The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Bush gives chilly response to Iraq study group President Bush gave a chilly response to the Iraq Study Group's proposals for reshaping his policy yesterday, objecting to talks with Iran and Syria, refusing to endorse a major troop withdrawal and vow- ing no retreat from embattled U.S. goals in the Mideast. British Prime Minister Tony Blair, an unflagging ally in the unpopular war, stood with Bush and wholeheartedly supported his determination to fight to victory in Iraq and spread democracy across the Middle East. "The vision is absolutely cor- rect," Blair said at a news confer- ence where the two leaders agreed, nevertheless, on a need for new approaches in Iraq. 1 "I thought we would succeed quicker than we did," Bush said. "And I am disappointed by the pace of success." When a reporter suggested Bush was denying even to himself how bad things are, the president tartly replied, "It's bad in Iraq. That help?" LONDON Ex-Russian spy buried, but trail of radiation lingers LONDON (AP) - A former KGB agent was buried in a rain-swept London cemetery yesterday, his grave surrounded by Russian emi- gres and his body sealed in a coffin to prevent further contamination by the radioactive substance that killed him. But the drama of Alexander Lit- PROTEST From page 1 of his classes on the plight of American prisoners. The project takes students into Michigan pris- ons to work with inmates on art projects. Demonstration organizerAdrian Griffin said the group on the Diag orchestrated the display to draw students' attention to an issue often ignored in Michigan because the state does not use capital punish- ment. Alexander's students organized another demonstration on the Diag yesterday in which they hand- cuffed themselves together, form- ing a human chain across the brass 'M.' From 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., the chain stretched across the Diag. Protest- ers shouted out statistics about the criminal justice system. "Seventy-two percent of all illicit drug users are white," one chain member yelled. "Yet blacks consti- tute 58 percent of those incarcer- ated for drug felonies." Chainmemberstalkedwiththose who stopped to watch, explaining that they feel the penitentiary sys- tem neglects the rights of prisoners and fails to rehabilitate offenders. At about noon, the chain of stu- dents and a woman who had been incarcerated for more than 30 years had a tense exchange with a stu- dent who said their sympathy for convicts was unfounded. The student shouted that a 17- year-old had stabbed her boyfriend. She said the offender should have been tried as an adult despite his age. The protesters argued that the perpetrator should receive psycho- logical help. Some members of the chain wore signs around their necks tallying the days they had been fasting for. LSA senior Karen Soell said 60 students tried to limit themselves to 600 calories a day for one to 10 days as an act of empathy for ahun- ger strike taking place in a Texas prison. Soell had been fasting for nine days. Some of the public displays were developed as final projects for Alex- ander's classes. Students organized yesterday's demonstration, the fast and astudentgroup called Students for Justice outside of class require- ments. Although his classrooms are often a birthplace for activism, Alexander said he doesn't play a commanding role. Instead, the activist projects came out of student discussion in Alexander's English 411 and Uni- versity Courses 270 classes. "I trust (my students) to really Friday, December 8, 2006 - 3 think aboutthe issues and to talk to each other," Alexander said. "Out of this emerges people who take charge." Students described an atmo- sphere unlike other classes they've had. They said Alexander rarely lec- tures. Insteadhe allows studentsto pose opening questions and invites guest speakers. Several students said they plan to continue social justice activism after classes end. Alexander said this is only natural. "They just don't go out and do a random project," Alexander said. "When you do a project, you think about it after - about how it affects your life." RFID From page 1 The database then translates the information into spoken words. The tags are no longer than a pencil, and each contains a single microprocessor. They are also cheap, running about 50 cents each. Knox and Gifford predict that the cost will decline to a nickel or less in10 years. But that doesn't mean it would be inexpensive to make the cam- pus compatible with TalkingPoints technology. It would only cost a few hundred dollars to tag every University building, but the chal- lenge is to develop an easily por- table device to pick up the signals. The device Gifford's team has put togetherisn'tquitereadytohitshelves. Gifford calls the device "ridiculously large," ill-suited for blind people to take around campus with them. Gifford stressed that the device wasn't even ready for preliminary testing as he wheeled out a variety of gadgets connected to a laptop on a rolling cart during an interview yesterday. When Gifford pushed the cart down a deserted aisle of the library, a computerized voice called out objects it passed labeled with RFID tags. "To your left, library stacks," it said. "To your right, fire hose closet for use in emergencies only." Confusion arose for a moment when the device insisted that to the right, there were "restrooms - women's and men's" when there weren't any in sight. Knox, momentarily perplexed, unraveled the mystery - there was a spare tag lying on a table nearby. "Something like a tag on a table could cause a really bizarre situa- tion," he said. Right now Knox and Gifford are mainly focused on showing the world that their technology works. The next phase of the project will be gathering input through user studies, though the technology will need to be made smaller and more user-friendly first. Gifford said it's hard to think about user interface when the equipment is so large. "It's kind of like pushing a gro- cery cart," Knox said. The same technology Gifford pushed around on a cart will ideally be compressed into something as small as a cell phone. Despite lim- ited funding, Knox hopes to reach that goal by next summer. Knox said he imagines the sys- tem expanding beyond aid for the blind, perhaps as a guide for tour- ists who don't speak the native lan- guage. WAYNE STATE From page 1 "(The voters) were directing Wayne State and otheruniversities inthe state to hold minorities to the same stan- dards of admissions that are used for all applicants and not to adopt special standards that would provide them a preference," Bartell said. Wayne State Law School faculty members debated two amendments aimed at moderating the most con- troversial exceptions for more than two hours, ultimately ending in deadlock. Dean Frank Wu cast the tiebreaking vote to temper the most contentious exceptions. John Weinberg, a Wayne State law professor who helped draft the new policy, defended it in The Detroit News. "The bottom line is we are still interested in doing a holistic evalu- ation," Weinberg said. "Our goal is to get a class that is diverse in the broadest sense - a student body that has a broad set of interests, backgrounds, perspectives and life experiences - and to do that with- out using race." But not all critics of affirmative action are convinced that Wayne State's new policies will hold up under legal scrutiny. Paul Beard of the Pacific Legal Foundation, an anti-affirmative action group, questioned Wayne State Law School's new policies in an interview with Inside Higher Ed. He said his firm would go to court to enforce Proposal 2 if need- ed. Beard described the geographic exception for students living it Detroit and the immediate area as "awfully suspicious" and vowed tc investigate it further. "I'll bet you anything that they'll weight these (exceptions) for minority applicants," Beard said. - The Associated Press contributed to this report ATV1LA to... O ani %~enj'oya the Michigan Daily Account Executive of the week vinenko's death was not over. Who- ever dosed him with polonium-210 appears to have left a lengthening trail of victims. Seven employees at the London hotel where the meeting took place have tested positive for low levels of polonium-210, Britain's Health Pro- tection Agency said yesterday. The seven are not likely to suf- fer short term health problems, a Health Protection official told BBC Television, but the poison could cause "a very slight increase" in their-risk of health problemsover the long term. The agency said the seven were working at the Millennium Hotel's wood-paneled Pine Bar on Nov. 1, the day Litvinenko became sick. He died Nov. 23. Among the others contaminated by the poison is Mario Scaramel- la, an Italian security consultant working with the Italian parlia- ment who also met the Russian in London Nov. 1. Scaramella was found to have significant quantities of polonium- 210 in his body and there are con- outgoing chair of the American MIDEAST Movement for Israel; and Miriam From page 1 Liebman, president of the Union of Progressive Zionists. LSA junior Jennifer Netburn, Not everyone shares the group's the group's philanthropy chair, vision. Cherine Foty, president of said she wished the representation the Palestinian Student Associa- was more even. There were many tion, said she wouldn't work with more Jewish students than Arab Bridge the Gap. students at the meeting. "I find it ironic that a group Business Schooljunior Fouad Has- wants to talk about all these things san, one of the group's co-presidents, when in the meantime Gaza is being said goal is to have equal numbers bombed on a daily basis," she said. .from both sides, but there are many Foty said dialogue does not work more Jewish students at the Univer- in the Israeli- Palestinian conflict sity than students of Arab descent. because there is a distinct power Most of the group's executive imbalance. board members already belong to "One side has billions and billions Israeli or Palestinian organizations of dollars, of weapons, of internation- on campus. But board members al aid and various companies sending said they hope Bridge the Gap will money and support," she said. "The provide the middle ground other other side reallyhas none of that." student groups lack. Meagan Mirtenbaum, Bridge the Hassan was co-founder and a Gap's other co-president, said she former president of the Palestin- expected some negative responses. ian Student Association. Bridge "We're trying to keep in mind the Gap members include Fatima that there are going to be people Makhzoum, president of the Arab against it and try to stay away from Student Association; Josh Berman, that and stay positive," she said. It so, then apply to be an Online Sales Account Executive with The Michigan Daily! This is agreat job with commission pay and an awesome resume builder! cerns for his health, but he has not developed symptoms of radiation poisoning. $1.00 OFF WASHINGTON any grande size GOP hold ends in beverage fm bh(with this coupon) a shuffle of boxes, 539 Liberty * Ann Arbor " 734-997-0992 some long faces 3354 Washtenaw " Ann Arbor " 734-975-0642 BEANER S® open late! It has not been a pretty sight on www.beaners.com FREE G-- oodatthese locaos. SeyNts gowithany other ofer.N oapis 'i Capitol Hill in the waning hours of COF E F E this pane acspt O*"a pires Dm , 2oas Pi Republican control. once-powerful lawmakers have been shown the door at their own offices, forced to crowd in a base- ment or other nooks to finish their work, if not their careers. The usual backslapping has given way to back pats as colleagues try to com- fort losers who will soon be going home. Historic hallways are jammed with desks, leather sofas, chairs, To play: Complete the grid so that every row, column lamps, metal file cabinets and card- board file boxes, part of a massive and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9. office shuffle that will continue when the lame-duck Congress There is no guessing or math involved, finishes, probably today. Rub- just use logic to solve. Good Luck and enjoy! bermaid trash bins holding office garbage bear signs saying "Do Not Remove." Difficulty: Hard - Compiled from Daily wire reports I I I 2.887 The grade point average .. of Theta Xi, which has the lowest of any fraternity on campus. The GPA of new members is 3.226. The aver- age GPA for Interfraternity Council fraternities is 3.150 and the average GPA of all men on campus is 3.179. 7 5 4 0.o