The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, September 10, 2008 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom WednesdaySeptember 10, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS MCALLEN, Tex. Texans prepare for Ike, brace for evacuation With Hurricane Ike steam- ing into the Gulf of Mexico, Texas emergencyofficialsyesterdaystood ready to order 1 million people evacuated from the impoverished Rio Grande Valley and tried to con- vince tens of thousands of illegal immigrants that they have less to fear from the Border Patrol than fromthe storm. Emergency planning officials . were meeting all day to decide if and when to announce a mandato- ry evacuation for coastal counties close to the Mexican border. With forecasts showing Ike blowing ashore this weekend, au- thorities lined up nearly1,OO bus- es in case they are needed to move out the many poor and elderly peo- ple who have no cars. Federal authorities gave as- surances they would not check people's immigration status at evacuation loading zones or inland checkpoints. But residents were skeptical, and there were wor- ries that many illegal immigrants would refuse to board buses and go to shelters for fear of getting ar- rested and deported. WASHINGTON Kim Jong Il may have suffered " stroke North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il may be gravely ill, per- haps the victim of a stroke, U.S. * and other Western officials said yesterday after he failed to appear for a major national parade. If so, it could jeopardize the already troubled international effort to get his nation to abandon nuclear weapons. Kim's absence from a mili- tary parade for the country's 60th anniversary lent credence to. reports that the man North Koreans call the "Dear Leader" had been incapacitated during the past few weeks. The 66-year-old Kim, who has been rumored to be in varying degrees of ill health for years, has not been seen since mid-August. Thoughhe appears rarely in public and his voice is seldom broadcast, Kim has shown up for previous landmark celebrations. LANSING House Speaker to * face recall election House Speaker Andy Dillon's last chance to avoid a recall elec- tion fizzled yesterday. A federal appeals court refused to halt a lower court's order that cleared the way for the recall elec- tion to move forward. That means the recall continues on track for the Nov. 4 ballot, at the same time Dil- lonis up forre-election. Voters will be weighing wheth- er to recall Dillon from his current House term ending in December while decidingwhetherto re-elect him for anewtwo-year term start- ingin January. Dillon, .a Democrat from Wayne Coupty's Redford Township, is targeted for recall by a group upset about his role in raising taxes last year as the Michigan Legislature wrestled with a huge state govern- ment budget deficit. TBILISI, Gerogia Russia will keep troops in Georgia Russia announced yesterday it would keep 7,600 troops in Abk- hazia and South Ossetia for the foreseeable future, asserting power in the breakaway regions even as it began a pullout from positions deeper in Georgia. The Kremlin's plans for a heavy military footprint in the enclaves mock Georgia'shopesthatarevised peace agreementwillleadto acom- plete Russian withdrawal from the fractured country at the heart of a bitter fray between Moscow and the West. - Compiled from Daily wire reports U,.S. D TJ Number of American service members who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths identified yesterday. Alum gives $10 million to"U' Money will go toward programs studying emerging democracies By CAITLIN SCHNEIDER Daily StaffReporter A University alum and his. wife have donated $10 million to the University's International Institute for research on emerg- ing democracies, the University announced Monday. Ronald Weiser, founder of the national real estate company McKinley Associates, is a former U.S. Ambassador to Slovakia. Dur- ing his time in that position, he became intrigued with the often- tumultuous process of a country's transition into democracy. Weiser said the experience motivated he and his wife, Eileen, to donate to the University research. "I am interested in what factors have led some countries to achieve democracy and others not,"Weiser said in a statement. "In Europe and Eurasia are some of the best exam- ples of places that have achieved democracy and freedom. It is very important to understand how these countries transitioned and to share that information with coun- tries that are in transition." The donation will establish the Ronald and Eileen Weiser Cen- ter for Europe and Eurasia. That umbrella organization will over- see the existing Center for Rus- sian and European Studies and the Center for European Studies- European Union Center, as well as the new Weiser Center for Emerg- ing Democracies. Students will likely see the donation manifest itself in the form of new courses, seminars, conferences and lecture series. The University President's Donor Challenge Fund, which contributes $1 for every $2 gift to a graduate and professional study program, will tack on another $1.5 million to the donation. Weiser's $10 million gift is the second $5-million-plus donation this year. In June, the University received a $5.2 million donation for LSA Fellowships from the late alum Mildred Dorothy Sommer's estate. In 2004, alum Stephen M. Ross made the University's largest- ever donation, a $100-million gift. uihAKgT nrnA~f VUIEMmtcrU uEO Most med students opt for specialties Only 2 percent of students want to enter primary care CHICAGO (AP) - Only 2 per- cent of graduating medical stu- dents say they plan to work in primary care internal medicine, raising worries about a looming shortage of the first-stop doctors who used to be the backbone of the American medical system. The results of a new survey being published today suggest more medical students, many of them saddled with debt, are opt- ing for more lucrative specialties. Just 2 percent of nearly 1,200 fourth-year students surveyed planned to work in primary care internal medicine, according to results published in the Journal of the American Medical Associa- tion. In a similar survey in 1990, the figure was 9 percent. Paperwork, the demands of the chronically sick and the need to bring work home are among the factors pushing young doc- tors away from careers in primary care, the survey found. "I didn't want to fight the insur- ance companies," said Dr. Jason Shipman, 36, a radiology resident at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., who is carrying $150,000 in student debt. Primary care doctors he met as a student had to-"speed to see enough patients to make a reason- able living," Shipman said. Dr. Karen Hauer of the Uni- versity of California, San Fran- cisco, the study's lead author, said it's hard work taking care of the chronically ill, the elderly and people with complex diseases - "especially when you're doing it with time pressures and inad- equate resources." The salary gap may be another reason. More pay in a particular specialty tends to mean more U.S. iedical school graduates fill resi- dencies in those fields at teaching hospitals, Dr. Mark Ebell of the University of Georgia found in a separate study. Family medicine had the lowest average salary last year, $186,000, and the lowest share of residency slots filled by U.S. students, 42 percent. Orthopedic surgery paid $436,000, and 94 percent of resi- dency slots were filled by U.S stu- dents. Meanwhile, medical school is getting more expensive. The average graduate last year had $140,000 in student debt, up nearly 8 percent from the previous year, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges. Another likely factor: Medi- care's fee schedule pays less for office visits than for simple pro- cedures, according to the Ameri- can College of Physicians, which reported in 2006 that the nation's primary care system is "at grave risk of collapse." RECREC -PA www.recsports.umich.edulintramurals 734-763-3562 S - IN T RAMU RA L IN T RA MU RA L C osEntries due: I con " . Thur,9/11 IMSB Entries due: a Manager's Meeting: Thurs, 9/11 tak Ine MANDATORY IMSB. Thurs, 9/11 6,00 PM IMSB Stimulus checks seized for unpaid child support i More than $831 million collected BOSTON (AP) - Deadbeat dads and moms around the country are discovering that their economic stimulus checks from Washington - intended to encourage the pur- chase of TVs, cars and other goods - are being intercepted and fun- neled toward the support of their children. Treasury Department figures obtained by The Associated Press show that more than 1.4 million of the checks have been seized since the payments began last spring, and a total of $831 million has been collected by child support agencies nationwide. Cheryl Hayes, a 32-year-old paralegal student from Auburn, Mass., said her ex-husband owes about $30,000 in support for their three children, and she hopes to see some of that via his stimulus check. Hayes said that while sheknows the stimulus checks were intended to encourage people to head down to the local Wal-Mart, Best Buy or Home Depot, in the case of dead- beat parents, their children's well- being should come first. "The stimulus check is some- thing at least they can get to help live off of," Hayes said. "It should go to the children because the children are the ones that would need it." The parents who are owed child support won't immediately see the money. And in some cases they may not receive it at all. The intercepted checks in Mas- sachusetts,forexample, are depos- ited with the state and held for 180 days to allow the parent to file an appeal. If the appeal is denied, the money is turned over to the parent who has custody - in most cases, the mother - unless she has been on public assistance, in which case the funds can go back to the state and federal government to reim- burse the taxpayers. In California, $97.9 million was collected via 152,877 diverted checks, while Texas brought in $80.3 million from 132,144 pay- ments. Rhode Island saw a $1.9 million boost from 3,465 diverted checks. Massachusetts took in $11.2 million, Tennessee $24.4 million. "It's been a very nice bonus for our children in need of sup- port," said Mike Adams, assistant commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Human Services. "We've been very pleased with the amount of money we've been able to collect." The stimulusprogramproposed by President Bush and approved by Congressprovided $600 checks for most individuals and $1,200 for couples filing jointly, with a $300 per-child credit added on. Entry Fee: $30 per team $5 per individual Earn All-Year Championship Points!! Meet Date: Sat, 9/13 Mitchell Fields Tournament Dates: Sat. 9/13 & Sun 9/14 Mitchell Field Entry Fee: k _i $35 per team Entries due: Entry Fee: Thurs, 9/11 $90 a team IMSB Meet Date: Sun, 9/21 2:00PM UM Golf Course IEntry fee includes course fee. Golf carts available at course for an additional fee, 4 '0 A