Ann Arbor, MI ONE-HUNDRED-NINETEEN YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM -Or 100' A Weekly Summer Edition Ann Arbor, MI ONE-HUNDRED-NINETEEN YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM Weekly Summer Edition Texting ban needs state's drive Michigan must properly enforce the new road-tex- ting laws to prevent OMGs. >>SEE PAGE4 ARTS The Hold Steady can't find'Heaven' New album 'Whenever' still rocks, but doesn't quite capture the moment. >>SEEPAGE9 SPORTS Baseball falls to OSU at home Even with Barry Larkin's jersPv retirement, Blue comes up short of a win. Polo takes title Women's water polo beats rival Indiana for conference championship. >> SEE PA.-E '1 President Obama, University President Mary Sue Coleman and Governor Jennifer Granholm during the 2010 Spring Commencement ceremony held at Michigan Stadium on Saturday. Obama defines citizenship Graduation speech INDEX xc4anai .onMiigaeuiy NEWS ..................2 OPINION ...............4 CLASSIFIEDS .......... ... 6 ARTS .....................................9 SPO RT S ............ .................11 President calls for civil discourse and active participation By JACOB SMILOVITZ and KYLE SWANSON Editor in Chief and Daily News Editor President Barack Obama chal- lenged the political status quo in a speech before more than 80,000 at the University of Michigan's spring commencement Saturday, calling on graduates to embrace change as a means of strengthening the coun- try's democracy for years to come. Obama's speech in Michigan Stadium was a clear denunciation of the current state of American politics - an environment he said is never a place for the "thin-skinned or faint-of-heart" but has recently been pushed further by the "incred- ibly difficult moment in which we find ourselves as a nation." Through his words, the president attempted to convey his notion of citizenship to the maturatinggener- ation before him. He tried at times to reshape current conceptions of small and big government, pushed for a more civil political discourse See OBAMA, Page 7 Obama's presence felt by some as special, others left wanting By JILLIAN BERMAN Managing News Editor "I feel inspired to go on now and to do the work I'm going to do after I graduate," Karey Quarton, an LSA graduate, said as she walked past Elbel Field Saturday following Presi- dent Barack Obama's address at the University of Michigan's 2010 spring commencement. Quarton, who will be moving to New Orleans following graduation to become a part of Teach for America, said hearing Obama deliver the com- mencement address on Saturday "sent us off in a very positive light." "I thought it was really wonderful and I thought it appealed to all of us," she said. See SPEECH, Page 8 gets mixed reviews