I NI IUc Ni)'l 1) W EN I U 1 l S O F \ E1111 TO A \ I) M Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, March 24, 2014 michigandaily.com STUDENT GOVERNMENT UMDivest movement sit-in sees progress RUBY WA LLAU/Daily After eleven years, Donna Rafferty and Jules Cobb are married at Washtenaw County Court Saturday. Same-sex couples join in marriage before court stay Officials issue marriage licenses ahead of circuit court's injunction By RACHEL PREMACK Daily News Editor By 11 a.m. Saturday morn- ing, Chelsea residents Marcia Wilson and Kim Richer were deemed wife and wife. Dressed in a simple hoodies-and-jeans ensemble, clutching red roses, they were officiated in a room in the lower floor of the Washt- enaw County Clerk's Office among other beaming same-sex couples, children in their Sun- day best offering stickers and cookies and families snapping iPhone picture. Same-sex couples waited hours to marry in Washtenaw County and three other counties around Michigan, taking part in an act that had been prohibited until the same-sex marriage ban was lifted on Friday. However, the Wilson-Ritcher wedding and more than 100 oth- ers statewide may be at risk as a result of the stay of proceedings issued late Saturday by the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati. A stay is a legal action that suspends a particular pro- ceeding within a case - same- sex marriage in this situation. Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette (R) requested an emergency stay shortly after the decision was announced Friday at 5 p.m. Schuette defended the state's 2004 ban on same-sex marriage and requested the stay for the case shortly after the decision was announced Friday. The Court of Appeals issued the stay later Saturday. The stay will halt ceremonies until Wednesday. At that point there will be a hearing concern- ing Schuette's request. Schuette defended the state in DeBoer v. Snyder, filed in Janu- See MARRIAGE, Page SA CSG resolution supporters speak to administrators, student leaders By WILL GREENBERG, MAX RADWIN and MICHAEL SUGERMAN Daily News Editor and Daily Staff Reporrers It was a busy weekend for mem- bers of Students Allied for Freedom and Equalityand allthosesittingin inthe Central Student Government chambers, as both administrators and CSG representatives met with the group to discuss plans to move forward. SAFE's efforts over the past three days culminated with astate- ment Sunday from Business senior Michael Proppe, CSG president, who laid out his response to each of the five "calls for accountability" from the sit-in, including an apol- ogy fromProppe personally. The sit-in in the CSG cham- bers in the Michigan Union began Wednesday night in response to CSG's indefinite postponement on a vote to divest from companies thathave supported allegedhuman rights violations against Palestin- ians. While the larger goal of the movement is to use CSG's influence to call on the University to divest from these companies, the sit-in is auresponse to CSG's indefinite post- ponement of avote onthe proposal. Proppe, Public Policy junior Bobby Dishell, CSG vice president, and LSA sophomore Meagan Sho- kar, CSG speaker of the assembly, met with the participants of the sit- in Sunday afternoon to give a state- ment from Proppe and discuss the current on-campus situation.In the statement, Proppe responded to all five of the calls for accountability made, reiterating his plan from last week to motion for Assembly Reso- lution 3-050 to be reconsidered. In the statement, Proppe said he See DIVEST, Page 3A CAMPUS LIFE MUSIC Matters will host 2 Chainz at SpringFest Proceeds from events will go toward scholarship, leadership camp By MICHAEL SUGERMAN Daily StaffReporter After months of negotiations and contract edits, MUSIC Matters has finally chained down the headlining artist for its year-end concert. This guy is different - yeah, he's differ- ent. And he's ready to perform. 2 Chainz will grace the Hill Auditorium stage April 10 to close MUSIC Matters' capstone event, SpringFest. Engineering senior Shan- kara Bharadwaj, the chair of MUSIC Matters' Talent and Concert Committee, said he thinks 2 Chainz is at the peak of his career, which makes him a hot acquisition as a musical guest. "Three Grammy nomina- tions, invited to all the major summer festivals ... there's a reason why we worked so hard to get him here," Bharadwaj said. "He brings a lot of energy; the Michigan student body is known to have a lot of energy. So it should be a marriage, really." Business senior Phil Scherm- er, MUSIC Matters President, said hiring 2 Chainz is the icing on the cake that has been expanding this year's Spring- Fest into an all-encompassing showcase of student achieve- ment. This year, the organization is rethinking SpringFest to resemble South by Southwest, the 10-day spring festival in Austin that is a hub for music, film and technology. "What we're doing in the afternoon at SpringFest is going to be so big," he said. "It's not going to be like anything anyone has seen on campus before." The revamped event will stretch from the Diag to North University Avenue. Its tentative layout will include a central "globe," an open area and stage See 2CHAINZ, Page 3A Medical Student Stephani Burdick, who is graduating this year, and her son Walter place a pin on the map at Match Day at the NCRC Friday. Medical students annoumce residencies at Match Day-. BUSINESS Hunter House to open new A2 location Popular burger joint makes a move from Birmingham By CHRISTY SONG Daily StaffReporter A Birmingham, Mich. burger spot that has caused food critics coast to coast to salivate is com- ing to Ann Arbor this spring. After more than 60 years of serving classic diner food in Bir- mingham, Hunter House Ham- burgers is set to open its second location near Central Campus. Hunter House serves up sliders, chili fries, cheese fries, hot dogs, grilled.cheese, breakfast platters and milkshakes. Its trademark is its style of burger: steamed buns and ham- burger patties with chopped onions smashed into the meat. In Birmingham, sliders and small fries are $1.99 each and a choco- late shake is $3. The new location at 609 E. William St. is about twice the See BURGER, Page 3A Doctors-to-be reveal their placements across the country By AMABEL KAROUB Daily StaffReporter Anxiety was palpable in the Building 18 ballroom of the North Campus Research Com- plex Friday at noon. After years of studying, 161 future doc- tors would soon receive their residency assignments--the culmination of their medical evaluation. Match Day, the annual day on which every medical student in the country learns where he or she is placed for residency took place Friday. At noon, Medi- cal School seniors opened their envelopes and went on stage to declare where they would go. Throughout their senior year, Medical School students interview at hospitals around the country. The students rank their preferences of hospitals and the hospital chooses which students it wants to accept as residents. The preferences of each side go into a computer program, which attempts to create ideal matches. At the end of the process students receive an envelope, unaware of which residency acceptance it will contain. The room was packed with long tables of food, maize and blue balloons, hundreds of glasses of sparkling water and the friends and families of the future residents. Many students See RESIDENCIES, Page 6A iirrrrrrr rniirr ronrr rrir r rr s wi r i m WEATHE R H I: 31 TOMORROW Lo: 7 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILYCOM Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail FX releases first trailer for "Fargo" news@michigandaily.com and let us know MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS INDEX NEWS .........................2A ARTS...........................7A Vol. CXXIV, No. 88 SUDOKU....................2A CLASSIFIEDS............... 6A 20t 4TheMichiganDaily OPINION.....................4A SPORTSMONDAY..........1B michigandaily.com A