The Michigan Daily - michigandaiiy.com Thursday, A pril 2, 2009 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, April 2, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS S LANSING New appointee to help communities tied to auto industry The man leading the White House effort to help cities that depend on the auto industry says he "gets it" when it comes to under- standing Michigan's plight. Ed Montgomery told reporters yesterday he wants to know what Michigan needs to get out of its economic slump and weather the sharp turndown in the domestic auto industry. He spoke to Gov. Jennifer Gra- nholmand her economics teamear- lier yesterday and planned to hold a similar conversation in Detroit with Mayor Ken Cockrel. Appointed just two days ago by President Barack Obama's admin- istration, Montgomery says he's returning to Washington to find ways federal agencies can help Michigan communities. The former Michigan State Uni- versity economics professor has Michigan in-laws who work in the auto industry. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Federal judge offers no fix for Michigan prison conditions A federal judge won't order new remedies in mental-health care in a long-running legal case about . Michigan prison conditions. U.S. District Judge RobertJonk- er (YON'-ker) said Tuesday the state has followed court orders on staffing, daily rounds with inmates and coordination between medical and mental-health staff. The death of a 21-year-old men- tally ill inmate in Jackson in 2006 put a spotlight on psychiatric care. Jonker rejected an effort to force the Corrections Department to add more staff. His ruling came in a decades-old case that began with conditions at Jackson prison, now closed. Lawyers for inmates plan to appeal. Jonker says the case now cen- ters mostly on inmates temporar- ily housed at a Jackson facility ewhere. JERUSALEM Israel's new foreign minister takes hard line on peace process Israel's new hard-line foreign minister delivered a scathing cri- tique of Mideast peace efforts yes- terday, rejecting the past year of U.S.-led negotiations and telling a room crowded with cringing dip- lomats that concessions to the Pal- estinians only invite war. Avigdor Lieberman's first speech since taking office, along with accusations by the moderate Palestinian president that the new Israeli government opposes peace, signaled tough times ahead for the Obama administration's regional diplomacy. "Whoever thinks that conces- sions ... will achieve something is wrong. He will bring pressures and more wars," Lieberman said. "What we have to explain to the world is that the list of priorities must change." MIAMI, Fla. Federal officials seize Madoff's yacht and smallboat Federal authorities seized dis- graced financier Bernard Madoff's vintage yacht and a smaller boat from two Florida marinas early Wednesday, part of an effort to recoup assets to pay back his swin- dled investors. The 55-foot yacht named "Bull" and a 24-foot motor boat were taken from marinas on Florida's east coast, said Barry Golden, a spokesman for the U.S. Marshals Service. The yacht, a 1969 Rybo- vich, is worth $2.2 million. "A lot of money was put into maintaining this boat," said Gold- en. "This boat was extremely well kept, extremely clean. Engine com- partment was spotless. It looked like somebody took a bottle of 409 and scrubbed it every day." Madoff, 70, is in jail pending sentencing for pleading guilty to charges he swindled billions from investors in what could be the big- gest scam in Wall Street history. He faces a maximum sentence of 150 years behind bars. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 4,000 protestors gather in London's financial district Clean-up added to delays for W. Quad residents More than 30 i people arrested on, eve of G20 summit LONDON (AP) - Chanting G-20 protesters clashed withriot police in central London on yesterday, over- whelming police lines, vandalizing the Bank of England and smashing windows at the Royal Bank of Scot- land. An effigy of a banker was set ablaze, drawing cheers. More than 30 people were arrested after some 4,000 anar- chists, anti-capitalists, environ- mentalists and others clogged London's financial district for what demonstrators branded "Financial Fool's Day." The pro- tests were called ahead of today's Group of20 summitofworld lead- ers, who hope to take concrete steps to resolve the global finan- cial crisis that has lashed nations and workers worldwide. The protests in London's finan- cial district - known as "The City" - began as Prime Minis- ter Gordon Brown and President Barack Obama held a news con- ference at Britain's Foreign Min- istry elsewhere in the capital. A battered effigy of a banker in a bowler's hat hung on a traf- fic light near the Bank of England as protesters waved signs saying: STUDENT VETERANS From Page1A training seem like they should transfer," he said. "Leadership is something that the University of Michigan prides itself on." Blumke stated that the main purpose of the proposal is to ease the shift from active duty to uni- versity life for student veterans. He added that the bill will aid Michigan's economy by attract- ing student veterans to the state to attend school. "We want to help our friends come home and not have to deal with the obstacles that we've had to face," Blumke said. "We want to help them make a smooth transition to college and help the'Michigan economy at the same time." Michigan Student Assembly "Resistance is Fertile," and "Make Love not Leverage." Bankers have been lambasted as being greedy and blamed for the recession that is making job- less ranks soar. Other banners read "Banks are evil" and "Eat the bankers," and "0 percent interest in others." Some bankers went to work in casual wear yesterday fearing they could be targeted. Some bolder financial workers leaned out office windows, taunt- ing the demonstrators and waving 10 pound notes at them. Two men - one wearing a suit - exchanged punches before police intervened. Groups of protesters converged on the central bank, with Tibetan, Palestinian, communist, and anar- chist flags poking out from the crowd. Tensions rose as officers refused to let the protesters leave the small plaza in front of the bank. Protesters pelted police stand- ing guard at the Royal Exchange with paint, eggs, fruit and other projectiles, and a small group of anarchists, skinheads, and masked protesters repeatedly attacked a police cordon flanking the Bank of England. Some in the crowd urinated against the bank and the message "Built on blood" was scrawled in chalk in front of the building. Police helicopters hovered above. A particularly ferocious bala- President Abhishek Mahanti attended the Senate hearing in Lansing to support the student veterans' proposal. Mahanti, an Engineering junior, expressed his desire to encourage veterans to attend the University, as well as the University's need to accom- modate student veterans. "There is a need for student veterans on campus and a need to make them feel welcome," he said. "These are the people who will be our future politicians and the leaders of our nation because of their service to the country." After returning from Lansing, Mahanti and Blumke said they both had an overwhelmingly positive feeling about the pro- posal hearing. - From an observer's stand- point, Mahanti noted the student veterans' preparedness and orga- clava-wearing mob broke into a closed RBS bank branch and stole keyboards, using them to break windows. Other protesters spray-painted graffiti on the RBS building, writing"Class War" and "Thieves." Mounted riot police eventually pushed them back. RBS has been the focus of par- ticular anger because it was bailed outbythe British government after a series of disastrous deals brought it to the brink of bankruptcy. Still, its former chief executive Fred Goodwin - age 50 - managed to walk off with an annual pension of 703,000 pounds ($1.2 million) even as unemployment in Britain rises from some 2 million. "Every job I apply for there's already 150 people who have also applied," said protester Nathan Dean, 35, who lost his informa- tion technology job three weeks ago. "I have had to sign on to the dole (welfare) for the first time in my life. You end up having to pay your mortgage on your credit card and you fall into debt twice over." There were surreal moments: Earlier in the morning, police impounded an armored person- nel carrier - complete with what looked like a machine-gun turret - near London's Liverpool Street Station as slack-jawed office workers took pictures with their cell phones. nization as a strong point to the proposal hearing. "They laid it all out for the senators to just take under their wing," he said. Blumke was also encouraged by the meeting and said he hopes to see the proposal realized by August of this year. "I don't think it could have gone any better," he said. "The state senators were all really supportive and wanted to know more about what universities we're approaching." Blumke isn't new to Lan- sing, he's testified there before in hopes of getting the G.I. Gill passed. According to statistics in the proposal, the University current- ly ranks ninth in the Big Ten in the number of student veterans enrolled in classes, with only 48 enrolled at the University. From Page1A lot better in the beginning, because a lot of people didn't believe there was really anything going on," she said. "We heard everything through the grapevine kind of in the begin- ning, but then the RAs came and notified us." Logan said there is some dif- ficulty with communication dur- ing any emergency because of the necessity to take care of the situation at hand before notify- ing affected individuals of the situation. He also said it was dif- ficult to contact all of the residents involved because many chose to leave the evacuation sites. "There is the issue that we don't always know what's going on in a timely basis," he said, "because in an emergency the first thing to do is deal with the emergency, so I do know that there were students who were unhappy." The students were allowed back into their rooms sometime between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m., depending on where they lived within West Quad, Logan said. Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Diane Brown said multiple steps had to be taken before students were allowed back into the building even after the fire was put out. And because the fire was an arson, West Quad was determined as a crime scene where police interviews and fingerprint- ing had to be taken. In addition to the crime scene investigation, the waiting time was augmented by the need for an air quality test before resi- dents were permitted to re-enter the building. Brown said the Uni- versity takes the fire marshal's OK a step further, waiting extra time to ensure the safety of the building. "The University administration has a set of stronger responsibili- ties for students, staff and faculty," Brown said. "The administration wants to go that one step further to ensure that buildings really have good air quality, etc. in order to be reoccupied." The sprinkler system also con- tributed to the wait delays, Brown said. Though the fire was on the lowest level of West Quad, which she said made it easier to contain, there was still water damage to about 20 rooms that had to be miti- gated. "You can't stop the sprinkler system," Brown said. "That whole portion of the piping system has to drain out, so even if the fire is put out very quickly, a lot of water still comes down." Logan said he has not heard of a lot of criticism from the students who were displaced once they re- entered the residence hall. "It was something nobody wanted to have happen, and it is disturbing that this was an arson," he said. 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