The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, September 7, 2007 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS CAIRO, Egypt Bin Laden to address U.S. with video on 9/11 Terror mastermind Osama bin Laden plans a new video addressingthe American people regardingthe anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, terror monitor- ing groups said yesterday. SITE Intelligence Group said an Internet announcement of the plan included a photo of the al-Qaida leader from the upcoming video - his beard, which in previous messages had been streaked with gray, was entirely dark. Intelcenter, which is based in Alexandria, Va., and also moni- tors Islamic Web sites, said the video was expected within the next 72 hours, or by Sunday. That would come before the sixth anniversary next Tues- day of the World Trade Center attack. The last bin Laden video was in October 2004, shortly before the U.S. presidential elections. WASHINGTON Study says U.S. forces in Iraq should be reduced U.S. forces in Iraq should be reduced significantly, according to anew study on Iraq's security forces that inflamed debate in Congress on how quickly that can happen without hurling the country into chaos. The report, authored by a 20- member panel comprised most- ly of retired senior military and police officers, said the mas- sive deployment of U.S. forces and sprawl of U.S.-run facili- ties in and around Baghdad has given Iraqis the impression that Americans are an occupying, permanent force. DETROIT Top Toyota exec in North America joins Chrysler Chrysler announced yes- terday that auto executive Jim Press will take over its sales and marketingoperations as the new vice chairman and president on Sept. 17. He'll inherit stagnant sales, disgruntled dealers and a marketing plan that's in disar- ray after poor sales of some new products. He'll be working for a private equity firm, Cerberus Capital Management LLC, which took over Chrysler last month. And for the first time, he'll come face to face with the United Auto Workers union, which represents 46,276 hourly workers atChryslerbuthasbeen unable to unionize Toyota's U.S. workforce. U.S. automakers are currently negotiating new con- tracts with the UAW. Many analysts say that's just the kind of challenge that appealed to Press, a consum- mate salesman and one of the industry's most highly regarded executives. LANSING Lawmaker aims to decrease illegal bottle returns One dime at a time, Michi- gan taxpayers and businesses may lose more than $10 million a year when people get refunds on bottles and cans from out of state. A state lawmaker wants to stop people from claiming the 10-cent Michigan refund on bottles and cans that come from Ohio, Indiana and other states that don't have similar bottle return laws. Rep. Steve Bieda (D-War- ren) detailed legislation yester- day aimed at stopping what he called smuggling of illegal out- of-state bottles and cans. "It's a big problem, especially in the border areas," Bieda said. "We need to fix it." - Compiled from Daily wire reports FALLEN A ER ,}ANo 3,752 Number of American service members who have died in the War in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. The following were identified by the Depart- ment of Defense yesterday: Army Cpl. William T. War- ford III, 24, of Temple, Texas, Army Pfc. Dane R. Balcon, 19, of Colorado Springs, Colo. Budget deadlock continues LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Hours of closed door meetings and rare displays of public pressure yester- day were failing to resolve Mich- igan's state government budget crisis. i But the chambers remained in session late into the evening, build- ing speculation that an agreement was close on how to fill an estimated $1.7 billion deficit for the fiscal year that starts Oct. 1. The Republican-led Senate joined Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm in urging the Democrat-controlled House to vote on a tax increase, which some say is necessary to avoid SAFETY From page 1 sures, like the text messaging alert system, appear to make sense, but that it'stoo earlyto determine wheth- er they are feasible or necessary. Some schools already have text messaging alert systems. The Col- lege of Notre Dame of Maryland, for example, sent a text message to stu- dents an Saturday after a report of an attempted abduction on campus. At the University of Colorado at Boulder, thousands of students rushed to sign up for the new text message warning system there after a stabbing in August. Although the University doesn't have a text messaging alert system, DPS could assign officers to drive down every street in Ann Arbor playing an emergency message, if drastic program cuts or a state gov- ernment shutdown next month. Democrats and Republicans from the 38-member Senate left their chamber together and converged on the 110-member House in the late afternoon. Democratic Gov. Jenni- fer Granholm also was on the House floor trying to persuade representa- tives, mostly Republicans, to pass a tax hike. "There's a bipartisan effort from the Senate to encourage the House to move the revenue bill and to do it in a bipartisan way," said Senate Minority Leader Mark Schauer (D- Battle Creek) while standing in the necessary, Brown said. Brown said her biggest concern is that students don't take safety issues seriously. She cited a fire that broke out in the Art and Architec- ture Building on North Campus the week of the Virginia Tech shoot- ings. When the fire alarm went off, students didn't leave. "We do need people to be more aware of these systems," she said. "If they're going to ignore the alerts, it's notgoingto help the situation." The report also addresses the ways mental health services can help prevent tragedies. Although Brown and other University admin- istrators said some crises are impos- sible to prevent - particularly those involving a violently disturbed per- son - they added that the Universi- ty's Counseling and Psychological Services office plays a vital role in keeping campus safe. CAPS director Todd Sevig said House chamber. Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop (R-Rochester) said he would wait on House action "as long as it takes for them to do something." "Everything's inplace," he added. "The question is now: What are they going to do?" Despite the pressure, the House didn't immediately plan any major votes yesterday to raise taxes. Dem- ocratic House leaders asked the senators to leave so they could begin to take some relatively minor bud- get-related votes, clearly unmoved by the display. CAPS is expanding its outreach with a program called "Questidon, Persuade, Refer," which trains stu- dents and staff to identify people who might need counseling or may be a danger to themselves or others. Dean of Students Sue Eklund said some of CAPS's programs - like a hotline students can call if they think a peer needs immediate help - could be better publicized. She said many students don't know these services exist. The report encouraged high schools to pass mental health information to colleges, which is illegal in Michigan. Sevig said that while CAPS can help identify indi- viduals who may need counseling and provide help, students mustbe the ones to act. "Let's use Virginia Tech to help clear up some issues," Sevig said. "If you think your fellow student needs help, do something." Joe Malcoun celebrates with fellow first-year MBA students in section six after winning the S.C. Johnson Shout-Off on Ingalls Mall last night. The Shout-Off was intended to build cameraderie among first -year MBA students who were judged on noise level ad creativity. Home foreclosures rise in Midwest WASHINGTON (AP) - A record number of homeowners got an unpleasant notice in their mail- boxes this spring that their mort- gages were being foreclosed. The grim prospect is that thou- sands more of those notices will crop up in mailboxes in coming months as the steepest slump in housing in 16 years contributes to a widening mortgage crisis. More than 2 million families are facing the prospect of seeing their adjustable mortgage payments rise sharply over the next two years, possibly to levels that many will be unable to pay. The largest number of fore- closures and delinquencies have occurred in subprime mortgages, loans extended to people with weak credit histories. But quar- terly data released yesterday by the Mortgage Bankers Associa- tion indicated the problem is now spreading to other types of mort- gages. The MBA report showed the number of homeowners who got foreclosure notices in the April- June quarter hit an all-time high of 0.65 percent, up from 0.58 per- cent in the first three months of the year. It marked the third con- secutive quarter that a new record has been set. The rising defaults in subprime mortgages have roiled global financial markets in recent weeks, sending stock prices on a roller- coaster ride as investors wonder which big bank or hedge fund will be the next to report huge losses from subprime mortgages that were bundled into securities and resold to investors. Both President Bush and Fed- eral Reserve Chairman Ben Ber- nanke tried to calm fears late last week. Bernanke pledged the cen- tral bank would "act as needed" to limit any adverse economic effects from the market turmoil. Bush announced changes in the Federal Home Administra- tion insured-loan program to help combat the expected wave of fore- closures and also answer attacks from Democrats that his adminis- tration has been slow to respond to a growing crisis in mortgage fore- closures. Democrats accused Bush of not going far enough and vowed to push more aggressive legislation through Congress, not only to help homeowners facing foreclosure but also to attack predatory lend- ing practices that they contend led to the crisis. A BITING ROMANTIC COMEDY... REVEALS MORE ABOUT EMOTIONAL AND SEXUAL CHEMISTRY THAN ANY FILM I CAN RECALL' Stephen Holden, THE NEW YORK TIMES 'THE BEST MOVIE OF THE YEARIn Caroline Kepnes, El NLINE JULIE DELPY ADAM GOLDBERG 2 DAYS IN PARIS a filmby JULIE DELPY