CELBLRI\TI NG OUR ONE-I I UINI)ED TWEVNTY-FIFTH YEARF 0ED1'ITORIA L FREEDOM Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, December 8, 2014 michigandailycom ACADEMICS Classes give opportunity to explore T. R. Durham, owner of Dur m's Track ementsshowcases one of his products to customers Saturday. kerrytown fish mk brings upscale tastet A Moto Detroit courses focus on history, culture and community service By NEALA BERKOWSKI Daily Staff Reporter Students registering for winter term -classes have a range of opjions for learn- ing about the city of Detroit through culture and history classes, or through community service programs. Rebecca Zurier, an associate professor of art history, who teaches Made in Detroit: A His- tory of Art and Culture in the Motor City, said Detroit has changed so much recently she felt it was important to offer this course and have a discus- sion about the city with stu- dents. Her course gives students insight to trends in modern art, architecture and history by see- ing how they were stressed on a world stage. "The arts are playing a bigger and bigger role in this Detroit r City that is kind of growing infor- mally," she said. "The arts are an important insight into the city and they have something to do with its growth, so that's a good thing to think about in a classroom with a group of really committed and interesting stu- dents." In the course, which is cross-listed in art history and American culture, students will discuss specific pieces of art and architecture along with more general topics including the story of the Detroit Institute of Arts during the Detroit bank- ruptcy trials. For students interested in taking classes in Detroit, Detroiters Speak is a six-week public mini-course aiming to give students and the public a better understanding of his- toric and contemporary topics in Detroit. Students listen to a panel of Detroiters and experts talk about various topics. Semester in Detroit and the University's Detroit Center are co-sponsors of the series that is held weekly at the UM Detroit Center. Transportation is pro- See D4TRPIT, Pag24 Durham's caters to local, national clientele with speciality products By LINDSEY SCULLEN Daily StaffReporter It all started in a bathtub. Sound fishy? Well, it was. Hand-crafted smoked salmon is Durham's Tracklements' spe- cialty. The business started in Amherst, Mass. back in 1992, where Founder of Tracklements T.R. Durham cured - preserved with salt, sugar and maybe some seasoning - salmon in his base- ment. The bathtub, being a req- uisite size for salmon, served as his sink. Since then, Tracklements has nixed the bathtub in favor of a large sink in a small shop in Ker- rytown, just around the corner from the farmer's market. At the sink stands Margarito Dominguez, a member of the Tracklements team since 2002. He's performing a hand-led dry cure with quick, skilled hands. Using salt, sugar and sometimes some seasoning, he's smoothing the mixture up and down the fish, applying more to the thick- er parts and less to the thinner, Durham explained. "He's really extremely metic- ulous," Durham said. They've also since expanded from what used to be a holiday- time service onlyto a year-round business - open on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fri- days, Saturdays and by appoint- ment - that produces and sells smoked salmon varieties and has further filled in its repertoire with other fishes, meats and cheeses. Tracklements moved from Amherst to Ann Arbor in 1996 when Susan Douglas, Durham's wife, got a job at the University. She's currently a professor and Chair of Communication Stud- See SALMON, Page 3A WELLNESS Health experts debate merits of circumcision . Res ne re The of C Resou sponsc "New sion," order pitfall; Joh direct( tors and R and it at the sity C. The ev ethica circun dure t arounc earchers discuss commonly performed on new- born males. ethical issues, The U.S. Centers for Disease Control released a set of guide- w CDC medical lines last Tuesday that recom- mends doctors to discuss the commendations option of circumcision with their patients. Jonathan Mermin, By IRENE PARK director of the National Center Daily Staff Reporter for HIV/AIDS at the CDC, stated that circumcision is beneficial for National Organization men's health, especially for dis- ircumcision Information ease prevention. rce Centers of Michigan "The first thing that's impor- ored an event Sunday, titled tant to know is male circumci- Perspectives on Circumci- sion has been associated with at the Michigan League in a 50 to 60 percent reduction of to discuss the merits and HIV transmission as well as a s of the debated practice. reduction in sexually transmitted n. Geisheker, executive infections such as herpes, bac- or of the nonprofit Doc- terial vaginosis and the human Opposing Circumcision, papilloma virus, which causes obert Van Howe, professor penile and cervical cancer," Mer- nterim chair of Pediatrics min told The New York Times on Central Michigan Univer- Tuesday. ollege of Medicine, spoke. During his Sunday talk, Van rent addressed medical and Howe rebutted CDC's guidelines 1 problems associated with and said there is currently no ncision, a surgical proce- scientific evidence that circumci- :hat removes the foreskin sion is beneficial, saying that he d the tip of the penis most See HEALTH, Page 2A VIRGINIA LOZANO/Daily Students participate in a "die-in," a silent protest organized by the Black Law Students Alliance at the Law Library Friday. Students lay on the ground for 4.5 minutes representing the 4.5 hours Michael Brown's body lay on the ground after he was shot in Ferguson, Mo. Sudents organize 'de-iln' Std nsonz to rotest police brutality TECHNOLOGY 'U'sponsors Twitter chat on activism, new media Questions focus on journalism, social justice after Ferguson decision By IRENE PARK Daily Staff Reporter The University hosted a live Twitter chat event Friday titled "The Power of Social Media in Journalism Today"with three pan- elists: Gregory Anderson, editorial director at Yahoo and Knight Wal- lace Fellow; Martha Jones, profes- sor of history and Afroamerican and African studies; and Jennifer Calfas, 2015 Editor in Chief of The Michigan Daily. Twitter users submitted their questions using the hashtag #UMi- chChat before and during the event, and the University Twitter account chose 15 questions out of the pool to ask the three panelists. Questions covered a variety of topics within the theme of social See TWITTER, Page 2A Black Law Student Association calls attention to grand jury decisions By ALLANA AKHTAR Daily Staff Reporter Students and faculty gath- ered on the Law Quadrangle Friday afternoon to show their solidarity with protestors across the country who are ral- lying for justice in the killings of two unarmed Black men at the hands of police. Recent protests were spurred nationwide by a grand jury's decision last month not to indict the Ferguson, Mis- souri police officer who fatally shot teenager Michael Brown. Protests continued this week after a New York grand jury decided not to charge the offi- cer that killed 43-year-old Eric Garner while holding him in a chokehold. On the Law Quad, partici- pants were photographed dis- playing the "hands up, don't shoot" gesture that has become a symbol of the movement nationwide. They also laid -on the ground in the Law Library for four and a half minutes in a staged "die-in," intended to represent the number of hours See BROWN, Page 3A rue the Wolverines despite Caris ame. WEATHER HI: 40 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX L0 Call 734-41-4115 or e-mail Lil Wayne airs grievances on Twitter Vol. CXXIV, No. 38 TOMORROW news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS ©204 The Michigan Daily michigooduiy.com N EW S .........................2A A RT S...........................SA SUDOKU.....................2A CLASSIFIEDS............... SA OPINION ...........4A SPORTS MONDAYB.........B I 4