A BOY &A BIKE The story behind Taylor Lewan's \ 1962 teal-blue Firestone tandem bike and the man who sold it. IPAGE 2B1 Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, April 2, 2012 michigandaily.com STUDENT GOVERNMENT SAM rallies for higher ed. funding STATE BUDGET 'U' stem cell programs under attack Amid rain, wind 100 turnout for protest at Capitol By GIACOMO BOLOGNA Daily StaffReporter LANSING - Despite heavy rain and strong winds, almost 100 students from across the state came to Lansing on Fri- day to protest funding cuts to higher education and to advo- cate for students' rights. The rally - held by the Stu- dent Association of Michigan, a collaborative organization of student governments at universities in the state - was close to being cancelled due to a -heavy thunderstorm that persisted throughout the morning and afternoon. However, the storm ceased just minutes before the stu- dents began their march from the Lansing Center to the steps of the capitol building. SAM President Jay Gage, a student at Lake Superior State University, met with state senators and representatives on Thursday, before speaking at the rally on Friday. "We desperately need rein- vestment in higher educa- tion," Gage said. "If we are going to have a good educa- tional sector, then we fund it." Gage lauded higher edu- cation in the state and called Michigan's institutes of higher learning "the most prestigious universities in the world," particularly praising the University of Michigan. During the 90-minute rally, the students, waving colorful flags with university logos, listened to speeches from several speakers while occasionally interrupting with loud chants and vuvuz- elas. Tyler Helsel, public rela- tions director for SAM and a LSSU student, said he was hoping upwards of 500 stu- dents would participate in the rally, but said the weather discouraged students from See SAM, Page 3A House committee demands more information on studies By ANDREW SCHULMAN Daily StaffReporter In light of ongoing disputes over the University's embryonic stem cell research efforts, the state House Appropriations Subcommit- tee on Higher Education passed a budget recommendation Friday seeking to strip the University of some of its funding from the state. The recommendation comes more than two weeks after Univer- sity President Mary Sue Coleman's critical remarks to the committee about its budget formulation, and stems from a disagreement over the type of information the Univer- sity should report to the legislators. Republican members of the com- mittee insist that the University must provide specific data on the research, while University officials have resisted those efforts. This year, instead of supply- ing the data points the committee requested, the University compiled what Cynthia Wilbanks, the Uni- versity's vice president for govern- ment relations, called a packet of press releases and scientificejournal articles on the University's embry- onic stem cell research. University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald said the University sent the package to legislators to pro- vide them with a more in depth look at the research going on at the University. "It gave the legislature a deeper, broader, richer understanding of the stem cell research than a simple list of five or six numbers," Fitzger- ald said. Wilbanks added that one reason the University did not provide the data was that it does not generate documents that contain the data the committee requested. "We have provided a lot of infor- mation that may in part include some of the data points that were identified in the higher education See STEM CELL, Page 3A TOP: Festifoolers prepare for the parade in an alley near Main Street yester- day. BOTTOM: Art & Design Prof. Nick Tobier helps students from Detroit Community High School with their puppets. ANN ARBOR PUBLIC TRANSIT AirRide bus service begins From the Editor: Route will serve Detroit Metro starting today By ANDREW SCHULMAN Daily StaffReporter With summer quickly approaching, students may now have an easier time find- ing their way home at the end of the semester with the assis- tance of AirRide - a newly launched service that provides daily roundtrip bus transpor- tation from the Ann Arbor area to the Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport. The program - a collabo- ration with Michigan Flyer, a branch of the Indian Trails Motor Coach transportation service - will stop 12 times daily at the Blake Transit Cen- ter and the Kensington Court Hotel, located off of State Street, as well as four times at the University's Central Cam- pus Transit Center. Tickets range from $6 to $20 a person, depending on age and how far in advance a ticket is pur- chased. At the official announce- ment of the service at the Kensington Court Hotel on Friday, David Nacht, a Law School alum and AATA board member who spearheaded Air- Ride's development, lauded the service's affordability and con- sistency of service to the crowd of about 40 people. "This is a big deal," he said. "You're not going to wait two or three hours. You need regu- lar services, and you need to know that and rely on that. We're offering that." Nacht said demand from University officials was an important factor in the ser- vice's introduction, noting that he surveyed the deans of the University's schools and col- leges to find out the biggest barrier to attracting prospec- tive faculty and graduate stu- dents. "Number one or two on every dean's list were trans- portation issues," he said. "The University is the number one driver of traffic to and from our community from this air- port, and so, this is very much designed with the University in mind." Under current plans for the service, AirRide may offer air- port-bound riders parking for up to 14 days at the Fourth Ave- nue and East William Street parking structure and at the Kensington Court Hotel for $2 per day. It would also poten- tially share bus stops with the Detroit SMART bus system. See AIRRIDE, Page 3A An article in the March 8 edition of The B-Side, The Michigan Daily's weekly arts supplement, ("Ten Thousand Villages unites art, culture and philanthropy in one store- front") contained material that was plagiarized. The article, which was about a fair-trade store on Main Street, contained several passages that were cop- ied directly from the Wikipedia entry on fair-trade products and from the store's website. The plagiarism was discov- ered after an arts editor editing another one of the reporter's articles found passages that were also taken verbatim from other websites. A thorough search of the reporter'sprevious work revealed no other instanc- es of plagiarism. The writer in question has been dismissed, and The Mich- igan Daily no longer stands behind the plagiarized article. This is an unacceptable violation of this newspaper's core principles, and correc- tive actions will be taken. Since January, when it was discov- ered that a former Daily col- umnist's work didn't meet our paper's ethical standards, we've stepped up our safeguards against plagiarism. We will continue to work to enhance those safeguards. This semester, we've expand- ed the role of our copy desk. Our copy editors now read all news and opinion articles and any arts articles in the B-Side. All staffers must also now submit details about any research they conducted for their piece when they turn in their articles. Until now, these steps had proven successful, as we've caught a handful of question- able pieces before they've gone to print. The Ten Thousand Vil- lages story slipped through the cracks. There are no excuses: This was an egregious error and we, as Daily editors, take full blame. Moving forward, we willnow require plagiarism checks on all articles before they go to print. The arts section already does this in its day-to-day editing process, and we will require all other sections to followsuit. Plagiarism willnever be com- pletely preventable, but we can - and will - do better to ensure that you can trust the content you see every day in print and online as original work. Joseph Lichterman Editor in Chief CAMPUS PHILANTHROPY 1,500 volunteer for annual Detroit Partnership service day Students participate in activities to rejuvante Detroit By PETER SHAHIN Daily StaffReporter DETROIT - For many Univer- sity students, smashing concrete or digging trenches may not be the ideal way to spend a week- end, but volunteers of the Detroit Partnership gladly spent Satur- day participating in such philan- thropic efforts. This weekend, about1,500 stu- dents from the University trav- eled to Detroit to participate in events around the city organized by DP, a student organization that provides volunteer and edu- cational opportunities in Detroit to University students. Working with community-based groups, students engaged in activities ranging from demolishing hous- es to planting community gar- dens in an effort to support some of Detroit's most underprivileged neighborhoods. LSA senior Cassie Basler, executive director of the Detroit Partnership, explained that the group arranged events with 35 organizations around the city. Basler said one of the partner- ship's strengths is the diverse and unique opportunities it pro- vides to its volunteers. "Not many people have the opportunity to knock down a garage with a sledgehammer," Basler said. According to Basler, students went to several sites around the city to paint and clean schools, work in community gardens, clean abandoned properties, demolish dilapidated structures and perform a host of other activ- ities. In almost every case, com- munity volunteers, joined the students, eager to see their own neighborhoods benefit from the program. In Brightmoor, a distressed Detroit subdivision, volunteers worked with the neighbor- hood group Neighbors Building Brightmoor to prepare commu- nity gardens for planting, cleared debris and cleaned up abandoned properties awaiting demolition. Riet Schumack, program coor- dinator for Neighbors Building Brightmoor, said to prevent aban- doned homes from being used as drug houses, residents often employ a crude technique called "dropping the porch." The pro- cess - an economical solution for a neighborhood where a house can be purchased for $500, as compared to the $10,000 it costs to demolish it - involved tearing the roof off a home's porch and letting it fall in front of the door to prevententry. "(For) people that come back to the neighborhood, it's very mixed feelings," Schumack said. "They're hurt by the fact that so many houses are gone, but they're also happy to see that something is happening." See DETROIT, Page 7A I Aduk WEATHER HI: 61 TOMORROW 36 GOT A NEWS TIP? 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