6 - Tuesday, October 25, 2011 STREET From Page 1 the education, enforcement and engineering around creating a more pedestrian-friendly commu- nity," Hohnke said. "I think this is a useful request to ask staff to explore some new alternatives." Due to changing technology in pedestrian crossing mechanisms, Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje and Hohnke said they are looking forward to seeing the proposals the staff is expected to develop and share with the council later this fall. They both expressed their support to explore alterna- tives to the current High-inten- sity Activated crossWalK - an overhead lighting system acti- vated by a button on the sidewalk - which is installed at several intersections throughout the city. The current law states that drivers must stop and yield for pedestrians approaching or with- in a crosswalk, as outlined in an ordinance adopted by the city in The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com July 2010. Council member Sabra Briere (D-Ward 1) stressed the importance of clarifying the use of "approaching" in the ordi- nance due to the ambiguity that she feels it creates. "That language is too vague for people to feel comfortable about what to do," Briere said. Briere also brought up the issue of having a bus stop near a cross- walk, which poses a threat for pedestrians since drivers cannot determine whether individuals are attempting to cross a street or waiting for a bus. Council member Marcia Hig- gins (D-Ward 4) said she appreci- ates the resolution, which might help to prevent dangerous situ- ations like the one she said she witnessed a few weeks ago at the intersection of Crest Avenue and West Liberty Street. "I had been on a cross street watching a person wait and saw a motorist stop on one side of the street and almost get hit and have people honking horns and shoot- ing out around them... and yet the (vehicles) coming from the other side never stopped because they hadn't seen that pedestrian yet," Higgins described. Initiatives for increased safety measures for pedestrians in the city have been a major concern in previous years, especially in light of a tragic incident in which two University students, Teh Nan- nie Roshema Roslan and Norha- nanim Zainol, were killed when they were struck by a vehicle while crossing Plymouth Road in November 2003. Their deaths instigated an ini- tiative by City Council to improve crossing safety. A new traffic signal and medians were con- structed two years later at the intersection of Traverwood Drive and Plymouth Road. Council member Stephen Kun- selman (D-Ward 3) said he felt there were other areas in the city where safety measures should be improved for pedestrians, such as Packard Street, and added that he would ask the staff to consider these areas as well. Pro-life and pro-choice groups debate issues of abortion in the Michigan Union last night. Las Vegas still fumes over 2-year-old Obama remark President counting on Nevada in re-election LAS VEGAS (AP) - President Barack Obama has a Sin City problem that won't go away. Obama is counting on Nevada's support for re-election next year. He easily won the Las Vegas Val- ley in 2008 and will probably win the largely Democratic, urban center again next year. But some Nevada state officials and residents of this economical- ly ravaged state have been fuming over comments they perceived as rants against the tourism indus- try since he first made them two years ago, and Republicans are hoping that fury will pointvoters in their direction. The friction resurfaced as Obama visited a Las Vegas neigh- borhood Monday as part of a nationwide tour to sell his jobs plan. The stop came as Repub- lican presidential candidates, business titans and former Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman maintain that Obama has twice disparaged Las Vegas tourism - this Western swingstate's largest employer. The jabs are notable because casino-dependent Nevada has the highest unemployment rate in the nation, and Obama can't afford to have voters blame him as his Republican rivals try to convince the nation that they would do a better job of turning the stalled economy around. Nevada's unemployment remained steady at 13.4 percent last month. "He said it more than once," said former Nevada Gov. Bob List, a national Republican com- mitteeman. "You can't un-ring the bell. You have to live with what you say. It just shows a lack of understanding of the engine that drives the state." The feud began in 2009, when Obama admonished corporations using federal bailout money: "You can't go take a trip to Las Vegas or go down to the Super Bowl on the taxpayer's dime." A year later, Obama warned families against gambling away college tuition: "You don't blow a bunch of cash in Vegas when you're trying to save for college." The call for financial respon- sibility didn't sit well with some Las Vegans, and Democratic and Republican lawmakers in Nevada all lashed back at the time. From Page 1 "Human development begins at fertilization and does not stop at birth," LSA sophomore Joe Lipa, a member of Students for Life, said. The discussion was heated during the 90-minute debate. Both sides expressed frustra- tion about the complex argu- ment concerning the definition of life and the rights of both women and fetuses. While speaking about the illegality of abortion, LSA junior Dakota Hadfield, a mem- ber of the Secular Student Alli- ance, hit the podium and called abortion unfair. "This is masochism being offered to you by sadists," Hat- field yelled. Earlier in the debate, LSA sophomore Katie Dieckman, a member of the Secular Student Alliance, held up hangers and knitting needles - which she said are instruments used for abortion in countries where it's illegal - to argue the danger of abortion alternatives. "This is the reality we are forcing if abortion becomes ille- gal," said Diekman, while hold- ing the instruments. The Secular Student Asso- ciation also talked about how an overturn of the Supreme Court ruling would directly affect poverty and mortality rates and unfairly penalize women and doctors. LSA junior Anna Paone of Students for Life said there are ways to support women's rights without harming others. "Feminine empowerment does not mean killing unborn women," Paone said. Throughoutthe debate, mem- bers of Students for Life held steadfast in their beliefs of the rights of the dependent unborn over those of the mother, while the Secular Student Alliance stayed constant in their views of the mother's right to choose. "Our rights end when some- one else's begins," LSA senior Elise Aikman, a Students for Life representative, said. LSA sophomore Sahana Prasad of the Secular Student Alliance, countered: "(Abortion is) depriving the fetus use of the body ... which the fetus has no right to in the first place," In an interview before the event, Rackham Graduate School student Andrew Patton, a member of Students for Life, said he saw the debate as an opportunity for students to see the principles of his group. "I think people make the mis- take that the decision to be pro- life is irrational," Patton said. Though there were criti- cisms voiced during the debate, Public Policy junior Michael Jacobson, a Secular Student Alliance representative, pro- posed that the two groups work together to address the roots of abortion. Unplanned pregnan- cy and alternatives to abortion were proposed to be the focus of future conversation. i r i FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @MICHIGANDAILY I I 5 & 6 BR Houses May 2012 www.copiproperties.com 734-663-5609 AVAIL FALL '12: 717 Dewey Ave. 5bdrm/2bth $2850/mo. Call (610) 952- 526. Email louisbreskman@gmail.com ***CENTRAL CAMPUS 6&7 BED- ROOM HOUSES. Great Furnitue/ Decor. Wireless/Cable. Free Laundry, Parking. FOR RENT NOW MAY 2012. www.horvathproperties.com or Call 734-972-7368. 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