2 - Friday, April 18, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2 A KrA/ -lrr% V Frida, Apil 18 201-The ichian Daly -michiandalyco 41e Idtcigan Dailm 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com PETERSHAHIN KIRBY VOIGTMAN Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1251 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 pjshahin@michigandaily.com kvoigtman@michigandaily.com LEFT LSA-sophomore Dana Abufarha celebrates her victory at the Man vs. Spoon event to raise money for Relay for Life Saturday (AMANDA ALLEN/ Daily). UPPER RIGHT Daisha Martin, a Seaholm High School student, participates in a By Any Means Necessary protest at the Student Activities Building Tuesday. (PAUL SHERMAN/ Pailip). LOWER RIGHT LSA sophomore Serge Andreou pets a furry friend at the Dogs in the Diag event at the Diag Wednesday (VIRGINIA Newsroom 734-418-4115 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales dailydisplay@gmail.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaily.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letters to the Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classifed@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Stress Relief Beginner Week Tango Clas WHAT: With finals around WHAT: For $25, bed the corner, who doesn't can come and learnt need some stress relief? joy of the dance that This is the week for it. A Argentine tango. M range of activities will be said instructors areE provided all week long. enced as well as per WHO: Center for Campus WHO: MTango Involvement WHEN: Today at 81 WHEN: April 18 to 22 WHERE: Mason H WHERE: All locations vary Floor Lecture in Symphony Drug Discovery Orchestra WHAT: Dennis C. Liotta WHAT: The Univer from Emory University Symphony Orchestr will give a lecture entitled hold a performance "Nucleoside Analogs as RNA- will be led by condur Dependent RNA Polymerase Kenneth Kiesler. Ki Inhibitors of Single Stranded will be giving a pre- RNA Viruses." lecture at 7:15 p.m. ir WHO: Center for the Lower Lobby. Discovery of New WHO: School of Mu Medicines Theatre & Dance WHEN: Today at 10a.m. WHEN: Today at 8 WHERE: Rackham WHERE: Hill Audit Graduate School Immortal s Technique ginners WHAT: The big nay the per and hip-hop art is the Ann Arbor. Tickets, Tango for all. experi- WHO: Michigan Ur sonable. Ticket Office WHEN: Today at 8 p.m. WHERE: Michigan all, 3rd Rogel Ballroom me rap- ist is in are $10 lion p.m. Union, Dustbowl Revival WHAT: The group mixes bluegrass, gospel and swamp blues with lively set for a modern spin on traditional American music. WHO: Michigan Union Ticket Office WHEN: Today at 8 p.m. WHERE: The Ark T H REE T HINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW TODAY Obama announced 35 percent of ACA enrollees are under the age of 35, USA Today reported. Obamacare now has 8 million participants, and premiums are 15 percent lower than anticipated. Maja Tosic discusses how white guilt can be harmful in shaping how persons of color are percieved by white individuals: "It does not allow white individuals to see people of color as equals." FOR MORE, SEE OPINION, PG. 4 Earth may be an only child, but NASA may have found its cousin. A Kepler-finding mission has discovered Kepler-163f, a planet made up of the same materials as Earth, The New York Times reported. EDITORIAL STAFF Katie Burke ManagingEditor kgburke@michigandaily.com JenniferCalfas Managing News Editor jcafas@michigandaily.com SENIORNEWSEDITORS:IanDillingham,SamGringlas,WillGreenberg,RachelPremack and Stephanie Shenouda ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS: Allana Akhtar, Yardain Amron, Hillary Crawford, Amia Davis, Shoham Geva, Amabel Karoub, Thomas McBrien, Emilie Plesset, Max Radwin and MichaelSugerman Megan McDonald and Daniel Wang Editorial PagetEditors opinioneditors@michigandaily.com SENIOR EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Aarica Marsh and Victoria Noble ASSISTANT EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Michael Schramm and Nivedita Karki Greg Garno and Alejandro Zdiga Managing sports Editorssportseditors@michigandaily.com SENIO SPOREDITORS: Max Cohen, Alexa Dettelbach, Rajat Khare, Jeremy Summitt ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS: Lev Facher, Daniel Feldman, Simon Kaufman, Erin Lennon,JakeLourimandJasonRubinstein John lynch and jplynch@michigandaily.com AkshaySeth ManagingArtsEditors akse@michigandaily.con SENIOR ARTS EDITORS: Giancarlo Buonomo, Natalie Gadbois,nErika Harwood and ASSISTNT ARTS EDITORS: Jamie Bircoll, Jackson Howard, Gillian Jakab and Maddie Thomas Teresa Mathewand Paul Sherman Managing PhotoEditors photo@michigandaily.com SENIORcPHOnOcEDInORS:PatickusBarrson n ReyWallr A ISTANTPHOTOEDTORSrionFrarrandTrcyKoerraMolengraffandNicholas Wilams Carolyn Gearig and Gabriela Vasquez Managing Design Editors design@michigandaily.com SENIOR DESIGNEDITORS: Amy MackensandAliciaKovalcheck tanlinaM Dan Ma xideditoe staement@mihigandaily.com STATEMENT PHOTO EDITOR: Ruby Wallau STATEMENTLEADDESIGNER:AmyMackens Mark Ossolinski and Meaghan Thompson Managing Copy Editors copydesk@michigandaily.com SENIORCOPYEDITORS:MariamSheikhandDavidNayer Austen Hufford OnlineEditor ahufford@michigandailyacom BUSINESS STAFF Amal Muzaffar DigitalAccounts Manager Doug Solomon University Accounts Manager Leah Louis-Prescott classified Manager Lexi Derasmn Local Accounts Manager Hillary WangNational Accounts Manager Ellen Wolbert and Sophie Greenbaum Production Managers Nolan Loh Special Projects Coordinator Nana Kikuchi Finance Manager Olivia JonesLayout Manager The Michigan Daily (IsrN 074s-967)is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the university of Michigan.One copy is available free of charge to al readers. Additionacopiesmay be picked up at theDloays orice for $2.Subscriptions or fal term. starting in september, via U.s.mail are $1o. Winte'term (anuary through April is, yearIong (September through Apri)isa$s 5s.university a rflniates are subiect to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are 5. Subscriptions must be prepaid The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. sity a will which ctor esler concert n the sic, p.m. torium Senior send- Drama: Les off tailgate Miserables WHAT: Graduating seniors WHAT: The theatre are invited to gather in the department performs an afternoon for free food, cap interpretation of Claude- & gown pictures, giveaways Michel Schonberg's con- and the Michigan Memory temporary masterpiece. Wall WHO: School of Music, WHO: Center for Campus Theatre & Dance Involvement WHEN: Todayat8p.m. WHEN: Today, 12 p.m. to WHERE: Power Center 2 p.m. * Please report anyerror WHERE: Michigan Union, in the Daily to correc- Front Lawn tions@michigandaily.com. Chaos follows the South Globally renowned novelist Korean ferry accident passes away at the age of 87 Boat sinking leaves 25 people dead with 270 passengers still missing MOKPO, South Korea (AP) - There was chaos and confusion on the bridge of a sinking ferry, with the captain first trying to stabilize the listing vessel before ordering its evacuation, a crewman said Thursday. By the time the order came, however, he said it had become impossible to help many of the passengers - although the cap- tain and a dozen crew members survived. The confirmed death toll from Wednesday's sinking of the Sawol off southern South Korea was 25, the coast guard said. But the number was expected to rise with about 270 people missing, many of them high school students on a class H-U trip. Officials said there were 179 survivors. Divers worked in shifts to try to get into the sunken ves- sel, but strong currents would not allow them to enter, said coast guard spokesman Kim Jae-in. The divers planned to pump oxygen into the ship to help any survivors, but first they had to get inside, he added. The water temperature in the area was about 12 degrees Celsius (54 degrees Fahren- heit), cold enough to cause signs of hypothermia after about 90 minutes of exposure. Kim said three vessels with cranes are being brought in to help with the rescue and to salvage the ferry, which sank not far from the southern city of Mokpo and now sits with just part of its keel visible. The captain of the Sawol, identified by broadcaster YTN and the Yonhap news agency as 68-year-old Lee Joon-seok, 5-m was questioned by the coast guard and made a brief, vid- eotaped appearance, although his face was hidden by a gray hoodie. "I am really sorry and deep- ly ashamed," Lee said. "I don't know what to say." Kim Soo-hyun, a senior coast guard official, said officials were investigating whether the captain got on one of the first rescue boats. Kim Han-sik, president of Chonghaejin Marine Co., the ship's owner, also apologized separately, bowing deeply and saying through his tears, "I committed a sin punishable by death. ... I am at a loss for words. I am sorry. I am sorry." The 146-meter (480-foot) Sewol had left Incheon on the northwestern coast of South Korea on Tuesday for the overnight journey to the southern resort island of Jeju. There were 475 people aboard, including 325 students from Danwon High School in Ansan, which is near Seoul. It was three hours from its destination Weadnesday morn- ing when it began to list for an unknown reason. Oh Yong-seok, a helmsman on the ferry with 10 years of shipping experience, said that when the crew gathered on the bridge and sent a distress call, the ship was already list- ing more than 5 degrees, the critical angle at which a vessel can be brought back to even keel. The first instructions from the captain were for passen- gers to put on life jackets and stay where they were, Oh said. Video obtained by The Associated Press that was shot by a survivor, truck driv- er Kim Dong-soo, shows the vessel listing severely with people in life jackets cling- ing to the side of the ship to keep from sliding. The initial announcement for passengers to stay in their quarters can be heard. Not G M ME: laureat crafted the fat heroic mindc ing up coast. One influen tion, h charm tions t lions a practit a blen( into pc made almost In h butterf lover's of nat and fa Man V one of1 spottec Gar( story e with h southe to two who sl nymity ily's pr Kno "Gabo, widely guage'; sinceN 17th c literar parisor Charle His anchol "Chrot "Love and "A - outs in Spa epic 1 bel prize winner ears of Solitude" sold more than 50 million copies in more than 25 Jabriel Garcia languages. With writers including Nor- arquez dies of man Mailer and Tom Wolfe, Gar- cia Marquez was also an early pneumonia practitioner of the literary nonfic- tion that would become known as XICO CITY (AP) - Nobel New Journalism. He became an e Gabriel Garcia Marquez elder statesman of Latin Ameri- i intoxicating fiction from can journalism, with magiste- alism, fantasy, cruelty and rial works of narrative non-fiction s of the world that set his that includedthe "Story ofA Ship- churning as a child grow- wrecked Sailor," the tale of a sea- on Colombia's Caribbean man lost on a life raft for 10 days. He was also a scion of the region's of the most revered and left. tial writers of his genera- Shorter pieces dealt with sub- e brought Latin America's jects includingVenezuela'slarger- and maddening contradic- than-life president, Hugo Chavez, o life in the minds of mil- while the book "News of a Kid- nd became the best-known napping" vividly portrayed how ioner of "magical realism," cocaine traffickers led by Pablo ding of fantastic elements Escobar had shred the social and ortrayals of daily life that moral fabric of his native Colom- the extraordinary seem bia, kidnapping members of its routine. elite. In 1994, Garcia Marquez is works, clouds of yellow founded the Iberoamerican Foun- lies precede a forbidden dation for New Journalism, which arrival. A heroic liberator offers training and competitions ions dies alone, destitute to raise the standard of narra- r from home. "A Very Old tive and investigative journalism Vith Enormous Wings," as across Latin America. his short stories is called, is But for so many inside and out- d in a muddy courtyard. side the region, it was his novels cia Marquez's own epic that became synonymous with 'nded Thursday, at age 87, LatinAmerica itself. is death at his home in When he accepted the Nobel rn Mexico City, according prize in 1982, Garcia Marquez people close to the family described the region as a "source poke on condition of ano- of insatiable creativity, full of rout of respect for the fam- sorrow and beauty, of which this ivacy. roving and nostalgic Colombian wn to millions simply as is but one cipher more, singled Garcia Marquez was out by fortune. Poets and beggars, seen as the Spanish lan- musicians and prophets, warriors s most popular writer and scoundrels, all creatures of Miguel de Cervantes in the that unbridled reality, we have entury. His extraordinary had to ask but little of imagina- y celebrity spawned com- tion, for our crucial problem has ns with Mark Twain and been a lack of conventional means s Dickens. to render our lives believable." flamboyant and mel- Gerald Martin, Garcia Mar- y works - among them quez's semi-official biographer, nicle of a Death Foretold," told The Associated Press that in the Time of Cholera" "One Hundred Years of Solitude" lutumn of the Patriarch" was "the first novel in which sold everything published Latin Americans recognized nish except the Bible. The themselves, that defined them, 967 novel "One Hundred celebrated their passion, their intensity, their spirituality and superstition, their grand propen- sity for failure." The Spanish Royal Academy, the arbiter of the language, cel- ebrated the novel's 40th anniver- sary with a special edition. It had only done so for just one other book, Cervantes' "Don Quijote." Like many Latin American writers, Garcia Marquez tran- scended the world of letters. He became aheroto the LatinAmeri- can left as an early ally of Cuba's revolutionary leader Fidel Castro and a critic of Washington's inter- ventions from Vietnam to Chile. His affable visage, set off by a white mustache and bushy grey eyebrows, was instantly recogniz- able. Unable to receive a U.S. visa for years due to his politics, he was nonetheless courted by presi- dents and kings. He counted Bill Clinton and Francois Mitterrand amonghis presidential friends. Garcia Marquez was born in Aracataca, a small Colombian town near the Caribbean coast on March 6, 1927. He was the eldest of the 11 children of Luisa San- tiaga Marquez and Gabriel Elijio Garcia, a telegraphist and a wan- dering homeopathic pharmacist who fathered at least four chil- dren outside of his marriage. Just after their first son was born, his parents left him with his maternal grandparents and moved to Barranquilla, where Garcia Marquez's father opened the first of a series of homeopathic pharmacies that would invariably fail, leaving them barely able to make ends meet. Garcia Marquez was raised for 10 years by his grandmother and his grandfather, a retired colo- nel who fought in the devastat- ing 1,000-Day War that hastened Colombia's loss of the Panama- nian isthmus. His grandparents' tales would provide grist for Garcia Mar- quez's fiction and Aracataca became the model for Macondo, the village surrounded by banana plantations at the foot of the Sier- ra Nevada mountains where "One Hundred Years of Solitude" isset. 9 I f