The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, November 14, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS ROCHESTER, Mich. Oakland U. to submit report on coach firing A judge on Wednesday ordered Oakland University to turn over an unedited internal report on the firing of women's basketball coach Beckie Francis, who university officials say abused players. Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Martha Anderson said dur- ing a hearing Wednesday that she would decide this week how much of the report will remain blacked out. Francis is suing the 19,000-stu- dent school to get specific infor- mation on her June 12 firing. That same day her husband, Gary Russi, announced his retirement as pres- ident of Oakland University. PITTSBURGH Three students shot in drug-related dispute after school Three Pittsburgh high school students heading to their vehicle after classes ended were shot Wednesday afternoon, and police investigating whether the shoot- ing stemmed from a drug-related dispute had six people in custody for questioning, school and police officials said. The victims were shot out- side Brashear High School as they walked to a vehicle they'd all taken to school earlier in the day, school district spokes- woman Ebony Pugh said. Nearby residents said theyheard seven or eight shots. The wounds of the victims, all boys, appeared to be non-life- threatening, both Pugh and police spokeswoman Diane Richard said, though their descriptions of the wounds differed slightly. Pugh said two students were grazed in the head and one was shot in both the foot and arm. Richard said one was grazed in the neck and shoul- der, but not the head. TORONTO Toronto mayor admits to buying illegal drugs Toronto Mayor Rob Ford admitted during a heated City Council debate Wednesday that he bought illegal drugs while in office, but adamantly refused to step down despite calls from nearly every councilor to take a leave of absence and get help. "I'm most definitely keeping this job," the 44-year-old Ford said, insisting he was "a positive role model for kids." The mayor made the admission under questioningby a former ally, Councilor Denzil Minnan-Wong. Ford publicly acknowledged last week that he smoked crack cocaine while in a "drunken stu- por" last year, but his comments Wednesday marked the first time he admitted buying illegal drugs. PARIS French official IDs suspect in murder of journalists The Paris prosecutor has con- firmed the identity of the prime suspect in the killing of two French radio journalists in Mali last week as a militant with ties to al-Qaida's north Africa branch. Francois Molins said an "intense" manhunt was under- way for Baye Ag Bakabo, known to authorities as a low-level drug trafficker from the Tuareg ethnic group who had ties to al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb. He was one of four men believed to be involved in the Nov. 2 kidnap- ping and killing of correspondent Ghislaine Dupont and technician Claude Verlon of Radio France Internationale. Speaking to reporters Wednes- day, Molins also denied accounts in Malian media saying the jour- nalists had had their throats slit. He said they were each shot mul- tiple times, and no knife was used. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Symposium to highlight art influenced by political uprisings Event to feature presentations from artists and activists By GIANCARLO BUONOMO Daily Arts Writer How do you bring down a dic- tator? Often, it requires the usual tools: guns, bullets, bombs and blood. But dictators can them- selves grant rebels a powerful weapon. Say, Bashar al-Assad's skinny face, or Muammar Gad- hafi's bushy hair. Throughout the entirety of political upheaval in some Arab nations, protest- ers and rebel fighters have been using art as a weapon, both by satirizing oppressors and com- memorating sacrifices. This Thursday and Friday, the His- tory of Art department will be holding a symposium dedicated to analyzing and preserving the art that has played such a huge role in recent uprisings. "Over the last two years, I've followed really carefully all of these events," said Christiane Gruber, an associate professor of Islamic Art and Visual Cul- ture. "I followed street artists, cartoonists, bloggers, journal- ists, and when I saw just how many people were active in the uprisings through the expressive media, usingall of these different media, I thought it would be just wonderful to put them in conver- sation, to exit academia for just a second and bring everybody together." This symposium on the under-analyzed role of art, in WORK From Page 1A Business School, surveyed 109 part-time MBA students about their conceptions of work. "We don't necessarily under- stand why people approach their work in different ways," Dekas said. "It's helpful for people to reflect on what work means to them - in other words, the main things they hope to achieve or experience through working - and ensure they're making deci- sions accordingly." The study, to be published in the 2014 volume of Research in the Sociology of Work, suggests that parents are the most major influence on work orientation. It also found that the participant's religious culture and the stabil- ity of a participant's industry changed how he or she viewed the work. Baker said this aligned with how parents impact other values, such as political leanings. Ado- lescence is a key time for parental socialization to influence work orientation, as one is still form- ing their values but is old enough to comprehend what values are. Job, career and "calling" were defined as the three career ori- entations understood by indi- viduals. Amy Wrzesniewski, now an associate professor at Yale University, established these categories in her business Ph.D. dissertation. Those with a job orientation work principally for a source of income and are eager to retire. ORGAN From Page 1A the waiting list for organs is 3.5 times faster than the rate of increase of deceased donors," Sade said. "While the waiting list and number of deaths con- tinue to grow, the number of donors has essentially stabilized over the last seven years. This accounts for what has come to be known as the organ gap." Sade blames the National Organ Transplantation Act of 1984, which made compensation for organs a felony, for the lack of organ donations in recent years. "Over the last 30 years, the only motivation that is legally accepted is altruism; that is, providing organs for no other reason than the satisfaction of doing something good," he said. Toward the end of his lecture, the Arab uprisings will feature presentations from a diverse group of activists, journalists and academics, including CNN correspondent Jill Dougherty and Tunisian photo-blogger and Nobel Peace Prize nominee Lina Ben Mhenni. "There has been interest in the arts, but there hasn't been a systematic study of how it's func- tioning at the core of the upris- ings," Gruber said. "The more you look actuallyat how thesethings are enacted and activated, it's through banners, it's through chants, it's through posters, it's through digital art," she said. Along with live report- ing, Gruber said these tools aim to give a profile or shape to a demonstration. Much of the art that will be discussed in the symposium is street art, which has played a sig- nificant role in the uprisings for both practical and symbolic rea- sons. If an artist in Libya wants to make a statement to a whole neighborhood, what better way than to paint a humorous image on the wall of a public square? "If you see Gaddafi as a rat run- ning away from extermination, you don't need to explain all of the different messages imbedded in those images," Gruber said. However, on a symbolic level, street art is also a means by which citizens reclaim the spaces which government forces may have seized. Even if some- one spray-paints a giant smiley face on a wall where a massacre occurred, it still sends a message. "The simple fact of putting something up is about reclaim- ing that public space as public," Career-oriented employees might be seen as the typical workaholic - they are eager to climb the ranks and derive their identity from their job. Finally, a calling orientation leads people to seek employment that posi- tively affects others and fulfills their own passions. These orientations are largely stable over a person's life, Dekas said. For example, a father with a career orientation is most likely to raise a child with the same ori- entation. Interestingly enough, participants more closely mim- icked their father's orientations over their mother's. However, this leaning maybe influenced by the gender norms surrounding most of the partici- pants' adolescence. The average age of survey participants was 31, and women were underrep- resented in the working force in the 1980s. More than half of the working mothers of the par- ticipants worked in health care or education, fields that are not characterized by career mobil- ity compared to managerial positions that the participants' fathers may have held. The researchers concluded it was likely that fathers were stronger occupational role mod- els. Baker said he expected there would be a difference in the find- ings if the study if it were repeat- ed in the coming decades. Additionally, the report found that distressed industries force employees to shift to a job or career orientation, as par- ticipants employed in the auto industry demonstrated. A big- ger meaning in a person's career Sade touched upon the ethical standards of physicians, say- ing that the most critical ethi- cal principle of any physician is trustworthiness given the intimacy of relationships with patients. Before the lecture, Sade said decisions regarding end-of-life care were some of the most dif- ficult he faced as a physician. "One difficult problem that still is a problem for me is when you're taking a patient who's sliding downhill and getting sicker and sicker, and trying to decide when is the right time to discontinue life support," Sade said. "Is it ok to help that patient who's suffering badly and is not going to survive?" Sade also offered some advice to pre-medicine students: the major you choose as an under- graduate does not make any dif- ference whatsoever to medical school admissions officers. Gruber said. Public satire has been par- ticularly useful in destroyingthe elaborate cult of personalities. "There's nothing worse for an autocratic ruler than to have his charisma broken," Gruber said. And dictatorsoreally are afraid. Over the last several years, several prominent cartoonists and satirists have been beaten, imprisoned and even killed because of their art. Gruber has seen this violence firsthand. She spent the summer in Turkey profiling and working with protesters, who regularly experienced police brutality. Tear gas canisters were so ubiq- uitous thatshe began to use them as flower pots. That is, the tear gas canisters that didn't land next to her feet and engulf her and other protesters in a suffo- cating fog. Like tear gas-canister flower pots, much of the art of the Arab uprisingsis improvised andspon- taneous. For example, one Egyp- tian protester in Cairo's Tahrir Square made a necklace out of empty shell casings, a weirdly beautiful and uniquely powerful retort to violence. However, this symposium recognizes that what makes this art powerful - how it can pop up overnight, seemingly anywhere, using anything- isn't conducive to longevity. "I think with street art, in general, it is fleeting; it is ephem- eral," Gruber said. But for these artists, their art has a significance beyond brief existence. "It's,'I live through art,"'"Gru- ber said. "It's, 'I hope through art.'" might be ignored if layoffs are looming. "You may be a lot more focused on getting a job where you can make some money and get by," Baker said. Baker and Dekas also found that individuals raised in com- munities with a Protestant cul- ture, such as the Netherlands or Great Britain, were more likely to have a job or career orienta- tion. Baker links this correlation to the change in attitude toward work during the Protestant Ref- ormation. She said that value in working hard and advancing in society is still cherished 500 years later. "Work was no longer seen as something you just had to do," Baker said. "Workinghard,being frugal and investing wisely were all considered to be almost spiri- tual endeavors." The researchers highlighted the importance of learning one's own career orientation and find- ing employment that matched it. Baker mentioned firms that hire top undergraduates and overwork them for a few years with a high salary might pleasea job-oriented person but alienate those with a calling orientation. Dekas affirmed the need for some introspection to achieve happiness in a work-crazed envi- ronment. "Are they looking for work that will provide them with aslot of money? Social status? Deep, genuine fulfillment? Many peo- ple look for all of these things, but most people can isolate one or two that are particularly important." "People who major outside of the sciences, (those) who major in history or art or economics or philosophy, do just as well in medical school as people who major in chemistry or biology," Sade said. My best advice to pre- medical students is to major in whatever it is that turns you on, and not necessarily in the sci- ences." After the lecture, Nursing senior Kim Siebert said the idea of monetary compensation for organ donors is still question- able in her mind. "I think it's difficult because if you were to try and puta price on an organ, it's not going to be easy. It's the same thing as trying to put a price on a life." Siebert said. "There are so many different situational things that you can think of, like why did that person need an organ, or how did the person giving an organ feel about it?" SWEETWATERS From Page lA "It will take on the personality of the location that it's in - more geared toward students," she said. Bee said Sweetwaters would like to continue to expand in the futureifthelocation andpartners are the "right fit." Sweetwaters is the fourth com- pany slated to open in the former Borders building. Knight's Steak- house, Huntington National Bank and Slurping Turtle, a Japanese CAMPAIGN From Page 1A the activities shared resources to contain spending, she wrote it was difficult to separate how much each individually cost. "To achieve our audacious goal of raising $4 billion, we need gifts from hundreds of thousands of donors," Malcolm wrote. "That means we need hundreds of thousands of people aware of and engaged in the campaign." The DTE Energy Founda- tion donated $25,000 toward the Community Festival, helping off- set the costs of that event. While the Office of Develop- ment did not specifically track gifts and pledges received over the weekend, Malcolm wrote that the events were intended to thank donors for their recent gifts, including $50 million from Richard and Susan Rogel and $200 million from Stephen Ross. The purpose of the events was to highlight those donations in order to motivate other donors to begin considering what they might con- tribute to the campaign. "Unlike a fundraising telethon, acampaignkickoffis notdesigned or intended to raise money at that precise moment in time," Mal- colm wrote. "The kickoff event did, however, provide a focus and urgency for fundraising." To demonstrate their early support for Victors for Michigan, Malcolm wrote that many donors SECURITY From PagelA serve alcohol at many fraternity parties - includes preparation for dealing with sick party-goers, violent confrontations and crowd control. However, Andrew Koffsky, for- mer president of AEPi, said in a previous interview that he was less convinced the sober monitor train- ing could prevent such an assault. "No 19 or 20 year old knows how to deal with somebody who has a knife and is trying to get into a party," Koffsky said. "None of us are trained to have mortal combat abilities." Stephen Siddall, risk manager for the University's chapter of the Chi Phi fraternity, echoed Koff- sky's concerns aboutthe stabbing. "I think it's really scary; it really could have happened at any frater- nity," Siddall said. As risk manager, Siddall approves plans for Chi Phi's par- ties, works the front door and coor- dinates up to 10 sober monitors around the fraternity's property. Siddall said he had little formal training aside from shadowing the previous risk manager. While Siddall admitted none of his sober monitors aretrained to deal with a weapon, he said hiring additional security - as some fraternities have - would be overkill, and he put the onus on guests for keeping parties safe. "People just need to understand that fraternities are not throwing open parties every night," Siddall said. "Ninety-nine percent of our parties are closed events." But when fraternities plan tapas and noodle house, have also confirmed that they will set up shop in the first floor of the space, leaving one additional vacant spot for a retailer or restaurant. The University's School of Information will fill the office space on the second floor, accom- panied by PRIME Research. Bar- racuda Networks, an information technology security firm, leased 45,000 square feet of space at the corner of East Liberty and May- nard Street, which housed Bor- ders' corporate headquarters in 2012. wanted to contribute in advance of the campaignukick off - so they could also be recognized as lead- ership donors atcindividual school and unit events. Malcolm wrote thatcJerry May, the University's vice president for development, spoke with five potential donors over the week- end who are considering gifts in the $10 to 12 million range and another six who are considering gifts in the $5 to 10 million range. She added that many deans used the kickoff event as a way to close donations in the run-up to the launch. Over the weekend, the deans were then able to use the gifts already received to talk with other potential donors about how they could contribute. The University has already raised $1.7 billion of the $4 bil- lion goal, which includes the gifts from Ross, Rogel, Penny Stamps, who donated $32.5 million to the School of Art and Design in 2012, and others. "The goal of every event is to thank the donors who contribut- ed the $1.7 billion in the Nucleus Fund and to inspire others to give," Malcolm wrote. Malcolm added that the Uni- versity had succeeded in its goal of getting its message out to at least five million potential donors over the course of the weekend. The count included those who participated in an event, watched the live-stream of the kickoff in Hill Auditorium or read a Tweet, Facebook post, news article or promotional item. massive parties - usually with attendance of 500 people or more - some risk managers see a third- partysecurity team as anecessary investment. K-9 Patrol, a risk management consulting firm based out of Dear- born Heights, Mich., has been employed this year by the Univer- sity's chapters of Sigma Alpha Mu, Alpha Sigma and Alpha Epsilon Pi. The company provides pre- event guidance, onsite armed and unarmed guards and post-party consultations. Timothy Schar, CEO of K-9 Patrol, said his guards are profes- sional and act as a strong visual deterrent to help reduce the chance of an assault. "We're not a companythatcgoes and puts a bunch of 300-pound gorillas out there with black t-shirts that say 'security' on the back, because that's not security," Schar said. The company even deals with angry neighbors through a hotline designated for complaints. Guards generally cost $280, and most parties need between three and five guards, depending on the number of guests, Schar said. Most fraternities spend between $1,000 and$1,500upfrontonhis company's services, and there are no refunds if a party gets shutdown, he said. Still, the exorbitant costs required to hire a company like K-9 Patrol remain a strongenough deterrent for some risk managers, like Siddall. "We haven't been asked to (hire security), and that's an added cost that we don't necessarily need, and I really don't think its neces- sary from a risk management per- spective," Siddall said.