The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, April 11, 2014 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, April 11, 2014 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Several hundred gather at vigil for beaten driver Several hundred people are gathering at a Detroit church to stand against racism and pray for a white motorist beaten by a black mob after he stopped to check on a child struck by his pickup truck. Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan joined clergy and the motorist's family Thursday evening at His- toric Little Rock Baptist Church. Bishop Charles Ellis III urged the community not to dwell on the bad, but to embrace good in the city, including good Samari- tans. Fifty-four-year-old Steve Utash was attacked April 2 when he- stopped to help 10-year-old David Harris. Utash remains hospitalized with severe head injuries. Harris suffered leg and other injuries. LANSING, Mich. State bars indicted energy companies from lease auctions The Michigan Department of NaturalResourceshas barred two energy companies under criminal indictment from participating in oil and gas lease auctions. DNR Director Keith Creagh says Chesapeake Energy Corp. and Encana Corp. can't par- ticipate in auctions until Michi- gan charges against them are resolved. The state also won't execute Encana's pending lease and will refund the company's money. Attorney General Bill Schuette last month charged the compa- nies with violating Michigan antitrust laws in a 2010 auction. He says collusion is suspected of depressing the per-acre cost of leases from $1,510 in May 2010 to under $40 in October 2010. SACRAMENTO, Calif. Judge rules treatment of Calif. inmates unconstitutional A federal judge has ruled that California's treatment of men- tally ill inmates violates consti- tutional safeguards against cruel and unusual punishment through excessive use of pepper spray and isolation. In the ruling issued Thursday, U.S. District Court Judge Law- rence Karlton gave the correc- tions department time to issue updated policies on the use of both methods but did not ban them. Karlton gave the department a range of options on how it could limit the use of pepper spray and isolation units. The ruling came after the release of what the judge calls horrific videotapes made by prison guards showing them pomping large amounts of pepper spray into the cells of mentally ill inmates, some of whom are heard screaming. PERTH, Australia Another possible signal heard in Flight 370 search An air and sea hunt for the missing Malaysian jet resumed Friday in the same swath of the southern Indian Ocean where an underwater sensor made the fifth detection of a signal in recent days, raising hopes that searchers are closing in on what could be a flight recorder. An Australian air force P-3 Orion, which has been dropping sonar buoys into the water near where four sounds were heard earlier,s picked up a "possible signal" on Thursday that may be from a man-made source, said Angus Houston, who is coordi- nating the search for Flight 370 off Australia's west coast. -Compiled from Daily wire reports LEADER From Page 1 community garnered 1,169 sig- natures. In response, the University engaged faculty and staff with five forums discussing how they would like business to be car- COUNCIL From Page 1 University does not have to pay taxes to the city of Ann Arbor and has autonomy from the city. The city has always had somewhat of a tense relation- ship with the University due to this polarizing reality, and since the University does not have to play by the city's rules or pay taxes as an autonomous unit, city officials' suggestions to the University often fall on what they say are selectively deaf ears. Monday's resolution spe- cifically urges the University to consider selling small parcels of the land for "complementary uses," and asks that the Univer- sity reflect on the idea of creat- ing a possible "pedestrian and vehicular" connection between South Main and South State in harmony with the Oakbrook Drive extension plan. Jim Kosteva, the Univer- sity's director for community relations, said in an e-mail the University plans to use the property to expand its athletic infrastructure. Kosteva reiterated that the ried out at the new center. After replacing former AST leader Rowan Miranda, who is departing for a position at the University of Chicago, Thom Madden, the University's direc- tor of sponsored programs, took the reigns of the initiative. He said the forums emphasized that the center should have staff University would be more than happy to sit down and talk with city officials regarding the use of the land and would consider their concerns. "We are always prepared to welcome any formal conversa- tions on topics of interest to the City government," Kosteva wrote. "We have already com- municated our willingness to meet with city officials regard- ing their specific interests expressed in the resolution." Councilmember Sabra Briere, while noting that she does not harbor any bitterness towards the University, also said while University officials do engage in talks with city officials, the Uni- versity almost always does what is best for itself and not neces- sarily for the city. "They always sit down, but it's notto negotiate," Briere said. Still, Briere said she does not expect the University to fully comply with the city's resolu- tion. Briere has been in conver- sation with Kosteva, who told her though the University would not satisfy all suggestions, they would make some concessions. "He said of course they aren't going to do any retail develop- ment close to the sidewalk or with specific unit expertise. "Faculty members in par- ticular have told us they don't want to lose the nuanced knowl- edge of unit staff, and this is an important part of our planning process going forward," Mad- den said ina release. Gabel was unavailable for comment Thursday afternoon. things that would make the pedestrian experience for walk- ing along there better," Briere said. "Although they might improve the sidewalk, what they really promised to do is keep the commuter lot open." However, Briere also said she was told the University might consider the Oakbrook con- nector between North Main Street and South State Street for pedestrian and bicycle passage, which she said would be a great thing for the city's residents. She added that she hopes one day the University sees that also considering the city's interests is mutually beneficial. "It's unfortunate that the tension exists between the city and the University," Briere said. "Designing to help Ann Arbor to be abetter community is to their benefit." Over the past year, the city and the University have had similar encounters. On Nov. 7, the City Council formally asked the University to take down the new marquee board that was erected in front of the Big House. Some city councilmem- bers had fears that the board was distracting to drivers, but the University did not budge. ROBOTICS From Page 1 The National Center for Manu- facturing Sciences, a non-profit organization that fosters collab- orations between businesses, government and researchers, co- hosted the event with the College of Engineering. NCMS director Phil Callihan said the role government plays in partnering with businesses is not solely to advance innovation, but to ensure industry continues to produce innovative products within the country. He said fed- eral and,, state governments are looking closely at robotics innova- tion in Michigan - a budding hub for the field - to create local jobs and restore the weak economy. Callihan added that govern- ment and business involvement in the University's robotics program will increase in the coming years thanks to the "fertile" environ- ment for innovation in the area. "When we're talking aboutthis kind of robotic innovation and autonomous vehicle innovation, they're not waiting for us," he said. "Innovation will march for- ward. We need to make sure we're doing everything we can to drive industry and to allow the work to happen that will help that grow." INEQUALITY From Page 1 the people that are not at the Uni- versity, then the people who are in power won't do a whole lot to make the world more equal." Public Policy graduate student Gillean Kitchen said inequality is an issue that all people face but not everyone is willing to talk about. "I think inequality has an impact on the overall economy, on the opportunities that we have available tous and the.opportuni- ties that will be available to our future kids, and if we don't care about it nobody else is going to," Kitchen said. "We're potentially future leaders, so if we truly take that to heart this is one of the big- gest challenges facing our nation today." The inequality discussion will continue this week at the Public Policy School and the National Poverty Center Friday with an academic conference in honor of The Research and Training Program on Poverty and Public Policy. Sebelius resigns after healthcare rollout issues SPRINGFEST From Page 1 SpringFest. It's unbelievable." Schermer said the festi- val's new layout, which aimed to both inspire and showcase student accomplishment, set a strong precedent for future improvement. He said he hopes that MUSIC Matters will recruit more student organiza- tions to present next year, in addition to bringing in more fooddoptions and more live out- door concerts. One of Thursday's live per- formers was LSA sophomore Sylvia Yacoub, who was for- merly a top 10 contestant on the third season of NBC's "The Voice." She said the venue gave her a chance to cater to a local audience, which she appreci- ated. "I thought it was a lot of fun," she said. "The crowd was awe- some. I loved the energy ... It was really cool to just perform with students. It's the demo- graphic, essentially, that I want to jump to when I release my album sometime this year." Yacoub performed a roughly 10-song set that included covers of Jessie J., Christina Aguilera and Rihanna. She also sang a slow, acoustic version of Tay- lor Swift's "I Knew You Were Trouble." Musical acts like Yacoub's were intertwined with entre- preneurial-themed talks throughout the day. University alum Mike Muse, one of the nation's top political fundrais- ers and the co-founder of record label Muse Recordings, deliv- ered one of these presentations. In his speech to students, Muse emphasized the close ties between music and politics - both mechanisms of enacting change. "We're here about SpringFest and we're here about 2 Chainz are we're here for MUSIC Mat- ters, but really, what is the purpose for us being here?" he asked during his talk. "The pur- pose is engagement. The pur- pose is activism. The purpose is to build community. The pur- pose is to bust down the segre- gated walls that we have here on this campus." Muse has also been named the first director of MUSIC Mat- ters' future board, which he said will ultimately consist of profes- sionals who "have ties to both the intersection of pop culture and change agents." This group will work with outside sources to help fund and build MUSIC Matters in the coming years. Muse said he became involved with MUSIC Matters after Schermer reached out to him earlier inthe year, as he was impressed with the similarities between his work and that of the student organization. "I was using music to make fundraising fun, and to make it cool, and to make it inviting, and to break the ice and say, 'This is what politics looks like now,"'"he said, adding that his career and MUSIC Matters "share a very unique symbiotic relationship that runs parallel." On a similar tangent of devel- opment, MPowered hosted an event called MTank - mod- eled after ABC's "Shark Tank," where start-up entrepreneurs pitch their potential products to world-renowned business moguls. Five groups pitched their products to a board of local ven- ture capitalists, and ultimately a product called "S-Pack"won the contest. According to a handout dis- tributed by MPowered prior to the MTank, S-Pack works to "solve the problem every woman faces by combining sev- eral essential toiletries into one product small enough to fit in any woman's purse." Business sophomore Mariel Reiss presented the product, which she said targeted college- aged women who might need to freshen up following a night on the town or even a drunken hookup. Engineering junior Chris O'Neil, MPowered president, credited SpringFest for provid- ing entrepreneurship with a wider audience. "I'm kind of stuck in the entrepreneurship end of this university, and I think that SpringFest was a really unique opportunity to have an event that had a little higher enter- tainment value - so you have these people who maybe aren't as familiar with entrepreneur- ship get to see what is going on and see all the cool startups and ideas that are actually happen- ing on campus," he said. Tom Frank, executive direc- tor of the University's Center for Entrepreneurship, said there is no longer a "normal" entrepre- neurship crowd. "I think that it's more about people who have innovative ideas; that they're becoming less and less shy about sharing with an audience, as opposed to something thinking of an entre- preneur as somebody locked in a room who's going to build and invent something that suddenly gets released on the world," he said. "They make it more collab- orative, more open and a safer environment to let those ideas cross-pollinate." This "cross-pollination" of thought Thursday was not restricted to entrepreneur- ship. Schermer said the Identity tent, located directly outside of Hatcher Graduate Library, was also a large factor in the trading new ideas. The Black Student Union pre- sented a photography exhibit in the tent as a culmination of the #BBUM movement. LSA senior Tyrell Collier, outgoing BSU speaker, said the pictures were meant to explore the experience of Black students at the Uni- versity in a new medium. The photo-shoot largely took place primarily in an alleyway off of E. Liberty Street. "We just wanted to show - because the environment that we shot in was a rough environ- ment; there was trash, dump- sters, some bricks - we really just wanted to get across the beauty in blackness, even in the roughest environments," Collier said. Despite 20 mph winds, Col- lier said the extreme weather did not impede the project's success. "We were placed right on the Diag proper," he said. "So there was a lot of traffic. Even just stu- dents going to class - there was a lot of traffic flowing through our tent. I don't think it's every day that you see a tent with about 24 different pictures of Black people." University alum Jeff Sorensen, a co-founder of social innovation group optiMize, also commented on the event's success in showcasing student accomplishment. Though optiMize had been planning to host a dunk tank featuring "well-known" stu- dents on campus - including CSG representatives and stu- dent athletes - these efforts were halted early in the day by the University's Risk Manage- ment Services, Sorensen said. However, he added, opti- Mize was most successful with its whiteboards, on which buzz words like "diversity," "health" and "education" were writ- ten and students were asked to write down what those terms meant to them. Sorensen said optiMize received several hun- dred responses, all of which are now displayed in the Center for Entrepreneurship. Sorensen also lauded the work of optiMize finalists, who presented their innovative proj- ects throughout the day. As for the future of Spring- Fest, Schermer said the best is yet to come. "I think it's going to be so much bigger and better than it was this year," he said. Sylvia Mathews Burwell to fill Health and Human Services Secretary role WASHINGTON (AP) - Embattled Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius is resigning as the White House seeks to move past the election-year political dam- age inflicted by the rocky rollout of President Barack Obama's sig- nature health care law. Sebelius' resignation comes just over a week after sign-ups closed for the first year of insur- ance coverage under the so-called Obamacare law. The opening weeks of the enrollment period were marred by widespread web- site woes, though the adminis- tration rebounded strongly by enrolling 7.1 million people by the March 31 deadline, exceeding ini- tial expectations. Enrollment has since risen to 7.5 million as people were given extra time tocomplete applications. Even with the late surge in sign-ups, the law remains unpopular with many Ameri- cans and Republicans have made it a centerpiece of their efforts to retake the Senate in the fall. Sebelius' resignation could also set the stage for a conten- tious confirmation hearing to replace her. In a sign that the White House is seeking to avoid a nomination fight, the president was tapping Sylvia Mathews Burwell, the director of the Office of Management and Bud- get, to replace Sebelius. Burwell was unanimously confirmed by the Senate for her current post. A White House official requested anonymity to confirm Sebelius' resignation and Bur- well's nomination ahead of the formal announcement. Obama has not nominated anyone to replace Burwell as budget direc- tor. Obama remained publicly supportive of Sebelius through- ott the rough rollout, deflecting Republican calls for her resigna- tion. But she was conspicuously not standing by his side last week when he heralded the sign-up surge during an event in the White House Rose Garden. The official said the 65-year- old Sebelius approached Obama last month about stepping down, telling him that the sign-up deadline was a good opportunity for a transition and suggesting he would be better served by some- one who was less of a political target. A spokeswoman for Sen. Pat Roberts, a Republican from Sebelius' home state of Kansas, called the resignation "a prudent decision" given what she called the total failure of Obamacare implementation. Sebelius dropped no hints about her resignation Thursday when she testified at a budget hearing. Instead, she received congratulations from Demo- cratic senators on the sign-up surge. INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH RESEARCH CENTER FOR GROUP DYNAMICS UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Winter 2014 Seminar Series: New Science on Race, Discrimination and the Social Lives of Black Americans Racism and Resilience: Ongoing Applications of Psychophysiological Methods April 14, 2014 Institute for Social Research 3:30-5:00 p.m. 426 Thompson Street Room 6050 Free and open to the public Follow us: @umisr, @rcgdisr Join the conversation: #RCGDseminar More information: http://bit.ly/RCGD-seminar M I C H I G A N D A I L Y. C O M A