12 Thursday, June 5, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Weekly Summer Edition MichiganDailycom LeVert, Bielfeldt recovering from offseason surgery Ann Arbor, MI ONE-HUNDRED-TWENTY FOURYEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM Thursday, June 5, 2014 - By JAKE LOURIM ManagingSports Editor After the Michigan men's bas- ketball team lost three top players to the NBA head- NOTEBOOK iog ioto this sea- son, junior guard Caris LeVert is one of the only returning key contributors. Couple LeVert's length, shoot- ingskills and defensive ability with what should be an increased role next season, and the expectations are sky-high. But first things first: LeVert must 1 recover from offseason surgery to repair a stress fracture in his foot. LeVert will miss the Kevin Durant Skills Academy from June 27-29, but barring a setback, he should be ready to go for the team's trip to Europe in mid-August, said Michigan coach John Beilein at a press conference Tuesday. "Obviously the surgery was a success," Beilein said. "With some of our players, we thought he is such agrinder and he is in that gym so longthat we didn't want to take any chances. We expect him to be fullgo probably by the beginning of August, if not sooner." Though Beilein won't be able to prevent such injuries from occur- ring in the future, he's taking LeVert's injury as a guide to dealing with such bumps moving forward. "It's going to happen with some people now and then, and it does happen, a stress fracture in the - foot," he said. "It'll be a t "We are really being cautious, opportuni and it's the right boy thingto do.,," The only - other player limited by injuries is redshirt junior forward Max Bielfeldt, who had hip surgery after the season ended. He will be out for most of the summer, but Beilein said the current plan is for him to be back for the Europe trip. In his absence, the thin Michi- gan frontcourt - which lost Mitch McGary to the NBA, Jordan Mor- gan to graduation and Jon Horford to a transfer - will be even thinner. Though the injury might inhibit the plans Beilein had for Bielfeldt for the summer, it also enables Beilein to perhaps better acclimate PAUL SHERMAN/Daily Carts LeVert is expected back from foot surgery by early August, if not sooner. incoming freshman Ricky Doyle and redshirt freshman Mark Don- nal to his system. "Ricky (Doyle) and Mark Don- nal are going to get a lot of mean- ingful minutes over the summer," Beilein said. "If Max isn't back on the trip, (it's) reallygood for them." WHEN IN ROME: Beilein pro- vided more details on the team's trip to Europe, which will begin Aug. 15. The team will be gone for eight days and play four games in Italy. With such an inexperienced team, Beilein expects improve- ments out of several players. The Wolverines lost four key contribu- tors plus McGary, and just two players - Bielfeldt and junior guard Spike Albrecht - have more than two years of experience. remendous "Max hasn't had that type ty for us to oftime,"Beilein 77 said. "Spike nd. hasn't had that much time, so I think it'll give us a great time to start at ground zero and build everythingup again. Obviously some will be ahead of (others), but there's not veteran seniors and a young class. Every- body's pretty young." Beilein has worked with sopho- more guard Derrick Walton Jr. about taking over more of the scor- ing load this season with three starters gone. He also believes sophomore guard Zak Irvin could make a similar improvement to what Stauskas did last year, expanding his game beyond perim- eter shooting into a penetration game. Per NCAA rules, the team has not traveled to Europe in four years. In 2010, when the Wolverines took a trip to Europe in the summer, they made the second round of the NCAA Tournament the following year after missing out on the post- season the previous year. "We'll do some things on the trip such as room the freshmen with upperclassmen," Beilein said. "(We) try and teach our culture wherever we can. There's no cell phones working, there's going to be limited access to Internet, it'll be a tremendous opportunity for us to bond." A FRESH START: For the third time in four years, Michigan's lead- ing scorer departed early for the NBA, so the Wolverines will again look to a deep freshman class to contribute. This time, however, the rebuilding process could be slower - each of the previous two, Michi- gan won the Big Ten the following season. In addition to forward Kameron Chatman, who played in the Jor- dan Brand Classic game and will try out for Team USA's U18 team next week, the Wolverines have other recruits looking to make an early impact. The Wolverines added guards Aubrey Dawkins and Muhammad Ali Abdur-Rahkman late in the process after they lost players to the NBA. Beilein also didn't rule out the possibility of adding another player with the last open scholarship he has available. He didn't mention names, but West Virginia transfer Eron Harris has Michigan on his visit list. RGlasow blew .11 after OWI At least seven others in car with him, including volleyball player By JAKE LOURIM ManagingSports Editor Redshirt junior center Gra- ham Glasgow was charged with operating a vehicle while intoxi- cated on March 15, landing him a suspension for part of spring as well as the team's opener Aug. 30 against Appalachian State. But there's a little more to that story. According to a police report obtained by the Detroit Free Press and Ann Arbor News via a Free- dom of Information Act request, Glasgow was driving a Chevro- let Suburban around 8:30 p.m. on March 15 near State and Wil- liam Streets. He blew a .11 blood- alcohol concentration at the scene and a .13 at the Ann Arbor Police Department Security Datamaster room, both above the legal limit of.08. Glasgow told the police he'd had five Natural Light beers since 3 p.m. He failed multiple sobri- ety tests at the scene. He could not concentrate when asked to retrieve a number of items, stum- bled when walking and could not stand on one leg. Items were fall- ing out of the trunk while the car was moving. "(Ann Arbor police officer Pat- rick) Maguire could immediately smell an overwhelming odor of intoxicants coming from the driv- er," the report stated, according to the Ann Arbor News. At least seven other passen- gers were in the car, more than the number of seatbelts. Glasgow was pulled over by Maguire when he allegedly noticed that senior volleyball player Lexi Dannemi- ller was in the passenger seat, not wearing a seatbelt and hang- ing out the window screaming at pedestrians. Dannemiller, 20, was charged with a minor in posses- sion of alcohol and possession of a fraudulent ID, that of fifth-year senior rower Emily Idoni. Glasgow was in Ann Arbor District Court on Monday for his pretrial hearing. At the request of his attorney, John Shea, the hear- ing was adjourned until June 16so that a housekeeping matter could be resolved. He was dismissed on a $1,000 personal-recognizance bond and cannot leave the state or' consume alcoholuntil his hearing. Former left tackle and 2014 NFL Draft pick Taylor Lewan will also have his pretrial hearing for two charges of aggravated assault and one of battery that day. inside N EWS Policy conference Annual Mackinac Island Policy Conference focuses on Detroit's future >>SEE PAGE 2 NEWS ACLU lawsuit 300 couples file suit, once again bringing debate to state courts >> SEE PAGE 6 OINION\ Social sciences From the Daily: Congress must recognize importance of social science research >>SEE PAGE 4 AR TS New fairytale Disney's "Maleficent" fails to reinvent genre, but mostly fulfills expectations >> SEE PAGE 9 SPORTS Men's basketball Junior Caris LeVert could be back by early August from foot surgery >> SEE PAGE 12 INDEX Vol.CXXI oso. IO 2014TheMicige nDai N EW S ....................................2 OPINIO N ...............................4 ARTS ...............................6 CLASSIFIEDS........................8 CROSSWORD........................8 SPO RTS................................10 Oirector John sayles cuts a ribbon madentlimatthe openig of an exhibit for histilms during the John Sayles Symposium at Hatcher Library Wednesday Acclaimed indie filmmaker donates workto'U' archives RESEARCH Researchers find link between slut-shaming, finances Study of female freshmen indicates chasm between social classes By CAROLYN GEARIG Daily StaffReporter In Fall 2004, 55 women moved into a floor of a dormitory at a large public Midwestern university. Only 53 were students. The other two were Sociol- ogy Prof. Elizabeth Armstrong and then-graduate student Laura Ham- ilton, now teaching sociology at the University of California-Merced. The most surprising find- ings centered on the intersection between affluence and who was slut-shamed - that is, who was made guilty for their sexual activ- ity. Although Armstrong said all of the girls "slut-shamed" equal- ly, poorer girls were shamed by wealthier girls for their sexual behavior. Although wealthier girls had more hookups than the other girls, poorer women felt that they could not get away with this behav- ior without being shamed. Hamilton and Armstrong spent five years studying the attitudes, habits and daily routines of the girls on their floor. They spent extensive time with the women during their first year and interviewed them annually from sophomore year to post-graduation. Their findings concluded with a book published in April 2013, "Paying for the Party: How College Maintains Inequal- ity", and a study published in Social See SLUT-SHAMING, Page 3 C) o. N d N IT N symposium 1994 and 1983's Baby It's You. The library hosted a sympo- celebrates donation, siumtitled"Declarations ofinde- ,pendence: John Sayles as Author, discusses films' racial Auteur, Founding Father," which and nde th mes Lsted for the duration of Wednes- and genderthemes day afternoon. Various Screen Arts & Cultures professors and By HILLARY CRAWFORD administrators spoke at the event, DailyStaffReporter separated into segments discuss- ing Sayles as a screenwriter and A ribbon-cutting on Wednes- author, the themes of gender and day was lacking in a ribbon. Inde- race in hisfilms and the changing pendent filmmaker John Sayles landscape of American indepen- snipped a 35-millimeterfilmstrip dentcinema. as he officiallyintroduced his col- SAC Prof Jim Burnstein, also lectious to the Hatcher Graduate a screenwriter, played a part in Library's American Film Maver- opening the ceremony with an icks at Michigan collection. account of Sayles' identity and Since his directorial debut in beginnings as a writer. Sayles 1979 with Return of the Secaucus began his career as an author; his 7, Sayles has directed 17 addition- works include four novels, two al films. Go For Sisters, which had collections of short stories and a budget of $L2 million and was numerous screenplays - the best shot in just19 days, willbe shown of which he claims have unfortu- at this year's Cinetopia Film natelyneverbeen produced. Festival. Several of his films has "John Sayles is the Godfather reached universal acclaim, such of the American independent as The Secret of Roan inish from film," Burnstein said. Sayles said although it is hard- er today to raise money for inde- pendent film and sustain a career, it allows him to tell the stories he wants to tell as an auteur. "When I'm writing a movie for somebody else, I'm an employee," Sayles said. "There are people who don't raise their money inde- pendently and who make their own movies-they're a lot more successful than I am and they also don't get to do everything they want." Sayles came to this realization early on in his career when he beganwritingnovels that allowed him to sculpt his own world, nar- ratives and characters. Sayles has since translated this creativity to the screen but plans to write at least one more novel, which will most likely be based on one of his screenplays that are not yet pro- duced to be films. Currently, Sayles writes screenplays for TV and features by other directors to raise money See FILM, Page 3