The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 10, 2008 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Obama plans to make immediate impact President-elect Barack Obama plans to use his executive powers to make animmediate impactwhenhe takesoffice, perhapsreversingBush administration policies on stem cell research and domestic drilling for oil and natural gas. John Podesta, Obama's transi- tion chief, said yesterday Obama is reviewing President Bush's execu- tive orders on those issues and others as he works to undo poli- cies enacted during eight years of Republican rule. He said the presi- dent can use such orders to move quickly on his own. "There's a lot that the president can do using his executive author- ity without waiting for congressio- nal action, and I think we'll see the president do that," Podesta said. "I think that he feels like he has a real mandate for change. We need to get off the course that the Bush admin- istration has set." MOSCOW Russian submarine accident suffocates 20, injures 21 The fire safetysystem on a brand- new Russian nuclear submarine accidentally turned on as the sub wasnbeing tested in the Sea of Japan, spewing a gas that suffocated 20 people and sent 21others to the hos- pital, officials said Sunday. The Russian Navy said the sub- marine itself was not damaged in Saturday's accident and returned to its base on Russia's Pacific coast under its own power Sunday. The accident also did not pose any radia- tion danger, the navy said. Yet it was Russia's worst naval accident since torpedo explosions sank another nuclear-powered sub- marine, the Kursk, in the Barents Sea in 2000, killing all 118 seamen aboard. Overcrowding may have been a significant factor on Saturday. The submarine being tested had 208 people aboard, including 81 seamen, according to Russian navy spokesman Capt. Igor Dygalo. Yet Russian news agencies said a sub of this type normally carries only a crew of 73. BAGHDAD Bomb attacks in Iraq kill 8 Bombs killed at leasteight people Sunday across Iraq and wounded dozens of others, officials said. Syr- ia's president blamed the U.S. mili- tary presence for Iraq's instability and called on U.S. troops to leave. In the northern city of Mosul, a roadside bomb ripped through an Iraqi army patrol soon after sun- down, killing three soldiers and wounding four others, police said. U.S. and Iraqi troops have been fighting for months to clear al-Qai- da in Iraq and about a dozen other Sunni insurgent groups from Mo- sul, Iraq's third largest city. To the south, a bomb attached to a bike wrapped in a trash bag exploded outside a cafe in Khalis, 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of Baghdad, killing at least two people and wounding 13, including the city mayor, police said. SAN DIEGO Thousands protest gay marriage ban As many as 10,000 people took to the streets in San Diego and similar numbers marched in Los Angeles Saturday to protest passage of an anti-gay marriage ballot initiative, authorities said. Demonstrators began march- ing through central San Diego at noon, accordingto police Sgt. Diane Wendell. The event lasted about 90 minutes and was peaceful, with no arrests. The march in the Silver Lake area of Los Angeles began at Satur- day evening and lasted about four hours, said police Sgt. Jake Bushy. No incidents were reported as dem- onstrators marched down Sunset Boulevard carrying signs and way- ing banners. The demonstrations were the largest of several marches that fol- lowed Tuesday's passage of Propo- sition 8, a constitutional amend- ment banning same-sex marriages and overturning the state Supreme Court decision that legalized such unions in May. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Report: AIG near deal on new gov't bailout Students zOOm into $150 billion deal would replace $123 billion plan NEW YORK (AP) _ American International Group Inc. late Sunday was reportedly near a deal for a revised bailout package from the U.S. government that would make borrowing terms easier for the troubled insurer. FAVORS From Page 1A Athletic Department offers to pay travel expenses for APC members attending Michigan bowl games. For the 2007 Rose Bowl, the seven APC members attended the game as "guests of the Athletic Depart- ment," the audit said. Pharmacology Prof. Charles Smith, who chaired the Senate Advisory Committee on Universi- ty Affairs from May 2006 to April 2008, said SACUA's members all agreed that the audit's findings "looked bad" when the audit came out. "Everybody agreed on SACUA when were given the audit by the provost that it appeared as if there were a conflict having (APC) mem- bers having their ways paid to the bowl games," he said. Despite the audit's findings, the University has chosen not to change the practice. University spokeswoman Kelly Cunningham said University Provost Teresa Sullivan "has taken the audit's findings under advisement," but doesn't intend to change any poli- cies. Athletic Department spokes- man Bruce Madej said the money used to pay for APC members's expenses comes from funds the Athletic Department receives for appearing in bowl games. "When you go to your bowl, you get a budget for the amount of money you can spend for that bowl," he said, adding that the bud- get's amount depends on the bowl game. Madej said the practice of pay- ing for APC members's bowl game expenses is long-standing. "I've been here 30 years," he said, "and it's been ongoing for 30 years." Kinnear, who also serves as the executive director of the Samuel Zell and Robert H. Lurie Insti- tute for Entrepreneurial Studies, said he never thought about who paid for his Rose Bowl trip. He later insisted that even if the Ath- letic Department had paid for APC members'trips to past bowlgames, the practice never influenced the committee's decisions in his eyes. "Everybody on that committee is a dignified faculty member with very high integrity," he said. "Such issues did not influence people on that committee in any way, shape or form." REVISITING THE DEBATE Though the audit was released in July 2007, no actions have been taken as aresult ofits findings other thanaunanimousmotionby SACUA at its July 30, 2007 meeting saying the findings should be reviewed. At the Oct. 27, 2008 meeting of the Senate Assembly, the University faculty's governing body, Physics Prof. Keith Riles renewed talk on the potential for conflict of inter- est with the Athletic Department's practice. Near the meeting's conclusion, Riles asked University President Mary Sue Coleman why there had not been an investigation into the practice after the audit's release in 2007, even after SACUA unani- mously supported a review. In response, Coleman said she was unsure on whether any actions were being taken regard- ing the audit's findings, but added that she had no concerns about the practice. She suggested Riles dis- cuss the issue with Sullivan, who oversees all academic issues at the University. Riles said in an interview that he brought up the audit because there has yet to be any action by the University administration a year after its release. "I thought it was about the right time to bring it up," he said. "The practice of funding bowl game vaca- tions for faculty who are supposed to give unvarnished advice on athletics issues - the potential for conflict of interest issues seems strong." At the Senate Assembly meet- ing, Coleman also told Riles that she thought the practice of athletic departments paying for faculty members to attend bowlgames was prevalent at other universities. "It is my understanding that this is a widespread practice across Division I institutions and within the Big Ten," she said. Several other athletic depart- A proposed $123 billion bail- out package would be replaced with a new $150 billion pack- age, according to the Wall Street Journal. Details of the arrangement could be announced as early as Monday, when AIG is scheduled to report its third-quarter results, the Journal said. The plan report- edly would replace an $85 billion two-year loan with a $60 billion five-year loan at a lower interest ments at Big Ten universities use bowlgame funds to pay some or all of the expenses for faculty mem- bers serving on athletic advisory boards to attend bowl games. At the University of Iowa, bowl game proceeds are used to pay the travel expenses for the chair of the Presidential Committee on Ath- letics, an athletics advisory board that reports to the university pres- ident, according to Mark Abbott, an associate athletic director at the University of Iowa. The chair of the PCA is always a faculty member selected by the university president, according to the com- mittee's charter. In 2008, the athletic depart- ment at the University of Illinois purchased game tickets to the Rose Bowl game for two faculty representatives and the faculty chair of the Athletic Board, UI's faculty athletics advisory board, accordingtoKent Brown, assistant athletics director at Illinois. In his book "Beer and Circus: How Big-Time College Sports Is Crippling Undergraduate Educa- tion," Murray Sperber, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley, notes that the University of Wisconsin Athletic Department paid for faculty members on the Faculty Board of Control of Inter- collegiate Athletics to attend the 1999 Rose Bowl game. Sperber said the practice of athletic departments paying for faculty members on athletics advi- sory boards to attend bowl games is pervasive. "It occurs at almost every big- time athletic (department) that I know of and thus is not local cor- ruption but systemic corruption, and part of the reason why real reform cannot come to big-time college sports," he said. "The foxes are guarding the henhouse." Several other Big Ten schools did not respond to requests for information about bowl game expense practices for their respec- tive faculty advisory boards. An NCAA spokeswoman also declined to comment on the bowl game expense practices at Big Ten universities. At the end of the Oct. 27 Senate Assembly meeting, Riles presented a resolution before the assembly to urging Coleman to stop the bowl game expenses practice. The Sen- ate Assembly will vote on the reso- lution at its Nov. 10 meeting. WHO'S FOOTING THE BILL? As part of his membership on the APC, Smith attended the 2007 Rose Bowl and the 2008 Capital One Bowl in Orlando, Florida. When asked about the Athletic Department paying for the trips, Smith said he thought the Univer- sity administration, not the Athlet- ic Department, had footed the bill. "It was my impression that the president's office was paying for the trips," Smith said. "The invita- tion did notcome from the Athletic Department. The most recent invi- tation came from (vice president and secretary of the University) Sally Churchill. So I don't really know who pays for the trip." Kinnear also said his Rose Bowl invitation came from the Office of the President. Smith said if he had known that there was a potential conflict of interest in going to the two bowl games, he simply would not have attended. But he said the APC's members were never influenced by the bowl game perks. "That trip to the bowl game had no influence at all on the decision making process of the (APC)," he said. "I was impressed by the clean, clear, transparent way in which they conducted their busi- ness." Not all faculty members who served on the committee saw the bowl game perks as potential problem. Social Work Prof. Larry Root, who served on the APC during the 2006-2007 academic year, said he viewed the free bowl game trips as merely an added benefit for serv- ing on the committee. "The fact is, if you're on this committee, there's this perk asso- ciated with it, and that's kind of neat," he said. "And it's always been that." WEIGHINGTHE POTENTIAL FOR CONFLICT rate. The government also report- edly would inject $40 billion into AIG in exchange for preferred stock. AIG representatives were not immediately available for com- ment. The government had ear- marked $85 billion in September for AIG's rescue. Another $37.8 billion was made available in October. School of Education Prof. Percy Bates, who has served on the APC and is the main faculty represen- tative to the Athletic Department, said the committee only reviews a few student-athletes each year. That, he said, undercuts the argu- ment that the Athletic Department paying APC members' bowl game expenses presents a potential con- flict of interest. "If we were responsible for all 85 (scholarship) football players and determining their eligibility, I would say,'I don't know about this,' " he said. "I just don't see, as long as I've watched people do it, how critical it becomes at this juncture that we ought to change this proce- dure because of this issue." Exact records on how many student-athletes go before the committee and the past decisions made by the APC are difficult to obtain because, as Bates explained, the APC does not keep minutes at its meetings. The committee can- not release its decisions including the names of individual student- athletes because it would violate student privacy laws. A review of the minutes for the larger ABIA from January 2006 to January 2008, during which time the advisory board met 17 times, shows that the APC on five separate occasions reported to the board specifically concerning stu- dent-athletes. The minutes for each of these five meetings show that no stu- dent-athletes that went before the APC were prohibited from prac- ticing or competing in games. 'A CLEAR CONFLICT OF INTEREST' The Athletic Department's practice has drawn criticism from outside the University. Western Carolina University Prof. Kadence Otto, the acting president of The Drake Group, a national college sports watchdog organization, said the bowl game perks practice is "highly unethi- cal" and "a clear conflict of inter- est." "From an ethical perspective, should that money be going to pay for a faculty member who is supposed to be a neutral member on this committee?" Otto asked, referring specifically to the Athlet- ic Department's bowl game funds. "Certainly there could be some- thing going on; namely, they're feeling pressured or obligated to keep these athletes eligible." Otto, who teaches in WCU's Business Administration and Law and Sport Management depart- ment, also said she disagreed with the Athletic Department's and University administration's jus- tification of the practice by citing precedent and saying that other colleges and universities do it. "So it's based on tradition - so what?" Otto said. "Because every- one else does it, that means it's OK if we do it?" Ohio University Assistant Prof. David Ridpath, former president of The Drake Group, coached wres- tling at Division I Ohio University in Athens and later served as assis- tant athletic director at Marshall University, also aDivision I school, in Huntington, W.Va. Ridpath, who led The Drake Group for three years, said that while he believed the University's practice presents a conflict of inter- est, he said the broader idea of giv- ing faculty members exposure to the workings of their university's athletic department - which could include an occasional trip to a sporting event - canbe beneficial. Ridpath said that, ideally, a fac- ulty member's academic depart- ment could pay for the trip rather than the athletic department. However, he conceded that practices like the University's will continue to take place at colleges and universities across the country no matter what. The key, he said, is ensuring that faculty members make it as clear as possible that they aren't being influenced by athletic department-funded perks. "It's good to have that faculty involvement, but we as faculty members have to guard zealously in the area of faculty integrity," he said. "The bottom line is per- ception, and it is something that you have to watch. And as fac- ulty, we have to guard against this, as perception many times is reality." world record books Group sets record by flying unmanned fuel cell plane for 10 hours By ELAINE LAFAY Daily StaffReporter In late October, a University of Michigan student group zoomed into the world record book for launching the longest flight by a fuel cell-powered airplane. Thegroup,calledSolarBubbles,flew the airplane in a field in Milan, Mich., for 10 hours, 15 minutes and four sec- onds, whizzing past the old record of a little over nine hours held by a Califor- nia-based engineering company. The group, composed mostly of aerospace engineering undergradu- ates, had been working on the plane, named Endurance, for six months. These small planes, called unmanned aerial vehicles, are often used by the military, which sends them to collect data in places unfit for human access. UAVs can be used for mapping territories, testing chemi- cals, exploring the environment or delivering medical supplies. The fuel cells used were manu- factured by Adaptive Materials Inc., an Ann Arbor-based company that approached SolarBubbles about working on the project. Nick Schoe- ps, a University alum and fuel cell engineer for the company, said SolarBubbles was a good way to test out some of the company's prod- ucts. "We have some other military contracts we're testing it with, but we thought this would be a great opportunity to collaborate with the University and bring some students into the mix and see what we can accomplish," he said. SolarBubbles chair Nick Rooney, a College of Engineering senior, said the group agreed to help with the project because he wanted to help break ground in the alterna- tive energy field. "It's important because it shows that there are alternative forms of energy out there that can be used for powering these types of vehi- cles," he said. The plane, which was controlled by radio waves, zoomed off the ground like a commercial plane. At 1L7 pounds with an eight-foot wingspan, the plane averaged a lit- tle less than 99 miles per hour dur- ing its flight. Fuel cells take a fuel - in this case, propane - and convert it into energy. Because of their small size, UAVs, which usually run on bat- teries, can only carry enough bat- tery power to last between one and two hours, but fuel cells can last between 10 and 12 hours. Rooneysaid fuelcells areonlygood for smaller objects like UAVs and robots because large machines, like commercial planes, are run by more efficient interior combustion engines. Schoeps said UAVs are the ideal testing ground for fuel cells because after the flight, engineers have a clear idea on how well the fuel cells worked. "It's a very unforgiving environ- ment," he said. "If you don't have enough power, the plane falls out of the air - there's no question to how it's performing." Not counting the fuel cells that AMI developed, the plane cost around $2,500 to build. The Uni- versity of Michigan Engineering Council, the Michigan Student Assembly, the Aerospace Engi- neering department and the Wil- son Student Team Project Center in the College of Engineering all funded the project. Rooney said the group's ultimate goal is to build a UAV that can be powered for 24 hours on fuel cells, a project scheduled for completion in the spring. He said the fuel cells could have, powered their world record run for about five more hours, but because daylight was ending they had to bring the plane down. In order for the plane to fly at night, the group needs to devel- op a night-power system, which includes a way of having the plane constantly visible and able to navi- gate in the dark. "It's hard to tell where the-UAV is, figuring out what the orienta- tion is, which ways it's flying, how it's turning - since you can't see anything, it's really hard to look at," Rooney said. evw " *'' *" - 17 Full-length CBTs All of AAMC's Features 800-2Review I PrnncetonReview.com Corner of S. University and S. Forest C"REATIVE PROCES AN INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIO-LECTURE COURSE WINTER 2009 -- UARTS -- Class #29325 4 credits, No prerequisites Sati s LSA requirements for Creative Expression Friday -3, School of Art & Design, North Campu Ma g creativity an integral part of students' lives and work. W~ vw rtsonear thorg/studentshtnl ON EAHM A 0