The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, March 23, 2009 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, March 23, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS BAD AXE, Mich. DTE sees 280 wind turbines in Thumb's Huron County The skyline in Michigan's rural Thumb could look a bit like historic Holland a few years down the road under DTE Energy Co.'s announced plan to install 125 wind turbines in Huron County by 2015 - and 280 within two decades. DTE Energy officials told Huron County commissioners the com- pany must add 1,200 megawatts of green power to meet the state's new energy mandate. State rules require utilities to provide 10 per- cent of electricity from renewable sources by 2015. The Huron County wind tur- bines eventually could provide 4 percent to 4.5 percent of the com- pany's total power, DTE says. The Detroit-based utility now generates about 1 percent of its power from renewable energy sources, said Grady Nance, manag- er of DTE Energy Renewable Ener- gy Development. He said DTE's goal is to have about 3 percent of its electricity generated from renew- able energy sources by 2012. BAY CITY, Mich. 15-year-old Michigan boy dies after being Tasered by police Police in Michigan say a 15-year- old boy has died after being Tasered by officers who were trying to break up a fight. Police didn'trelease his name and say state police are investigating. A Bay City police news release says officers answered a report of an early morning fight on Sunday. The statement says two males were arguing in an apartment, and one of them "attempted to fight the offi- cers." Police say officers Tasered him, and his reaction led them to imme- diately call for emergency medical help. He was pronounced dead at Bay Regional Medical Center. TORONTO Chrysler, CAW start concessions talks The Canadian Auto Workers union said it plans to begin talks today with Chrysler LLC on pos- sible worker concessions. Automakers seeking Canadian federal and Ontario provincial gov- ernment support must reach cost- cutting agreements before March 31 to qualify for the money. The CAW reached a deal with General Motors Corp. on March 8, and workers ratified it March 11. "Getting to the bargaining table with Chrysler has taken longer than expected," union President Ken Lewenza said in a statement. "But the CAW fully expects to get the process back on track and work towards reaching an agreement with Chrysler that will secure jobs here in Canada." In a statement, Chrysler said, "We look forward to a constructive dialogue with the CAW as we enter this important phase of our discus- sions." The Canadian union has said it wants Chrysler and Ford Motor Co. to agree to the same terms. But Chrysler and Ford have said the GM worker concessions don't go far enough to make them competitive. CAPE CANAVERAL Fla. Space shuttle moves to avoid space junk Confronted with orbiting junk again, NASA ordered the astronauts aboard the linked space station and shuttle Discovery to move out of the way of a piece of debris yesterday. Discovery's pilots fired their ship's thrusters to reorient the two spacecraft and thereby avoid a small piece from a 10-year-old Chinese satellite rocket motor that was due to pass uncomfortably close during Monday's planned spacewalk. Mission Control said keeping the spacecraft in this position for about three hours -with Discovery's belly facing forward - would result in a slow, natural drag of about a foot per second, enough to get the complex out of the way of the 4-inch piece of junk. Space junk has been a recurring problem for the space station, espe- cially recently. Earlier this month, the three space station residents had to take shelter in their emergen- cy getaway capsule when another piece of orbital debris seemed like it might come too close. - Compiled from Daily wire reports FACEBOOK From Page 1A ty and students," ... as a matter of sound judgment and professional ethics, faculty members have a responsibility to avoid any appar- ent or actual conflict between their professional responsibilities and personal relationships with students." GSI Charles Gentry, the staff organizer for the Gradu- ate Employees' Organization, explained that while relation- ships outside of the classroom are generally frowned upon, they are by no means prohibited. "This policy in no way prohib- its interpersonal relationships, but 'strongly discourages roman- tic and/or sexual relationships between faculty members and students,' and explicitly limits supervisory roles to avoid con- flicts of interest.", Gentry said, citing guidelines in the UM Fac- ulty Handbook. However, Gentry said the poli- cy doesn't directly address online relationships between GSIs and students. "This (policy) does not seem to apply to friend or group invites on Facebook, or other online social networking communities," Gen- try said. King explained that the main reason no such policy exists is because the administration doesn't "want to make any rules about communication between anybody in the University that would have a chilling effect on reasonable communication" - such as school work, the football team or a political race. BAYDOUN From Page 1A doun said he wanted to put the money in his bank account for safekeeping while he went away for the weekend. He said he kept all the singles and change - about $482 - ina container in his room and put the remaining money in his checking account. Baydoun was also in charge of depositing the money raised from homecoming in 2007, which CSJ determined meant he knew the funds should have been deposited within onebusiness day. Baydoun said he was not aware of the one business day deadline, and that he had planned to turn over the money by the start of the UMDM event held.this past weekend. Baydoun said he procrastinated, buthad everyintention of donating the money to UMDM. He said no one asked him for the money prior to the Sunday before the trial. When Averill realized the money was not yet donated to UMDM, she set last Monday morning as a deadline for the money to be submitted - a dead- line Baydoun did not meet. Baydoun did not return the money until the MSA Executive Board pressured him to do so and an e-mail from Student Affairs Program Manager and MSA Adviser Anika Awai-Williams notified him that he would face severe repercussions if he did not Inantacademic setting, it is important for communication to remain open, King said, adding that the inappropriate interac- tions are what should be dealt with, not the medium in which they take place. "The issue is the relationship, not Facebook," he said. "Our bias is not to shut down the communi- cations. Our bias is to deal with the behavior." LSA freshman Rebecca Round- tree thinks that relationships between GSIs and students - both online and offline - are a non-issue. "(GSIs) are students just like us," Roundtree said. "We call them by a first-name basis, so why shouldn't we be friends with them?" LSA junior Nathan Hembroff said he shares mutual friends with some of his GSIs, and as a result, he'll sometimes go out to bars with his GSIs, or see them at parties. "It's fun to go out (with GSIs) and then there isn't that social barrier," Hembroff said. "It's a much more friendly environment to interact on a non-educational level. It opens a dialogue in class when you're on a more interactive level." Engineering junior David Juenemann said that students' friending GSIs on Facebook.com could be a potentially awkward situation. "I guess it could be seen as a conflict on interests," Juenemann said. "But that's not that big of a deal." - Daily Managing News Editor Jacob Smilovitz contributed to this report. return the money bythat Wednes- day morning, which he did. . To make up for any interest that may have accumulated while the money was in his bank account and to compensate for any pos- sible discrepancies in the amount of money raised, Baydoun wrote UMDM personal a check for $500. At the end of the trial, CSJ ordered MSA, which had been holding onto the $500 check until the event, to return it to Baydoun because MSA President Sabrina Shingwani veri- fied the amount of money Baydoun returned was correct. Baydoun said that in retrospect he realized he did not handle the funds as he should have and that he felt badly for keeping the money for so long. "I feel like this was not in keep- ing with the standard that I held for myself," Baydoun said. Benson said he was satisfied with the trial's results. "I think CSJ found for MSA, but at the same point did not do irreparable harm to (Baydoun);" he said. "He has done great work for MSA in the past. This was just a lapse in judgment. He made a big mistake, but there was no malice." After all was said and fone, Baydoun said he was just happy the trial was over. "I think it's clear from the rul- ing that there was no intentional wrongdoing or malfeasance on my part," he said. "I'm glad that it was taken care of and that the CSJ trial showed that." Children among 17 dead in Montana plane crash Plane crashes in cemetery 500 feet from destination BUTTE, Mont. (AP) - A small plane - possibly carrying children on a ski trip - crashed Sunday as it approached the Butte airport, kill- ing 14 to 17 people aboard, a federal official said. The single engine tur- boprop nose-dived into a cemetery 500 feet from its destination. The aircraft crashed and burned while attempting to land, said Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Mike Fergus. The plane crashed in Holy Cross Cemetery. An investigator with the Nation- al Transportation Safety Board offered few details at a press con- ference in Butte Sunday night. No cause of the crash was given. "We are just beginning our investi- gation," said Kristi Dunks. "We don't have alotofinformationatthistime. "Certain family members were contacted," she said. "At this point, HACK U From Page 1A Lerdorf and other Yahoo! engi- neers were made available to help students during the competition. When students work on projects like the ones in the competition, Lerdorf said there's usually no one around to help them when they run into roadblocks, which isn't the case with students in Hack U. "When we have engineers stand- ing right here over their shoulder getting them unstuck, it becomes a very intense 24-hour session where they keep banging away at it," Lerdorf said. LSA junior Majd Taby and Engi- neering junior Bryan Summersett, who created a location-based alarm for cell phones, stayed awake for 35 hours to build their hack. Instead of an alarm set for a specific time, their application sends a text mes- sage reminder to the phone based on its geographical location. "Lets say you're traveling on a long-distance trip, and you want to remember to take your pass- I don't have an exact number." Dunks would not say if there had been a distress call from the pilot. It was partly cloudy, the visibility was 10 feetand winds were blowing from the northwest around 10 mph at the time of the crash, according to hourly temperature information from the National Weather Service. The aircraft had departed from Oroville, Calif., and the pilot had filed a flight plan showing a destination of Bozeman, about 85 miles southeast of Butte. But the pilot canceled his flight plan at some point and headed for Butte, Fergus said. Preliminary reports indicate the dead include numerous children, he said. "We think that it was probably a ski trip for the kids," Fergus said. Butte Silver-Bow Sheriff John Walsh said there were a few people at the cemetery at the time of the crash, but no one on the ground was injured. He would not describe witness reports. "I heard a loud bang," said Nick Dipasquale, 19, who was working port," Taby said. "When you leave the house, it will send you a text reminding you to take it." Other hacks developed in the competition included a program that reads e-mails to you by call- ing a number over the phone and a system that sends a text to your cell phone with the number of parking spots left in a specific parking lot. Goer said the real benefit of competitions like Hack U is that it allows students to escape from their day-to-day routines. "Computer science majors and engineers get lots of homework, and they have to study, and they do all these tests," Goer said. "Taking them into this 24-hour pizza-, cola- fueled hack event breaks them out of that environment and allows them to collaborate with students that theymightnotinteractwithnormal- ly and think about problems in ways that they might not ordinarily do." University alum Chris Yeh, head of Yahoo!'s developer network, said Yahoo! sometimes hires students it finds at Hack U competitions, pointing out that many of the skills at a gas.station across the street. "It sounded like someone ran into the building." He said he ran outside to see flames as tall as the trees. Dipasquale said people who were fueling their cars said they saw the plane flying low, begin a turn, start to wobble and then slam into the ground. Fergus said the Pilatus PC-12 aircraft was manufactured in 2001. Such planes are certified to carry 12 people. The plane was registeredrto Eagle Cap Leasing Inc. in Enterprise, Ore., Fergus said. He didn't know who was operating the plane. I. Felkamp is listed in Oregon corporate records as Eagle Cap's president. Attempts to reach him by phone were unsuccessful. The flight originated at Brown Field Municipal airport in San Diego on Saturday evening and flew to Redlands, Calif., where it left Sunday morning for Vacaville, Calif., according to Flight Aware, a Web site that tracks air traffic. students use to build hacks are the same skills Yahoo! employees need for Web development. "That's one of the reasons why we love being here," Yeh said. "Because it gives us the chance to know some students." LSA senior Brandon Kwaselow took first place and will advance to the International University Hack Days competition in Sunnyvale, Calif. this summer. His winning hack - an iPhone application that uses Yahoo! maps - can be used to find places of interest like restaurants, parks and schools. While Kwaselow said he was thrilled to receive first place after working on the hack for 24 hours straight, Kwaselow said the first thing he was going to do was take a long nap. Lerdorf said despite the fact that it's a competition, winning Hack U "isn't all that important." "The point is to get the students thinking about Web technologies and getting them out of the aca- demic routine a little bit," he said. "To take some of all this knowledge and apply it and build something." GOT A NEWS TIP? E-MAIL NEWS@MICHIGANDAILY.COM Series of free student workshops * Wednesday, March 25, Landing a Job in a Difficult Economy " Wednesday, April 1, Your Fork Is Not a Shovel: A Lesson in Business Etiquette All sessions are from 6-8 p.m., are free and include dinner. Register now! Space is limited so make sure 'you register early. www.umalumni.com/students Thanks to our sponsors: Liberty CRE)IT Mut:.LVLINIONO ALUMNIASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN A