ONE-HUNDRED-TWENTY-FOUR YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM Thursday, September 11, 2014
Ann Arbor, Michigan
michigandaily.com
PRESSURE’S ON
PUBLIC SAFETY
No threat found after emergency alert issued Navy ROTC member mistaken for gunman in Chemistry Building
ALLISON FARRAND/Daily
LSA senior Julia Kim, a member of EnCore dance company, demonstrates a routine at the group’s auditions Wednesday evening in the Union.
ANN ARBOR
Ridesharing’s legality in 2 A still under evaluation Limousine drivers bemoan varied regulations
panies in the city, traditional taxi companies are frustrated with the exceptions granted to companies such as Uber and Lyft. Last week, councilmembers voted to request that City Administrator Steve Powers negotiate operating agreements, which included liability insurance, passenger safety and vehicle inspection,
By JACK TURMAN Daily Staff Reporter
Following the Ann Arbor City Council’s resolution to further regulate ridesharing com-
with ridesharing companies. Contrary to traditional taxi or limousine services, ridesharing companies employ non-professional drivers who use their own vehicles. Uber, which uses a smartphone app to connect drivers and riders, has multiple transportation services. However, the service that has faced the most scrutiny is UberX, Uber’s
New residency rankings place UMHS highly By AMABEL KAROUB Daily Staff Reporter
The rankings are still rolling in. Starting Wednesday, a website called Doximity began offering ranks of different medical residency programs across the country, and the University of Michigan Health System stood out among the 3,700 programs listed. Doximity is a social networking site for doctors. The rankings are based on input from physicians, who give their opinions on the top residency programs within their specialties. Of the 20 residency programs ranked, 12 UMHS programs ranked in the top 10 in their fields, including Anesthesiology, Dermatology, and Surgery. Most of the other eight programs placed in the top 20, with the lowest, pediat-
rics, ranking at 22. Doximity’s Residency Navigator is the first of its kind. According to Monica Lypson, interim assistant dean for graduate medical education, residency programs have never been ranked before. Previously, people looked at overall hospital rankings to assess the strength of residency programs. “Since most training programs happen in a hospital where teaching occurs, people would assume that if a hospital got ranked at a certain level, then the residency programs would follow,” Lypson said. “There really hasn’t been clear rankings for residency programs.” The rankings did not come a moment too soon. Applications for residencies that start in September 2015 are due in less than a week. Students unsure of where they can receive the best possible physician training now have a resource available to help them choose. Lypson said the University’s See UMHS, Page 2A
Daily Staff Reporter
After a brief scare that a possibly armed suspect was in a University building Wednesday morning, students and staff are reacting and evaluating the University’s emergency alert procedure. University officials concluded that the purported “man with a gun” initially reported via e-mail was a Navy ROTC student returning “non-weaponized equipment” to the program’s offices in the Chemistry Building Wednesday morning. This information was revealed nearly three hours after an emergency alert announced reports of a potential gunman at 8:55 a.m. Students were advised to “take
driving service with lessstringent driver requirements. Michigan residents have questioned this service because some believe that it violates the 1990 Michigan Limousine Transportation Act. Under the Act, limousine drivers are required to obtain commercial insurance, have their vehicle inspected, register See RIDESHARE, Page 2A
DINNERTIME
HEALTH SYSTEM
Doximity ranks 12 specialty programs in top 10
By MICHAEL SUGERMAN
shelter, lock doors, quiet phones” at the time of the alert. Eleven minutes later, they were notified again, this time simply that the situation had been “resolved.” University Police said “many officers, police and security” were sent to the scene, though there was ultimately “no threat” to campus, nor was any neutralization required to settle the situation. An update on the Division of Public Safety and Security website elaborated that University Police “received a call around 8:40 a.m. from a subject who stated he had observed two men wearing flak jackets and carrying equipment, including an assault rifle, entering the building.” A police search of the building revealed that the perceived threat was actually “consistent with the ROTC program activities.” University Police Chief Robert Neumann said that though he doesn’t have specifics, “it is not unheard of to get a call regarding an ROTC student carrying one of See ALERT, Page 2A
GOVERNMENT
No debates scheduled for Senate, gov. races After denying offers, candidates evaluate value of public events By SHOHAM GEVA Daily Staff Reporter TERESA MATHEW/Daily
Engineering junior Victoria Cheung and LSA senior Taiki Fujimori are served food at Taste of SAAN in the East Hall Atrium Wednesday.
SPORTS
Hoke calls Gardner ‘a kid,’ says flack is unwarranted Quarterback is OK after Saturday “cheap shot” By ALEJANDRO ZÚÑIGA Managing Sports Editor
In his time at Michigan, Devin Gardner has been a backup quarterback, a starting
wide receiver and the face of the football program. Now in his second full season under center, the fifth-year senior has received significant criticism for his role in the Wolverines’ struggles, particularly following his performance Saturday against Notre Dame. But coach Brady Hoke believes the harsh reactions
are unwarranted. “You’re going to have opinions. That’s fine,” Hoke said at Wednesday’s press conference. “When your quarterback takes some criticism, that might be unjust because of things that transpired. I guess that’s the way we are as a society now. But at the same time, I don’t know if that’s called for. See GARDNER, Page 5A
The debates — or lack there of — have just begun. Grand Rapids television station WOOD-TV had a debate scheduled Monday evening between the Republican and Democratic candidates running for U.S. Senate — Terri Lynn Land, former Michigan Secretary of State, and U.S. Rep. Gary Peters (D– Bloomfield Township). However, because Land did not reply to the station’s invitation to the debate, WOOD-TV postponed the event. Peters, who had accepted his invitation, held a forum in Grand Rapids where he “debated” an empty chair with Land’s name on it. The postponement was the latest development in the question of whether a public debate between the two candidates will be held before the November general election. A similar question has been raised in the state gubernatorial race, in See DEBATES, Page 2A
the claymakers Local gallery perfects the art of pottery
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INDEX
Vol. CXXIV, No. 124 ©2014 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com
NEWS......................... 2A SUDOKU.....................2A OPINION.....................4A
SPORTS.....................5A CL ASSIFIEDS...............6A B-SIDE ....................1B