The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 16, 2007 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich. Reward offered in CMU noose case Police are trying to find out who hung four nooses in a classroom on the Central Michigan University campus. A student discovered the hang- man's nooses in the Engineering and Technology Building on Mon- day. Campus Police Chief Stan Din- ius says the nooses were made from "flexible compressed gas lines" that are used for laboratory work. President Michael Rao and other CMU leaders issued a state- ment calling on the university and Mount Pleasant communities "to join us in our denouncement of this reprehensible act." Police are questioning students and faculty about whether they noticed suspicious activity in the building. A $500 reward is being offered for information in the in- cident. SEOUL, South Korea North, South Korea agree to run cross-border trains North and South Korea agreed yesterday to launch cross-border rail service for the first time in more than half a century, the lat- est sign of improving relations between the two sides. The rail's Dec. 11 opening will also mark one of the first tangible results of a summit last month between South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang. The service, which will be lim- ited to freight transport, will have trains running along a16-mile track across the heavily armed frontier to a joint industrial complex in the North's border city of Kaesong. KHULNA, Bangladesh Cyclone kills 41 on Bangladesh coast A cyclone packing 150 mph winds slammed Bangladesh's southeast coast late yesterday, kill- ing at least 41 people and forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes, officials said. Cyclone Sidr leveled numer- ous homes as it sent driving rains and high waves across the lowland coastal areas before weakening to a tropical storm by this morning, according to the Bangladesh Mete- orological Department. Local government officials across the region said that at least 41 people had been killed, mainly from collapsing homes and falling debris, and 650,000 people had been evacuated. WASHINGTON Gates vows cuts if Congress doesn't pass war funds Defense Secretary Robert Gates said yesterday that unless Con- gress passes funding for the Iraq war within days, he will direct the Army and Marine Corps to begin developing plans to lay off employ- ees and terminate contracts early next year. Gates,whometwithmembers of Congress on Wednesday, said that he does not have the money or the flexibility to move funding around to adequately cover the costs of the continuing operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. "There is a misperception that this department can continue funding our troops in the field for an indefinite period of time through accounting maneuvers, that we can shuffle money around the department. This is a serious misconception," Gates told report- ers at the Pentagon. Asaresult,hesaidthatheisfaced with the undesirable task of pre- paring to cease operations at Army bases by mid-February, and lay off about100,000 Defense Department employees and an equal number of civilian contractors. - Compiled from Daily wire reports U.S ADE AT HS 3,866 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in B Iraq, according to The Associated Press. No new deaths were identi- fied yesterday. Army Spc. Derek R. Banks, 24, Newport News, Va. Army Pfc. Casey P. Mason, 22, Lake, Mich. PRESS From Page 1A heid-like racist state in Israel and that a single, secular, democratic state is the only solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The University Press halted dis- tribution of the book in August, citing "serious questions" raised by "members of the University community," only to resume dis- tribution amonth later. Although copies of Pluto's books distributed by the University Press do not bear the University's logo, the three regents argued in the let- ter that the University is endanger- ing its reputation by continuingthe agreement. According to the letter, Pluto's revenues made up between 4 and 5 percent of the University's Press's total revenues in the fiscal years 2005,2006 and 2007 -not enough to warrant the "potential for pro- found reputational damage." Although the Board of Regents has the power to terminate all Uni- versity contracts, the letter states REGISTRATION From Page1A other students said they had to exploit the registration system to enroll in classes they needed to graduate and worried might fill too quickly. LSA senior Ashley Hagaman said she used her roommate's enrollment appointment at the end of her sophomore year to sign up for classes required for her neu- roscience major. She said upper- level science classes tend to fill extremely quickly, and she wanted access to classes that would have otherwise been full. Hagaman's roommate was set to transfer to another college but still had a registration date. Hagaman usedthatregistrationdateto enroll in several additional classes so she would have more flexibility later in that it chose not to do so out of respect for the University Press's executive board. To terminate a contract, a majority vote on the eight-member board is needed. Only three regents signed the let- ter. Inaninterviewaftertheregents' meeting, Deitch said the rationale for terminating the Pluto contract focuses solely on the University Press's lack of review authority and has nothing to do with issues of free speech. "The University Press, through its relationship with Pluto Press, has elected to profit from books over which it has no editorial con- trol and which press officials have said that it would never publish based on its own editorial stand- ings," Deitch said. "That being the case, I simply don't think we ought to be in that business." Several representatives of groups opposed to the University Press' contract with Pluto also voiced their concerns during the public comments of the meeting yesterday about the University's continued relationship with Pluto. Donald Cohen, the director of designingher schedule. University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham said in an e-mail that LSA officials know about the issue and have taken steps to protect students who might have trouble enrolling in the classes they want. The college hasn't crafted a policy officially banning students from holding seats, though. "The overarching structure that allows those with more credits to register earlier is to give priority to students who are close to gradua- tion," Cunningham said. "There is also a flip side. U-M has certain courses reserved only for fresh- men, and upper-division students are not allowed to enroll." The College of Engineering has revised its honor code to deal with the problem. In 1997, language explicitly prohibiting students from registering for a course to hold a seat for another student was the Great Lakes Region of B'nai B'rith International, a Jewish ser- vice group, said the University Press should reevaluate its contract with Pluto because of the "strong political overtones" of the Univer- sity's relationship with Pluto. Cohen cited a July 2004 Univer- sity Press release that described Pluto as a renowned independent publisher "known for some of the best in critical writing across the social sciences and humanities, with a spotlight on Middle East politics and terrorism." Betsy Kellman, regional direc- tor of the Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish advocacy group, said the University was condon- ing anti-Semitism by continuing to distribute Pluto's books and called for the termination of the Pluto contract. "You are in a unique position to promote diversity and prevent the furtherance of anti-Semitism and all kinds of bias, rather than fur- ther these awful hate-filled refer- ences," Kellman said. Representatives of Pluto Press and the University Press could not be reached for comment. added to the Engineering Honor Code. Before then, the code only said it was a violation to submit fal- sified documents. James Holloway, the College of Engineering's associate dean for undergraduate education, said the change to the Honor Code became necessary after the college made its enrollment system digital. "Before Wolverine Access, we required an advisor's signature to register for classes," Holloway said. "With the new system, there was a check process that was lost." Holloway said most Engineer- ing advisers don't consider manip- ulation of the enrollment system a major problem. There were no cases of abuse reported to the Engineering Honor Council last year, he said. "It's up to the society and the community to follow the rules," he said. Members of the University chapter of the College Democrats watch the Democratic presidential debate last night. Cli*nton accuses rivals of mudslinging Obama, Edwards say she's still not answering tough questions LAS VEGAS (AP) - Under pres- sure in a feisty debate, Sen. Hill- ary Rodham Clinton accused her closest rivals last night of slinging mud "right out of the Republican playbook" and leveled her sharpest criticism of the campaign at their records. "People are not attacking me because I'm a woman, they're attacking me because I'm ahead," Clinton said, striving to protect her standing as front-runner in an increasingly competitive nominat- ing campaign. "What the American people are looking for right now is straight answers to tough questions, and that is not what we have seen from Senator Clinton on a host of issues," said Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois in the opening moments of a debate seven weeks before the first contest of the race for the Democratic pres- idential nomination. "There's nothing personal about this," said former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina, who joined Obama in bluntly accusing Clinton of forever switching posi- tions on Social Security, driver's licenses for illegal immigrants and other issues, turning aside the suggestion that she was seek- ing to hide her positions. Long an advocate of universal health care, she said Obama's current proposal leaves millions uncovered and that Edwards did not support health care for all when he first ran for president in 2004. The three-way confrontation at the beginning of a lengthy debate reduced the other Democratic presidential hopefuls on the debate stage to the uncomfortable role of spectator, yet it perfectly captured the race for the party's nomination. Clinton leads in the nationwide polls, but recent surveys in Iowa show she is in a virtual dead heat with Obama and Edwards. For Richardson, Sens. Joseph Biden of Delaware and Chris Dodd of Connecticut and Rep. Den- nis Kucinich of Ohio, the opening moments were frustrating - and they repeatedly tried to break in. STOCKWELL From Page 1A next fall. "It's a very elegant solution," Coleman said. Regents still need to approve a contractor for the project, but the University plans to start construc- tion in May 2008 and complete it during the summer of 2009. During a presentation to the ------- COLEMAN From Page 1A term is the plan for interdisci- plinary research. The University plans to set aside $20 million for start-up costs like equipment and facilities and $10 million more for compensation for the new faculty members. Provost Teresa Sullivan said the money will come from the Presidential Faculty Recruitment and Retention Fund created last summer and from cutting costs in the office of the provost's operat- ing budget. Coleman said she hopes multi- faceted areas of study like envi- ronmental sustainability and alternative energy will become the University's bread and butter over the next decade. "This kind of work has never been more important," Cole- man said in her address. "Great universities like Michigan must transcend disciplines to be truly effective in addressing societal needs." In an interview with reporters afterthe speech, Coleman said she thinks the investment in interdis- ciplinary research will pay off in the long run. "We're making a strategic bet by doing this that that it's going to, within the next five years, help us address the areas that are of most interest to the students and also in which there might be the best research opportunities," she said. Sullivan said after the regents regents about the planned addi- tion to the College of Architec- ture and Urban Planning, an architect from Miller/Hull Part- nership - the company designing the addition - said the 16,300- square-foot addition will allow for more outdoor working space- as well as studio and classroom space. He said the addition will be to the south side of the build- ing, which was used as the back door, but will provide more access meeting that she envisions a system where the University's schools and colleges compete to produce the best proposals for new faculty members. Departments will be able to use the program to hire additional faculty on top of those they hire with their normal operating bud- get because the appointments will be funded by the provost's office. For that reason, Sullivan said she expects schools and colleges to start competing for the positions almost immediately. "I'll hear the first ideas tomor- row morning," Sullivan said. "Did you see how fast the deans left that room?" Coleman also announced the creation of the Michigan Innova- tion and Entrepreneurship Initia- tive, a $100 million-plus project that will create entrepreneurship training programs at Michigan colleges and provide funding so researchers in the state of Michi- gan can market their research to investors. The project will be funded by private donations and invest- ment by the state's colleges and universities. Stephen Forrest, the University's vice president for research, said the program will eventually earn some money in royalties that will help offset the cost of the initiative. "The initiative will advance commercialization of university research, promote partnerships between higher education and industry, and propel the work of entrepreneurial students and fac- from that direction. He said the addition will include classrooms, studio space, a library and offices. There will also be new stairways and bathrooms. The addition was first approved in July and is expected to cost about-$13 million. The-regentsA must still approve construction contracts before construction can begin. If all goes according to plan, the renovation will be completed by spring 2010. For video of the speech, visit michigandaily.com/videos ulty," Coleman said in her address. "It is, in effect, an investment in the people and ideas that emerge from our public universities as drivers of a knowledge-based economy." Coleman also touched on sev- eral other goals for her term in the address. She said she intends to continue working to make North Campus a cohesive community of its own. She suggested that Baits Resi- dence Hall could be renovated and converted into a living-learn- ing community for students inter- ested in the arts. "Is North Campus like Cen- tral Campus? No, and by design it never will be," Coleman said. "It is its own distinctive place, with distinguished academic programs and beautiful natural surround- ings." Coleman also vowed to pro- mote study-abroad by University students, increase the amount of research funding garnered by University faculty and continue raising money to offset declining state funding. "It has been a privilege to serve this university for the last five years, and I am grateful for the support of the regents and so many others," Coleman said. "I look forward to joining with all of you as we work together to carry this university to even greater heights." 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