0 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, March 27, 2009 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, March 27, 2009 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON More U.S. troops sent to Afghan war Confronting an inherited and fal- tering war, President Barack Obama plans to dispatch thousands more military and civilian trainers to Afghanistan by the fall on top of the 17,000 combat troops he has already ordered, senior administration offi- cials said yesterday. Obama's war strategy, which will he announce today, includes no timeline for withdrawal of troops. The war began more than seven years ago. As he plans to put more U.S. lives andmoneyintothewarzoneObama will set benchmarks for progress in Afghanistan and neighboring, trou- bled Pakistan. The goal is to show Congress and the American people that the strategy is working - and to set a clear framework for making corrections as needed. Obama also will call for increas- ing aid to Pakistan as long as its leaders confront militants in the border region. The U.S. will launch an intensive and expanded diplo- matic effort to gain international cooperation, including reaching out to Russia, China, India, Saudi Ara- bia and even Iran. WASHINGTON Obama plans to raise fuel efficiency standards by 2 mpg The Obama administration plans to raise fuel efficiency stan- dards by 2 miles per gallon to 27.3 mpg for new cars and trucks in the 2011 model year, marking the first increase in passenger car standards in more than two decades. Under the changes, which are slightly less stringent than those proposed by the Bush administra- tion, new passenger cars will need to meet 30.2 mpg for the 2011 model year and pickup trucks, sport utili- ty vehicles, and minivans will need to reach 24.1 mpg, an administra- tion official told The Associated Press yesterday. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to speak in advance of an announce- ment expected today. The fuel efficiency rules are the first step in meeting a 2007 energy law that will require car makers to meet at least 35 mpg by 2020, a 40 percent increase over the current standard of about 25 mpg. LANSING Michigan Senate OKs stimulus road, bridge spending Michigan road and bridge con- struction is poised to get an $847 million boost now that state law- makers have approved legislation authorizing spending federal stim- ulus dollars. The state Senate unanimously passed a bill yesterday that allows the state to receive and spend stimulus cash for transportation projects. The House already has approved the measure so it soon should be on its way to Gov. Jenni- fer Granholm for her signature. That will allow the state to begin entering into contracts for the work, much of which will be done this construction season. It will add to state road and bridge spend- ing that was expected to be about $1.5 billion this fiscal year. The transportation bill includes $635 million for main state high- ways and bridges and $212 million for local road departments. Anoth- er $26 million goes to other areas, including bus transit and freight projects. FARGO, N.D. Record flood levels hit North Dakota Officials in North Dakota have ordered a mandatory evacuation of one Fargo neighborhood and a nursing home after authorities found cracks in an earthen levee built around the area. Authorities say the evacuation late Thursday is a precaution and that the 40 homes in the River Vili neighborhood are not in immedi- ate danger. They say no water has breached the levee. They also say Riverview Estates nursing home is being evacuated. The number of residents affected isn't immediately clear. Fargo is on high alert after fore- casters said the Red River could crest higher than predicted - at a record 43 feet. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Brand name birth control to see big price dip President Barack Obama holds an 'Open For Questions' town hall style meeting in the East Room of the White House in Washington yesterday. It was the first online town hall done in the White House. The town hall came on the same day that his budget proposal won a key committee vote in the United States Senate. Senate Democrats push Oba-ma's recession budget From Page 1 NuvaRing, also priced at $50 per cycle, do not have generic equiva- lents, Chivers said. Dr. Susan Ernst, chief of gyne- cology services at'UHS, said that although most patients switched to the generic brand of their birth control product, for those patients on products like the NuvaRing, switching to a different form of contraception was not always the best option. Ernstsaid the NuvaRing"is one of those itemsthat really became unaf- fordable for some patients," and that because there is no generic alterna- tive, patients would have to switch to a pill form of contraception. Despite the increase in pricing for many brand-name contracep- tive products, Ernst said she did not see a decrease in patients' use of birth control altogether. "I really don't feel like patients didn't use contraception because of that problem," Ernst said. "I feel like we were able to find something that was acceptable to them and often that was a generic because we could give them a lower price." But for some students, generic products were not always advised. Engineering sophomore Lianna Gordon started getting her birth control product from UHS in 2008. But after switching to the birth control pill Yaz, her doctor advised her not to switch to the generic brand when prices rose. Gordon said she stopped buy- ing Yaz from UHS, because the price was $50, double the price she would pay for the same product at The Village Apothecary located at 1112 South University Ave. But Gordon said if drug compa- nies reinstated the discounts with college health clinics, she would reconsider where she purchases her birth control. "If they're doing discounts through the school, then yeah, I would definitely go through UHS," Gordon said. Chivers said that on the same day UHS received the news thatthe federal budget bill could potential- ly lower the price of birth control products, it called the drug compa- nies to inquire about reinstatingthe contracts that would provide them with the discounted prices. "I'm just hoping they will think very positively about how we can move forward with the new lan- guage and be able to roll back the price,"Chiverssaid."But that can'tbe guaranteed because it will all revolve around the manufacturer and how they choose to handle this." Lisa Ellen, spokeswoman for New Jersey-based drug company Schering-Plough, said the corpo- ration has not come to any con- crete decisions about reinstating contracts but is looking into the possibility of doing so for certain contraceptive products, includ- ing the popular birth control pill Desogen. "Overall we're looking into the pricing and the legislation," Ellen said. "We have not made any final decisions but we're evaluating it." Obama's proposal wins key committee vote along party lines WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democrats pushed a recession- era budget backed by the Obama administration through com- mittee yesterday after rejecting Republican attempts to cut spend- ing and reduce mammoth deficits. The 13-10 vote was along party lines in the Senate Budget Com- mittee, and came as GOP critics sharpened their attacks on a plan that Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama derided as "the most irrespon- sible budget in the history of the Republic." The plan calls for spending of $3.5 trillion for the year that begins Oct. 1, and assumes a GREEK WEEK From Page 1 time and responding by becoming increasingly involved with commu- nity service work while still donat- ing the money we can," he said. He added that Greek Week's unique format also motivated him to work with the organization. "We were drawn to the social and competitive aspects ofthe com- munity service work done during Greek Week," he said. "We want to build upon this idea of making com- munity service something social thatyou can do with friends." Rachael Reeves, president of the Panhellenic Association, said she was very "impressed" with Greek Week's dedication to help local charities. "While it is always great how much money we raise as a commu- nity, it is also important to have a more direct involvement with the charities themselves as many of our STUDY ABROAD From Page 1 private tutors to replace the classes at the French university," Ethan David, an LSA junior and student in the Aix-En-Provence program, wrote in an e-mail interview. Because of the situation and uncertainty about regular class meetings, many students are concerned about fulfilling neces- sary credits at the University of Michigan. "My concern was that I wasn't going to receive credit for my courses," LSA junior Sonita Moss, whois alsointheAix-En-Provence program, wrote in an e-mail inter- view. "What's good is that they're deficit of $L2 trillion. It includes increases for hundreds of domes- tic programs and clears the way for major legislation later in the year on President Barack Obama's priorities of health care, energy and education. Despite their criticism, Senate Republicans have said they do not intend to propose an alternative to the Democrats' budget, a decision that spares them the need to make politically difficult choices. Republicans conceded thatSen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., chairman of the committee, had produced a plan that sliced recommended spending beneath levels Obama requested less than a month ago, with lower deficits projected as a result. But some said he had not gone far enough, while others argued that the budget lacked the type chapters were created to further philanthropic pursuits," she said. Greek Week, which runs from March 23 until April 1, pits 13 teams madeupofmembersofallfourGreek councils against one another in a variety ofcompetitionsto encourage participants to raise money. As a supplement to Greek Week this year, participants took part in the first annual Service Day, which allowed about 300 volun- teers to get directly involved with local charities. Brooks said Service Day gave students the chance to do some- thing besides the typical Greek Week events. "I also think the members of the Greek community were excited to do something other than participat- ing in competitive events such as State Street Day and Diag Day," she said. "Our first annual Service Day allowed over 300 individuals to help local charities in both Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti complete projects that would benefitour area directly." ensuring everyone their credits and tailoring the courses to what we were taking at the (Universite de Provence Fac de Lettres)." The University's Office of International Programs is trying to keep students aware of current developments. The OIP has set up a page on its website for students studying abroad to get informa- tion and has been in contact with on-location program directors. In an e-mail interview, Nicole LeBlanc, assistant director at the UniversityofMichigan's OIP,wrote that fulfillingcredits in the wake of the strikes is no longer a concern. "(Fulfilling credits) should not be an issue, based on the current academic plan in place which will give students a full semester of of enforcement measures needed to make sure the targets aren't exceeded in future years. Sessions' attempt to cut an additional $200 billion from non- defense domestic programs over five years was defeated on a party- line vote, 13-10. Conrad responded that he already had trimmed spending below Obama's request by $160 billion over five years and had reduced the deficit by two-thirds over the same period. He said Ses- sions' proposal would have frozen spending in particularly worthy programs like veterans services "at a time when we have large numbers of them returning from Iraq and Afghanistan." Republicans also failed several times to make it more difficult for Congress to exceed spending lim- its prescribed for 2011-2014. LSA senior Liz Henley, co- director of Greek Week, said the shift to more service was one of the main goals for this year's Greek Week. "When Dayna and I were appointed as co-directors, one of our big goals for Greek Week 2009 was to make it more service-ori- ented," she said. "I feel that we've really done that." On Monday, organizers are hosting another event, called Diag Day, to bring participants closer to the charities. The event will fea- ture children's games like spell- ing bees and mascot competitions as well as a can castle building competition. The kids from Peace Neighborhood Center, one of the charities Greek Week is helping, will be judging castles the teams make out of the canned foods they collected over the semester. "It's really fun to get the kids involved and they get to judge big structures that Greek Week par- ticipants make," Henley said. credits," LeBlanc wrote. "Some students did not have courses affected by the strike, depending on their faculty/institute." "If an OIP student should find themselves in an academic situa- tion which needs special attention, however, we will work directly with that student on an individual basis," LeBlanc said. While the situation caused panic, Moss wrote she has chosen to remain optimistic. "Maybe I'm not getting the ideal education here in France, but I am meeting extraordinary people and giving myself to the entire experience," she said. "I go to Michigan for the educa- tion; I came to France for some- thing else." FIRE From Page 1 said. "Now we're just like 'OK, what are we supposed to do?' "We just wish someone would tell us what's goingon," he said. Engineering sophomore Keith Lamprecht expressed similar dis- pleasure with the amount of infor- mation authorities were getting to the residents. "They don't reallytell us awhole lot and I kind of thought they would," he said. "They haven't really done anything for us besides tell us to go to South Quad." West Quad resident and Nurs- ing freshman Breann Eckerle was on the ninth floor of South Quad hanging out in the hallway, wait- ing for word on the situation in her residence hall. She said she was passing the time by people watching, but was "tired" and getting "pissed" about the situation. "I wish there was somewhere we could sleep," she said. Clean-up has been underway since the incident occurred early this morning, Brown said. Logan said there was a delay in getting residents back in their rooms because of air quality tests. "The fire marshall did require that we conduct an air quality test for the safety of the students because any time you have build- ing material ina combustion it can create fumes that could be discom- forting," Logan said. Logan said University Housing is also adding $10 in Blue Bucks to the accounts of each resident affected by the water infiltration into their -rooms, to assist with laundry expense. The residence hall's sprinkler system quickly extinguished the small fire, Brown said. The cafeteria in South Quad, which is directly across Madi- son Street from West Quad, was opened for West Quad residents during the clean-up. Brown said the incident took place on the lowest level of the building, which usually makes it easier to contain. Police Sergeant Michelle Chatell, who was on the scene early Thurs- daymorning, declined to comment. Brown said there hadbeen some flooding on the first floor because once a sprinkler is activated, all the water in its pipes has to come down. Cleaning up that water, Brown said, usually takes a long time. The University is offering a reward of up to $500 for infor- mation leading to the success- ful arrest and prosecution of the person or persons involved in the arson. Anyone with information is being asked to contact University Police at (734) 763-1131. i FRIDAYS Domestic Bottles are only L ssv ,:s"Y"W4, yar r vs.,rrv v:vv W94"W" MAS Ov sow itsssynwn rsMRinm US# MO Ms j -H-,< l e