The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, March 5, 2007 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS HARBOR SPRINGS, Mich. Macomb man suspected of killing wife captured Wearing neither coat nor shoes, a fugitive suspected of killing and dismembering his wife was found hiding under a fallen tree yester- day in a snowbound state park after a bitterly cold night on the run, authorities said. A police posse tracked down Ste- phen Grant about 225 miles north of the suburban Detroit community where body parts believed to be those of his wife were discovered. He was being treated for frostbite and hypothermia under police guard at a nearby hospital. Grant was wearing only slacks, a shirt and socks when captured - nearly 10 hours after he abandoned the truck he had driven and set out on foot in Wilderness State Park near the tip of Michigan's Lower Peninsula, Emmet County Sheriff Pete Wallin said. SELMA, Ala. Clinton, Obama pay homage to civil rights activists Presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton crossed campaign paths for the first time yesterday as they paid homage to civil rights activists who they said helped give them the chance to break barriers to the White House. The two candidates and former President Clinton, making his first appearance with his wife since her campaign began, linked arms with activists who 42 years ago were attacked by police with billyclubs during a peaceful voting rights march. "Bloody Sunday" shocked the nation and helped bring atten- tion to the racist voting practices that kept blacks from the polls. "I'm here because somebody marched for our freedom," Obama, who would become the first black president, saidfromthe Brown Cha- pel AME Church where the march began on March 7, 1965. "I'm here because you all sacrificed for me. I stand on the shoulders of giants." BEIJING U.S. to China: Explain defense budget hike A top U.S. envoy yesterday urged China to be more open about its mil- itary spending, hours after the gov- ernment announced a 17.8 percent increase in its defense budget - the biggest in more than a decade. The $44.9 billion budget for 2007 would mainly be spent on higher wages and living allowances for members of the armed forces and on upgrading armaments "in order to enhance the military's ability to conduct defensive operations," Ji- ang Enzhu, a spokesman for Chi- na's national legislature, said at a news conference. He did not give any details. China's 2.3 million-strong mili- tary is the world's largest and has been criticized abroad for not being open about its spending. Unlike the U.S., where Congress is required to approve the military budget, Chi- na's military is extremely secretive and rarely releases information on its spending. BARIKAW, Afghanistan Afghans say U.S. fired on civilians after suicide bomb An explosives-rigged minivan crashed into a convoy of Marines that U.S. officials said also came under fire from militant gunmen yesterday. As many as 10 people were killed and 34 wounded as the convoy made a frenzied escape, and injured Afghans said the Americans fired on civilian cars and pedestri- ans as they sped away. U.S.officials said militantgunfire may have killed or injured civilians, but Afghanistan's Interior Ministry and wounded Afghans said most of the bullets were American. Hun- dreds of angry Afghans protested near the blast site, denouncing the U.S. presence here. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 67 Illegal immigrants found in a one-story house in Houston on Friday after a man told police that the immigrants were being held in the house for thousands of dolalrs in ransom, the Houston Chronicle reported. Authorities have charged six men with smug- gling and begun deportation pro- ceedings against the people found inside the house. PETERSON From page IA Peterson said. "I believe that change is really important - per- sonally and professionally." David Greene, the University of Chicago's vice president for stra- tegic initiatives, said Peterson's "extraordinary experience" will help the school improve its aca- demic reputation on an interna- tional level. "She has built up a reputation as one of the top communications professionals in higher education, which was apparenttous when we met with her," Greene said. The University of Chicago, located on the city's South Side, doesn't have much in common with the University of Michigan. A private school, Chicago has just over one-third as many students as the University of Michigan. It was a founding member of the Big Ten, but its athletics programs haven't been a large part of campus life since it withdrew from the confer- ence in 1946. Although Peterson said the Michigan athletic program some- times presented public relations challenges, she said she will miss the University's top-tier sporting events. Peterson, who has worked at the University for 13 years, said she feels a familiarity with the work- ings of the University that she hopes to replicate in Chicago. She described her fob as "a col- lege student for life," constantly requiring her to learn about the University. Peterson said her knowledge of the University could fill encyclopedias. She said her job required her to promote the positive aspects of the University and to minimize the school's "problems and vulner- abilities." For a school the size of the Uni- versity, that work was "exhaust- ing," Peterson said. She frequently worked long hours, often receiving media inquiries late into the night when the University was in the news. On Election Day in November, Peterson struggled to sleep while reporters called her for comment on the results of the landmark affirmative action ban. She told The Michigan Daily in November that a reporter from another paper asked if the report- er could call her at 3 a.m. on elec- tion night. "I said, 'Please, call me before 10,' " she said. Peterson said that her job at a smaller university will be more "focused." She said she also looks forward to learning about a new institution. Kelly Cunningham has filled Peterson's previous job as chief University spokeswoman since Peterson took the interim posi- tion. All that remains now is the search for a new vice president for communications. Peterson said in an e-mail sent to her colleagues Wednesday that the University will find a replace- ment soon. "(University President Mary Sue Coleman) has assured me that the search for a new vice president is proceeding expeditiously," she wrote. JUST BEAD IT FILE SHARING From page IA The financial cost for students caught illegally downloading can be enormous. An offender can be charged $750 to $150,000 per song infringed, depending on the com- pany and material in question. Engineering senior Daniel Mur- ray said he won't stop downloading music because of the lawsuits. He said the companies should target the technology that enables illegal file sharing rather than go after individuals. Steve Marks, the RIAA's general counsel and vice president, said in an online interview with several reporters that universities have a choice of whether or not to forward the letter to the student. The RIAA addresses its letters to the owners of offending IP addresses. If the University doesn't forward the let- ter to the student responsible, the RIAA will subpoena the student's information and the copyright owner will file a formal suit against the student after 20 days. The RIAA expects full coopera- tion from colleges in informing stu- dents of the letters. "Universitiesliketheideaofhelp- ing their students avoid a lawsuit and certainly don't want to stand in the way of an opportunity to settle quickly and for less money," RIAA President Cary Sherman said dur- ing the online interview. Students do not have to accept pre-litigation terms, though. They can turn down the offer and take the matter to court. Marks said the new policy was created after previous defendants said they would rather have set- tled prior to the filing of a lawsuit to avoid public knowledge of their ALLISON GHAMAN/Daily cases. School of Music alum Eun-hyung Kim (left) and Jeoung Han (right), a School of Even though the RIAA won't file Music senior, make bracelets at The Bead Gallery on East Liberty Street yesterday. lawsuits right away, Sherman said students should still take the pre- settlement letters seriously. "We never send a letter if we don't intend to sue," he said. EXPER IENCE F R YOUR RESUME. Campbell said the threat of a lawsuit is too severe. MONEY FOR COLLEGE. "I don't think it's necessary to have a big stain on your legal record for downloading one song," he said. Murray said he thinks the law- suits are just a way for the record companies to cash in on students. "The music industry seems very greedy," he said. Marks said that's not the case. "We don't make money off this program," Marks said. "It costs us a lot to pursue these lawsuits. But even more important, anything we recoup is an infinitesimal portion of what we're losing everyday." Strengtheningyour personal skills isnottheonly For more PRESIDENTS From page IA is through medical and nursing degrees. A presentation compiled by the three research institutions said Wayne State, Michigan State University and the University of Michigan are responsible for all medical degrees and nursing doc- torates issued in the state. The presentation also said the universities- made 95 percent of the state's research and develop- ment expenditures in 2003. The University of Michigan made 57 percent. Good research, MSU President Lou Anna Simon said, "is the real essential force of a strong economic future." The students and staff collabo- rating on these projects, she said, Acapulco's dark side. The University's most outrageous alum. Publishing porn on campus. michigandaily.com/thewire I A *