2A -'Monday, November 7, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2A" Mndarovmbe.7.211.heMihign.aiy_-mihiadlco Jersey Shore' star talks bullying A WONDER-FUL SONG 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com STEPHANIE STEINBERG ZACH YANCER Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1251 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 steinberg@michigandaily.com zyancer@nichigandaity.com Students in Columbia Uni- versity Prof. Diane Vaughan's sociology class called "Mistake, Misconduct, Disaster" were in for a fist-pumping surprise when guest lecturer Vinny Guadagni- no from "Jersey Shore" spoke to their class on Wednesday, accord- ingto a Nov.3 Gothamist article. Guadagnino, who is a part of the anti-bullying group "Do Something," spoke about bully- ing to the class, the Gothamist reported. According to the article, after the class, students left posts on a blog for Columbia students. One student wrote, "The thrust of his speech in Vaughan's class was about how we can all set good examples in the world, stop vio- foundation, which works with lence before it escalates, and be at-risk children, according to the models for polite society. article. PENN STATE DEFENSIVE THIEL COLLEGE RECEIVES COORDINATOR BAILED OUT $25 MILLION DONATION Newsroom 734-418-4s15 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@miuhigandaily.com Display Sales 1 display@michigandaily.com Online Sales ontineads@michigandaily.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letters to the Editor toth edaily@michigandaily.om Editonial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com tlassified.Sales classified@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com Jerry Sandusky, former defen- sive coordinator for Per1n State University, was arraigned last Saturday and later released on $100,000 bail for multiple counts of sexual abuse, according to a Nov. 5 New York Times article. The grand jury's report stated that Sandusky had made sexual advances or assualts toward eight boys between 1994 and 2009, the Times reported. He met all of the boys through his Second Mile Administrators of Thiel Col- lege, located 80 miles north of Pittsburgh, announced Thurs- day that the estate of recently deceased steel executive William Dietrich II will donate $25 mil- lion to the college, according to a Nov. 3 Associated Press article. The $25 million donation is equivalent to the school's annual budget, according to theAP. -PAIGEPEARCY McKENZIE BEREZN/Daily The Compulsive Lyres, a student a capella group, per- forms "Superstition" on Saturday. CRIME NOTES Nuisance in Laptop lifted the library from Quad WHERE: Law Library WHERE: North Quadrangle WHEN: Thursday at about Residence Hall 9:45 p.m. WHEN: Thursday at about WHAT: A group of girls 7 p.m. entered the library two WHAT: A student's laptop separate times, screamed was taken between 5 and and fled the scene, 7 p.m., University Police University Police reported. reported. The laptop has The area was mostly empty not been recovered. at the time. Look out below! Case of the CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Religious film Job interview New York City Mayor screening tips session Bloomberg spent $5.64 Smillion this ye ar on a pub- WHAT: The Library WHAT: Career Center staff lic image campaign despite Diversity Committee will will host an interactive not re-running for office, The screen "Seven Passages: the workshop covering New York Post reported. He Stories of Gay Christians" presentation strategies for spent more than $100 mil- in honor of the Spectrum resumes, CVs, cover letters lion during his re-election in Center's 40th anniversary. and interviews. 2009. 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One copy is aval5able free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, viaU.S.mailare $110. Winter term( anuary through April)is $115, yearonn(September through Aprilt is $195universitynf filiates are subject td a reduced subripionrate.On-cmpusubiptonfeorllteArnre$n Teuscipdosusterepe The MicignrDtely s a member of The Associated Pess and TheAsociuated Collegate Pess. WHERE: South Quadrangle Residence Hall WHEN: Thursday at about 7:45 p.m. WHAT: A subject was seen throwing water balloons out of a window at passersby, University Police reported. No damage was caused. missing clothes WHERE: University Cancer Center WHEN: Thursday at about 3:15 p.m. WHAT: Clothing was taken from a patient ina locker room area, University Police reported. WHO: Spectrum Center WHEN: Today at 7 p.m. WHERE: Hatcher Graduate Library Politics lecture WHAT: Roy Norton, the Canadian consul seneral, will discuss the 235-year relationship between the U.S. and Canada and the significance of the state of Michigan in Canadian policymaking. Admission to the event is free, and a reception will follow. WHO: Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library WHEN: Today at 7:30 p.m. WHERE: Gerald Ford Library WHO: The Career Center WHEN: Today at 3 p.m. WHERE: Rackham Graduate School Organ recital WHAT: Students of Professor of Music James Kibbie will perform a free showcase. WHO: School of Music, Theatre & Dance WHEN: Today at 8 p.m. WHERE: Moore Building CORRECTIONS " Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michi- gandaily.com. For the third-straight year, Iowa knocked Michigan's starting quarterback out of the game, and for the third-straight year, Iowa won The Wolver- ines lost on Saturday 24-16. >o FOR MORE, SEE SPORTSMONDAY, INSIDE Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain said he would not answer more questions about his alleged sexual harassment incidents, the Huffington Post reported. He blamed the media for "nit-pickiness" regarding the issue. FLOREK From Page 1A started running to Ann Arbor. In a game where the Michi- gan defense forced just three 3-and-outs, it made sense that one of them came with just under four minutes left when Iowa could have put the game away. It made sense that despite not playing well for three quar- ters, the Wolverines were going to march down the field on the final drive and tie the game. It was a foregone conclusion. "We thought for sure we were goingto go into overtime," said redshirt junior safety Jordan Kovacs. "But it didn't work out like that." Except this time, Jeremy Gal- lon wasn't inexplicably wide open on a wheel route. The Wolverines had two touchdown plays go to review on that final drive: Vincent Smith's he's- down-but-he's-not-really-down play and Junior Hemingway's catch that wasn't a catch. Nei- ther was called in Michigan's favor. The referees could have called pass interference on the final play of the game, when it appeared Hawkeye corner- back B.J. Lowery wrapped up redshirt junior Roy Roundteee before the ball arrived. They didn't. The officials also could have called pass interference on the deep pass to Roundtree in the second quarter, when it was still an eight point game. One threw the flag, then picked it up. "There are always six to eight plays in a game that are really going to define when you're playing a good football team, when you're playing ateam on the road," Hoke said. Those past plays were four. Whether they were the right calls isn't important when look- ing at the fact that Michigan didn't get the breaks. As for play No. 5, how about Robinson's interception at the end of the half, when Iowa's Micah Hyde got an arm on the ball to tip it into his teammate's waiting hands? And No.6? Robinson's fumble. He did the hard part in avoiding a sack. Then he didn't just drop the ball, he swung his leg and accidentally kicked right to the Hawkeye defensive lineman. Back in the tunnel, about 20 feet ahead of Mattison was Hoke, surrounded by a gang of police officers. It may have been the first time he actually needed them this season. That Midas touch is gone. On the field Michigan has few long-term injuries. For all the bad interceptions junior quarterback Denard Robinson had thrown, he won games. Then there is the Notre Dame game, which still doesn't make sense. It hasn't been magic because that implies some form of deception. Michigan came into Saturday at 7-1 because nearly everything has just sort of worked out in its favor. For the first time all season Hoke seemed like a regular coach who had to go through regular channels, not some sort of fairy-tale creature who bleeds toughness and creates winning with his mind. It's obvious now that Michi- gan's season isn't going to be a fairy tale either. Its outside shot at the Big Ten Title game likely ended four days into November. The Wolverines will have to finish the season without rely- ing on ridiculous turnovers and every questionable call going their way. Even when they got beat by Michigan State, Michi- gan had its good fortune, recov- ering two fumbles that were dropped by the Spartan player and not forced. Now, they'll simply have to be better than the opposing team. And through all the non-catches, non-pass interference calls and tweets from Junior Hemingway about how he caught that ball, did the Wolverines actually play better than Iowa? No. Why does it feel like Michigan should've won? - Florek predicted 8-4 at the beginning of the season. He feels pretty good about that prediction. Send him hate mail at florekmi@ umich.edu. You can also yell at him on twitter: @michaelflorek I I JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP Howard University alumni and students march by the Treasury Department in Washington on Oct. 28, 2011. olice, D.C. protesters differ on accounts of car collision Slaying plunges rebels in Colombia into uncertainty Motorist struck three his vehicle struck the three at around 10 p.m. people near Occupy "The protesters were appar- entlytryingto block the roadway," DC demonstration Micciche said. "It was essentially an accident where three individu- District of Columbia police and als were injured but they were in Occupy DC protesters are offering violation by being inthe roadway." conflicting accounts about a week- Micciche said witnesses told end incident in which a motor- police that the three pedestrians ist struck three protesters near a "either ran toward or jumped in downtown demonstration. front of the moving vehicle.". He Police said Saturday that a driv- said one pedestrian jumped on the er will not be charged for striking hood of the car. the three people Friday evening. But the demonstrators said that Assistant Police Chief Lamar wasn't true. Greene said at a Saturday eve- Heidi Sippel of Vandalia, Ohio, ning press conference that police said that she, her 13-year-old son concluded from talking to two and her wife Brandy Sippel were witnesses that the collision was taking part in the demonstration unavoidable. But the three people when a silver Lexus sped toward involved in the crash gave a differ- them. The driver slowed down, ent story. threw up his hands in appar- Hundreds of protesters affili- ent frustration and then drove ated with Occupy DC shut down forward, hitting them, she said. streets Friday night near the city's Brandy Sippel, who is six months convention center in downtown, pregnant, was grazed by the car's where a conservative group was rearview mirror. Heidi Sippel said gathering. The two adults and one she and her son were both hit by teenager who were struck were the front of the car. taken to the hospital after the col- "He just threw his hands up lision and later released. and hit the gas," Heidi Sippel said Lt. Christopher Micciche of the driver. (MITCH'-ih-kay) of the D.C. She said none of them had police said the driver was not cited thrown themselves in front of the because he had a green light when car. "We weren't trying to get in front of the cars. We would have very happily, given the opportu- nity, stepped out of the way and let him pass by," she said. Sippel said all three members of her family were cited by police for obstructing traffic and walking against a do-not-walk sign, both of which carry fines. A police report confirms the citations. A man identified in a police report as the vehicle driver, Shawn Valentine of Clinton, Md., said he was at work when reached bytele- phone Saturday night and could not speak about the incident. According to a police report, he told officers he observed a clearing between the protesters and tried to pass between them when the demonstrators jumped "onto and in front of his vehicle." Other individuals affiliated with the Occupy DC group said the same driver struck another demonstrator nearby before hit- ting the Sippel family. Greene, the assistant chief, said he did not know about another incident. That all changed in 1955, when Legendary GM design head Har- ley Earl created a car known for its beauty and speed. The Bel Air had chrome accents and was powered by a small, V-8 engine. 6 6 6 6 Insurgents will name new leader after death of Cano BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - President Juan Manuel Santos on Saturday called on fighters of Latin America's only major rebel force to accept the killing of their top leader as proof the movement is doomed and to sur- render. "This is the moment to decide to lay down your arms because, as we've said many times, the alternative is prison or a tomb," Santos told combatants of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia a day after troops killed their 63-year-old chief. But analysts don't believe Cano's death will lead the drug- funded rebels, known by their Spanish initials FARC, to crum- ble. While it's a body blow to the insurgents, the rebels remain potent. They have depth in their leadership and resilience steeled in a half century of armed revolt. Santos expressed satisfac- tion but said it's "not a moment for triumphalism" after meeting Saturday with the military high command behind closed doors in Popayan, the southwestern provincial capital where Cano's body was taken. He said Cano's ranks were infiltrated by rebel defectors, but refused to discuss details. Santos added that "my eyes moistened" at the news of Cano's death, "a few tears of emotion."