The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, February 16, 2007 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS LANSING GOP rejects part of Granholms plan for this year's budget Gov. Jennifer Granholm wants Senate Republicans to put out their own plan for cutting nearly $900 million out of this year's state bud- get now that they have rejected part of her budget-balancing plan. "I can't negotiate with vapor, when they've put out no plan on the other side," she said during a news conference yesterday morning. "I call on Republican lawmakers to have the backbone and the courage to put their plan on the table." Senate Appropriations Chairman Ron Jelinek (R-Three Oaks) said after the governor's news confer- ence that Republicans who control the Senate do have a plan and are willing to sit down with the Demo- cratic governor to discuss it. "She has to talk to us. We are a part of the process," he said. The GOP-led Senate Appropria- tions Committee on Wednesday voted along party lines to reject Granholm's proposed executive order making cuts to the existing budget. Granholm wants to offset this year's nearly $900 million deficit through a mix of spending reduc- tions to day care, foster care and other programs; a new 2 percent tax on services such as haircuts and movie tickets starting June 1; delayed funding; and changed accounting practices. Republican lawmakers object to the tax increase and say they instead want more spending cuts in the budget year that started Oct. 1. WASHINGTON Pelosi says Bush would need con- gressional approval to invade Iran House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said yesterday that President Bush lacks the authority to invade Iran without specific approval from Congress, a fresh challenge to the commander in chief on the eve of a symbolic vote critical of his troop buildup in Iraq. Pelosi (D-Calif) noted that Bush consistently said he supports a dip- lomatic resolution to differences with Iran "and I take him at his word." At the same time, she said, "I do believe that Congress should assert itself, though, and make it very clear that there is no previous authority for the president, any president, to go into Iran." . Pelosi spoke in an interview in the Capitol as lawmakers plowed through a third day of marathon debate in the House on a nonbind- ing measure opposing the admin- istration's plan to increase troop strength in Iraq - and as Demo- crats readied a more provocative challenge to the president. ' WASHINGTON Investigators say billions of dollars wasted in Iraq About$10billionhasbeensquan- dered by the U.S. government on Iraq reconstruction aid because of contractor overcharges and unsup- ported expenses, and federal inves- tigators warned yesterday that significantly more taxpayer money is at risk. The three top auditors oversee- ing work in Iraq told a House com- mittee their review of $57 billion in Iraq contracts found that Defense and State department officials con- doned or allowed repeated work delays, bloated expenses and pay- ments for shoddy work or work never done. More than one in six dollars charged by U.S. contractors were questionable or unsupported, near- ly triple the amount of waste the Government Accountability Office estimated last fall. "There is no accountability," said David M. Walker, who heads the auditing arm of Congress. "Orga- nizations charged with overseeing contracts are not held accountable. Contractors are not held account- able. The individuals responsible are not held accountable. "People should be rewarded when they do a good job. But when things don't go right, there have to be consequences," he said. 385 million The amount of money in dol- lars that Chinese con man Wang Zhendong swindled from inves- tors in an ant-breeding scam. Ants, which are used in some traditional Chinese medicines, fetch a high price in China. Wang sold ant- breeding kits for inflated prices, claiming that investors would col- lect returns of up to 60 percent. Chinese courts sentenced Wang to death this week, CBS reported. To fight poverty, charity in the form of livestock DRESSED TO GRILL By PHILLIP AZACHI For theDaily For $5,000, Heifer Interna- tional will send a menagerie that includes goats, llamas, cows, rab- bits and chickens to an impover- ished country. Short on cash? For $250, they'll send a water buffalo. Jo Luck, president and CEO of the non-profit organization, spoke to a large audience yesterday in the Michigan League about the challenges of global poverty. Since Heifer International was founded in 1944, the group has sent aid in the form of animals to more than 7 million people in 125 countries. The group was founded by Dan West, an American farmer who provided humanitarian aid dur- ing the Spanish Civil War. While handing out cups of milk, West realized there was a more effec- tive way to fight poverty. "These children don't need a cup, they need a cow," West would say. The group's aim is to encourage long-term development by sup- plying third-world countries with livestock and agricultural skills. Luck, an 18-year veteran of the organization, said the organiza- tion plays a role in giving rights to women. The organization refuses to send assistance to villages that restrict women from education or decisionmaking. One Masai chief in Kenya was reluctant to accept help from Heifer International because he didn't want to educate his wives in agriculture, Luck said. After Luck explained the economicbenefits of agricultural education for women, the chief accepted. Luck showed a traditional Thai headdress and bamboo flute she received as tokens of appreciation from women who had received aid from Heifer International. "We are there when the camera leaves," Luck said. "We are there for the long term." Luck said there are misconcep- tions about motivations of people in impoverished nations. They need things other than material goods to develop, she said. "Like the first Americans, these people want leadership roles but they need opportunity, resources, and training," Luck said. In an emotional moment, Luck introduced a one-time aid recipi- ent and current deputy director of Heifer International, Tererai Trent. Trent said she grew up in a vil- lage in Zimbabwe where males were considered more important than females. "The breadwinners oftomorrow were boys," she said. "We needed to nurture and educate them." Trent firstmetLuck whilesitting in a circle with nine other women. Luck asked the women where they hoped to be in five years. Trent said she wanted to go to a univer- sity and get an education. "I cannot talk about the educa- tion of my children," Trent told Luck at the time. "I want to talk about my education because if I am educated, I will teach my chil- dren." Trent said the group has helped women by giving them education- al opportunities. She said she had endured emotional and physical abuse as a wife and mother before Heifer International came to her village. In her closing remarks, Trent said Heifer International has also played a key role in giving Afri- can women an alternative to the sex trade. She said she once asked a former prostitute whether she made more money as a farmer or as a prostitute. "I'm going to measure it in dig- nity, not in money," the woman replied. Judge rules N.Y. police need reason to videotape public events ByJIM DWYER who were exercising their right Whilehecalledthepoliceconduct The New York Times to free speech and breaking no "egregious," Haight also offered an laws, the Police Department had unusual judicial mea culpa, taking NEW YORK - In a rebuke of ignored the milder limits he had responsibility for his own words in a surveillance practice greatly imposed on it in 2003. a 2003 order that, he conceded, had expanded by the New York Police Citing two events in 2005 - a not been "a model of clarity." Department after the Sept. 11 march in Harlem and a demonstra- The restrictions on videotaping attacks, a federal judge ruled yes- tion by homeless people in front do not apply to bridges, tunnels, terday that the police must stop of the home of Mayor Michael R. airports, subways or street traf- the routine videotaping of people Bloomberg--the judge said the city fic, Haight noted, but are meant at public gatherings unless there had offered scant justification for to control police surveillance at was an indication that unlawful videotaping the people involved. events where people gather to activity may occur. "There was no reason to sus- exercise their rights under the Four years ago, at the request of pect or anticipate that unlawful First Amendment. the city, the same judge, Charles or terrorist activity might occur," "No reasonable person, and S. Haight Jr., had given the police he wrote, "or that pertinent infor- surely not this Court, is unaware greater authority to investigate mation about or evidence of such of the perils the New York public political, social and religious activity might be obtained by film- faces and the crucial importance groups. ing the earnest faces of those con- of the NYPD's efforts to detect, In yesterday's ruling, Haight, of cerned citizens and the signs by prevent and punish those who U.S. District Court in Manhattan, which they hoped to convey their would cause others harm," Haight found that by videotaping people message to a public official." wrote. Street vendorJose Rasc6n grills a quesadilla inside Chilango's, his new Mexican food stand located on the corner of State and William streets. Rascdn recently obtained a food permit after a year of waiting. 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They als Alexei Etmanov, head of the maintained that working condi- labor union at the Vsevolo- tions at the five-year-old plan1 zhsk plant near St. Petersburg, were in line with local labor reg- said work on the assembly lines ulations and Ford's own safety resumed around midnight. standards. The assembly line and other The Vsevolozhsk plant pro- operations halted work at mid- duced about 60,000 cars last year night Wednesday, as union lead- mainly the Focus model. Plant ers demanded the company stop officials hoped to increase pro- using temporary workers, guar- duction to 75,000 this year. $