The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - 5 W LAWSUIT From Page 1 against the HathiTrust Digital Library - of which the Univer- sity is an inaugural member - the University of Wisconsin, the University of California, Indiana University and Cornell Univer- sity. In a statement released Fri- day on the University Library's website, the University acknowl- edged that there were "a number of errors, some of them serious" with the Orphan Works Project. "Having learned from our mis- takes - we are, after all, an edu- cational institution - we have already begun an examination of our procedures to identify the gaps that allowed volumes that are evidently not orphan works to be added to the list," the state- ment said. "Once we create a more robust, transparent, and fully documented process, we will proceed with the work." In an interview with The Michigan Daily last week, Paul Courant, the University's dean of libraries, said the library's use of COLEMAN From Page 1 important decisions about the endowment and how to manage the endowment," Coleman said. "(We've been) smart about the investments made, but this envi- ronment is going to force us to act like a private institution." Coleman reported an aver- age 9-percent annual return on investments for the endowment over the past 10 years, despite suffering a negative 23-percent return in 2009. In fiscal year 2010, the University experienced a 12.3-percent return on invest- ments. Coleman emphasized the importance of a strong endow- the scanned books was not in vio- lation of copyright law. "We're not using these books in any way that competes with the use of the marketplace," Cou- rant said. However, the Author's Guild - a non-profit organization that supports the legal rights of authors - published a blog post. on its website last Wednesday that said the guild had located one of the authors included on the list of orphan works to be released by the University. The author, J.R. Salamanca, is a professor emeritus at the Uni- versity of Maryland. The Author's Guild wrote in the blog that Sal- amanca wrote two successful books that were made into mov- ies - starring Elvis Presley and Warren Beatty - and will soon have one of his books rereleased as an e-book. The Author's Guild reached out to Salamanca's son and his liter- ary agent, neither of whom knew that his work was to be included in the Orphan Works Project. "(Salamanca's son) told us that he, too, hadn't heard of the HathiTrust Orphan Works Proj- ect and was stunned to learn that his father's first book was set to be released online to hundreds of thousands of students," the blog states. The University Library state- ment said the University will con- tinue to work with the authors and publishers to ensure the proj- ect is a success. "The widespread dissemina- tion of the list has had the intend- ed effect: rights holders have been identified, which is in fact the project's primary goal," the statement reads. "And as a result of the design of our process, our mistakes have not resulted in the exposure of even one page of in- copyright material." Paul Aiken, executive director of the Authors Guild - the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit - said in an interview with the Daily last week that the authors are asking for an injunction to remove the copyrighted works off the Inter- net until Congress establishes a firm policy regarding digital libraries. "Security is a top concern," Aiken said. "These works do not belong to the universities." 1960s activist, SDS president Carl Oglesby dies at age 76 Oglesby known for anti-Vietnam War speeches By HALEY GLATTHORN Daily StaffReporter Renowned 1960s activist and University alum Carl Oglesby, who was best known as an orator and a leader in protests against the Vietnam War, died last week at the age of 76. Oglesby's friend, Todd Gitlin, told The Associated Press that Oglesby was battling lung can- cer that had expanded into other parts of his body. He died last Tuesday in his home in Mont- clair, N.J. Oglesby attended classes at the University in the early 1960s while working for a defense con- tractor. He came into contact with University activist group Students for a Democratic Soci- ety in 1964 and was so passion- ate about its message that he soon became the organization's president. Tom Hayden, a University alum, activist and former Michi- gan Daily editor in chief, said Oglesby joined SDS when the Vietnam War was beginning to garner greater national atten- tion. "He was an important fig- ure in the anti-war movement," Hayden said. "He was not just an activist but a serious intellectual (and) a serious writer. More than anything else, (he was) a special- ist in words." On Nov. 27, 1965, Oglesby gave one of the mostly widely recog- nized speeches of the era at an anti-war rally in Washington D.C. During his speech, titled "Let Us Shape the Future," Oglesby criticized American political leaders by saying, "good men can be divided from their compassion by the insti- tutional system that inherits us all." Oglesby was 30 years old when he joined SDS, and Stephen Selbst, a former Daily writer who wrote an article on former SDS leaders in the 1970s, said many of the organization's members con- sidered Oglesby a mentor. "He was like the older states- man," Selbst said. "Most of the people he was dealing with were students, so he was half a generation older. Many of the students sort of looked up to him as the grandfather (of the group)." Hayden said 1965 marked the start of Americans "questioning the draft and questioning the war," and Oglesby captured that doubt in his speeches during his term as SDS president and after. The anti-war movement that SDS began at the Univelsity in 1960 later spread throughout the country and pushed SDS into the national and media spotlight as a symbol of student empower- ment. However, Hayden said by 1968, the organization had become irreconcilably divided and came to an end shortly thereafter. "People like Carl were wound- ed by that because they had invested their lives and their careers by taking years of time and devoting it to a cause that was embodied by an organiza- tion," Hayden said. "So when the organization fell apart, they were wounded. It took a long time to recover." Oglesby's later accomplish- ments include teaching at Dartmouth University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology and publishing sev- eral books, including a memoir in 2008. Hayden said Oglesby will be most remembered for his speeches that compassionately encompassed the anti-war per- spectives of the time. "I don't think he'll be remem- bered for an organizational contribution or having changed public policy. I think he'll be remembered and referred to as a voice of a generation," Hayden said. "Not the only voice, but the particular voice of SDS and its opposition to Vietnam." ment to fund faculty projects. "What keeps me awake at night (is) generating the money that we have to have to fund fac- ulty ideas,"Coleman said. "The faculty always has more great ideas than we have the (money to fund). That's the end all, be all for me." Coleman added that the state cannot regulate the organization of the University's endowment - unlike funding regulations at other institutions like the Uni- versity of North Carolina. The endowment at UNC is regulated through "35 budget lines" that manage funding for various ben- eficiaries within the university. Additionally, the number of out-of-state students admitted to the University is unrestricted by the state, which Coleman said is unusual for a public university. The ratio of in-state to out-of- state students at the University has traditionally been 65 percent to 35 percent since 2004. Full-time undergraduate LSA students from out-of-state are paying $18,794 per semester this academic year, while Michigan residents with the same provi- sions are paying $6,220, accord- ing to the University's Office of the Registrar website. "Our hands are not tied," Cole- man said. "(However), there may be political realities. We wouldn't want to go to 70 percent out-of- state because that would be seen as an affront to the state, but right now I think we're in a very advan- tageous position." FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @MichiganDaily, @MichDailySports, @MichDailyFball, @MichDailyArts, @MichDailyOped 'LIKE' THE DAILY ON FACEBOOK 06 party for the planet! Tuesday, September 27 Central Campus Diag Noon - 4pm THEY TOOK IT TO THE SUPREME COURT AND WON! Join us for free food, giveaways, activities, and -5 Our students shepherded a case through the lower courts and on to the nation's highest, stunning the immigration world with a unanimous decision. Hands-on training is a large part of what we do at the University of Houston Law Center. But it's just part of what we offer. The Law Center combines the best of all worlds: . Excellence in education with multiple "Top Ten" specialty programs . Reasonable tuition and fees . 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