The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 26, 2012 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, October 26, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DEARBORN Joyride priest now in rehabilitation Ajudge onThursday postponed a hearing for a priest accused of driving naked and drunk in Dear- born this summer because the priest is at a Pennsylvania rehabil- itation center receiving treatment. The pretrial hearing for the Rev. Peter Petroske of Sacred k Heart Parish in Dearborn was adjourned until Dec. 27. Dear- born District Judge Richard Wygonik approved the post- ponement sought by defense lawyer Edward Zelenak and over the objections of a city attorney. "He's in a lock-down facility," Zelenak said of Petroske, a long- time Detroit area priest. "It's not as if he's thumbing his nose at the system." AUSTIN, Texas Texas AG says he will arrest foreign poll observers Don't mess with Texas elec- tions. That's the double-;down message Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott delivered Thursday to international poll watchers who plan to come and observe voting on Election Day, tweeting "BRING IT" after the group took offense at being threatened with criminal charges from the state's top prosecutor. Abbott, a Republican with a tea party bent who has the "Don't Tread on Me" logo on his Twitter page, drew a highly publicized line in the sand this week with a letter to the Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe. OSCE observers generally are members of parliament from of organization members, which include the United States and 55 countries in Europe and Central Asia. The group has sent observ- ers to poll locations across the U.S. since 2002. JERUSALEM Israel mum after blast rocks Sudan munitions factory Senior Israeli officials accused Sudan on Thursday of playing a key role in an Iranian-backed net- work of arms shipments to hostile Arab militant groups across the Middle East, a day after a myste- rious explosion rocked a weapons factory near the North African country's capital. The tough words were likely to add to Sudanese suspicions that an Israeli airstrike was behind the blast. Israel has both the motive and means to carry out such an airstrike, and Sudan has accused Israel in the past of operating on its territory. Israel considers Iran to be a grave threat, citing Iranian calls for Israel's destruction, suspi- cions that Iran is developing a nuclear bomb, and Iran's support for militant groups on Israel's southern and northern borders. Israeli officials have long con- tended that Sudan is a central player in Iranian efforts to fun- nel weapons to Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip and Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon. MOSCOW Military accused of graft in sell-off Russia's top investigative agen- cy on Thursday launched a crimi- nal probe into alleged fraud in the selloff of Defense Ministry assets, a high-profile case that could shake up the nation's scandal- marred military establishment. It may also threaten Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov, who has enjoyed President Vladimir Putin's support despite years of * strong public criticism. The Investigative Commit- tee said that the state had suf- fered damage of more than 3 billion rubles ($95 million) from an alleged scheme that involved the sale of prized land plots and O real estate in Moscow and other parts of Russia. -Compiled from Daily wire reports At showcase, TechArb highlights student work 20 student venture teams share projects at event By ALICIA ADAMCZY X Daily StaffReporter Much like Diagon Alley, the Liberty Square parking struc- ture located at 510 E. Wash- ington St. doesn't seem out of the ordinary. But one floor below the structure's surface, student entrepreneurs are collaborating to create the extraordinary. The University's Center for Entrepreneurship, located in' the basement of the parking structure, held its Student Ven- ture Showcase on Thursday. At the event - hosted by CFE's TechArb Student Startup Accelerator, and co-sponsored by the Samuel Zell & Robert H. Lurie Institute for Entrepre- neurial Studies, the College of Engineering and the Office of the Vice President for Research - iore than 100 students and faculty attended in hopes of attracting investors for their fledgling businesses. The 20 student venture teams in attendance were com- prised of undergraduate and graduate students from vary- ing educational backgrounds. University alum Richard Sheridan - president and CEO of Menlo Innovations, a software design and develop- ment firm located on E. Lib- erty Street - gave the opening remarks at the event, citing Ann Arbor as the nextPalo Alto in termsof startup potential. "This is how we are going to reinvent Michigan," Sheridan said of the student entrepre- neurs. University alum Mahendra Vora - the founder and manag- ing director of Vora Ventures, which helps to found and sell technological ventures - said he attended the event to sup- port other student entrepre- neurs. "That's all I've done my whole life, is startups," Vora said. "I'm just excited to be batk at my alma mater. Twen- ty-five years later there's noth- ing like this." The student startups includ- ed several Facebook and mobile phone apps, a trivia game and a hybrid solar energy system, among others.. A select few of the student presenters also had the oppor- tunity to meet privately with investors Thursday afternoon. Rackham student Jus- tin D'Atri represented Torch Hybrid, LLC, a company that produces power management computer systems for hybrid boats. He said the mentorship, advisory roles and the indus- try connections provided by CFE were indispensible in his team's startup quest. "We wouldn't even be here right now if it weren't for the CFE," D'Atri said. "We just had a silly idea a year ago and it's turned all the way into some- thing we can actually make money with." University alum Sam Beck- ett is a member of Exo Dynam- ics, LLC, a startup seeking to improve the treatment pro- cess for people afflicted with chronic spinal conditions. He said TechArb has been a help- ful tool for his team in the past six months. "We're looking just to fur- ther develop it ... for fund- ing sources," Beckett said. "(TechArb) has been very use- ful for feedback for different things we need to do." TechArb members weren't the only University students in attendance. In addition to the TechArb members, several student groups, including the entre- preneurship organization MPowered, came to show their support. Social Work student Cath- erine Fish said she attended in hopes of learning more about TechArb. "I'm interested in the start- up scene here," Fish said. "I thought I'd come and checkout what other entrepreneurs are doing." - Stephanie Dilworth contributed to this report. PROTEST From Page 1 "What do we want? Justice," they chanted as a few Univer- sity employees watched from inside the building. "When do we want it? Now!" LSA junior John D'Adamo, a College Democrats member, led chants and gave multiple speeches throughout the event. D'Adamo criticized University President Mary Sue Coleman for her lack of public response to the coalition's goals, saying it was inconsistent with the Univer- sity'svalues. "The (University) president probably uses 'diversity' more than any other word in the English language," D'Adamo remarked to a laughing crowd. LSA sophomore Sam Hahn stood at the front of the admin- istration building, passing out free coffee and fliers to admin- istrators arriving to work. One woman declined to accept the flyer. "No thanks," she said as she headed inside. "I'd better not." LSA senior Tatiana Hofmans, a FOKUS member, said as a Jamaican immigrant, she wants to take the initiative to help other immigrant students. Hofmans said MyDreamIs- BiggerThan.com - a website cre- ated specifically for Thursday's protest that allows students to type their dreams and aspira- STONE From Page 1 other." As a result, Stone's lat- est project, a 10-part Showtime documentary, "The Untold His- tory of the United States," aims to tell the story of the evolution of the American National Secu- rity State. Clips from the documentary were shown, and while it was a lesson in history, Stone's nar- ration never seemed like the monotonic drawl of a tired his- tory teacher. Stone talked of how, while he is considered a political film- maker, he primarily looks to understand and develop charac- ters - he merely prefers those in political power because "history is determined by the top," and he, as an artist, looks toward his- tory for understanding, or lack thereof. Discussing his film "Nixon," 'Stone said that, in his movies, he attempts to get into the shoes of the characters of history. Stone may not have agreed with the decisions of the Nixon admin- istration, saying that Nixon wasn't a "good" person (though he noted a respect for Nixon's self-loathing), but nevertheless wanted to humanize the former president. "I emphasized with him, but I didn't sympathize with him," Stone said of Nixon. Throughout the talk, Stone expressed how he wanted to inspire a younger generation tions into a form - will compile the student etris and send mass a-mails to the University's Board of Regents. "It's a creative and fun way for people to get involved as well as see the information about what the cause is all about and why to come out," Hofmans said. University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald wrote in a statement that Thursday's protesters were respectful and "thoughtful" in their approach to addressing the issue. "This is a difficult, compli- cated and important topic," Fitzgerald wrote. "The Univer- sity will continue its ongoing collaboration with the coalition and others to develop a prac- tical response that is legally compliant and reflects the Uni- versity's core values of fairness to all students and commitment to maintaining a diverse and inclusive community." Sanjay Jolly, a Public Policy graduate student and a repre- sentative from the University's chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the protest was intended to demonstrate to University officials that the fight for tuition equality is enduring. "All of these events are dif- ferent ways of engaging admin- istrators," Jolly said. "There is enormous support for this change and there is enormous opposition to this discrimina- tion against our peers." of filmmakers with a sense of questioning, emphasizing how important it is to not believe everything they learn in high school. Stone just laughed when he spoke about backlash from his attempt, as a liberal director, to disclose an alternative history of the United States. "Of course I'm goingto be rid- iculed," Stone said. He added though, that if you make the film entertaining enough, both conservatives and liberals will want to watch it. Some audience members found the lack of film discussion troubling, others, like Univer- sity of Toledo film student Sylvia Keller said they were intrigued by the more political nature of the conversation. "I thought it was a very inter- esting topic, mostly about how ideas in popular culture can be divided into binaries, and how Oliver Stone's work sort of takes those binaries that we segregate ourselves into and turns it into a dichotomy, and has us look at it from a different perspective," Keller said. During a questions and answer period with audience members, Stone listened eager- ly to stories about experiences in Vietnam, Yugoslavia and Afghanistan. It's in moments like this where one sees past the politics and controversies, and recognizes the man for someone deeply interested in the world around him, the present and the past. APPLICATION From Page 1 that process," Krenz said. "We therefore respectfully decline to release any part of the record." University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald said the University's response to the FOIA request is consistent with how it has responded to previous requests for student applications: "It's our view that is the pri- vate business of that individual," Fitzgerald said. When asked if exempting stu- dent applications from release is an official procedure followed by the University's FOIA office, Fitzgerald said it is simply the University's general interpreta- tion of the law. "It's not a policy, it's how that type of record - we see a stu- dent application record as not something that we're required to release under FOIA," Fitzger- ald said. Fitzgerald added that upon review of the application, the University believes that it is exempt from FOIA in its entire- ty. "We've looked at this docu- ment, and we believe that this document in total ... is exempt," Fitzgerald said. The University's denial comes after officials at the University of Iowa, the Uni- versity of Illinois and the Uni- versity of Alabama released Holmes's graduate applications after receiving requests, which Fitzgerald acknowledged. "I can also appreciate with other schools in other states operating under... somewhat dif- ferent FOIA laws may have come to other decision on releasing that material," Fitzgerald said. However, all three universi- ties exist in states that have sim- ilar or less restrictive FOIA laws than Michigan. The Illinois FOIA law exempts from disclosure, "per- sonal information contained within public records, the dis- closure of which would con- stitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy." Illinois defines "unwarranted invasion of personal privacy" as the "disclosure of information that is highly personal or objec- tionable to a reasonable person and in which the subject's right to privacy outweighs any legiti- mate public interest in obtaining the information," according to the state's FOIA policy. The Iowa Open Records Law states that, unless autho- rized, "personal information in records regarding a student, prospective student, or former student maintained, created, collected or assembled by or for a school corporation or educa- tional institution maintaining such records," should be kept confidential. Finally, the state of Ala- bama's Open Records law does not explicitly exempt personal information.on the basis of pri- vacy, but does exempt, "records the disclosure of which would otherwise be detrimental to the best interests of the public." Frank LoMonte, executive director of the Student Press Law Center - a Virginia-based nonprofitthatprotectsthe rights of journalists - said legal priva- cy is largely based on whether a person has a reasonable expec- tation of privacy. In the case of Holmes, whose photo and biography have been widely disseminated throughout the media, LoMonte said there is no reasonable expectation of privacy. "Once a person is caught up in a nationwide headline-making crime, that person loses any rea- sonable expectation of privacy in information they filed with the government," LoMonte said. He added that it's particularly concerning that the Univer- sity chose to deny access to the entire document, rather than simply redact clearly private information. "Typically, public records are not an all or nothing mat- ter," LoMonte said. "If you can remove the portions of the record that give away truly secret information, like a social security number, then you're supposed to remove only those portions and disclose the rest." LoMonte said public informa- tion like Holmes's date of birth, hometown and high school are not exempt under Michigan FOIA. "I find it hard to believe that there's not anypartofthatrecord that couldn't be safely revealed without giving away top-secret information," LoMonte said, adding that information such as the date of application could be useful in knowing if he applied to the University after being denied by other institutions. LoMonte added that ques- tionable denial of FOIA requests appears to be a trend, noting that many government entities believe requestors won't chal- lenge them in court. "I think we're definitely seeing more and more that government agencies are get- ting bolder about withholding records because they're con- vinced they can get away with it," LoMonte said. "They know that it's costly and time consum- ing to sue, and that a lot of media outlets - especially campus ones - don't have the time and money to pursue it." LoMonte said the University has little reason to protect the privacy of Holmes when the public already knows many inti- mate details of his life, and his reputation is already damaged beyond repair. "I just can't see where there's any interest in a public institu- tion bending over backwards for somebody who's never going to see life outside a jail cell again and whose life is an open book," LoMonte said. FOL LOW T HE DAILY ON TWITTER A,-,,00 WANT TO GO TO THERE. STOP BY 420 MAYNARD STREET FOR INFORMATION ON HOW TO JOIN STAFF