The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday; October 24, 2008 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, October 24, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS BAGHDAD Iraqi minister escapes assignation Iraq's labor minister escaped assassination yesterday when a suicide bomber rammed an explo- sives-laden SUV into his convoy, killing at least nine people in one of the safest areas of the capital. The blast came on a day when the U.S. relinquished control of a province that includes much of the area south of Baghdad once known as the "triangle of death." Babil is the 12th of 18 Iraqi provinces to be placed under Iraqi control, paving the way for U.S. forces eventually to go home. Americans will stay in the area to help the Iraqis when needed. The bomber drove his Toyota Land Cruiser into the convoy car- rying Labor and Social Affairs Minister Mahmoud Mohammed al-Radhi as it passed near Tahrir Square in the busy Bab al-Sharji market area - not far from the U.S.-protected Green Zone. The blast left a 15-foot crater in the road and the smell of gunpow- der in the air. The Shiite minister was unharmed, but three guards were killed, ministry spokesman Abdullah al-Lami said. NEW YORK McCain won't attend election night party John McCain's election night watch party might be missing John McCain. Instead of appearing before a throng of supporters at the Bilt- more Hotel in Phoenix on the evening of Nov. 4, the Republi- can presidential nominee plans to deliver postelection remarks to a small group of reporters and guests on the hotel's lawn. Aides said yestersday that the arrangement was due to space limitations and that McCain might drop by the election watch party at some other point. McCain's remarks will be piped electronically into the party and media filing center, aides said. ISLAMABAD, Pakistan Missiles strike Taliban school Suspected U.S. missiles struck a religious school linked to the Tali- ban on yesterday, killing nine peo- ple in the lawless border region where al-Qaida and its Taliban allies are believed to plot attacks on American and NATO forces in Afghanistan. The strike came hours after Parliament warned against any incursions on Pakistani soil and condemned the wave of terror- ism tearing at the country, while stressing the need for dialogue. The suspected U.S. missiles hit the religious school on the out- skirts of Miran Shah, the main town in the region of North Wa- ziristan, four intelligence officials said. No students were believed to be at the school at the time. Relying on informants and agents in the area, two officials said nine people were killed, in- cluding four pulled lifeless from the rubble hours after the strike, and two others were wounded. DETROIT Chrysler to cut nearly 2,000 jobs Chrysler LLC will cut 1,825 jobs by eliminating one shift at a Tole- do Jeep plant and accelerating the closure of its sport utility vehicle factory in Newark, Del., because of the slowing global economy and a shift toward smaller vehicles. About 825 workers at the Toledo North Assembly Plant will be laid off indefinitely as of Dec. 31. The Newark closure also will be effec- tive at the end of the year and af- fect about 1,000 jobs, the company said yesterday in a news release. The cuts are about 6 percent of Chrysler's U.S. hourly work force of 33,000. . - Compiled from Daily wire reports 4,186 Number of American service members who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths identified yesterday. Regents vote to expand Mott plan, Law School PROJECTS, From Page 1A demand for beds in the hospital would outpace the University's supply by the 2009 fiscal year. With the expansion, the hospital will be able to fully satisfy that demand through at the least the 2016 fiscal year, she said. When Regent Julia Darlow (D - Ann Arbor) questioned the, timing of the expansion request, which comes in the middle of an economic slowdown for the state, Warner said there's a "window of opportunity" which will allow construction to be conducted in the "least disruptive" and "least costly manner." In an interview after the meet- ing, Robert Kelch, executive vice president for medical affairs, said the need to meet demand drove health system officials to propose the expansion. "We're running the hospital at very, very high occupancy," he said. "So much so that we unfor- tunately have to turn patients away." When asked how many patients the University has to turn away annually, Kelch said that it's hard to give numbers on the topic, but that the hospital delays "admis- sions everyday and we occasion- PROPOSAL 2 From Page1A Institute, spoke in favor of the ini- tiative. Prior to the debate, the stu- dent groups met to develop four questions for Burke and Mosher. A quick question and answer ses- sion followed the planned por- tion of the debate. Throughout the debate, Burke stressed whathe called the "prob- lematic" language of Proposal 2, saying the initiative is trampling on the state's right to regulate stem cell research in Michigan and that it opens the door to the possibility of cloning. "This proposal is bad legisla- tion, with all the loopholes that are inherent in this language," Burke said. Mosher combated Burke's claim that if the initiative passes on Nov. 4, it would "open the door to taxpayer funding" for embry- onic stem cell research, by saying that Proposal 2 does not contain provisions for taxpayer funding. Mosher stressed the impor- tance of embryonic stem cell research for findingcures for dis- eases like Parkinson's Disease or spinal chord injuries. "We want to allow Michigan Court releases more Beatty, Kilpatrick text messages DETROIT (AP) - More sexually explicit text messages between the city's former mayor and his ex-chief of staff were released yesterday, just days before Kwame Kilpatrick goes to jail for lying abouttheir affair. Former aide Christine Beatty, who is charged with perjury and obstruction of justice, tried to keep them sealed. But a Wayne County judge ordered them on the public record, and the Mich- igan Court of Appeals refused to stop him. A series from November 2003 goes on for more than an hour as Beatty describes what she would do with Kilpatrick if they were together. "Don't STOP! PLEASE," he replies. Hundreds of messages were filed by prosecutors to show that Kilpatrick and Beatty sent and received them on city pag- ers. They were attached to a court filing that had been sealed for months. "Wouldn't the mayor of a major American city complain to someone if he was receiv- ing these types of messages by accident?" Wayne County assis- tant prosecutor Robert Moran wrote. Besides communications with Beatty, the messages reveal contact between Kil- patrick and other women who are not identified in the court filing. The pager seems always at hand, even at sporting events when he sends texts to a woman at the same game. ally can't get patients in - at least every week." Kelch said this expansion had always been under consideration, but Health System officials waited to make the proposal uptil they were sure it was economically fea- sible and demand would continue to grow. In addition to the hospital expansion, the Regents gave the go-ahead on schematic designs for the Law School Commons and a new instructional building for the Law School, which together are expected to cost the University $102 million. The project will be funded by private donations, returns on Uni- versity investments and the law school. This construction will be the first renovations on Hutchins Hall, the school's main classroom building, since it opened in 1933. The schematics approved by the Regents were designed by Hart- man-Cox Architects of Washing- ton D.C. The new instructional and administrative building, which will be located on an unused grassy area east of Hutchins Hall and south of the Legal Research building, will add more class- rooms and clinical spaces to the law school. scientists to participate in the war against disease," Mosher said. LSA junior Lauren. Bennett, president of Students for Life, said having the debate was important because Proposal 2 has been overshadowed this elec- tion season. "This is a very pertinent elec- tion issue. With all of these issues, a lot of the attention has gone to the candidates themselves, and not a lot has gone to Proposal 2," she said. Bennett then pointed to Pro- posal 2's support on campus, including from University Presi- dent Mary Sue Coleman, who has been an outspoken supporter of the initiative, as a reason why opposing arguments need to be presented. "A lot of members of the Uni- versity, including our president and many researchers here, have been pushing for this proposal and there really hasn't been an opportunity for students to hear why there is opposition to it," Bennett added. Early polls have indicated the initiative has support statewide. In a Detroit Free Press-Local 4 poll of Michigan voters conduct- ed in September,. 58 percent of respondents supported the pro- Planners envisionthe Commons as "the heart of the Law School." It will include group study spaces, gathering spots for students, and a caf. In a speech before the Regents, Law School Dean Evan Caminker said the only additions to the law school in the last 75 years have been for library space, not for aca- demic space. But since 1933, the size of the school's student body has doubled and the size of the faculty has quadrupled. Caminker also said the new space was necessary because the way law is taught has changed to become "more collaborative" and "more experiential," which "requires different kinds of spaces than just the traditional classroom experience." In an interview after the meet- ing, University President Mary Sue Coleman said the changes to the law school campus are neces- sary. "If you compare it, if you do benchmarks with other law schools, we have fallen way far behind," she said. "This is way overdue." Coleman also said that the emphasis on student spaces in the project iq important, as law school students currentlyhave no central gathering place. posal, 31 percent opposed it and 11 percent said they were unde- cided. LSA senior Landon Krantz, president of Student Society for Stem Cell Research, stressed the importance of voting in support of this initiative. "Michigan is one of the select few states that has this research being illegal," he said. "It is time for research in Michigan to catch up and modernize and to join the rest of country and world to support stem cell research of all kinds." After the debate, Burke said he was pleased with the event, which filled Auditorium D of Angell Hall. "I think this was awesome," he said. "I'm glad that there was a collaboration like this put together. We need to be people that can have respectful debates and discussions and dialogue." University alum Victor Sinadi- noski said he believed the debate went very well, but also recog- nized the difficulty of addressing all issues in the allotted time. "Given the amount of time and the urgency of the proposal, I think they did a good job mak- ing it clear, but I think there were a lot of things on both sides that were left out." Sinadinoski said. Proposal At meeting, regents approve Coleman's words of support By JACOB SMILOVITZ Daily StaffReporter FLINT - University President Mary Sue Coleman continued her outspoken support of stem cell research yesterday, when she deliv- ered an impassioned speech to the University's Board of Regents and other top school officials, calling misinformation about the state bal- lotinitiativeProposal2"aninsultto medical researchers everywhere." Proposal 2, which is slated to go before Michigan voters on Nov. 4, would loosen the state's restrictions on stem cell research using cells harvested fromhuman embryos. In an interview earlier this month, Coleman made clear her personal support for the initiative, saying its passage would be a boost to Michigan's economy and help the state recruit the best scientists to its universities. University faculty and officials walk a fine line in discussing their positions on political issues due to the University's nonpartisan tax- exempt status, but Coleman's com- ments fell on kind earsyesterday. After saying that all citizens should inform themselves about all candidates and issues on the ballot next month, Coleman's comments quickly turned to the need for vot- ers to learn about Proposal 2. "There is currently a tremen- dous amount of misinformation being presented about stem cell research," she said. "In fact, some of the claims are outrageous and blatantly false." Coleman, who spent 19 years in the biochemistry department at the University of Kentucky, said the medical benefits of stem cell research are still being discovered. "The potential of stem cells to help us better understand human biology and how disease affects our bodies is, at this point, limit- less," she said. She said that lifting the ban on 4 Coleman continues 2 praise stem cell research would allow the University to expand its research in the field. "University of Michigan is a rec- ognized leader of adult stem cell research," she said. "With greater research into embryonic stem cells, we can expand our development of therapies and cures and extend our commitment to the well-being of the people in Michigan." Coleman concluded by repeating that voters should learnmore about the initiative. "Again, I urge people to edu- cate themselves about the science and about the ballot issue in order to make an informed, thoughtful choice." As Coleman tried to move to the meeting's next order of business, Regent Laurence Deitch (D-Bing- ham Farms) interrupted her. "President Coleman, Iwouldlike to take a second to compliment you and thank you for your advocacy on behalf of Proposal 2," Deitch said. He said that "putting aside the potentiality for helping the human race," the bill is "extraordinarily important for the future of the Uni- versity and the future of the state." Deitch said that when leader- ship is needed on important issues, those in power often worry too much about the political implica- tions of choosing a side. "Too often, people in positions of leadership remain silent, or are wishy-washy on things that they actually believe in, lest they offend anyone," he said. "Your leadership has been exemplary and extraordi- nary on this matter." RegentS.MartinTaylorfollowed Deitch in praising Coleman. He said he agreed withDeitch "whole- heartedly," but that the Regents expect Coleman to "do more." Coleman jokingly responded, "I'lltake that as an order." In an interview after the meet- ing, Deitch said he sees the initia- tive as a bipartisan issue, and has no problem with the president of a public university taking a public position on it. "We're in a democracy. 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