The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, December 3, 2013 - 3A * The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, December 3, 2013 - 3A DETROIT, Mich. Tigers trade Fister to the Nationals The Detroit Tigers have trad- ed starting pitcher Doug Fister to the Washington Nationals for three players. The deal was announced Mon- day night. The Nationals sent infielder Steve Lombardozzi, left- hander IanKrol and minorleague lefty Robbie Ray to Detroit. The AL Central champion Tigers have been busy reshaping their roster this offseason. They traded slugger Prince Fielder to Texas and also let All-Star short- stop Jhonny Peralta leave as a free agent for St. Louis. WASHINGON, D.C. Supreme Court defers on state sales tax decison On perhaps the busiest online shopping day of the year, the Supreme Court refused to wade into a dispute over state sales taxes for purchases on websites like Amazon.com, an outcome likely to prompt more states to attempt to collect taxes on Inter- net sales. Monday's court action means "it might be the last Cyber Mon- day without sales tax," said Joseph Henchman of the Wash- ington -based Tax Foundation. It's all part of a furious battle - also including legislation in Congress - among Internet sell- ers, millions of buyers, aggrieved brick-and-mortar stores and states hungry for billions of dol- lars in extra tax revenue. HONOLULU Gay marriage legalized in Hawaii Retired professors Rod Pow- ell and Bob Eddinger have been partners in life since 1977. On Monday, they joined in marriage on the first day it was legally possible in their home state of Hawaii. Powell says they wanted to celebrate the beginning of same- sex marriages in the state as a significant moment in society's movement toward equality and justice. The 78-year-old and 74-year- old met 36 years ago on the Manoa campus of the University of Hawaii. The state Department of Health says it issued 40 licenses for same-sex marriages in the hours since it began accepting applications at midnight. Department spokeswoman Janice Okubo says almost all the licenses were issued to couples on Oahu. LONDON French artist wins Britain's top prize A growing body of evidence collected by U.N. investigators points to the involvement of senior Syrian officials, includ- ing President Bashar Assad, in crimes against humanity and war crimes, the U.N.'s top human rights official said Monday. The statement by Navi Pillay, who heads the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, adds to the pressure for quicker action on Syria ahead of a key peace conference planned for Geneva in January. The con- ference, brought on by combined U.N., U.S. and Russian diploma- cy, would for the first time bring the Assad government and oppo- nents together for face-to-face negotiations. "As we look around the world at the end of 2013, we see exam- ples of situations where that readiness of the international community to act in time is already being sorely tested," Pil- lay told a news conference that touched on trouble spots around the world. "In addition to Syria, where the scale and viciousness of the abuses being perpetrated by elements on both sides almost defies belief, the situation in the Central African Republic is dete- riorating rapidly, and the alarm bells are ringing loud and clear." -Compiled from Daily wire reports SERVICE From Page 1 plans to hold job preference interviews with staff originally set to transfer to the new center. University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald said the letter gets across that the University has opted to take the time to consid- er about alternative structures. Engineering Prof Faw- waz Ulaby, who authored the href=http://www. michigandaily.com/news/ faculty-petition-shared-servic- es-center>petition, said the Uni- versity's announcement shows the faculty has gotten the atten- tion of the administration. However, he added that the University's response does nothing but delay the eventual AST implementation. Ulaby said the University should be terminating AST, not setting a timetable. He added administrators should form committees to study the best direction for University cost containment. "The fundamental problem is AST is flawed and bad for the campus, and it should be termi- nated - period," he said. At LSA's regularly scheduled faculty meeting held Monday afternoon, Pollack and Slot- tow again acknowledged the University's mishandling of shared services and attempted to assure faculty their concerns would not only be considered but play a central role in future decision-making processes. "I'm committed to cost sav- ings because I have no choice... but I'm also committed to repairing the damage that's been done during the rollout of AST," Pollack said. At the end of the meeting, the LSA faculty approved a motion to vote next week to support a two-year moratorium on the Shared Services Transition. The motion has been placed on the agenda for the Dec. 9 LSA fac- ulty meeting. During the question-and- answer session, Dena Good- man, professor of history and women's studies, asked if the administration would be willing to abandon AST all together. Slottow said if the Univer- sity were to give up on AST, administrators would need to find savings elsewhere. From conversations with Coleman, regents and deans over the past few days, Slottow said there are still alternative options. "While I understand the sen- timent to say 'just stop it,' the sense of a lot of people is that that would be irresponsible," Pollack added. "It's our respon- sibility to move forward, but to do it right." One faculty member asked Pollack how the University could stand behind the vision of a few administrators while 1,100 faculty members protest the very nature of AST. "I trust the faculty more, but I want to say this, there is mis- information on both sides," Pol- lack said. "I am with the faculty. I am a faculty member." Two faculty members also raised overarching concerns regarding AST. Two faculty members questioned the Uni- versity's relationship with Accenture LLC - the consult- ing firm with an $11.7 million contract to implement the ini- tiative. Slottow said administrators regret how Accenture's selec- tion was communicated to fac- ulty. "That is a failure," Slottow said. "I'm accountable for that; I feel responsible for that." Faculty have expressed concern with Accenture's fee as well as its reputation and connections with Rowan Miranda, the University asso- ciate vice president for finance who formerly served as lead on Accenture's state and local government and higher educa- tion portfolios. In November, Slottow released a statement addressing faculty member's concerns. At the LSA meeting, Slottow said AST is a complex program - a program the University does not have the resources to carry out on its own. He added that AST's project team is composed of 24 University representatives and 10 from Accenture, aided by 100 faculty and staff from across the Uni- versity. Slottow said the University held a regularly audited com- petitive bid process, during which a number of firms made offers for the AST contract. A team of people from across the University evaluated the bid before choosing Accenture. However, Slottow said the firm has not performed at the level administrators had hoped it would and are "look- ing at ways to reduce their involvement." Chemistry Prof. Charles Brooks asked if the University would disclose records related to the decision, to which Slot- tow responded by inviting any- one to look at the Accenture contract. Brooks also asked why the initiative's projected savings has fallen from $17 million in reoc- curringsavings to $6 million. "As far as savings go, I have been equally frustrated and very angry with those num- bers," Pollack said. However, Pollack said the decrease partly stems from the University's decision to refrain from running the transition like a corporation. Instead of saying each department needed to find ten people to cut, the University worked with department and college leaders to figure out fea- sible numbers. Pollack said the University never had any intent to hide these updated projections from the faculty but has traditionally left cost containment projects for administrators to grapple with. Describing the University's established "paternalistic" approach to cost-containment, Pollack said there has been the assumption that administrators should make decisions regard- ing efficiency and procure- ment savings, allowing faculty to focus on their research or teaching. In the future, Pollack prom- ised to gather input from faculty on similar issues, rather than protecting them from some- times painful cost cutting pro- cesses. "We've learned our lesson," she said. "I really do appreciate the degree to which the faculty is taking this seriously." FACULTY From Page 1 the administration's decision to postpone the shared services ini- tiative. Many members echoed his sentiments, noting that the decision shows the voices of the faculty have been heard. Social Work Prof. Karen Staller, chair of SACUA, said the delay provides faculty with more opportunities to par- ticipate in the next phase of research and discussion. Laura Olsen, a biology pro- fessor and SACUA member, said that LSA faculty will ask for a two-year suspension of the entire initiative. "In order for people to take us seriously, we need to partici- pate," Olsen said. After revamping several resolutions as a result of infor- mation relayed in the article, SACUA formally endorsed the suspension of shared services. SACUA plans to round out the semester with a private meeting with Pollack this Wednesday, followed by a Regent's update on Friday, a Senate Assembly meeting on Monday, Dec. 9, and a regular meeting with Univer- sity President Mary Sue Cole- man as a guest on Monday, Dec. 18. BID From Page 1 the 1950s, so leaving the plant has been a difficult task. "Moving out of here will not be an easy thing for me to do, but it is the right move for our com- pany," Edwards said. As part of an effort to improve and enhance the Athletics Cam- pus, the Board of Regentsap- proved a $6 million construction project to create a new building to centralize its operations on the Athletic Campus. Moreover, the Athletics Cam- pus will undergo a slew of reno- vationsover the next few years, including 16 improvement proj- ects. ORDINANCE From Page 1 the Michigan Uniform Traffic Code wording, which requires drivers to stop or slow for pedes- trians in the crosswalk, not including pedestrians at the edge of the walk or on the curb as the Ann Arbor ordinance currently states. The tone for the evening was set during the public comment section of the meeting, when Erica Briggs, chair of the Washt- enaw County Bicycling and Walk- ing Coalition, asked for opponents of the ban to stand and raise their hands. The move brough roughly three-fourths of the overflow- ing chamber guests to their feet. There were so many attendees at the meeting that city employees opened the chamber's retractable walls. The turnout may be the result of a request for public support at the meeting that was posted onWBWC's website. "You're placing the blame on the pedestrians for getting hit or killed in crosswalks, not on the drivers who hit them in marked crosswalks," Briggs told the coun- cil, describing the consequences should the law be repealed. The public hearing before the vote brought overwhelm- ing opposition to the repeal. Ann Arbor residents - including a few University students - passion- ately shared personal stories and pleaded to the Council to recon- sider the shift in policy. Some raised concerns that the council rushed to repeal the ordinance without a full engineering analy- sis. Others expressed a need for a pedestrian-friendly city and the importance of ensuring dis- abled people have enough street access without having to navigate oncoming traffic. Rackham student Lloyd Shel- ton said the changed ordinance would be exclusionary. He uses an electrically powered wheelchair and said crossing the street with- out the current ordinance would be incredibly burdensome. "It's about inclusion; it's about having a society that is designed so that everybody has access to everything," Shelton said. Still, the councilmembers who sponsored the repeal did not waiver from their stance, sup- porting the consistency of using the UTC law like the rest of the state. The initial vote to repeal was sponsored by Councilmembers Sally Peterson (D-Ward 2), Sumi Kailasapathy (D-Ward 1), Jane Lumm (I-Ward 2), Mike Anglin (D-Ward 5) and Kunselman, who eventually in favor of the Traverse City language. Councilmember Jack Eaton (D-Ward 4) was the sixth vote in favor. Kunselman responded to the arguments of limiting the access for the elderly and disabled by mentioning that it hadn't been an issue before and wasn't specifi- cally mentioned in any previous wordings. He said he is ready to move forward. "This has been talked about since well last summer; we heard some former candidates for coun- cil who were talking about it as they were out there this last fall," Kunselman said. "There is a dif- ferent perception besides just those that are represented by the Washtenaw Biking and Walking Coalition." Speakers on both sides of the issue spoke to the need for increased education, enforcement and improved infrastructure, many acknowledging that the wording of the law will not auto- matically change the behavior of either drivers or pedestrians. Councilmembers Kailasapa- thy and Peterson, among others, spokerepeatedly in favor of these efforts, regardless of the law. "What (tonight) shows is there is a great need for infrastructure, and that's what I take out of this. There's a great need for disabled people, older people, younger people to cross the street," Kai- lasapathy said in an interview. "What do we do? Put HAWK lights, crosswalks, put lights." U.N. says Assad may be guilty of war crimes Above: A view of Main Street in the 1860s. Below: A view of Main Street Monday. SHOPPING From Page 1 ings on going out to dinner." Although Ann Arbor is home to the University, Serras said the restaurants are often expensive along Main Street and draws an older crowd than college stu- dents. "They're higher end; I mean, you can go into them and see the pricing on the menu. I would say the demographic is slight- ly older than undergrad; the undergrads come when their parents are picking up the bill," Serras said. Maggie Long, managing partner and executive chef for the Jolly Pumpkin, also said their primary business is usually Ann Arbor locals and graduate students, adding that undergraduates usually live too far away to frequent the area. Long said patrons are attract- ed by the local atmosphere and "walkability" of the street, say- ing the distance from campus helps avoid the bustling student foot traffic of State Street or South University Avenue. "Main Street is easy to read. You can stand on the block and look and see where you need to go," Long said. The street's accessibility and vibrancy is not an accident, Thomson said. "We have lamp posts that were put up on Main Street twenty-plus years ago; they're a little bit more decorative. We have some mature trees, we have our planter beds, we have fairly wide sidewalks - all of these things that you don't necessarily think about as a pedestrian but that does sort of contribute to how you feel when you're on Main Street," Thom- son said. LSA freshman Kaia Parenti has been touring the city's food scene with her older brother Nicholas, a senior at the Uni- versity. The two of them visit a new restaurant every week. Parenti has explored the dining experience in many different Ann Arbor neighborhoods now but says that Main Street has its own "welcoming vibe." "There's a variety of different restaurants and places to eat, and they're all differentbutthey all look very intriguing," Parenti said. While Parenti admits the prices on Main Street can be steep, she said she's happy to pay to support good food, and the money is worth the trip. Adds pressure on embattled nation before peace talks GENEVA (AP) - A growing body of evidence collected by U.N. investigators points to the involvement of senior Syrian offi- cials, including President Bashar Assad, in crimes against human- ity and war crimes, the U.N.'s top human rights official said Mon- day. The statement by Navi Pillay, who heads the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, adds to the pressure for quicker action on Syria ahead of a key peace conference planned for Geneva in January. The con- ference, brought on by combined U.N., U.S. and Russian diplomacy, would for the first time bring the Assad government and oppo- nents together for face-to-face negotiations. "As we look around the world at the end of 2013, we see exam- ples of situations where that readiness of the international community to act in time is already being sorely tested," Pil- lay told a news conference that touched on trouble spots around the world. "In addition to Syria, where the scale and viciousness of the abuses being perpetrated by ele- ments on both sides almost defies belief, the situation in the Central African Republic is deteriorating rapidly, and the alarm bells are ringing loud and clear." Pillay said the Syrian abuses - suspected massacres, chemical attacks, torture, rape and a litany of other horrors - are being well documented by an expert U.N. panel of investigators. "They've produced massive evidence," she said. "They point to the fact that the evidence indi- cates responsibility at the highest level of government, including the head of state." Syrian Deputy Foreign Minis- ter Faisal Mekdad was dismissive of Pillay's remarks. a 4