The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Bush: 10 months is 'plenty of time' for Mideast peace deal With only 10 months left in his term and Israeli-Palestinian talks collapsed over renewed violence, President Bush said yesterday there is "plenty of time" to get a Mideast peace deal before he leaves. "This is a process that always has two steps forward and one step back," Bush said after meeting at the White House with Jordan's King Abdullah II. "We just need to make sure that it's just one step back." Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is in the region this week try- ing to rescue peace negotiations from a low point. WASHINGTON With housing market slipping, Bernanke urges more loan relief Battling a dangerous wave of home foreclosures, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke called yesterday for additional relief and urged lenders to help distressed owners by lowering the amount of their loans. "This situation calls for a vigor- ous response," Bernanke said in a speech to a banking group meeting in Orlando, Fla. Even with some relief efforts under way by industry and gov- ernment, foreclosures and late payments on home mortgages are likely to rise "for a while longer," Bernanke warned. Rising foreclosures threaten to V worsen the problems in the housing market and for the national econo- my, which many fear is on the verge of a recession or in one already. DETROIT GM, UAW get OK to form union-run trust for retired workers A federal judge in Detroit has given preliminary approval to a settlement between General Mo- tors Corp. and the United Auto Workers that would set up a union- run trust for retiree health care. U.S. District Judge Robert Cle- land made his decision yesterday after a brief hearing. Cleland says the settlement is very impressive and praises the cooperation between GM and the union. GM and the UAW agreed to form the trust as part of contract negotiations last fall, but needed court approval for it to take effect. Workers and retirees will be given details of the settlement by March 28. BAGHDAD Military helicopter crash kills 8 An Iraqi military helicopter crashed in northern Iraq, killing an American soldier and seven other people, the U.S. military said yes- terday. The announcement came on a day that recorded little violence in Iraq. The country's president an- nounced he would visit neighbor- ing Turkey, and the prime minister called for the release of akidnapped Chaldean Catholic archbishop. The Russian-made M-17 heli- copter was found Tuesday south of Beiji, about 90 miles south of Mosul, a day after it was reported missing. The Iraqi Defense Minis- try said the aircraft got caught in bad weather. All eight people on board the helicopter died, including the U.S. soldier, said military spokesman Lt. Michael Street. An Iraqi air force official said six Iraqis and two foreigners were on board. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to release the in- formation, did not give the nation- ality of the other foreigner. Street said he was unaware that another foreigner was aboard the helicop- ter. - Compiled from Daily wire reports . 3,973 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths identi- fied yesterday. DISTRIBUTION From Page 1A "The Daily will not support any policy that unnecessarily limits the rights of student publications to distribute in LSA buildings, even if that policy makes spe- cial allowances for the Daily and other well-established newspa- pers," the letter said. Grossman said he had little contact with LSA regarding the policy, other than writing the let- ter. He said he had planned to meet with officials from the Facilities and operations Office, but the meeting - and also a separate student forum to discuss the pol- icy - never materialized. O'Brien declared the announcement "a victory for all the different student publica- tions on campus and a victory for the First Amendment." He singled out student publications like the Review and the Daily for their coverage of the policy and its potential impact on stu- dents' free speech rights, which sparked discussion both on and off campus. "We really made sure there was as broad of an awareness as possible in the pool of concerned constituents," he said. Still, O'Brien said he doubted whether the scrapped policy was the last students would see of University policies aimed at regulating how student publi- cations and organizations can distribute print material on campus. "They should let things be or should work with student groups to address the litter problem," he said. But he added, "They'll make an attempt at some other similar policy down the road." Michigan Student Assem- bly president Mohammad Dar said he believed the decision to drop the policy to be the cor- rect one. "I'm happy to see policy in its current form was repealed," he said. "The free speech rights of not only student publications, but all students on campus should be paramount." The policy would have man- dated that all publications and organizations fall under the over- sight of the Board for Student Publications - which manages the Gargoyle humor magazine, the Michiganensian yearbook and The Michigan Daily - or be registered with the Michigan Student Assembly in order to dis- tribute or post student-created print material in an LSA build- ing. Johnston said last month that the policy was created to reduce the amount of discarded papers scattered on the floors in LSA buildings. If people walking in LSA build- ings slipped on the loose papers and injured themselves, John- ston said, it could create a pos- sible liability for the University. Althoughthe legal experts said the policy veered "dangerously close" to infringing on students' free speech rights guaranteed by the First Amendment, Johnston said the policy, the product of two years worth of discussions, was meant to help less established publications better distribute their work. He emphasized that the policy was in no way created in order to censor the content of student- created material. "My office isn't in the business of restricting content, and LSA isn't in the business of restricting content, either," he said. ALERT From Page 1A mobile phone numbers into Wol- verine Access. The numbers will be housed confidentially at the Uni- versity and can be removed from the system at a later time, Brown said. The text messages will include the time, date and subject of the alert, with brief precautionary instructions. DPS won't use abbre- viation conventions common to the medium, out of fear that older recipients would not understand them. Brown said that the text mes- sages should reach students and employees in minutes while e-mail messages take between one to two hours, but other traffic on the phone and e-mail message systems CELEBRATION From Page 1A Obama. And when Obama's lead nar- rowed in Texas, after networks originally showed him leading Clinton there, risers covered in students supporting Clinton screamed back and forth to one another, asking "Whose house? our house! Which house? White House!" But the supporters' focus quickly shifted when analysts announced that Clinton would likely take Ohio. Shortly after the announcement that she'd won the Buckeye State, sup- porters erupted into unre- lenting screams at the sight of Clinton. "For all the people of Ohio and across America who's ever been counted out but refused to at the University could be slowed because of the immense load of the alert system. Brown said she didn't know exactly how much the Univer- sity will pay for the service, but described it as "six figures." During the meeting, Brown said there hasn't been an occasion in her nine years working for DPS in which the emergency alert system would have been used. When someone asked whether the alert would have been used in January, when a University student fatally shot a home intruder near campus, she said no. The University came under fire for its slow notification process following the shooting. After that incident, DPS sent out a campus- wide e-mail message, which took 10 hours to reach some students and never reached others. be knocked out, struggled, but stood right back up, and never gives up - this one is for you," she said. Campaign staffers watching the event from the balcony led chants and threw confetti while dancing and drinking from bot- tles of Miller Lite. Younger members of the crowd - some as young as 2 - took running slides across the floor and doing dances through bits of red and blue paper that came up to their knees. Adam Ledford, a sophomore at Miami University in Ohio, who spent the weekend cam- paigning for Clinton, said wins in Ohio and Texas would give his candidate the momentum she needed to win the Demo- cratic nomination. "People are going to see she's serious, that's she's a fighter," Ledford said. Wednesday, March 5, 2008 - 3A Information Technology Cen- tral Services has whittled that time down to about two hours now, Brown said. These messages will continue to be sent out to all Uni- versity students, faculty and staff. Dar said he advocates sending a campus-wide e-mail announcing the service and explaining how to sign up. DPS has signed a one-year con- tract with 3n, an international provider of mass notification sys- tems, to provide the service. The University chose the company; Brown said, because it's the only one equipped to handle the 73,000 people affiliated with the Univer- sity who are eligible to sign up. 3n has an agreement with the major United States cell phone carriers, giving their emergency text mes- sages priority over other messages on the networks. JOIN THE MICHIGAN DAILY E-mail herring@michigandaily.com RANDOLPH COURT APARTMENTS I & 2 Bedroom Apartment Homes ~ Ground Floor Ranch Style! Private Entrance! Patio! - Call today to reserve your new address! 734-971-2828 wwwdoodtm-chareys~om p