The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, September 7,2011 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, September 7, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING, Mich. Residents to rally against proposed medical marijuana law changes A rally is scheduled for today on the steps of the state Capitol protesting proposed changes to the state's medical marijuanalaw. The Michigan Medical Mari- juana Association president and other speakers during the rally in Lansing are expected to discuss the law and treatment patients and caregivers have received from law enforcement. The event starts at noon. " Michigan voters in 2008 approved use of marijuana to relieve pain and other chronic ailments. About 100,000 people have state-issued cards letting them have 2.5 ounces of "usable" pot and up to 12 plants. Regis- tered caregivers also can grow marijuana for five people. HARTFORD, Conn. Yale sued over the 2009 murder of graduate student The family of a Yale Univer- sity graduate student killed in a research lab just days before she had planned to get married in 2009 sued the Ivy League school yesterday, claiming it had failed to adequately protect women on campus for years. The wrongful death lawsuit 'was filed in New Haven Superior Court by lawyers for the fam- ily of Annie Le, a 24-year-old Placerville, Calif., native whose strangled body was found stuffed upside-down in a wall at the Yale lab building on Sept. 13, 2009. That was the same day of her scheduled wedding and five days after she disappeared. Prosecu- tors also said there was evidence of a sexual assault. MIAMI, Fa. Hurricane Katia dwindles as it Teaches Miami Hurricane Katia is continu- ing to weaken over the Atlantic Ocean and is now a Category 2 storm. The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami says Katia's maximum sustained winds yes- terday had dropped to 105 mph (169 kph). Forecast maps show Katia veering to the northeast away from the U.S. mainland in the coming week. But the hurricane center says large swells could affect the East Coast, Bermuda, the Greater Antilles and parts of the Bahamas over the next few ;days. Meanwhile, a new tropi- cal depression formed over the Atlantic Ocean and could become a tropical storm by Tuesday eve- ning. It could pass over or near * 'Puerto Rico by Sunday. -ON, Jamaica 1 lpica to sign t!With Cuba S1orcing drug tafficking laws Jamaica's top security offi- 'ial announced yesterday that the will lead a delegation to Cuba this week to sign agree- 'ments strengthening coopera- 'tion against drug trafficking and other crimes. Security Minister Dwight Nel- son said the pacts are intended to increase intelligence sharing 'about the "movement of guns and drugs and the groups involved in their movement between the two 'countries." Jamaica is the Caribbean's largest source of marijuana for the U.S. and a transshipment point for cocaine from South America to North America and Europe. The island's gun-smug- 'gling networks are also a long- standing security concern. -Compiled from Daily wire reports SPIRITUAL SERENADE Spiritual campus organization Bhakti Yoga Society members play music on State Street yesterday. MSA From Page 1A community in these areas, Buoy explained, especially since three- quarters of the student popula- tion lives off campus. "We want to create (a) neigh- borhood feel in these areas because we believe that if stu- dents feel safer, they will act safer," he said. The commission plans to hire neighborhood ambassadors for each off-campus housing area who will serve a similar role as resident advisors in the residence halls. In addition to establishing Facebook and Twitter pages, the Student Safety Commission plans to print monthly newsletters with information relevant to off-cam- pus communities. "The idea here is to offer stu- dent-generated content, not just things that the University puts out that seem as rather fluffy or uninformative to student con- cerns," Buoy said. He concluded his presenta- tion by explaining that the new program was not put forth in response to the six assaults - four of which were sexual assaults - that occurred in July, but that the incidents prove the project is necessary. "Something important to note, being student leaders here, is that this program was initiated before the summer sexual assaults," he said. "This is not a direct response to those sexual assaults. This is more a long-term proactive mea- sure that we believe will lead to a safer campus here at Michigan." Following the presentation of Beyond the Diag, SAPAC sDirec- tsr Holly Rider-Milkovich took the floor. She explained the assaults that happened this sum- mer were carried out by people who did not know the survivors. She called stranger assaults "anomalous to the community," explaining that the majority of perpetrators who commit sexual assaults know the survaivors. To more effectively reach students, SAPAC is currently restructur- ing its programming. "One of the things that we dis- covered was that SAPAC was not presenting the most effective pro- gramming that we could," Rider- Milkovich said. "We were doinga lot of rape awareness,but what we discovered was that that type of programming was totally ineffec- tive so what we're doing instead is ... promote the kind of activi- ties that we would like to see, and that's all about healthy relation- ship promotion." MSA President DeAndree Watson said student safety will remain a top priority for the assembly. "We invited (SAPAC and Beyond the Diag) because we know that a lot of students have come to campus concerned about some of the things they've heard over the summer," Watson said in an interview after the meet- ing. "We just wanted to make sure that we gave them the forum to know ... how the university is responding." He continued: "We're going to keep working on student safety in all aspects, not just sexual assaults, and we really want to be a student government like we were tonight, offering students a forum to speak out, but also offer them resources." CITY From Page1A to campus. In a talk with The Michigan Daily on Sept. 2, AAPD Chief Barnett Jones and Univer- sity Department of Public Safety Chief Greg O'Dell said their departments will be increasing their presence on and near cam- pus. MEDICAL MARIJUANA LICENSING BOARD CONFIRMED Ann Arbor residents and City Council members discussed last night a recent state appellate court ruling regardingthe Mich- igan Medical MarihuanaAct and how it will affect the city's newly formed medical marijuana dis- pensary licensing board. The councilvoted unanimous- ly to confirm Mayor John Hief- tje's appointment of Ann Arbor residents John Rosevear, James Kenyon and Patricia O'Rorke to the board, but many members expressed concern about wheth- er dispensaries would be allowed to operate in the city following the court ruling. On Aug. 22, a three-judge panel of the Michi- gan Court of Appeals ruled that the Michigan Medical Marihua- na Act makes the use of medical marijuana legal but does not per- mit its sale. Councilmember Tony Der- ezinski (D-Ward 2) questioned whether it would be advisable to continue appointing individuals to the board following the court ruling. City Attorney Stephen Postema responded to Derez- inski by noting that the city's medical marijuana dispensary licensing ordinance only allowed dispensaries to be licensed if they were compliant with state law. However, now that the appeals court ruling has ruled the sale of medical marijuana illegal, the city might want to reconsider moving forward with the licens- ing board, Postema said. Washtenaw County resident Shelly Smith said the appeals court ruling is in contradiction to the will of Michigan voters. "Democratically, we voted for the safe access to this naturally powerful medicine," Smith said. "The decision is already made. We shouldn't make the access difficult." INTERNSHIPS From Page 1A ered a speech in June. In return for his services, Halpern met Obama. "As a gift from the White House, they let me take a picture with him, and I got to talk to him for about a minute," Halpern said excitedly. Halpern wasn't the only Wol- verinewhorubbedshoulderswith big names this summer. During her work as a development intern for Disney affiliate ABC Family, LSA senior Katherine Riley had the chance to network with the media company's top executives. "I met Paul Lee, who is the president of ABC, and I was on good terms with Michael Riley, who is the president of ABC Fami- ly," she said. "It's a great company that really put a lot of effort into their internship." Riley - who previously interned for NBC and Viacom - received the competitive, paid internship in Burbank, Calif. that more than 10,000 people applied for. Less than 80 applicants were accepted, according to Riley. During her internship, she attended numerous meetings and visited the backstage set of popu- lar television shows like ABC Family's "Pretty Little Liars." In addition to networking, Riley said the internship allowed her to learn what it's like to work in a fast-paced environment. "Itwas scaryto go into working for Disney - one of the biggest, if not the biggest media, conglomer- ates - but you have the opportu- nity to learn so much," she said. Geni Harclerode, the intern- ship and experiential learning coordinator at the University's Career Center, said the center tries to help students secure intern- ships by providing tips for resume and cover letter writing and con- ducting mock interviews. Har- clerode said the Fall Career Expou - on Oct. 4 and Oct. 5 this year - has become an outlet for find- ing summer internships and part- time job opportunities. "A lot of students think (it's) a job fair just for full-time oppor- tunities, but more and more internship this summer was we're seeing a good percentage of through the Career Center's employers that are coming to that Public Service Intern Program fair are also looking for internship in Washington D.C., where she candidates," Harclerode said. interned at Georgetown Law's The key to obtaining an intern- Criminal Defense & Prisoner ship, she said, is being prepared Advocacy Clinic. As an intern, for the application process. Golding worked as an investiga- "Students need to be prepared tor for the public defenders in the in that search," Harclerode said. clinic. "What that means is really being Part of Golding's duties includ- able tobe someone who can artic- ed traveling throughout the ulate what about that company nation's capital to talk to witness- interests them, why is this orga-_es and collect evidence for cases. nization so appealing, what is it "We were given alot of respon- about this industry thatthey real- sibility," Golding said. "It was ly feel like is a place they would something that forced you to want to spend a summer and what go out and do things that you do they feel like they can contrib- wouldn't normally do and that ute as candidate." would make you feel uncomfort- LSA senior Emily Golding's able." MLK From Page 1A can fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha - of which King was a mem- ber - contributed to the fund- raising efforts for the recently unveilied Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial. Over the past two years, the chapter has raised about $500 toward the construction of the memorial. Kinesiology senior Eric Poole, president of the University's chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha, said he was passionate about King's civil rights efforts long before joining the fraternity, but felt an even stronger connection to King and the memorial after-ie joined because of King's connec- tion to Alpha Phi Alpha. "Once I became a member of the fraternity and began to understand how (King) was involved and tied into every- thing, I said, 'We have to do something to make sure that we give back to the community,"' Poole said. "This is the per- fedt opportunity to not only celebrate, but also to give back in a way that helps his legacy live on." To raise money for the memorial fund, the frater- nity sponsored an annual poetry slam. Nationally, Alpha Phi Alpha has contrib- uted $10 million of the $114 million raised to build the memorial. The memorial fund is still hoping to raise another $6 million. The memorial was sched- uled to be dedicated on Aug. 28 in Washington D.C., but the ceremony was postponed because of Hurricane Irene. Though it just opened, fun- draising for the memorial has been going on for years, said Darrell Joyce, a former president of the University's chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha and the fraternity's current , chapter advisor. way for America to go," he said. rial coming up, and it's a very big "And we finally got this memo- accomplishment." 35%-45% cheaper 55% cheaper than onitne stores than bookstores on average* on averagen B Fit: srw g t igg0u e W82 AMEIC!AS FAVO1IT9 SAIIWI0I PELIVERY 6UYSJl A wt A