NEWS The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 19, 2005 - 5 .U.S. tightens rules for incoming ships to protect Great Lakes BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Most ships arriving in the Great Lakes are exempt from regulations meant to keep out invasive species capable of wreaking havoc on the ecosystem, the U.S. Coast Guard has acknowl- edged as it moves to tighten controls. As many as 80 percent or more of oceangoing ves- sels that enter the lakes are subject to little more than paperwork requirements. But those vessels - known as NOBOBs, short for no ballast on board - are not necessarily without stowaways. The NOBOBs may carry tons of residual ballast water and/or sediments that can mix with new bal- last water once on the Great Lakes and be discharged, according to a Coast Guard notice in the Federal Reg- ister earlier this month. The Coast Guard is soliciting suggestions for a new ballast water management strategy and has scheduled a public meeting for May in Cleveland. "The Coast Guard's program has a loophole big enough to drive a cargo ship through," responded Jen- nifer Nalbone of the environmental group Great Lakes United, which on Tuesday called for an immediate crackdown on NOBOBs. While praising the Coast Guard's intention to address the problem, Nalbone said the agency is obli- gated by law to move more quickly. "The Coast Guard has the very clear statutory authority to regulate all ships entering the Great Lakes," Nalbone said. "These NOBOB vessels are coming in unregulated. They don't have to do anything." Nalbone urged the Coast Guard to require the ves- sels to seal their tanks or be made to retain all bal- last content, measures the Coast Guard said would be unlikely in the near future. "We have to engage in full public participation before we do anything," said Beivan Patnaik, regula- tory coordinator for the Coast Guard's Aquatic Nui- sance Species program. Patnaik said NOBOBs are required to file reports on their residual ballast water as they enter the Great Lakes, but face no regulations on how to man- age the water. "The Coast Guard recognizes that that's an impor- tant issue to the Great Lakes, and we're committed to addressing this issue," he said. Coastal waters worldwide are increasingly becoming infested with foreign species that pro- liferate because they lack predators that kept them in check at home. Often the newcomers are dis- charged in the ballast water used to balance large oceangoing ships. Utilities on the Great Lakes spend millions of dol- lars each year to keep their water intake valves clear of zebra mussels, among the first invaders and the impetus for the existing ballast water regulations sought by Congress. High court rejects murder case DETROIT (AP) - A man con- victed of murder in a 1994 robbery in Romulus is expected to get a new trial " after the U.S. Supreme Court declined yesterday to consider an appeal from prosecutors in the case. Prosecutors wanted the justices to decide whether a lower court was wrong to throw out Clarence Scott's conviction in the death of Elwin Lil- ley. The 54-year-old was fatally shot in a McDonald's parking lot while he waited to pick up his elderly mother from Detroit Metropolitan Airport. The Supreme Court refused without comment to hear the appeal. Scott, now 43, was sentenced in 1995 to life in prison without parole after his first-degree murder convic- tion. Isaac Collier Jr., now 36, was sentenced to life with the chance of parole for second-degree murder in the pair's joint trial. Both remain in prison. Tom Chambers, an assistant Wayne County prosecutor who handled the appeal, said he was disappointed that the court declined to decide the issue. But he said prosecutors are confident Scott will be convicted. "Now it's just a matter of trying the man again for first-degree murder," Chambers said. Cleveland lawyer Andrew Cox, whose firm was assigned to handle arguments on behalf of Scott, said the case didn't present an unusual question of constitutional law, and he wasn't surprised the court declined to hear the appeal. "Now it's just a matter of trying the man again for first-degree murder." - Tom Chambers Assistant Wayne County prosecutor State Republicans travel to Capitol for Bush inauguration Prosecutors said the Detroit men were cruising the Romulus area look- ing for someone to rob in April 1994 when they found Lillie sitting in a car outside the McDonald's. When Lillie, of the Osceola County community of Evart, resisted their attempt to rob him, prosecutors said Scott shot him through the window. Scott had challenged his murder conviction, claiming that his consti- tutional right to confront his accuser under the Sixth Amendment was vio- lated when prosecutors introduced an incriminating statement from Collier, who later decided not to testify. In 2003, U.S. District Court Judge David Lawson agreed and ordered Michigan to either grant Scott a new trial or release him. The 6th Cir- cuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati affirmed the decision last year. Connerly to retire after 12 years at UC BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) - Ward Con- nerly - reviled as an Uncle Tom, hailed as a man of principle and unflinching courage-is moving on to another battlefield. Connerly's term as a member of the Univer- sity of California Board of Regents is drawing to a close after 12 turbulent years in which he led the university, and then the state of Cali- fornia, to drop affirmative action. "Love him or hate him, he really is the lightning rod for a lot of big issues," said Jen- nifer Lilla, a graduate student and president of UC's student association. Lilla did not always agree with Connerly but said she will "miss his enthusiasm and his energy and his strength of opinions." Michigan may be the next battleground for Connerly, who is of black, white and Ameri- can Indian descent. He and others recently announced they have enough signatures to get a proposed constitutional amendment on that state's 2006 ballot that would ban race and gender-based' preferences in admissions and government hiring. The 65-year-old Connerly, who will attend his final meeting as a regent this week, was a little-known Sacramento consultant in the land-development business when he was appointed to the Board of Regents in 1993 by Republican Gov. Pete Wilson. In 1995, 13 hours into a tense, stomach- churning meeting interrupted by a bomb threat and punctuated by a protests led by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Connerly's colleagues on the Board of Regents voted 14-10 to dismantle race-based admissions. At one point, Connerly was surrounded by more than a dozen security officers. "You could cut with a knife through the atmosphere of that meeting," he said in a recent interview. The vote marked the first time that a U.S. public university dropped affirmative action without being forced to do so by a court. Connerly went on to lead the campaign for Proposition 209, the 1996 California ballot measure that banned race- and gen- der-based considerations in government hiring, contracting and education. It was the first time a state voluntarily abandoned affirmative action. A number of states have joined California in dropping race-based college admissions, though largely because of court decisions. Some question the high cost of the ceremony LANSING, Mich. (AP) - State Sen. Jason Allen has been to every inauguration for a Republican presi- dent since 1984. He plans to make it four in a row with another trek to Washington this week. Allen, of Traverse City, is among the Republican faithful from Michi- gan who will be on hand for President Bush's second inauguration. Festivi- ties began Tuesday with a program to honor members of the military serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. "This is a celebration that is part his- tory, and we're participating in that," said Allen, who is making the trip with his parents, wife and daughter. A number of other Michigan Repub- licans will experience a presidential inauguration for the first time. Jennifer Hoff, a spokeswoman for the state House GOP, said she's going because it may be her only chance to see the U.S. president take the oath of office. Bush will be sworn in on Thursday by U.S. Chief Justice William Rehnquist. "This is the president being sworn in. It's a president I have a lot of respect for and one that I spent a lot of time volunteering for. Who knows if I ever will be at a point in my life when I can go see an inauguration," she said. "It's an amazing opportunity." Hoff is among those looking for- ward to attending balls that are part of the inauguration. She has tickets to the Michigan State Society Ball at the Smithsonian American History Museum and the ball for the president's home state of Texas. The state's congressional delegation is sponsoring the Michigan State Society Ball, which is set for Saturday. Michi- gan's officially sanctioned ball, the Free- dom Ball at Union Station, also includes Alaska, Alabama, Illinois, Louisiana and Kansas. It will be on Thursday. Some people have questioned wheth- er tens of millions of dollars should be spent on Bush's second inauguration with the ongoing war in Iraq, Decem- ber's devastating tsunami in South and Southeast Asia and the national deficit hitting a record-breaking $412 billion last year. District of Columbia officials expect the costs for the inauguration, the first since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, to be at least $17.3 million. Michigan Rep. David Palsrok, a Manistee Republican who is making his first trip to see a presidential inau- guration this week, said it's important to recognize the historic event. "It celebrates the transfer of power in a peaceful manner," he said. "It is an event that should be promoted and highlighted so people around the world can see how true democracy works. We're not having a revolution in the street even though just less than half the people who voted didn't support the president." Although Michigan's 17 electoral votes went to Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry in the Novem- ber election, a spokesman for the state Republican Party'said the inau- guration celebrates the hard work of Bush's campaign in the state. Ward Connerly, who is retiring from the University of California Board of Regents, Is seen outside his office in California. U U lnterfraternity Council Winter Recruitment Fraternity Forum Thursday, January 20th 7pm Michigan Union - Ballroom Register & Get Rush Details N.. Recruitment Dates Sunday Monday Tuesday 1/23 3pm-7pm 1/24 6pm-9pm 1/25 6pm-9pm Wednesday 1/26 6pm-9pm Events will be held at individual chapters houses