Thursday, June 19, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com FOLLOW US ON TWITTER &TH FRI OCKM eeklymrit g r nail& Sminer Edition 'Mihianoailycom Ann Arbor. MI ONE-HUNDRED-TWENTY FOUR YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM Thursday. June 19.2014 y' v . . v . . . . ., . . a . . . v v _ i, v v: a . :, vi +. , ... , . vi.i LKl VKKI VKlly 1/ i/Vi RESEARCH 'U' joins technology consortium, examines online ed. prospects ALLISON FARRAND/Daily Graham Glasgow pled guilty to a lesser charge Monday after a March 15 incident. Glasgow pleads guilty to lesser misdemeanor - A2_x SF JUNE - TOroboe Shorty in. Olenns Au enue NPR's Ask Me Another Robert Cray & M vis Staples The C pitot Steps - Disoouer Toe at A2SF.org City amends OWI to operating while visually impaired, sentencing July 14 By JAKE LOURIM ManagingSports Editor Redshirt junior offensive line- man Graham Glasgow appeared in Ann Arbor District Court Monday for an operating while intoxicated charge and pled guilty to the lesser charge of operating while visually impaired. Glasgow was arraigned June 2 and plead not guilty to the OWI charge from a March 15 incident. The city amended the charge Mon- day to operating while visually impaired, a misdemeanor punish- able by up to 93 days in jail and a fine of up to $350. Glasgow will be sentenced July 14 at 10 a.m. Judge Joseph Burke presid- ed over the hearing and asked Glasgow for details about the night of March 15, when he was pulled over by Ann Arbor police officer Patrick Maguire. Maguire pulled over Glasgow's Chevrolet Subur- ban when he noticed that there was a passenger hanging out the window shouting at pedestrians, according to the police report. At the hearing, Glasgow con- firmed most of the details - the only exception being the amount he had to drink. According to the police report, Glasgow told police that night he had consumed five light beers since about 3 p.m. In court Monday, Glasgow revised that estimate to 10 to 12 beers. He reaffirmed that he started at 4 p.m. at his house, then later took a nap and drove to New York Pizza Depot around 9 p.m. "I was at my house. I started probably sometime around 4," Glasgow told the judge. "I had - I'm not quite sure how much - 10 to 12 would probably be my rough estimate." Glasgow's blood-alcohol con- centration was .11 on the spot and .13 at the police station later. Glasgow's attorney, John A. Shea, asked that Glasgow be able to go home to Illinois to visit his parents from Wednesday through Monday during a break in foot- ball training. The judge originally adjourned the pretrial hearing from June 2 on the condition that Glasgow not leave the state or drink alcohol. The judge allowed Glasgow to go home Wednesday but upheld the condition that he not drink alcohol. "You understand that no alco- hol means no alcohol," Burke said, "even if your family is having alco- hol." The judge released Glasgow on a $1,000 personal-recognizance bond. The Aurora, Illinois native has been suspended for the team's season opener Aug. 30 against Appalachian State. f 0 LI ti I a m Id W Z. Q t I _v m Nation's first female delegate discusses experience in international politics By HILLARY CRAWFORD Daily StaffReporter The Center for the Education of Women hosted the Ambas- sador of Botswana to the United States, Tebelelo Mazile Seretse, on Wednesday to facilitate a more international focus in the depart- ment. Seretse, who became ambassa- dor in February 2011, is Botswana's first female ambassador. Prior to her current position, she served in Her Excellency Tebelelo Mazile Seretse, the Botswana ambassador to the US, speaks about her home country, democracy, and the power of women at Hatcher Graduate Library Wednesday. B otswana ambassador talks relations overseas Botswana's Parliamentary cabinets from 1999 to 2004, holding vari- ous positions including Minister of Trade and Industry, Minister of Wildlife and Tourism and Minister of Works, Transport, and Commu- nication. During her time on Cabinet, she successfully facilitated stronger relations with the United States as she negotiated a partnership agree- ment with Washington to establish an International Law Enforcement Academy in Botswana. Addition- ally, Seretse pushed for Botswana's inclusion in the Africa Growth Opportunity Act to increase trade with the United States. In addition to legislature, Ser- etse also has experience in the pri- vate sector as an entrepreneur and director of her family's business, Diragake Ltd, an oil company in Botswana. In her address, Seretse said because she has experience in both the public and private sec- tors, she believes there are higher expectations of her as ambassador. She added that such expectations reflect the success of her nation in the past decades since it gained independence from the United Kingdom. Seretse primarily emphasized the heterogeneity within Africa and criticized many Americans' conflicting tendency to refer to the continent as one would to a coun- try. Monica Porter, assistant vice chancellor of student suc- cess and director of the Office of See BOTSWANA, Page 2 Partnership includes four schools, allows for connectivity and collaboration By IAN DILLINGHAM Editor in Chief In the 19th century, the stan- dard gauge rail, which set the standard width of rail tracks in the United States and other coun- tries, allowed an unparalleled level of cooperation between the railway companies, engineers and businesses. Before the implemen- tation, trains could only travel as far as their company had laid track. Now, they had the oppor- tunity to travel across the coun- try on tracks operated by several companies - all working to stan- dardize rail construction in the industry. Currently, research universi- ties face similar difficulties on a digital front. As data is produced at an incredible rate and dis- charged into databases, they face the challenge of making sure it is stored, protected and utilized in the best way possible. To address that, the University announced last week it would join the Unizin consortium, a partner- ship between the University and three other institutions: Indi- ana University, Colorado State University and the University of Florida. Unizin's mission is "to support faculty and universities by ensur- ing that universities and their fac- ulty stay in control of the content, data, relationships, and reputa- tions that (they) create," accord- ing to their website. The consortium will allow greater connectivity between data at these institutions. Much like the standard gauge rail, it will-set the rules by which data is collected and distributed among research scientists, professors, students and the general public. Information Prof. James Hil- ton, dean of the University librar- ies, led the movement to get the University involved in the part- nership. "(Unizin) is about leveraging open standards to make sure con- tent and data can flow between tools and systems, rather than remaining locked up inside a sin- gle tool," Hilton said. "It's about tiltingthe table in favor ofinterop- erability and University control." For a practical example, Hilton said online practice quizzes, like those currently offered on CTools, could be adapted to better suit the needs of students and instructors. Rather than just simply having professors assign problems and receive scores, the data could be used to improve course curricu- lum. "There's data in there that would tell us - tell you - the kind of problems that you're struggling with and the kind of problems that you're not," Hilton said. "Right now, all that stays very isolated." See TECHNOLOGY, Page 3 INDEX Vol. CXXIV, No. III ©2014 The Michigan Daily sALcoors, 5it...a0onm h5,~g, , NEWS .........................2 OPINION......................4 ARTS...........................7 CLASSIFIEDS .................8 CROSSWORD ................8 SPORTS..............10 I 0" * - N EWS Summer festival The yearly tradition kicked off Friday with indoor and outdoor performances. > SEE PAGE 6 OPINION Love over fear Harleen Kaur talks catcalling and why it's a problem in major cities, >> SEE PAGE 5 ARTS GoT steps up 'Game of Thrones' Season 4 finale will certainly satisfy, excite fans >> SEE PAGE 9 SPORTS Leaders and Best Greg Garno hands out this year's Schefters, honoring University athletes. >> SEE PAGE 10