2 - Friday, November 1, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2 - Friday, November 1, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom MONDAY: TUESDAY: WEDNESDAY: THURSDAY: This Week in History Professor Profiles In Other Ivory Towers Alumni Profiles .oesa te -e- TOP LEFT LSA senior Taylor Henkin, LSA senior Kevyn Harer, LSA junior Mira Friedlander, andw LSA senior Michelle Rubin pose; with Kenneth Coleman, husband of President Mary Sue Coleman, who is holding a portrait of Cole- man for Halloween. She wasM unable to greet trick-or-treaters. - SPOON (TRACY KO/Daily) 4' BOTTOM LEFT Art & Design freshman Marisa Diamond participates in the Living Arts Haunted House at Bursley Resi- derce Hall Monday. (NICHOLAS WILLIAMS/Daily) RIGHT LSA sophomore Avery j Popofsky poses during the Spoona* University launch party Wednes- day. (ERIN KIRKLAND/Daily) , a Qelg 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com ANDREW WEINER KIRBY VOIGTMAN Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1252 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 anweiner@michigandaily.com kvoigtman@michigandailycom Newsroom 734-418-4115 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaity.com Display Sales dailydisplay@gmail.com Online Sales, onlineads@michigandaily.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letters to the Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classified@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com " CRIME NOTES CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Look both ways Broken heart before riding WHERE: 1000 Block of North Univeristy . WHEN: Wednesday at 4:15 p.m. WHAT: A bicyclist was struck by a vehicle and sus- tained a minor injury but did not need medical attention, University Police reported. WHERE: 2600 Glazier WHEN: Wednesday at 5:00 p.m. WHATi A vehicle window was broken into while parked in the lot between 7:40 a.m. and 5 p.m., Univer- sity Police reported. Noth- ing was taken and there are currently no suspects. Civil Rights symposium WHAT: A symposium that allows participants to dicuss the contributions that urban planners of color have made to cities and engage in debates about challenges racial minorities still face. WHO: A. Alfred Taubman College of Architecture WHEN: Today at 9 a.m. WHERE: Museum of Art Polish music WHAT: Phillip Serna and Emily Katayama will perform music from the Baroque period as well as from the Enlightment period. WHO: Copernicus Endow- ment WHEN: Today at 7:30 p.m. WHERE: Michigan League, Koessler Room Hold it, bro Partners in WHERE:1150'West Medi- cal Center WHEN: Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. WHAT: During a traffic stop, a driver was arrested for driving while his license was suspended, University Police reported. He posted bond for an outstanding warrant and was released. crime WHERE: 1900 Fuller WHEN: Thursday at 2:20 a.m. WHAT: Two subjects attempted to break into a parked vehicle with a crow- bar, University Polic report- ed. When the subjects were approached by witnesses, they fled in an SUV. The role of Puppet Show WHAT: Blind Summit pres- islands ents puppetry inspired by Beckett, the Bible and Ikea. WHAT: A symposium on WHO: University Musical what role islands play politi- Society cally, culturally, and eco- WHEN: Today at 8 p.m. logically. It will discuss the WHERE: Performance possible future of islands in Network theater, 120 East a world of growing inter- Huron Street connectedness. CORRECTIONS WHO: International Insti- tute " Please report any WHEN: Today at 10 a.m. error in the Daily to WHERE: School of Social corrections@michi- work Building, Room 1636 gandaily.com. Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio postponed trick- or-treating due to severe flooding, NBC News reported. Early Thursday, flash floods in Austin, Texas, forced people to evacuate their homes and helicop- ter rescues were issued. No deaths were reported. Co-Managing Sports Editor Everett Cook writes the annual dueling column against The State News, the student paper of Michigan State. FOR MORE, SEE SPORTS, PAGE 8 A woman from Ohio accused of faking a can- cer diagnosis for her 4 year-old son was brought before court on Tuesday, ABC News reported. She con- vinced him that he was sick by shaving his head and asked the public for donations. 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One copy is available free of charge to allreaders. Additional copies may bepicked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September. viaU.S. mail are $110. Winter term (January through April) is $115 ,"l(SptemberthroughvAril)is$n. iver e sitaiiaesaesubjetteduoed shubiptionrate.n-cmpsmsbseriptioAssorflltemres.s dTsscriedCons stabeeprei. The Mihign Daily is a embsservTh ssocatedPress andTevssitd Cllege Pess. 0 MORE ONLINE Love Crime Notes? Get more online at michigandaily.com/blogs/The Wire Appeals judge blocks ruling on stop-and-frisk 0 Appeals judge removes district judge from case after interviews NEW YORK (AP) - A fed- eral appeals court on Thurs- day blocked a judge's ruling that found the New York Police Department's stop-and-frisk policy was discriminatory and took the unusual step of remov- ing her from the case, saying interviews she gave during the trial called her impartiality into question. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan said the rulings by U.S. District Judge Shira A. Scheindlin will be stayed pending the outcome of an appeal by the city. The judge had ruled in August the city violated the Constitution in how it carried. A - out its program of stopping stop-and-frisk technique, say- and questioning people. The ing it unfairly targets minori- city appealed her findings and ties. He said he was "extremely her remedial orders, including disappointed" in Thursday's a decision to assign a monitor decision. to help the police department "We have to end the over- change its policy and the train- use of stop and frisk - and any ing program associated with it. delay only means a continued During arguments, law- and unnecessary rift between yers in the case said the police our police and the people they department hasn't had to do prothect," he said in a statement. anything except meet with a - The appeals court said the monitor since the judge's deci- judge needed to be removed sion. But the city said police offi- because she ran afoul of the cers are afraid to stop and frisk code of conduct for U.S. judges people now and the number of in part by compromising the stop-and-frisks has dropped necessity for a judge to avoid dramatically. the appearance of partiality. It The three-judge appeals noted she -had given a series of panel, which heard arguments media interviews and public on the requested stay on Tues- statements responding to criti- day, noted that the case might cism of the court. In a footnote, be affected in a major way by it cited interviews with the New next week's mayoral election. York Law Journal, The Associ- Democratic candidate Bill de ated Press and The New Yorker Blasio, who's leading in polls, magazine. has sharply criticized and In the AP interview, Scheind- promised to reform the NYPD's lin labeled as a "below-the-behlt attack" on judicial indepen- dence reports that Mayor Michael Bloomberg had reviewed her record to show that most of her 15 written "search and seizure" rulings since she took the bench in 1994 had gone against law enforce- ment. She said it was "quite dis- graceful" if the mayor's office 2 was behind the study. The 2nd Circuit said the cases challenging stop-and-frisk poli- 6 es will be assigned to a dif- ferent judge chosen randomly. 5 It said the new presiding judge shall stay all proceedings pend- 2 ing further rulings by it. After a10-week civil trial that ended in the spring, Scheindlin ruled that police officers vio- lated the civil rights of tens of 8 7 9 thousands of people by wrongly targeting black and Hispanic 1 3 men with the stop-and-frisk '' _program. She appointed an out- side monitor to oversee major 7 2changes, including reforms in policies, training and supervi- sion, and she ordered a pilot program to test body-worn cameras. 71 Mayor Rob Ford previously said video did not exist and denied scandal TORONTO (AP) - Toronto police said Thursday they have obtained a video that appears to show Mayor Rob Ford smoking a crack pipe - a video that Ford had claimed didn't exist and has been at the core of a scandal that has embarrassed and gripped Canada for months. Police Chief Bill Blair said the video, recovered after being deleted from a computer hard drive, did not provide grounds to press charges. Ford, a populist mayor who has repeatedly made headlines for his bizarre behav- ior, vowed not to resign. Speaking outside his office door, Ford said with a smile: "I have no reason to resign." He said he couldn't defend himself because the affair is part of a criminal investigation involv- ing an associate, adding: "That's all I can say right now." Toron- to police discovered the video while conducting a huge surveil- lance operation into a friend and sometimes driver suspected of providing Ford with drugs. Ford faced allegations in May that he had been caught on video puffing from a glass crack pipe. Two reporters with the Toronto Star said they saw the video, but it has not been released publicly. Ford maintained he does not smoke crack and that the video does not exist. The scandal has been the fod- der of jokes on U.S. late night television and has cast Canada's largest city and financial capital in an unflattering light. Ford was elected mayor three years ago on a wave of discontent simmering in the city's outlying suburbs. Since then he has sur- vived an attempt to remove him from office on conflict-of-inter- est charges and has appeared in the news for his increasingly odd behavior. Through it all, the mayor has repeatedly refused to resign and pledged to run for re- election next year. But the pressure ramped up on Thursday with all four major dailies in the city calling on Ford to resign. Cheri DiNovo, a member of Ontario's parliament, tweeted: "Ford video nothing to celebrate Addiction is illness. Mayor please step down and get help?" . On Thursday, Blair said the video of the mayor "depicts images that are consistent with those previously reported in the press." "As a citizen of Toronto I'm disappointed," Blair said. "This is a traumatic issue for citizens of this city and the reputation of this city." Blair said the video will come out when Ford's associate and occasional. driver, }Alexander Lisi, goes to trial on drug charg- es. Lisi now also faces extortion charges for trying to retrieve the recording from an unidentified person. Blair did not say who owned the computer containing the video. Blair said authorities believed the video is linked to a home in Toronto, referred to by a con- fidential informant as a "crack house" in court documents in Lisi's drug case. FRANK GUNN/AP Toronto Mayor Rob Ford walks past Halloween decorations on his way to talk to media at City Hall in Toronto on Thursday. Ford says he has no reason to step down, even though police seized a video that appears to show him smoking a crack pipe. Toronto police have video. of mayor smoking a crack pipe