project- ed to save the city about $5,500 in annual costs. Hamel asked council to con- sider an additional contract with DTE that would replace Oxford's lights with LED lighting. Hamel noted that because LED lights are brighter, they can better illu- minate areas. "Money spent in this invest- ment to convert the lights would go a long way in both making students feel safer walking at night in that area and making dark neighborhoods brighter for motorists," Hamel said. In an interview before the meeting, Rosenberg said while it would be ideal to add new light fixtures to the area, budget con- straints and a current city mora- torium deters the installation of new streetlights. Hamel said the DTE part- nership overcame those barri- ers because DTE subsidized the streetlight installations. She said student organizations like MSA would be willing to aid a project to replace lights in other areas including Oxford. "We just want to see some- thing happen in the area," Hamel said. CITY COUNCIL REJECTS PROPOSAL FOR HOTEL AND CONFERENCE CENTER While an underground park- ing garage is stillunder construc- tion at 319 South Fifth Ave., what will be built above the structure is yet to be determined. Council voted to reject a letter of intent from New York-based development group Valiant Part- voice to issues that we discuss that have nothing to do with the University," Dearing said. "If we were to discuss a topic that had anything to do with the Uni- versity, he would not be at that meeting or be involved in that process at all." In addition to his experience in public relations, Lampe has masters degrees in journalism and mechanical engineering. Dearing said AnnArbor.com maintains a "firm difference" between news coverage and editorials, and board members aren't paid for their work. He added that the public has expressed concerns about conflicts of interest regarding AnnArbor.com's editorial board members in the past. However, Dearing said board members always recuse themselves from discussing a topic or organiza- tion they are involved in. He cited former board mem- ber Bob Guenzel, who was a Washtenaw County administra- tor. Guenzel wasn't involved in the deliberations on editorials about the Washtenaw County commissioner, Dearing said. Likewise, Dearing said Lampe's presence on the board won't influence news coverage of the University. ners, which proposed to build a hotel and conference center on the property. Several members of the pub- lic addressed the council on the subject, and many demanded that the area be made into a pub- lic space, like a park, rather than developed by a private company. City Council member Chris- topher Taylor (D-Ward 3) said he was dissatisfied with the pro- posed hotel and conference cen- ter. "The process has borne a fruit that we're not interested in con- suming," Taylor said. City Council member Sandi Smith (D-Ward 1) said she sup- ported the resolution to reject the proposal, noting that the city needs to be careful in accepting proposals by developers. "When you put something out to the market in the worst possible times-you're going to get somebody who's going to respond in a way ... they're going to see what they can get," Smith said. "They're testing the waters to see how desperate we are." Hieftje said University offi- cials expressed no interest in using the proposed building's facilities and that a lack of Uni- versity involvement would give the proposal "a very low chance of being successful." In response to community members who appealed to coun- cil to make the area a public space, Hieftje said the city cur- rently has 157 parks with a com- bined acreage that surpasses the entire land area of the University campus. He said because of the unusually high value of the prop- erty, it is important that the city continues to look toward private developers. "The reason for that final resolve clause is to let people know that this isn't the place for a vast park covering that piece of land," Hieftje said. FOIA From Page 1 Scarnecchia distributed a let- ter from John Dowling, senior university legal counsel at the University of Wisconsin, to Stephan Thompson, the mem- ber of the Wisconsin GOP who filed the records request for Cronon's e-mails. The letter out- lined what criteria Dowling was planning to include in the FOIA request. Scarnecchia said Michigan's FOIA law is different from Wis- consin's in terms of what infor- mation can be exempted, since in Michigan information in e-mails considered "private," "prelimi- nary" or "advisory" would be blocked out in response to a request. Following her presentation, SACUA members and guests voiced their concerns about what the records request meant for University faculty. SACUA Secretary John Lehman, a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, asked Scarnecchia if she knew how far back the University's e-mail archive went and if faculty mem- bers were expected to search the entire system for the request. Scarnecchia responded that the amount of e-mails saved varies among schools and that time and funding restrictions make the amount of searching necessary to respond to each record request different. Peggie Hollingsworth, presi- dent of the Academic Freedom Lecture Fund, said at the meet- ing the situation is reminiscent of McCarthyismbecause the records requests is intended to find out if Cronon had violated a Wisconsin law barring state employees from using state-funded resources, like their work e-mail, for partisan political reasons. "I don't think you can talk about academic freedom without talking about freedom of speech," Hollingsworth said. SACUA Chair Ed Rothman, a University professor of statistics, motioned for the committee to submit a recommendation to the Civil Liberties Board at the Uni- versity in response to the FOIA- request that will express their feelings on the matter. Other SACUA members seconded the motion. "If we let this simply slide by Tuesday, April 5, 2011 - 3 we will not be serving our com- munity well," Rothman said SACUA DISCUSSES POTENTIAL CHANGES TO TRESPASS RULES Scarnecchia also distributed a summary of the University's cur- rent trespass policy and a set of proposed changes to the policy to members at yesterday's meeting. She said she was reviewing the policy at the request of Univer- sity President Mary Sue Coleman following several recent high- profile cases, including former Michigan assistant attorney gen- eral Andrew Shirvell's ban from some University premises follow- ing his alleged stalking of Michi- gan Student Assembly President Chris Armstrong. According to Scarnecchia, the University issued an estimated 2,000 trespass orders over the last decade, one of which was the alleged forcible resigna- tion of former University Prof. Andrei Borisov - a case in which SACUA's Faculty Hearing Com- mittee issued a 55-page report last year claiming University offi- cials had violated Borisov's rights and academic freedoms. Scarnecchia said trespass orders are only issued to individu- als affiliated with the University under "exceptional" circumstanc- es when safety is threatened. SACUA Vice Chair Gina Poe, an associate professor of anes- thesiology and molecular and' integrative physiology, said she thinks the proposed 30-day time lapse before an individual issued a trespass order can appeal the charge should be shortened because University employees can't be away from their work for 30 days without facing serious setbacks. Scarnecchia said there is not currently a time set for request- ing an appeal and a shorter peri- od is negotiable. However, policy allows for a review of the issued trespass order within 24 hours, during which the decision can be speedily overturned. Rothman said speediness is not the only issue he has with the current appeal process. He said he dislikes that the appeal goes through the chief of the Depart- ment of Public Safety and sug- gested that a small committee be formed for "expeditious" and "confidential" overturn of tres- pass issues. WILL YOU BE IN ANN ARBOR THIS SUMMER? COME WRITE FOR THE MICHIGAN DAILY E-mail bethlb@michigandaily.com to join the staff. Tuesdays Are South Of The Border erma!Slf~ielleiaclcoSpcifAllDNight $2.50 Tequila Sunrise & Vodka Drinks 25-,Of f Mexican Fare All With NO COVE!R 4 U D 1U' 5 Obama launches bid for 2012 re-election President is ignored and even Obama himself only makes a fleeting announces appearance. What the cam- paign wanted voters to see candidacy in video instead were people like them speaking of real-life concerns WASHINGTON (AP) - and their faith in Obama, No longer the fresh voice of against wholesome backdrops change, President Barack in every clip: a church, a farm, Obama embarked on a bid for a family in a kitchen, an Ameri- re-election Monday by asking can flag. a divided, anxious electorate to Yet this time around, Obama let him finish the job he won in carries both the benefits and 2008. He's getting an early start baggage of being the establish- against a Republican field that's ment candidate. still undefined, but he's saddled The president now owns an with an ailing economy that economy that is adding jobs still isn't working for millions but still leaving millions of of voters people without help or work. Obama began with an effort As the incumbent, he can blow to recapture his outsider's into town on Air Force One, touch of 2008, bypassing a pub- draw unparalleled free media lic statement from the White coverage and command all the House in favor of an email sent other perks of the presidency. to millions of supporters. But he must also remobilize He offered a kickoff video his coalition and reenergize it, in which official Washington too, including getting back the independent voters who swung Republican in last year's mid- term elections. Obama ran once on hope. This time he will run on his record as well. That means voters will eval- uate him on what he has gotten done, including laws to reshape health insurance and Wall Street behavior, and the prom- ises he has not delivered upon, including immigration reform and closing the prison at Guan- tanamo Bay, Cuba. A huge part of his chal- lenge will be to spark the voter inspiration that often got lost in the slog of governing. His new campaign video gave a nod to the challenge. A woman named Alice from Michigan said: "We're paying him to do a job. So we can't say, 'Hey, could you just take some time off and come and get us all energized?' So we better figure it out." 4 A A