46F 46F 46F .4f lic4tgan 4:3atlm Ann Arbor,_Michigan Tuesday, April 1, 2014 michigandaily.com State's role m marriage ruling stirs controversy Students lined up from the Michigan Union past the Fleming Administration Building Monday night to purchase tickets for President Barack Obama's speech this Wednesday, The hundreds in line brought tents, couches and mattresses to pass the night outside to wait for tickets to be distributed at 9 a.m. tdline droves f- ter Obake President will discuss proposal to raise minimum wage on Wednesday By IAN DILLINGHAM and SHOHAM GEVA Daily News Editor and Daily StaffReporter Following one of the warmest days of the year, some students felt inclined to stay outside well into the night with one goal in mind: to secure a spot at Presi- dent Barack Obama's address on campus Wednesday. On Monday, the University announced plans to issue alim- ited number of tickets to attend the address, which will be held at the Intramural Sports Build- ing at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday. The University said tickets would be distributed on a first-come, first-served basis to students, prompting many to pack bags for a long, chilly night waiting outside the north doors to the Union. At 5:30 p.m. Monday, almost 16 hours before tickets for Obama's Wednesday campus address were set to be distribut- ed, LSA freshmen Janie Brown and Sydney Grant, as well as LSA sophomores Olivia Mason and Lizzy Brilliant, were already waiting in line outside the Michigan Union, as the first four in line to get tickets Tues- day morning. By 11 p.m., lines stretched to about 500 students, with more arriving each minute. Plan- ning for a long night, many groups brought tents, food and entertainment. At the front of the line, Brown and Grant said the experience was well worth See TICKETS, Page 3 Attorney General Schuette's defense of ban on same-sex marriage questioned By SHOHAM GEVA Daily StaffReporter Almost immediately after Fed- eral Judge Bernard Friedman's March 21 ruling that Michi- gan's same-sex marriage ban was unconstitutional, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette filed for an emergency stay. Sat- urday, after almost 300 couples married in the state, that stay was granted and later lengthened into a more permanent stay that will last for the duration of the appeals process. While Schuette is not the first attorney general to be put in this position, he is one of the first to fight the appeal of the ban so vigorously and also do so in the midst of a re-election campaign. In several statements to the press, Schuette said his motiva- tion is to defend both the will of the people and Michigan's Constitution -which has raised questions about what the role of an attorney general is during this situation, given the actions of attorney generals in previous cases. The U.S. Attorney General also issued a directive earlier this year advising state attorney gen- erals not to fight the overturning of gay marriage bans. During similar cases in Ken- tucky and California, state attor- ney generals have chosen to allow the case to move through the courts without getting directly involved. Instead, other inter- ested parties, such as the propo- nents of the original bans, were the ones who filed for the appeal. Law Prof. Samuel Bagenstos said Schuette's actions sppear to have a deeper motivation than what he has stated. Bagen- stos added that getting directly involved in the filling for the stay steps out of the requirements of his office. "The waythat he has described what he's doing is that simply that he's carrying his obligations out as attorney general and I'd say that's not right," Bagenstos said. "I think the only justification for him to be doing what he's doing is that he trulybelieves that it's con- stitutional for a state to prohibit people of the same sex from get- ting married." On Monday afternoon, Joy Yearout, the attorney general's director of communications, reiterated that Schuette's moti- vation is to defend the Michigan constitution. She added that, to Schuette, the other state attor- neys' decisions to remain unin- volved in similar cases is wrong. "Attorney generals across the country have a responsibility and a duty to defend the constitution and that's what we're doing here See STATE, Page 3 CAMPUS LIFE Ambassador talks changing U.S. diplomacy Richard Boucher says social media is important to reach a global audience By ALLANA AKHTAR Daily StaffReporter On Monday, Ambassador Richard Boucher delivered a lecture to students at the Ford School of Puhlic Policy Monday, addressing the United States' changing role as a world leader and how the rise of social net- working and new technologies have affected modern diplo- macy. Boucher's tenure as assis- tant secretary of state for public affairs at the U.S. Department of State was the longest in his- tory. After earning a B.A. from Tufts University and doing graduate work at George Wash- ington University, he worked as an ambassador to Cyprus and U.S. Consulate General in Hong Kong. He also served as the spokesman of the Depart- ment of State for six secretaries of state,including Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice and Mad- eleine Albright. In his lecture, Boucher said the power of the Internet has changed the dynamics of inter- national diplomacy. He said the United States wields the most power internationally, not only due to its large army and reach in foreign markets, hut also through its global connectivity through branding and culture exporting. "We no longer live in a world of blocks and paths, we live in a world of nodes and connec- tions," Boucher said. "In our world, everyone's connected. Countries and teenagers, NGOs and corporations, students in universities and parents. Tradi- tional measures of power don't capture the changing nature in the power of diplomacy." For the United States to stay a leader in international rela- tions, Boucher said it must make its actions open to the modern media and accessible for citi- zens to build credibility around the world because "trust is what turns power into influence." See AMBASSADOR, Page 3 ADAM GLANZMAN/Daily University President Mary Sue Coleman speaks at a fireside chat Monday in the Michigan Union, where students organized a surprise event to commemorate her work at the University. Coleman reflects on her tenure during Union event BUSINESS Jerusalem Garden to relocate to Seva space Move will be completed by December if all goes according to plan By CHRISTY SONG Daily StaffReporter Jerusalem Garden is just a little spot on 5th Avenue now, hut hy next Christmas, patrons can expect to visit 314 E. Liberty Street instead - which currently houses Seva - to satisfy their cravings for Mediterra- nean food. Since August 2013, Jerusalem Garden owner Ali Ramlawi con- sidered the moving locations to accommodate for the restaurant's expansion. "We've always needed more room ever since we opened and we expanded every square inch we could possibly expand at our current location," Ramlawi said. "We also tried to put an addition on with our current space that we couldn't get through with the landlord." Due to convenience, space and historical meaning, Ramlawi said she believed the building current- ly occupied by Seva's is the best See GARDEN, Page 3 Approximately 120 students came to laud the 13th president's service By YARDAIN AMRON Daily Staff Reporter University President Mary Sue Coleman's final monthly fireside chat was more than a little different this time around as approximately 120 students filled the Michigan Union's Pendleton room for a surprise. While Coleman typically invites a random selection of students for her fireside chats, more than the anticipated amount of students came to applaud Coleman on her ser- vice as the University's 13th president. E. Royster Harper, vice pres- ident for student life, joined Coleman for the monthly event, which Coleman continued at the beginning of her tenure. During her presidency, Cole- man and Harper have orga- nized fireside chats to field students' questions and con- cerns in a more intimate set- ting. LSA junior Michael Chrzan, the student event coordinator for the surpise, said he aspired to make Coleman's last fireside chat memorable to honor her commitment to students during her tenure. "We wanted this to be really special because she made hear- ing students' voices a priority and that's not something that comes intrinsically with every president," Chrzan said. "We wanted to give back in a small way, to say 'thank you' for put- ting themselves on the line and See COLEMAN, Page 3 . avewa rtm iawaux.,...a .... ........ .. .fr..- .YM-e: e_ :C,. .«,. v: YII I MiIiI M11MIW IM1 tlMY hl 11 WEATHER HI:49 TOMORROW LO: 29 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM Call 734-418-4115 ore-mail Students lead march for Tawianese rights news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS IN D E X N E W S................. ........... 2 A R T S ........ s.. .................5 Vol.CXXIV,No.94 SUDOKU.....................2 CLASSIFIEDS .................6 02014TheMichiganDaily OPINION.....................4 SPORTS.............7 michigandoily.com. I