TAHE TROUBLE WI T H C oApRf AArescues pre-law hopeful z Having your car break down while wearing high heels in the middle of a week- night is a less than ideal start to the semester, LSA junior Starr Ford can attest. Running late to an event for her pre-law fraternity, Ford and a few friends hurried to find parking and ran to Angell Hall in their business attire without paying much atten- tion to whether or not they had shut off the car's hazard lights. Returning to her car after the meeting, she noticed her car lights "flashing like it was possessed." "We marked it up to anoth- er incidentof#StarrProblem," Starr said. Her calamity still not over, Starr returned all the way hometogetherjumper cables, only to be driven back by a friend and find out that the cables were broken - after 30 minutes of tryingthem. "At this time it was just comical," she said. She finally resolved to call AAA, who came to her aid after another hour. Looking back on the night, she said it was "not surpris- ing" that she forgot to turn her hazard lights off, as she received four tickets and had her car towed three times since the beginning of sum- mer. "Parents should really feel at ease knowing that these are the type of drivers that inhabit the roads at a school they pay thousands of dollars for," Starr said. RENT From Page 1A the University's high tuition, which surpasses that of the other univer- sities surrounding his properties, factors into the demand for high- rises. "The fact that people are paying that large amount for out-of-state tuition generally shows a higher income per capita per family," Perl- man said. Last year, The Washington Post reported on George Washington University's "rich kid" stigma. It describes the scene at a roof- top deck at one of the city's most expensive apartment buildings - surprisingly populated mostly by students. "The number one thingthat makes you popular at GW is money," one GW student told the Post. Back in Ann Arbor, the housing market reflects income disparity as well. LSA junior Amina Fishburn began her lease at Landmark this September after living in Baits Hous- es on North Campus her freshman year and a sorority house her sopho- more year. "There have been times when I don't necessarily want to tell people where I live," Fishburn said. "A little bit of a judgment does pass when you live in Landmark or Zaragon or any of the luxury apartments." The first high-rise to sprout near Central Campus was Zaragon Place, which Perlman developed in 2009. It is located about 1,200 steps from the Diag, Perlman said. Three years later, Perlman opened Zaragon West. Perlman also owns property near the campuses of Western Michigan University and East Carolina Univer- sity. He said Ann Arbor is an expen- sive town in terms of real estate. Ann Arbor's urban settingmeans less land and thus less area on which to build housing. "There isn't a bunch ofland to build so you're forced then to build verti- cally and that kind of construction is much more expensive," Perlman said. "With much more expensive con- struction, you have to charge more to rent." On average, depending on the occupancy of the unit, residents pay from $1,000 to $1,400 per person each month in Zaragon Place. The International Center approximates that the rent per person at a two-bed- room apartment in Ann Arbor ranges from $400 to $600 per month. Fishburn said the cost is worth it. "When it comes down to it, I don't think people necessarily realize that for what you're paying, you're actu- ally getting a lot," she said. Ladd said the storefronts in the area are doing better because of the additional business brought in by high-rises such as Zaragon Place, Landmark and the soon to open ArborBLU. "We're hopingthat long-term, stu- dents will move out of the neighbor- hoods and neighborhood houses will revert back to family use." t tMOdO oan INIy 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com PETERSHAHIN DOUGLAS SOLOMON Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1251 734-418-4115 eat. 1241 pjshahin@miehigondaiy.om doaaoo@michigandaiyeom Newsroom NewsTips 734-418-4115 opt.3 news@michigandaily.com Corrections Letters tothe Editor corrections@michigandaity.com tothedaily@michigandaily.com Arts Section Editorial Page arts@michigandaity.com opinion michiegndaily.com SportsSection Photography Section sports@michigandaily.com photo@michigandaily.com DisplaySales ClassifiedSales dailydisplay@gmail~corn classified@michigandaily.com Online Sales Finance onlineads@michigandaily.com finance@michigandaily.com EDITORIAL STAFF Katie Burke ManagingEditor kgburke@michigandaily.com JenniferCalfas ManagingNews Editor jcalfas@michigandaily.com SENIORNEWSEDITORS:IanDillingham,SamGringlas,WillGreenberg,RachelPremack andStephanie Shenouda ASSISTAN SEOWSEDITORS: AlanaAkhtar, Neala Serkowski, ClaireBryan, Shoham Geva, Amabel Karoub, Emma Kerr, Thomas McBrien, Emilie Plesset, Michael Sugarman and Jack Turman Megan McDonald and Daniel Wang EditrialPage Editors opinioneditors@michigandaily.com SENIOR EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Aarica Marsh and Victoria Noble ASSISTANTEDITORIALPAGEEDITORS:MatthewSeligman andDavidHarris Greg Garno and Alejandrn Uitiga Mangig SpotstEditors soseditors@michandaih,,om SNIORSPORTS EDITORS MaxCohon1 Dettelbach,LvFacher, R Kre,J ke ASSITANT SPORTS 7IOR MS:MaxBultman, Minh Doan, Daniel Feldman, Simon Kaufman, Erin Lennon, Jake Lourim and Jason Rubinstein John Lynchand jplynch@michigandaily.com Akshay Seth Manaeging ArtsEditors ,akse@michigandaly.orm SENIORARTS EDITOR: ioo omo, NatalieGadsHo d iikHarwoodand ASSIS NTARTSEDITORS: JamieBircoll, JacksonHoward,Gillian JakabandMaddie Thomas Teresa Mathew and Pal Sherman Mn ag hnoPhotdditor photo@michigandaily.com SENIOR PHOTOEDITORS: Allion Frrand andORubyWallau ASSISTANTPHOTOEDITORS:KatherinePekela,VirginiaLozano, JamesColterM cKzBerezin,andNicholasWilliams tarolyn Gearig and' Gabriela VasquezoManagingDesign Editors design@michigandaily.com SENIOR DESIGN EDITORS: Amy Mackensand AliciaKovalcheck Carlina Duan Magazine Editor statement@michigandaily.com DETYMAG AHINE EDITORS: Max adwin and Amrutha Sivakumar STATEMENT PHOTO EDITOR: ORuby Wa11, STATEMENTLEADDESIGNER:AmyMackens Mark Ossolinski and Meaghan Thompson Managing CopyEditors copydesk@michigandaily.com SENIOR COPY EDITORS: Mariam Sheikh and Alisha Qiu Austen Hufford online Editor ahufford@michigandaily.com VI000EDITORSAPaua Friedh d ndJamesReslier-Wells BUSINESS STAFF Madeline Lacey University Accounts Manager Ailie Steir Classified Manager Simonne KapadiaLocalAccounts Manager Lotus An National Accounts Manager Olivia Jones Production Managers Nolan Loh SpecialProjects Coordinator Jason Anterasian Finance Manager The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter tems by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mal are $110. Wi"terterm(J"uy'th'ugsAp'"yisn$115eaon(Sepember'h"ohprils'5195. Uersity affiiates asubecttoaes ubsonrae.n Oni-ampusss"ipions o em$5.Ssciptiu on t be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. 6 4 i i EARTHFEST From Page 1A to connect with groups they might want to get involved with, including exploring volunteer positions with community organizations and join- ing on-campus clubs. For example, Art and Design junior Dustin Park recently joined UMBees, a student group that works to raise awareness about the dwindling popu- lation of bees - a topic that has gar- nered national attention. Members also take part in a variety of activities to support healthy bee populations. LSA senior Mary Hirt belongs to the Undergraduate Sustainability Scholars Program, part of the Gra- ham Sustainability Institute. This learning community for juniors and seniors is a nine-credit course that, upon students' graduation, grants its members a certificate in sustainabil- ity and provides up to $3,000 in fund- ing for field experiences. "I used my money to go study agro- ecology in Cubathis summer," Hirt said. She also said she particularly appreciated the educational diversity within the program. "We come from all different backgrounds," she said. "We have engineers, people from the English Department, International Studies, so it's a really great community to get involved with because you get many differentperspectives on the issues of sustainability." TEXTING From Page 1A being of the community's resi- dents, collaborated with Chang. He also created the program Parkside Connected!- a repository of cell phone numbers of the residents of Parkside. FOP uses this program to send out information such as the time and location of important community events, including food giveaways or health fairs. During Chang's research project, individu- als who were part of Parkside Con- nected! were recruited to be part of the pilot study. Twenty participants who were familiar with receiving texts from FOP received and answered mul- tiple texts at varying times and days regarding a range of topics. "In our study, we asked them what they would do in different medical scenarios," Chang said. "Another one we piloted was lit- eracy and numeracy questions where we basically used these validated questions to understand illiteracy and innumeracy of the community. We were able to get really great information that could potentially be used to tailor interventlions." - In one medical 'scenario, the participants received a text mes- sage asking them what they would do if one side of their body became numb and they could not talk. Because many people responded that they would prob- ably stay home, the researchers determined that many residents did not know the signs of a stroke. This finding led to programming to help spread the word in Park- side about receiving proper medi- cal care and being on watch for health warning signs. "'We sent the texts at differ-" nt times of the day and different days of the week because some- times their regular doctor's office would be open and sometimes it wouldn't," Chang said. "We would want to know, oh, would they stay home, or would they go to the emergency room." Karen Daniels, a Parkside resident who participated in the study, said she heard about the study from a text message she received and decid- ed to par- tiipate so she could improve her texting skills. Danielsalso said she now prefers texting to other forms of communication. "It's faster than talking on the phone and you get to the point faster," Daniels said. "I would defi- nitely answer a text before I would answer avoicemail." Using texting to gather infor- mation also has many impli- cations for nonprofits and community organizations. These groups could potentially direct 'quhstifisn to members of the com- munities they are trying to help about how to use the nonprofits' resources, and about what those communities' top priorities are. "I don't want just me to use this technology," Chang said. "I hope that other people see how easy it can be and then how they may be able to incorporate the opinions and the viewpoints of the people they're working with as well." REPORTER From Page 1A Chief Justice John Roberts' court is First Amendment protection. "And it has, without question, ruled for free speech in hard cases," he said. However, Liptak noted while many view the Roberts court as favoring freedom of speech to the extreme, the court has heard fewer cases than the pre- vious three courts. Recent First Amendment cases focus on laws regarding campaign funds. For example, Justice Antonin Scalia respects the Constitu- tion's guarantee of free speech, Liptak said, defending it even when it conflicts with his own ideologies. "(Justice Scalia) likes to tell the story of how much it pained him when he voted to strike down a law making flag-burning a crime," Liptak said. "Here is what he said: 'If it was up to me, if I were king, I would take the scruffy, bearded,' sandal-wearingidiotsburningthe flag and I would put them in jail.' They come to the bench not with an agenda, but with a sense of neutral and dispassionate frame of law." Liptak also noted that this viewpoint is often an outlier, and politics do make their way into the court. "With the exception of Justice (Stephen) Breyer, who's really pretty much 50-50, all of the jus- tices were more likely to favor (their party line); the liberal jus- tices were more likely to favor liberal speakers, and conservative justices conservative speakers," Liptak said. He said while the Roberts court is generally straying away from sweeping rulings on hot- button issues such as abortion, gay rights and affirmative action, Liptak said Zivotofsky v. Kerry, a case the court is currently hear- ing that deals with the stance on listing Jerusalem versus listing Israel as one's birthplace on U.S. passports, stands to impact U.S. foreign policy. "Whatever the Supreme Court decides, in the matter of Ameri- can Constitutional law, the Mid- dle Eastern press will report on it in a kind of shorthand; and the Supreme Court decision itself may have an impact on their for- eign policy," Liptak said. Liptak said the court will also address whether someone can be prosecuted for issuing threats on Facebook that are quotes from rap lyrics. At the reception, when asked about his opinion of the Constitu- tion's effectiveness, Liptaksaidhe is behind the document as a legal device. "It's a work of genius," Liptak said. "It's endured for a longtime, and we are lucky to have it." Public Policy junior Julie Sarne said she came to the event because of her interest in the constitution, and how the current Court inter- prets it. "I think this event provided a great forum for that because it was more about how we report on the court and how the court has evolved and how that reflects the Constitution today," she said. Public policy junior Nick Rine- hart said he was interested in a reporter's take onthe court. "It was interesting to hear from his unique perspective," Rinehart said. "He gave pretty candid comments and that's something you don't usually get from a reporter." 4 MICH IGANDAI LY.COM H, -,, POLICY From Page 1A groups are said to be responsible for a significant amount of this violence, and while the Justice and Peace Law attempts to quan- tify the disruption and violence within communities, Castillejo- Cuellar emphasized Colombia's need for a strategy that is more sensitive to the individuals and communities at the heart of these conflicts. He described current methods as the "surgical extrac- tion of testimony." "There exist some forms of violence that are not perceived as such," Castillejo-Cuellar said. "We require institutional proce- dures as well as direct testimo- nies in order to fully understand, but what happens when testi- monials cannot be easily classi- fied? Extended narratives are not investigated, officials speak in Spanish, notilocal languages, and we see a domestication of testi- monies." Through anecdotal stories and personal experience, Castillejo- Cuellar described the varyingkinds of violence and poverty Colombi- ans experience. He implored pol- icy makers and researchers to use methods of analysis that include an understanding of individuals and the histories of their communities in a waythatdoes notdisregardthe past. To rectify what Castillejo- Cuellar said he considers the shortcomings of the Peace and Justice Law, he wants to rede- sign these short and 'uninvolved methods of data collection sothat they better reflect the experienc- es of Colombians. "Imagine a different kind of investigation that includes these kinds of conceptions of harm and violence in a different way," he said. "There is a need for histori- cal clarification." Following the lecture, Cas- tillejo-Cudllar offered a Q&A session with students and attend- ees. Some of these queries per- tained to his take on entering and interacting with communities like those in Colombia, as well as his opinion on the prospects for peace in Colombia. He said with new methods of research and policy-making, Colombia has an opportunity to move for- ward, though its past is still key in determining its future. "When I say I am from Colom- bia, everyone knows this means political conflict and drug wars and all ofthis,"he said. "That term, 'political conflict,' is now some- how engraved in our identity." While at this point Castillejo- Cuellar remains somewhat pessi- mistic about a peaceful future for Colombia, there remains some hope for his country. The Justice and Peace Law and other policies may give Colombians a sense of false security, of only aesthetic change. Castillejo-Cuellar hopes to bring this history of violence and the victims of this violence to the forefront of policy-making moving forward. "I think we still lack the politi- cal leadership to move the pro- cess even further forward. We lack the leadership of someone like Nelson Mandela," he said. "You live, in my experience, there and you have this sense of everything is cool, everything is fine and moving forward, butyou have this sense that underneath there is something wrong, a war going on." FOLLOW THE MICHIGAN DAILY ON TWITTER @michigandaily P A