UbeF*IiliFn 011& 1OLT EI4 AI)HI S) I\E\' DNITO R1I A! / F ,i. 11)1I l)A1. )\ Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, November 5, 2013 michigandaily.com CAMPIJS If Lawyer for bin Laden driver talks about case ALLISON FARRAND/Daily Sam Daley-Harris, founder of RESULTS and the Center for Citizen Empowerment and Transformation, spoke to students and faculty about his book, Reclaim- ing Our Democracy, and how to empower average citizens to take action towards ending world poverty and hunger. ACADEMICS CFE director's role expanded Schnieder saved driver from major terrorism charges By ARIANA ASSAF Daily StaffReporter Harry Schneider, a lawyer at Seattle-based Perkins Coie, spoke to a group of over 100 people Monday afternoon as part of The International Law Work- shop. Schneider talked about his involvement in the case of Salim Ahmed Hamdan, who was a driver for Osama bin Laden, and as a result was accused of engag- ing in acts of terrorism against the United States. Hamad was detained by the United States for nearly eight years before he won his case. Though he faced serious charges of assisting one of the most wanted criminals in American history, Hammad was only found guilty of materi- ally supporting bin Ladin, after' arguments from a legal team that included Schneider, court- appointed lawyer Lt. Command- er Charles Swift, Georgetown University Law Prof. Neal Katyal and others from Perkins Coie. Hamdan was first apprehend- ed on Nov. 24, 2001 after drop- ping his daughter and pregnant wife off at the Pakistan boarder. His second daughter was born while he was detained, and he didn't meet her until he was released years later. During his-time as a detainee, he was subject to harsh interro- gation, including sexual humili- ation and sleep deprivation. He was imprisoned in several facilities, including the notorious Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba. Hamdan was born in Yemen and orphaned at an early age. He was not extensively educated. Schneider said Hamdan's job offer from bin Laden offered a drastically different standard of living than he could have expect- ed otherwise. "He was told that if he stayed in Afghanistan, he could work and earn ten times the money he could ever hope to earn in Yemen," Schneider said. Hamdan was first employed by bin Laden in 1996 to trans- port agricultural workers who worked on bin Laden's farm. Eventually, Hamdan became the al-Qaida leader's personal driv- er. Although Hamdan was not unaware of bin Laden's activities, he wasn't a central figure to his See DRIVER, Page 3 E pro ent By STE In an mal en into eve tha Pal and vic affairs, Tngineering ing Prof Thomas Zurbuchen as senior advisor for entrepreneur- )f. Will advise ial education to begin immedi- ately, the University announced repreneurship Monday. Zurbuchen, who joined the education University in 1996, launched the Center for Entrepreneurship in EPHANIE SHENOUDA the College of Engineering in DailyStaffReporter 2008 and has helped the center expand its influence and scope attemptto integrate for- over the past five years. trepreneurial education CFE programs are currently ery student's major, Mar- available to 90 percent of under- lack, University provost graduate students, but Zurbu- ce president of student chen said in a statement that has appointed Engineer- he believes those efforts can be expanded and improved. "Our goal is to create the best creativity toolset in the world for students who want to learn how to 'be the difference' any- where in the world," Zurbuchen said. "A lot of this, we won't have to build. We just need to bundle. Entrepreneurial activities have grown tremendously here over the past decade. This isn't a top- down effort. This energy is com- ing mostly from the bottom up, and that's how revolutions hap- pen." Pollack also noted that entre- preneurial education is not as much about creating something new as it is facilitating the col- laboration of available resourc- es. "We see this role as one that not only knits together the Uni- versity's existing resources in entrepreneurship education, but also expands them, to offer as many students as possible a chance to develop entrepre- neurial skills," Pollack said in a statement. "This is a step we're taking for the education of our students, but I see tremendous potential for its effects to ripple See DIRECTOR, Page 3 CITY COUNCIL Eaton to focus on police, fire, basic services, U f' a Den get m his m to the in the The incuml Augu Eat versity degre earne State resent consis emplo naw, b the pa Eat past t in 201 sition write- Lockw write- pound challe niversity alum "What neighborhood activists find is that when they go to their aces elections council members is they don't feel they are being represented." is only official Eaton said. "Often you feel like you are the adversary when you candidate seek to have your representative act on your behalf." By ANASTASSIOS He has served as president of ADAMOPOULOS Friends of Dickens Woods Nature Daily StaffReporter Area, and co-founded the Neigh- borhood Alliance, a coalition of mocrat Jack Eaton says bud- Ann Arbor neighborhood groups, anagement and security are five years ago. The group is still ain priorities in the run up active today. election for city Ann Arbor Eaton stressed that his main fourth ward. concern as a candidate is manag- e University alum beat ing the city's budget priorities. abent Marcia Higgins in the "The fundamental responsibil- st primary. ity of the local government is to on graduated from the Uni- provide basic services like police, yin 1987 with a bachelor's fire, trash pickup and to maintain e in political science and the infrastructure: roads, storm d a law degree at Wayne sewers and waste water systems" University in 1991. He rep- he said. :s public sector unions, He says funding for the city's ting mostly of transit safety services has been particu- yees. Originally from Sagi- larly lacking while developers get e has lived in Ann Arbor for tax breaks and money was spent st 27 years with his family. on underground parking. on was unsuccessful the "I believe, and people similarly wo times he ran for office situated believe, that over the last 0 and 2012. The only oppo- ten years our local government Eaton faces this year are has neglected our safety servic- in candidates. William es," Eaton said. wood is the only official , Eaton said he's especially in candidate, but a "20- concerned about how these cuts i carp" has unofficially could affect University students. nged Eaton via Twitter. See SERVICES, Page 3 East Quad Residence Hall underwent a year-long, $116-million renovation and a radical resdesign- Post renovations, 'old' East Quad remembered fondly ACTIVISM Palm oil company protested bystudents Campaign urges cereal maker to divest from Wilmar By AMIA DAVIS For the Daily University students and the Ann Arbor residents are team- ing up with the Forest Heroes campaign, a group protesting the deforestation and displacement of endangered species in Indone- sia, to urge the Kellogg Company to break its partnership with Wilmar International, a Singa- pore-based palm oil corporation. In 2011 and 2012, Newsweek ranked Wilmar, the world's larg- est palm oil trader, as the least sustainable corporation in the world. Opponents say the com- pany has deforested parts of Indonesia in order to produce its product. The company is said to be responsible for the endanger- ment of many species in Indone- sia, including the orangutan and the Sumatran tiger, a rare sub- species found only on the Indo- nesian island. Forest Heroes has organized protest efforts and coalitions in the Ann Arbor area for some time. In October, the campaign recently held a statewide call-in See PROTESTED, Page 3 Residential College Students in the Residential College have called East Quad members mourn home since 1969. Some complain that the RC loss of Half Ass has taken a large loss as a com- munity due to the renovation. By EMMA KERR However, most RC students For the Daily who experienced East Quad before it was closed for renova- Since the reopening of East tions unanimously agree that, Quad Residence Hall this fall, even if just for safety reasons students have begun to wonder and general deterioration after what exactly the renovation's years of use, the building was $116-million price tag has in need of a makeover. bought them. The transition LSA senior Rosie Levine, to the "new" East Quad has who recently completed an not been without significant independent study* project adjustment and frustration, aimed at compiling memories, and stories from East Quad prior to its renovation, said she feels it is important to acknowledge not only what was lost in East Quad's renova- tion, but also the necessity of the improvements. "East Quad has been a really important place for a lot of people over the years," Levine said. "Before East Quad closed, a lot of people came back and talked about how much the building really meant to them and how much their college life was really formed around East Quad and how that was See RENOVATIONS, Page 3 WEATHER HI: 56 TOMORROW - LO37 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ON M CK IG AfN DA L YCOM INDEX NEWS......................2 SPORTS ...................7 The Wire: Students unlikely to show for election Vol. CXXIV, No.23 OP I N 10 N ..... .:.......... .-4 S U D O K U"................. 2 MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS 02011 The Michigan Daily ARTS .............................5 C LA 55I FI ED S .........6 michigandailycow 4 4 4