The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam Friday, October 10, 2014 - 3A * The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom N tW Friday, October 10,2014- 3A NEWS BRIEFS FLINT, Mich, Man sentenced to five years for drunken accident A young man has been sentenced to at least five years in prison for a drunken wrong- way crash that killed a woman in Genesee County. Zachary Parker shed tears Thursdayashetold ajudgethathe wishes he could trade spots with the victim, Mariah Bailey-Collins, who was killed in February. The 19-year-old Parker was driving the wrong way on U.S. 23 in Mundy Township. He was 18 at the time, and his blood-alcohol level was more than twice the legal limit. Bailey-Collins' son and new husband were injured in the crash. Parker will be eligible for parole after five years. His maximum sentence is15 years in prison. OAKLEY, Mich. Judge: Oakley police department is closed for now A judge has declared there's no police department in a small town in Saginaw County. The Saginaw News says Judge Robert Kaczmarek granted an injunction Thursday, saying Oakley can't have a police department after the village council voted to disband it last month. Chief Robert Reznick had resumed patrols after obtaining a privately funded insurance policy. Oakley has roughly 300 residents, but Reznick had a corps of 12 officers and 100 reserve officers who lived around the state and helped pay for the police budget. AUSTIN, Texas Texas judge rules against voter ID requirements A federal judge likened Texas' strict voter ID requirement to a poll tax deliberately meant to suppress minority voter turn- out and struck it down less than a month before Election Day - and mere hours after the U.S. Supreme Court blocked a similar measure in Wisconsin. The twin rulings released Thursday evening represent major and somewhat surpris- ing blows to largely Republican- backed voter identification rules sweeping the nation that have generally been upheld in previous rulings. Approved in 2011, Texas' law is considered among the nation's harshest and had even been derid- ed in court by the Justice Depart- ment as blatant discrimination. Wisconsin's law was passed the same year and has remained a similar political flashpoint. MEXICO CITY Leader of Juarez drug cartel arrested by Mexican officials Federal police arrested alleged Juarez drug cartel leader Vicente Carrillo Fuentes in the northern city of Torreon on Thursday, Mexican officials announced. After investigators narrowed Carrillo Fuentes' whereabouts to a neighborhood of Torreon, he was taken into custody at a traffic checkpoint without a shot being fired, National Security Commissioner Monte Alejandro Rubido said. Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam called the arrest "a capture of great importance." "We are extremely heartened by the court's decision, which affirms our position that the Texas voter identification law unfairly and unnecessarily restricts access to the franchise," U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said in a statement. "We are also pleased that the Supreme Court has refused to allow Wisconsin to implement its own restrictive voter identification law." -Compiled from Daily wire reports DETROIT From Page 1A people." The series is held weekly in Detroit, with program operators offering transportation for stu- dents of the class and others. Thursday's event, "Reflections on the State of Detroit Public Schools," focused on controver- sial topics around education in Detroit and featured three guest speakers. Linda Spight, former Mum- ford High School principal, Asenath Andrews, former prin- cipal of Catherine Ferguson Academy, and Yolanda Peoples, the parent of both a current and former DPS student, all voiced concerns about the schools in Detroit. Peoples called for the Univer- sity to give up its partnership with the Detroit School of Arts, saying the school is being mis- managed. She cited overall atten- dance dropping, arts programs being cut and what she sees as a poor decision to replace the school's certified teachers with teacher volunteers from Teach for America. "What self-governing schools are supposed to do is to allow the school and the community to run itself," Peoples said. "It is supposed to work to improve academics and whatever performance is lacking. But remember DSA wasn't lacking. It wasn't lacking in attendance, it wasn't lacking in performance, it wasn't lacking in overall academics. So we have to ask ourselves, 'Why are you here?"' Spight voiced separate concerns, saying Republican Gov. Rick Snyder's Educational Achievement Authority initiative, implemented in 2012 and designed to improve struggling schools, is experimental and not turning around schools. Andrews, whose school exclusively enrolls pregnant and parenting teens, criticized DPS for dropping Catherine Ferguson from the district after it became expensive, forcing it to become a charter school. n After the lectures, the floor opened to the audience for commentary, resulting inheated comments from attendees. Elena Herrada, member of the DPS board, asked for the EAA to revert DPS back to Detroit and for the University to withdraw its presence from the Detroit School of Arts. "We're asking for the support of U of M students to go to the School of Education and to tell them to get out of Detroit School ofArts,"Herradasaid. "Students have the power to do this. You don't have to live with what Detroit students are livingwith. They will never get to U of M if they continue on the path that they're on. You have the power to make this happen for our students. I'm asking you to go to your Board of Regents, go to your professors, go everywhere and tell them hands off Detroit Public Schools." LSA junior Amy Kanka said she took the mini-course to learn more about the current events and history of the city she enjoys visiting and where her father grew up. "I just thought it was really interesting that I actually never knew about any of these topics," Kanka said. "I thought with discussing schools in Detroit, we would talk about unions or the effect the economy had on schools. I didn't know it was such a deep, emotional topic, or that the University of Michigan had a direct relationship with it. I'm applyingto the School of Ed. and I had no idea that the school had any correlation to DPS." Regester said SID has a philosophy that there are many different kinds of educators for their students, including Detroiters who have formal and informal qualifications. The series is open to the public to enable deeper learning for everyone in attendance. Members of the public who attend at least five lectures will receive a certificate of participation, Lolita Hernandez, SID creative writing lecturer and Detroit native, said. "When we open it to the general public,we'regoingtoget a wider array of perspectives, viewpoints, life goals, and developmental phases," Regester said. "All of that just makes for a richer conversation, and everybody ends up learning more in the end." The series will take place most Thursdays this fall at the U-M Detroit Center until November 13. The University's Detroit Center Connector bus, which travels between Ann Arbor and Detroit, provides free transportation to and from Detroiters Speak. Spaces for the public can be reserved on the UM Detroit Connector website. MCUBED From Page 1A because it often isn't digital, or is restricted by copyright laws. "Our solution is to build a system that would deliver the songs in context of the performance and then engage performers in cataloguing their music," Conway said. "We educate them about their options for copyright release and ask them to make some decisions song by song." RackhamstudentVenkatram Pepakayala was participating in a much different project. He spent the past year working to improve biomedical implants by removing cells that would cause scar tissue formation. Pepakayala said he was in need of funding when he heard about MCubed. "I was looking for funding for my Ph.D. work, and my previous budget ran out last year," Pepakayala said. "My adviser got in touch with one of the doctors from the eye clinic, and they applied for a grant and they got it." LSA senior Jeff Pituch was at the Symposium not as a member of a cube but for personal enjoyment. A researcher himself, he said he came to the Symposium the year before and found it inspirational. "I found it really helpful in terms of giving me new ideas to approach other people in different areas of research that have similar ideas that I could collaborate with in the future," Pituch said. "We're always looking for new, innovative solutions that I think are best brought about when you talk with somebody who really doesn't know exactly what you're doing, but likes to research and has a passion for finding out new things about literally anything." TECH From Page 1A the ingenuity of the tech trans- fer team, the quality of research being done at the University and the resources and support pro- vided by the University and com- munity. "The record number of new inventions is a reflection of the level of engagement our researchers are having," Nisbet said. "Because of their creativity, we are seeing more of their work coming to us." University research discover- ies are implemented around the world, Nisbet said, though tech transfer tries to boost the local economy by finding local busi- nesses that can benefit from the inventions and creating startups that are - at least initially - located in Ann Arbor. When looking to put their dis- coveries on the market, research- ers first report their idea to tech transfer. The office gets more than 400 reports per year, Nisbet said. Specialists at tech transfer then work on assessing, techni- cally and commercially, what wduld need to happen to make the discovery a viable and valu- able market item. They work with the researcher on either integrating the technology into an existing business, or creating a startup with the new technol- ogy at its core. After initial success, the busi- nesses and startups pay royalties to tech transfer and that money is reinvested into research at the University. The record number of agree- ments reflects a growing interest in collaboration between busi- nesses and the University, Nisbet said. For example, the Michigan- based engineering corporation Michigan Aerospace has licensed University technology through tech transfer that allows for bet- ter detection of ice and snow on aviation equipment. University startups are creat- ed with the help of Tech Trans- fer's Venture Center. A start-up located in Ann Arbor called Aler- tWatch, which allows physicians to see all their patient informa- tion in one centralized location, was created with guidance from the Venture Center. "That's the whole idea," Nis- bet said. "It's to have the work of our research help the general public." Nisbet also spoke aboutthe rep- utation of the University and the research being done here, tying the record-breaking success of Tech Transfer this year to the suc- cess of the University as a whole. "The reason we have over $1.3 billion in research expendi- tures every year is because our researchers are of such high qual- ity," Nisbet said. "We're viewed as one of the best research uni- versities in the world." The University will recognize Tech Transfer's endeavors at the 14th annual Celebrate Invention reception, which will be held in the Michigan League Ballroom Oct. 28. SURVEY. From PagelA American 18 to 29 year olds eli- gible to vote found that overall, only 19 percent of those sur- veyed considered themselves to be politically active. In contrast, 30 percent of respondents in the Daily's survey said they were "politically active" and an addi- tional 5 percent who said they "strongly agreed." Peter Levine, director of the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at Tufts Univer- sity, said low levels of engage- ment among young people and differences between young people enrolled in college and those who are not can often be explained by differences in mobilization - the process of disseminating campaign infor- mation and encouraging voter participation. "There's a good effect to mobilization. It works," Levine said. "The University can be a place that's targeted for mobili- zation for party operations and party volunteers to reach out and that's a good thing. Rela- tive to suburban neighborhoods, there may be less mobilization going on (there). Everybody's young and they tend be off lists and not noticed. On the other hand, relative to low-income working twenty-year olds in Detroit, a University of Michi- gan student is much more likely to be contacted." He added that at four-year, competitive institutions like the University of Michigan, several factors can contribute to rela- tively higher level of engagement in comparison with others in the same age demographic, most namely higher levels of societal advantage among the campus population. Michael Burns, director of the Campus Vote Project, said in terms of direct political partici- pation by voting, there are also several basic structural barriers to the act of voting for college students, namely lack of knowl- edge about deadlines, residency requirements for out-of-state students and other logistics. Only 23 percent of voters in the Harvard survey said they would "definitely be voting" in this year's November midterm elections, and in the last mid- term elections in 2010, 24 per- cent of 18-29 year olds voted, according to U.S. Census data. On college campuses, a little over 30 percent of college stu- dents voted in 2010, according to data from CIRCLE. In comparison, the average voting rate among eligible voters in U.S in the 2010 midterm elec- tion was 45.5 percent. "I think alot of it is just over- coming - I like to call it an information deficit," Burns said. "Only about 13 percent of (col- lege students who don't vote) say 'Oh, it just wasn't important' or 'Oh, my vote wasn't going to change anything.' So I think the majority of folks would vote, even in midterm elections, if they had the right information." For two of the biggest partisan political student organizations on campus - the College Demo- crats and the College Republi- cans - high levels of potentially unengaged and undecided eli- gible voters are something they see as both an opportunity and a responsibility. According to The Daily's sur- vey, along with alack of demon- strated political engagement and a tendency toward indecision, only 40 percent agreed that they were well informed about politi- cal issues. "I think that there is a huge problem of disengagement from politics with young people," LSA senior Trevor Dolan, chair of the University's chapter of the College Democrats, said. "A lot of it is people haven't necessar- ily had the time to experience what political processes can do for them, and they're sort of divorced from it because they haven't been moved by it ever." LSA senior Gabriel Leaf, chair of the University's chapter of the College Republicans, said especially on college campuses, the first step towards becoming engaged can be difficult. "It's hard for youth to get involved in politics ... it's defi- nitely not something we think about all the time," he said. "It's the first election for many of us." Dolan said for this year's mid- term election, College Demo- crats is choosing to focus on specific issues and the progres- sive values they speak to, as opposed to simply encouraging people to vote Democratic, in an effort to better cater to students. He pointed to several issues as particularly relevant for stu- dents from the Democratic per- spective, including incumbent candidate Republican Gov. Sny- der's 15 percent cut to university funding in 2011 and the recent introduction of amendment to the Elliott-Larsen Civil Rights Act by several Democratic state senators and representatives, which would change the act to include sexual orientation, gen- der identity and gender expres- sion as protected classifications. "It's really important that people understand that what's being debated impacts them very directly, like for example their tuition increase, or that they'll be secure in their job and can't be fired because they act too effeminate," he said. "I think that's what our responsibility as the College Democrats is, to con- vey to them why what is happen- ing right now matters, and why the people they vote for matter." Leaf said College Republicans was also taking an issues-based approach, namely focusing on jobs and the state's economy. "I see us as an opportunity," he said. "We are there to educate everyone, to provide opportuni- ties, to give people access to that (and) further their involvement." BOYCOTT From Page1A - we don't leap to conclusions or take on new projects - until we've completed the first step: trust," he added. "Trusting the team, its leaders, and those who help it develop - that is how we open doors to a bright- er future." As confirmed by a search of MCommunity, all respondents to Dishell's statement in the com- ments section of the CSG web- site were alumni. In addition to thoughts posted on MGoBlog and the CSG website, recent data analysis conducted by The Michigan Daily revealed that the majority of signatures on the CSG petition to fire Brandon were also graduates. University alum Joseph Lechtner said he agreed with Dishell's sentiment that students must support their athlete peers on football Saturday. That, how- ever, was why he endorsed the boycott. "As you clearly state, it's criti- cal to support the players off and on the field," Lechtner wrote in his comment. "With the current AD in place, the correct coaching staff will never be here in Ann Arbor and we'll continue to let down the next group of Michi- gan Student Athletes." Law School student Zachary Robock added commentary in support of Dishell's statement, writing that he is a proponent of Brandon's firing, "But ... waiting outside the game is not the way to send this message." "Regardless of the intended message, an empty student sec- tion is a signal to our players that we don't support them," Robock wrote. "We should not be airing our concerns over Dave Brandon by undermining our support in the football team." In a phone interview Thurs- day, Dishell said he understands the student body's call for a per- sonnel change, but feels that working to create effective poli- cy changes within the preexist- ing boundaries will be the most realistic method of creating a positive student experience. As to Brandon, Dishell said meeting with the Athletic Direc- tor was a humanizing experi- ence, and explained Brandon is different than the pejorative way some students portray him. "He's someone who we're looking to build a relationship with to bridge the gap that exists between students and the Ath- letics Department," Dishell said. "Absolutely it's going to take time but I can tell you, the way to build relationships is not by going out and attacking some- one. At the end of the day, agree with him or disagree with him on certain things, he's still our athletic director." To mitigate this perceived gap, Dishell said CSG will soon be releasing a survey where stu- dents can respond to questions and publish their criticisms of the Athletic Department, which he will parse through with Bran- don in subsequent meetings. Although he couldn't reveal the exact plans for working with the department until next week, he hinted that they will entail setting up a new, streamlined way for students to communicate with the Athletic Department, while making administrators more transparent and available to the student body. "I'm still going to go to rep- resent the student voice, but the way to do that is not by boycot- ting," Dishell said. THE MICHIGAN DAILY WANTS TO FOLLOW YOU. EVERYWHERE.- FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @MICHIGANDAILY For the latest on campus news, goings-on and the occasional clicktait squirrel video 4