The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, April 3, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS BUCHAREST, Romania NATO rejects Bush's pleas for Ukraine, Georgia President Bush suffered a pain- ful diplomatic setback Wednesday when NATO allies rebuffed his passionate pleas to put former So- viet republics Ukraine and Georgia on the path toward membership in the Western military alliance. The decision, to be made final on Thursday, was sure to be cheered by Moscow, which heatedly oppos- es NATO's eastward expansion. In another sign of discord, Greece blocked Macedonia's re- quest to join the 26-nation alliance because of a dispute over its name. Only Croatia and Albania will be invited as new members. It was a sour outcome for Bush at his final NATO summit as he sought to polish his foreign policy legacy. Instead, he wound up side- tracked by opposition and splits among European allies. TROY Stabenow's husband admits to sex with prostitute The husband of Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow told authori- ties that he used the Internet to arrange a $150 sexual tryst with a prostitute at a metropolitan Detroit hotel, police said. Thomas Athans, 46, co-founder of the liberal TalkUSA Radio net- work, was stopped by police who were investigating Internet-based prostitution at the hotel, according to a police report obtained yester- day by The Associated Press under the state Freedom of Information Act. Athans, in a statement issued by his attorney, apologized and said he "fully cooperated with law enforcement. My family and I are dealing with this matter in a per- sonal and private way." DUBLIN, Ireland Irish PM Ahern to resign, denies corruption rumors Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, the common-touch Dubliner who tended Ireland's economic boom and the blossoming of Belfast peace, announced his resignation yesterday under a darkening cloud of financial scandal. The announcement stunned Ireland and much of his Cabinet, whose members stood by Ahern during an 18-month battle against allegations he accepted secret cash payments from businessmen in the 1990s. Ahern, who governed Ireland through 11 years of growing pros- perity at home and peace in North- ern Ireland, maintained his inno- cence. "I have never received a corrupt payment, and I've never done any- thing to dishonor any office I have held," Ahern told a hastily called news conference. WASHINGTON Bernanke says * recession possible For the first time, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke acknowledged the U.S. could reel into recession from the power- ful punches of housing, credit and financial crises. Yet, he was coy about the Fed's next move. With home foreclosures swell- ing to record highs and job losses mounting, Bernanke onWednesday offered Congress an unflinching - and more pessimistic - assessment of potential damage to the national economy. "A recession is possible," said Bernanke, who is under immense political and public pressure to turn things around. "Our estimates are that we're slightly growing at the moment, but we think that there's a chance that for the first half as a whole there might be a slight con- traction." - Compiled from Daily wire reports 4011 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. RESEARCH From Page 1A University's total research funding. Though the University's research budget for the 2007 fiscal year increased about 3.3 percent to $823 million, Vice President for Research Ste- phen Forrest attributed the University's funding gains to investment from the pri- vate sector. Federal funding grew by just 1.8 percent dur- ing the 2007 fiscal year after a2.4 percent boost during the 2006 fiscal year. In the 2005 fiscal year, federal funding grew by 6.5 percent. As a result of the leveling off of funding increases in recent years, the University has looked more and more toward private and commer- cial donors for support to supplement declining federal support. Federal funding for sci- ence has declined over the past five years, and President Bush's proposed budget for 2009 would continue that trend. Bush's budget would con- tinue a six-year trend of inflation outpacing biomedi- cal research funding by not granting a funding increase to the National Institutes of Health. The National Institute of Health is the single largest source of federal funding for the University, contributing nearly half its total research budget. In the 2007 fiscal year, the University received about $387.7 million from the NIH, about 47 percent of the University's total research budget. While the biomedical sci- ences have taken a hit in Bush's proposed budget, physical science funding would be increased signifi- cantly. The budget would pro- vide an increase of about 19 percent for the Department of Energy's Office of Science and about 14 percent for the National Science Founda- tion. The Department of Ener- gy and the National Science Foundationrepresent smaller portions of the University's funding than the NIH. In the 2007 fiscal year, funding from the National Science Foundation made up about 8 percent of the University's total research budget and funding from the Depart- ment of Energy made up about 2 percent. President Bush's proposed budget would bring funding for science research to about $29.3 billion, representing an overall increase of 3 percent. The Chronicle of Higher Edu- cation reported that about 60 percent of that money goes to universities. Mike Waring, executive director for federal relations atthe University, said schools need funding increases that exceed the rate of inflation. "The last two years here in Congress haven't been kind to science accounts," Waring said. "Universities need sus- tainable growth in all of the science accounts." Waring called increased funding, "an investment in America's future." Michigan senators Debbie Stabenow and Carl Levin, both Democrats, listened as Coleman made her case to the Democratic Steering Committee. Kathleen Long, a Levin staffer, said in an e-mail mes- sage that, "Senator Levin believes that a robust federal (research and development) program and commitment to science is critical to U.S. com- petitiveness." Levin's sentiments echoed Coleman's request that leg- islators increase federal funding for university-based research. "The support of Congress and the president is more importantthaneverintoday's global economy," Coleman said. "This is an investment in America's future that we cannot afford not to make." LEAK From Page 1A Jim Knight, managing editor of The Ann Arbor News, did not return repeated calls for comment last night. Cunningham said the Univer- sity is taking information leak "extremely seriously." She also said University officials warned GRADUATION From Page 1A of graduation. Most buses will stop running at 12:45 p.m., but two shut- tles will continue until 5:00 p.m., going every half hour from the Diag to the Varsity Tennis Center and the Glazier Way lots. Shuttles will run from most local hotels and several campus buildings with available parking, like Crisler Arena. All University- owned parking structures will be open and free for the day while Ann Arbor city lots will offer a flat rate for that day. To deal with the large influx of people to the Diag, event plan- ners will have portable toilets set up throughout the area and more indoor toilets available in the sur- rounding-buildings like the Natural Science Building and Mason Hall. Graduation organizers will also set up overflow locations in Hill Auditorium, which will open at 8:30 a.m. on graduation day, and Ingalls Mall, which will have a video display, bleachers and speakers. During the ceremony, graduates will wait in a staging zone on the the newspaper not to use the leaked data on two occasions between October and the publi- cation of the series first article on March 16. Additionally, University Provost Teresa Sullivan sent an e-mail to all University student-athletes on March 26 that said "the University informed the paper that the infor- mation was confidential and was obtained in violation of federal law east side of West Hall. They will follow the sidewalk through the underpass in West Hall, passing the Shapiro Undergraduate Library, and then cross the main stage located just in front of the Hatcher Graduate Library. At the Senate Advisory Commit- tee on University Affairs's meeting on Monday, University President Mary Sue Coleman said she thinks the Diag ceremony will be a suc- cess. "It will be a lovely graduation," she said. The ceremony is planned to take place on the Diag, rain or shine, and is set to last from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Coleman said she hopes the cer- emony will return to Michigan Sta- dium nextyear. "We'll be back to the stadium as soon as we can," she said. LSA senior Jane Rho, creator of the Facebook group "Petition To Keep Spring Graduation 2008 At The Big House," said the lack of information available to students about graduation has her con- cerned. "My friends and I are excit- ed because it's never been done before," she said. "But I just can't help but be uneasy." as well as University policy, which strictly forbids such disclosure, but to no avail." In the same e-mail, Sullivan wrote that she was "deeply dis- turbed by the decision of the Ann Arbor News to publish private and confidential information about individualstudents, such as grades and transcripts, without notifying them." Cunningham said University WORKPLACE From Page 1A tion and answer session with the students, one person asked how to mentally prepare for workplac- es that mightnot be welcoming to gays. Solmonese said one should have a group of people to lean on just in case his or her work envi- ronment is hostile. "A support system is key," Sol- monese said. "I think that when you go into those types ofjobs that swallow you up it's really impor- tant to maintain a balance." A woman named Alison who attended the event, but asked that her last name not be printed because she is notopenly gay, said the talk was interesting but that ultimately the decision to come out to co-workersis individual, no matter how welcoming the envi- ronment. Naomi, another student who asked that her last name not be used, said the talk gave good information for gay students entering the workplace. "I think we're starting a con- versation about identities in the workplace," she said. officials believed the release of looking into the release of the data student-athletes' private academic didn't think any student-athlete information "has had a negative had given the paper permission to impact on students." publish their academic records in She said University officials the series. tick tock tick tock Graduates! .hssyu as hnet Spena-m Your'Summer IS a ke a dva ntc di U-M Col Contact us: summer.stanford.edu summersession@stanford.edu (650) 723-3109 STAN FORD UNIVE ITY 5 --- - ----------------- -