2 - Friday, October 24, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 2 - Friday, October 24, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom chic atchlagan Bt1j 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com PETER SHAHIN DOUGLAS SOLOMON Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1251 734-418-4115 ext.1241 pjshahin@michigandaily.com dougsolo@michigandaily.com LEFT Students enjoyed Dogs on the Diag Tuesday. Ther- apaws, Paws with a Cause, Canine Assistants and other therapy dogs were present. (LUNA ANNA ARCHEY/Daily) RIGHT Schoolboy Q performs at Hill Auditorium Saturday night. (MCKENZIE BEREZIN/ Daily) Newsroom 734-418-41n5 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com ArtstSection 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 classified@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michrandaily.com TE WIRE Summer in ROTC run South Asia BY AMABEL KAROUB CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Regents Translate- election forum a-thon University ROTC mem- bers will be running from Ann Arbor to East Lansing for Saturday's football game against Michigan State. The charity race has already raised $13,705 to raise awareness for people with disabilities. TNE WIRE Glassboxclosure BY MICHAEL SUGERMAN Glassbox Coffee & Juice has closed its doors after primary investors called for the shop to close Wednesday night. Owner Jason Friend said the investor is no longer able to support the business. WHAT: Eight undergraduate students who spent a summer in India will sharetheir projects. WHO: Center'for South Asian Studies WHEN: Today from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. WHERE: School of Social Work WHAT: The candidates for the University's Board of Regents will answer ques- tions from Public Policy students. WHO: School of Public Policy WHEN: Today from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. WHERE: Weill Hall WCBN DJ Lou & Peter shadowing WHAT: Students have the chance to hang out behind the scences of WCBN. Participants will see what it's like to DJ at a local radio station. WHO: WCBN FM WHEN: Today from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. WHERE: Student Activities Building Berryman WHAT: These musical humorists mix Midwestern culture with humor and music. They have a dozen albums and three songbooks, and have toured in the United States and Canada. WHO: Michigan Union Ticket Office WHEN: Today at 8 p.m. WHERE: The Ark, 316 S. Main St. WHAT: A weekend-long event in which students can work on their translation skills. Food is provided. WHO: Language Resource Center WHEN: Today from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. WHERE: North Quad Chicago day trip WHAT: Spend a day exploring the Windy City with the International Center. WHO: International Center WHEN: All day Saturday WHERE: Chicago, Ill. . Please report any error in the Daily to correc- tions@michigandaily.com. Pope Francis wants to abolish life prison sentences. He called this type of punishment a "hidden death penalty," The Guardian reported. He spoke to a delegation from the International Association of Penal Law Thursday. The Michigan hockey team travels to the East Coast for a two-game weekend against UMass- Lowell and Boston University. The Wolverines hope to rebound from last, weekend's split against New Hampshire. >> FOR MORE, SEE PAGE 7 Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen donated $100 million to fight Ebola in West Africa, The New York Times reported. He is now one of the largest individual donors to the cause. The Bill Gates foundation will also donate $50 million. EDITORIAL STAFF Katie Burke Managing Editor kgburke@michigandaily.com lennifertalas Managing News Editor jcalfas@michigandaily.com SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: Ian Dillingham,Sam Gringlas, Will Greenberg, Rachel Premack and Stephanie Shenouda ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS: Allan Akhtar, Neala Berkowski, Claire Bryan, Shoham Geva, Amabel Karoub, Emma Kerr, Thomas McBrien, Emilie Plesset, Michael sugerman and Jack Turman Megan McDonald and Daniel Wang Editorial PagetEditors opinioneditors@michigandaily.com SENIOR EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Aarica Marsh and Victoria Noble ASSISTANT EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Matthew Seligman and David Harris Greg Garno and AlejandroZdtfiga Managing Sports Editors sportseditors@michigandaily.com SENIOR sORTSEDITOS:tMaxCohen,Alexa Dettelbach, LevFacher, Rajat Khare, Jake ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS: Max Bultman, Minh Doan, Daniel Feldman, Simon Kaufman, Erin Lennon, JakeL ourim and Jason Rubinstein John lynch and jpyysh@nichigandaiy.ow AkshaySeth Managing Arts Editors akse@nichitandaiycow SENIOR ARTS EDITORS: Giancarlo Buonomo, NatalieuGadbois, Erika Harwood and ASSITANT ARTS EDITORS: JamieBircoll, Jackson Howard,Gillian Jakob and Maddie Thomas Teresa Mathewand Paul Shenan ManagingPhootFrEditos y photo@michigandaily.com SENORsOTsnuOnaDITOS:nllisonyorrandansd Rbywllao ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITORS:LunaAnnaArchey,VirginiaLozano, JamesColler,McKenzieBerezin,and NicholasWilliams Carolyn Gearig and Gabriela VasquezeManagingDesign Editors design@michigandaily.com SENIOR DESIGN EDITORS: Amy Mackens and AliciaKovalcheck Carlina Duan Magazine Editor statement@michigandaily.com DEPUTY MAGAZINE EDITORS: Max Radwin and Amrutha Sivakumar STATEMENT PHOTO EDITOR: Ruby Wallau STATEMEN ED DESIGNER my Mackens Mark Ossolinski and Meaghan Thompson Managing Copy Editors copydesk@michigandaily.com SENIORCOPYEDITORS:MariamSheikhandAlishaQiu Austen Hufford OnlineEditor ahufford@michigandaily.com VDOEITETORS aulriedric nJa mes Reslier-Wells BUSINESS STAFF Madeline Lacey University Accounts Manager Ailie Steir classifiedManager Simonne Kapadia Local Accounts Manager Lotus An National Accounts Manager Olivia JonesProduction Managers Nolan Loh Special Projects Coordinator Jason Anterasian Finance Manager The MichiganD aily (SS N0745-967> is published Monday through Friday during the fal and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is avalable free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may' be picked up at the Dailys office for $2. Subscriptions for fal term, starting in septemberviaU. mail are $110. Winte' em (anuary throughtApr l)isel .yearlsong (September through April is $19.University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. 0 ., .... F .' ° '1 ' '' Clery Act revisions bring crime reporting updates GOP challenger aims to take Dingell House seat 0 Changes impact sexual assault prevention, hate crime classification By MAX RADWIN Daily StaffReporter College campuses should be safer come July, when new feder- al rules governing campus crime reporting are set to go into effect. The U.S. Department of Edu- cation announced final rules last Friday for new provisions to the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Cam- pus Security Policy and Cam- pus Crime Statistics Act, which ensures that universities comply with certain campus safety and security policies. The revisions were enacted as part of the Vio- lence Against Women Reautho- rization Act in Congress, which included changes to the Clery Act. Save Smart Oc 28 Apple' One-Day Sale & Seminar Up to $50 off select iPad' and $175 off select Mac*a Plus expert demos of OS 8 and OS X Yosemite' computershowcase.umich.edu "I am proud to say that now, teens and young adults will have better access to prevention and intervention programs to help break the cycle of violence around the country," said Valerie Jarrett, senior adviser and assistant to the president for intergovernmental affairs and public engagement and chair of the White House Council on Women and Girls, on the White House Blog. The Clery Act requires uni- versities that receive financial aid funding from the federal gov- ernment to create and follow a set of policies regarding student safety. For example, a university must publish an annual security report, keep a public crime log, post crime statistics, develop pro- cedures for emergency situations and prepare to handle reports of missing students, among other policies laid out in an almost 300- page Clery Act handbook. Effective July 1, 2015, the changes include five additions to the law. Universities will be required to: record incidents of stalking based on the loca- tion where stalking took place or the location where the vic- tim first realized he or she was being stalked; include gender identity and national origin as categories of bias that serve as hate crimes; describe the type of disciplinary action taken against people who have allegedly com- mitted domestic and dating vio- lence, sexual assault or stalking; include policies for preventing dating violence in their annual safety reports; and provide the accuser and the accused with the same opportunities during disci- plinary committees. Diane Brown, spokeswoman for the University's Division of Public Safety and Security, said it won't be difficult for the Univer- sity to make some of these chang- es since it already had many of the new requirements in place as recently as Fall 2013, when the University's sexual misconduct policy was updated - includ- See CLEARY, Page 3 Terry Bowman Right to work Energy focu care, By Dc In Feb Dingell( his reti seat op( service. are two crat Deb and Re man. Bowm an elect involved policy is Union C that seek tive valu bers. He as an as a Ford D where he his caree ses on health In 2012, Michigan passed . right-to-work legislation, which energy polcy prohibits unions from requiring employees to join or pay dues in SHOHAM GEVA workplaces. The issue proved aily StaffReporter divisive, with unions argu- ~-- -- ing that the policy would take bruary, U.S. Rep. John away their ability to effectively (D-Mich.) announced bargain. Bowman, a member of rement, leaving his the United Automobile Workers en after 58 years of union, was influential in the pas- Vying to replace him sage of the legislation through candidates - Demo- his role with the Union Conser- bie Dingell, his wife, vatives. publican Terry Bow- "Union officials don't like right-to-work because it holds ian, though never them answerable and account- ed official, has been able to their membership," Bow- in several statewide man said. "But for the rank and sues as the founder of file it's different. What right- onservatives, a group to-work does is it holds their :s to promote conserva- union officials answerable and es among union mem- accountable, and it forces those is currently employed union officials to start focus- sembly line worker at ing on them in their day-to-day Motor Company plant, work instead of being focused on has worked for most of politics on a national level. Right r. to work is pro-union worker, even though you hear from the 'Not a Dingell' other side that it's anti-union." Bowman characterized energy prices as one of the most important policy issues for the United States because of its significance to the econ omy both for families and busi nesses. "What people need to under- stand is that if your businesses are paying a high amount for energy, they have less money, to grow, to hire new people and to give the existing employees wages and benefits," he said. "Energy policy is our life- blood." Bowman added that he's not opposed to exploring and supporting wind and solar energy, but decried a focus on switching to them entirely. He also said to keep prices down he would look to coal as well as hydroelectric and nuclear energy sources. "There's no reason to demonize the existing energy plants today, like the coal- burning plants," Bowman said. "I think we've been very blessed in this country with an incredible amount of coal." Tough race to win No formal polls have been conducted for the race, but most predict Dingell will win due to her position as the Dem- ocratic nominee in a histori- cally blue district. Bowman's campaign does not have the money or the name recogni- tion to match his opponent, a fact he has acknowledged. "We know the district is very Democrat," he said. "ButO what we had said from the beginning is that what we have to do is make sure we have the ability - meaning the funds, the donations, the support of people in the district - we have enough in order to get our message out to the people in the district. And, we've been See BOWMAN, Page 3 0 The first thing Bowman wants to make clear is he's not a Dingell. Collectively, the Dingells have held a seat in the House for the past 81 years, through John Dingell's service and through his father, John D. Dingell, Sr., before him. Bowman has run on the platform of ending the "Dingell dynasty" and bringing a fresh perspective to Washing- ton. "It's no fault of the individu- al, but I think that if you're in Congress for a long time you completely lose the ability to connect with what goes on each andevery day," he said. He added that his campaign is not about partisanship in general. He said he's against family legacies in politics, whether it's a Clinton, a Dingell or a Bush. Healthcare Bowman has also made health care, specifically his opposition to the Affordable Care Act, a policy focus. He pointed an eco- nomic issue - the requirement for businesses with 50 or more employees to offer health insur- ance to their workers if they work 30 or more hours per week - as the basis for his concern. "For the first time in history, the Affordable Care Act desig- nates full-time employment as 30 hours a week or more," he said. "And so businesses are not willing to work their employees more than 29 hours a week. So this is a law, a bill, that actually encourages unemployment, and it encourages part-time employ- ment, which is not beneficial to the middle-income people in the United States, or the working families in the United States." r I I A A