The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 24, 2008 - 3A, NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON Dems expect Big 3 to show they're worth helping Leading Democrats expect U.S. automakers will show Congress next month they are worth rescu- ing and are capable of returning to global pre-eminence. Skeptical Republicans said yesterday that Detroit's Big Three needed to con- vince taxpayers that they deserve an emergency $25 billion lifeline. With the survival of a major manufacturing sector at stake, a top adviser to President-elect Barack Obama warned the compa- nies that there is little the govern- ment can do without a viable plan to retool and restructure. One leading Democrat urged Obama to become more involved. Executives from Detroit's Big Three returned home after a pair of disastrous hearings on Capitol Hill last week, under orders from Democratic leaders to provide Congress with a detailed account- ing by Dec. 2 of their financial con- dition and short-term cash needs, as well as a plan for viability over the long term. Hearings are expected the week of Dec. 1. Lawmakers could consider legislation the following week if they are satisfied by the companies' responses. "My expectation is that we are going to see something, that the auto companies are going to respond in a way that I think will give confidence to the Congress and to the American public that we need to assist these companies," said the House's second-ranking Democrat, Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland. TBILISI, Georgia Georgian, Polish presidents' motorcade fired on Shots were fired near the mo- torcade carrying the presidents of Georgia and Poland yesterday - the fifth anniversary of Georgia's Rose Revolution - Georgian offi- cials said. No one was hurt in the shooting. Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, who led the pro- Western 2003 uprising but whose popularity has waned in recent months, blamed Russian troops in Georgia's breakaway province of South Ossetia. "Frankly, I didn't expect the Russians to open fire," he said at a news conference with Polish President Lech Kaczynski. "The reality is you are dealing with un- predictable people. They weren't happy to see our guest and they weren't happy to see me either." Kaczynski said the shots were fired from only about 30 meters (100 feet) from the motorcade. He said it was not clear if the gunfire was aimed at the motorcade or shots were fired into the air. HOUSTON Astronauts work on machine to convert urine to clean water Astronauts tinkered yesterday on a troublesome piece of equip- ment which can convert urine and sweat into drinkable water once it's functioning and allow the international space station to grow to six crew members. Station commander Michael Fincke and Endeavour astronaut Donald Pettit changed how a cen- trifuge is mounted in the $154 million water recycling system. The centrifuge is on mounts and Mission Control asked Fincke to remove them and bolt it down without them. The astronauts have been working for the past three days to get the system running so it can generate samples for testing back on Earth, but the urine processor only operates for two hours at a time before shutting down. The water recycling system, delivered a week ago by the space shuttle Endeavour, is essential for allowing more astronauts to live on the space station next year. Lead flight director Ginger Kerrick said engineers hope the problem is fixed, but they were studying whether six crew mem- bers would still be able live at the space station with the urine pro- cessor only working for two hours at a time. The space station crew is scheduled to grow from three to six residents next year. In season fiale, Blue goes down with a whimper at Ohio State RATKOWIAK from Page lA The Wolverines can hope it won't be as bad next season. "Ain't going to happen on my watch asa senior next year," Minor said in his postgame press conference. But the Wolverines seemed to believe that at the beginning of this year, too. This time around, they'll have to understand where they went wrong Saturday - and this season - before they try to fix those problems next spring. PREGAME: Before it even started, the biggest rivalry game in college football was already irrelevant. The ABC broadcasters estimated just 200 of the 105,564 fans in the stands were Michigan fans, and it was easy to believe that, looking out at the solid red crowd. Rodriguez had been accused of not seeing the importance of the Michigan-Ohio State rivalry before coaching in The Game, and the questions about it had already become annoyingly repetitive by the time Ohio State week rolled around. It still wasn't clear he under- stood on Saturday. Next season, he has to prove he knows. Espe- cially in a transition period where SCHOLAR From Page 1A ies, he said he's been interested in medicine since his childhood. El-Sayed said he e-mailed many professors before starting medical school because he wanted to try his hand at research. Epidemiolo- gy Prof. Sandro Galea was the only one who responded, and has now been El-Sayed's doctoral adviser for the past two years, he said. Prof. Galea said that although he usually doesn't let students vol- unteer with his research team, he let El-Sayed join because he was so persistent. After a "very short period of time, he was exceptional," Galea said, adding that EI-Sayed's intel- ligence and hard-working nature, which he called an "uncommon combination," will lead the scholar to impact many fields. "I think he's a perfect candidate for Rhodes," he said. "He's highly deserving and exactly the type of person who should get such a scholarship." E-Sayed said his current inter- est in the social determinants of health started after reading a research study that showed how the effects of the 9/11 attacks increased the risk for low birth weight among Arab-American women in California. He said he wanted to see if there were simi- lar effects in Michigan. "One thing led to another, and I just fell in love with the science, and that's kind of all she wrote," he said. El-Sayed said preparing his application and practicing inter- views took "many, many hours." He met individually with eight people from the University who interviewed him to get the Uni- versity's endorsement, which is required to be considered for the scholarship. Then, he said, he focused on "rewriting and rewrit- ing and rewriting my personal statement to get it just right." In the weeks leading up to his final interview in Minnesota this past weekend, El-Sayed said he constantly drilled himself to practice how he might answer questions. "I'd be working out, and I'd just so much of Michigan tradition is being overhauled, the rivalry can't be overstated enough. Bo Schem- bechler made his team do drills in sets of 50 the year after Michi- gan's 50-14 loss to the Buckeyes. And next year, Rodriguez should make sure two sets of numbers from this season aren't forgotten: 3-9 and 42-7. After Saturday's loss, Rodri- guez said, "The quieter I am, the less drama I have to deal with." But next year, he needs to empha- size the importance of the rivalry so much that Michigan fans are sick of hearing about it before the game happens. It's not just any other game. When Jim Tressel came to Ohio State and spoke at his first pep rally, he made sure Buckeyes fans knew success started with a win in Ann Arbor - and he's now 7-1 against the Wolverines. ON THE FIELD: When the going got tough this season, Rodriguez often used the number of months he's been the Michigan head coach as an excuse. "Nine months," he said back in September, answering a question about his team's progress with a dramatic pause for effect. "Nine months." be interviewing myself," he said. He said he was asked every- thing in his final interview from how communism affected public health to whether the 1967 Arab- Israeli War was an "accident." Fiona Rose, a University alum who won the Rhodes Scholarship in 1998, started helping El-Sayed early this year with his applica- tion preparation, which included editing at least seven drafts of his 1,000 word personal statement. "He's wonderful. He's smart, he's personable, he's sincere, he cares a lot about other people," she said. "It couldn't happen to a bet- ter person." She said the scholarship will help him gain a more international perspective in his research, while allowing him access to a host of people and resources that would otherwise be unavailable to him. More than 1,500 students each year seek their institution's endorsement for the Rhodes Schol- arship. This year, 209 applicants from 107 colleges and universities It was the same the next month before the Minnesota game. "Ten months. Geez," he told reporters exasperatedly, when asked to evaluate how he's been as the coach. But 11 months after he was hired, his team looked shockingly similar to how it did in August. A meager offense featuring a bad offensive line and an erratic quarterback. A defense that gave up the big plays. A return game that couldn't hold onto the ball. Rodriguez constantly says that he can see progress in prac- tice Sunday through Friday that doesn't show up on the field. Sat- urday showed fans can no longer give him the benefit of the doubt - in terms of the season, there was no improvement to speak of. Experience will solve some of those in-game problems, and improving the product on the field will obviously be the Wolverines' top priority. Designating a No. 1 quarterback from day one will help with team attitude and con- sistency. Rodriguez's on-the-field problems will be the easiest to fix because this year's freshmen will be sophomores, and that year of experience could be the difference in next season's close games. reached the final stage of the com- petition. El-Sayed also won the presti- gious Marshall Scholarship, which sponsors education in the United Kingdom. But he said he will fore- go the Marshall because it doesn't fund the program he wants. He said he's excited to study at such a "historic" university and to work with people who have simi- lar research goals in the public health field. "It's kind of surreal still, but at the same time, I think it's an awe- some opportunity to represent my state, my country and other Mus- lim Americans in my situation," he said. His wife Sarah said that after he decided to apply, they both were committed to helping him work toward the award. "Both of us had to go into it 100 percent sure that this is what we want to do," she said. "He was really pumped up and ready to go." She said that while there are POSTGAME: Losing is unacceptable, but a fragmented team is intolerable. There had been hints of it all season, but the careful display of team unity the Wolverines tried to preserve all season finally crum- bled Saturday. It had been starting to publicly unravel for a few weeks before- hand, when Rodriguez announced last week that Zion Babb and Jason Kates were no longer on the team. Others will certainly follow, includingthe still-unannounced but likely departure of sophomore safety Artis Chambers. Upperclassmen David Moos- man and Terrance Taylor have both said more than once in the last few weeks that some of their teammates don't always under- stand the importance of playing hard. "Some people in the shadows that maybe have different agen- das, we're weeding those people out," Moosman said last Monday. But it wasn't until Saturday that the team's disconnect became glaringly, embarrassingly clear, starting with senior Charles Stew- art's fight with the coaching staff in the first quarter and ending with Brandon Minor stopping just short of calling his teammates out many talented people, EI-Sayed's dedication and drive set him apart from his peers. "One thing you know, if you know Abdul, is that he's an extremely, extremely passionate person," she said. "He doesn't do anything halfway." She said El-Sayed is "extreme- ly idealistic, which some people might take as a bad thing, but you don't really change the world if you don't have the hope that you can do it in the first place." She relayed a story of his high school chemistry teacher telling him that he wasn't smart enough to learn chemistry. When she by name after the loss. "It's like some people don't even like leaving theirself when they step on the field," Minor said. "Can't really blame Rich Rod because everybody on the team didn't buy in like they were sup- posed to." Going into next season, Rodri- guez's first priority needs to be getting his team to act like a team again. He has said he wishes he got to know his players better on a personal level, and starting now, he should make sure he does that. In the end, Rodriguez said he hopes this 2008 season will be remembered as a "blip on the radar." With all the notoriety it has gained, that's doubtful. Tying a program-record, five- game losing streak within a sea- son. Five more average points per game allowed this season than the previous worst Michigan defense. Five more losses than the Wol- verines had last season. That just means five months from now, with spring practice done and the start of season two in the transition looming, the Wolverines' progress needs to be obvious. - Ratkowiak can be reached at cratkowi@umich.edu. chemistry at the University. "If someone tells himhe can'tdo something, that means he's going to put all of his effort into trying to do it," she said. Along with winning the award, El-Sayed has led a medical mission to Peru and co-founded Healing at Home, which raises money for a local health clinic. Though he got a chance to cel- ebrate with his family Sunday, El- Sayed doesn't have much time to slow down. 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NINTH STREET, CLAREMONT, CA 91711 TEL: 909.607.3347 BU rnUE CREATIVE PROCESSq 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. wW.artsonearth.org/students M EARTH T h> cc:urse is ,p rte by? e'u si "iC f hi , ' wi3" iicE" nr, ra" rs* nc'* an a:ti ? ta* p - Compiled from Daily wire reports