The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, April 13, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DEARBORN, Mich. " Man kills woman, self at Michigan community college A community college student apparently used a shotgun to kill an aspiring actress and dancer Fri- day on the campus west of Detroit where they attended class together before killing himself as police rushed to the scene. Officers heard a gunshot as they rushed inside a Henry Ford Community College building and discovered the bodies of 20-year- old Asia McGowan of Ecorse and " 28-year-old Anthony Powell of Detroit in a classroom. "Nothing like this has ever occurred on campus," said Marjo- rie Swan, vice president/control- ler at the school, which was locked down as police and campus secu- rity worked to secure the area. Police responded after a 12:30 p.m. emergency call of an assault and received reports of gunfire while en route, said Dearborn Dep- uty Police Chief Gregg Brighton. They set up a perimeter around the MacKenzie Fine Arts Center, where police say a theater class McGowan and Powell took was held earlier Friday. DOVER, Del. Remains of 5 killed in Iraq sent to Dover The remains of five Army sol- diers killed by a suicide bomber in Iraq were expected to arrive last night at Dover Air Force Base. The bomber driving a truck deto- nated aton of explosives near apolice headquarters in the northern city of Mosul on Friday, killing the men in the deadliest attack against U.S. " troops in more than a year. The U.S. military said Iraqi police were the bomber's target and that the Ameri- cans were caught up as bystanders. Two Iraqi policemen also were killed in the midmorning blast near the Iraqi National Police headquar- ters. At least 62 people, including one American soldier and 27 civil- ians, were wounded, officials said. It arks the fourth time the media has been allowed to cover the arriv- al under a new Pentagon policythat requires getting family permission. An 18-year ban on press coverage of fallen U.S. service members ended a week ago. LONDON U.K. considering paying for old cars The British government is con- sidering giving consumers a cash bonus to trade in their old cars and buy new ones in an effort to help the country's ailing automotive indus- try, newspapers reported yesterday. A similar plan in Germany has given auto sales there a big boost, with one German auto industry group saying that new car regis- trations in the country in March soared to their highest level since 1992, thanks to the bonus. France has introduced a similar incentive, and the U.S. Congress is developing its own version of the plan, dubbed "cash for clunkers." Proponents say the plan gives consumers a chance to swap their old autos for newer and often more fuel-efficient ones while stimulat- ing the struggling international auto industry. Critics say the plan merely delays the pain while draining govern- ment coffers. There were conflicting reports in the U.K. media about the govern- ment's commitment to the car bonus plan. WASHINGTON Obama girls name new puppy 'Bo' The first family has settled on a first pet - a 6-month-old Portu- guese water dog that the Obama girls are naming Bo. Theselectionwas one ofthe White House's most tightly kept secrets. President Barack Obama's daughters, 10-year-old Malia and 7-year-old Sasha, picked a black and white pup, a White House official speaking on the condition of anonymity told The Associated Press Saturday night. The dog is a gift from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., who owns sev- eral Portuguese water dogs himself. "We couldn't be happier to see the joy that Bo is bringing to Malia and Sasha," Kennedy said in a statement. "We love our Por- tuguese water dogs and know that the girls - and their parents - will love theirs, too." - Compiled from Daily wire reports Navy rescues hostage, shoots three pirates Report issued on UM Survival Flight crash Decisive action ends five-day rogue confrontation NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - Navy snipers on the fantail of a destroyer cut down three Somali pirates in a lifeboat and rescued an American sea captain in a surprise nighttime assault in choppy seas yesterday, endinga five-daystandoffbetween a team of rogue gunmen and the world's most powerful military. It was a stunning ending to an Indian Ocean odyssey that began when 53-year-old freighter Capt. Richard Phillips was taken hos- tage Wednesday by pirates who tried to hijack the U.S.-flagged Maersk Alabama. The Vermont native was held on a tiny lifeboat that began drifting precariously toward Somalia's anarchic, gun- plagued shores. The operation, personally approved by President Barack Obama, quashed fears the saga could drag on for months and marked a victory for the U.S., which for days seemed powerless to resolve the crisis despite mass- ing helicopter-equipped warships at the scene. One of the pirates pointed an AK-47 at the back of Phillips, who was tied up and in "imminent danger" of being killed when the commander of the nearby USS Bainbridge made the split-second decision to order his men to shoot, Vice Adm. Bill Gortney said. The lifeboat was being towed by the Bainbridge at the time, he said. A fourth pirate was in discus- sions with naval authorities about Phillips' fate when the rescue took place. He is in U.S. custody and could face could face life in a U.S. prison. The rescue was a dramatic blow to the pirates who have preyed on international shipping and hold more than a dozen ships with about 230 foreign sailors. But it is unlike- ly to do much to quell the region's growing pirate threat, which has transformed one of the world's busiest shipping lanes into one of its most dangerous. It also risked provoking retaliatory attacks. "This could escalate violence in this part of the world, no question about it," said Gortney, the com- mander of U.S. Naval Forces Cen- tral Command. Abdullahi Lami, one of the pirates holding the Greek ship anchored in the Somali town of Gaan, said: "Every country will be treated the way it treats us. In the future, America will be the one mourning and crying," he told The Associated Press. "We will retali- ate (for) the killings of our men." Jamac Habeb, a 30-year-old self-proclaimed pirate, told the AP from one of Somalia's piracy hubs, Eyl, that: "From now on, if we cap- ture foreignships and their respec- tive countries try to attack us, we will kill them (the hostages)." "Now they became our number one enemy," Habeb said of U.S. forces. Phillips was not hurt in several minutes of gunfire and the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet said he was rest- ing comfortably on a U.S. warship after receiving a medical exam. "I'm just the byline. The real heroes are the Navy, the Seals, those who have brought me home," Phillips said by phone to Maersk Line Limited President and CEO John Reinhart, the com- pany head told reporters. A photo released by the Navy showed Phil- lips unharmed and shaking hands with the commanding officer of the USS Bainbridge. Obama said Phillips had cour- age that was "a model for all Amer- icans" and he was pleased about the rescue, adding that the United States needs help from other coun- tries to dealwiththe threatof pira- cy and to hold pirates accountable. Phillips' 17,000-ton ship, which docked with the 19 members of his crew Saturday in Mombasa, Kenya, erupted into wild cheers. Some waved an American flag and one fired a brightred flare skyward in celebration. "We made it!" said crewman ATM Reza, pumping his fist in the air. The ship had been carry- ing food aid bound for Rwanda, Somalia and Uganda when the ordeal began hundreds of miles off Somalia's eastern coast Wednes- day. Crew members said they saw pirates scrambling into the ship with ropes and hooks from a small boat bobbing on the surface of the Indian Ocean far below. As the pirates shot in the air, Phillips told his crew to lock themselves in a cabin and sur- rendered himself to safeguard his men, crew members said. Phillips was then taken hostage in an enclosed lifeboat that was soon shadowed by three U.S. war- ships and a helicopter ina standoff that grew by the day. The pirates were believed armed with pistols and AK-47 assault rifles. Crew member may have accidentally hit autopilot in 2007 medical plane crash ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - A crew member may have acciden- tally put a medical plane into auto- pilot shortly before a crash in Lake Michigan that killed both pilots and a four-member organ trans- plant team, a federal safety agency's report says. The University of Michigan Sur- vival Flight plane crashed just after takeoff from Milwaukee's General Mitchell International Airport on June 4, 2007. One of the National Transporta- tion Safety Board teams investigat- ing the crash issued a report on its simulation of the plane's final min- utes. The report found the results of the simulation "are consistent with the co-pilot inadvertently hittingthe autopilot button" instead of another motion control device, the Detroit Free Press said Sunday. The co-pilot apparently intended to activate the "yaw damper on the airplane center console," accord- ing to the report by one of six NTSB teams looking into the crash. A yaw damper helps reduce side-to-side oscillations of an aircraft. If it were turned on, the autopilot would have resisted the efforts of the pilots of the Cessna CitationIIto maneuver the plane. The problem may have begun when First Officer Dennis Hoyes told Capt. Bill Serra he had rou- tinely activated the aircraft's yaw damper. Eleven seconds later, Serra was recorded as saying, "Why amI fight- ingthe controls here? Damn it." "It's choppy. It's going to fight you,"saidCapt. SteveJones,anexpe- rienced pilot and head of operations at Western Michigan University's College of Aviation. He reviewed the NTSB reports at the newspaper's request. The two buttons are next to each other on the center console, and some aircraft makers have rede- signed cockpit controls to avoid such mistakes. The changes include giving the controls varying shapes to make them less likely to be con- fused, Jones said. The report is from the NTSB's Recorded Radar and Airplane Per- formance StudyGroup. NTSB teams also are looking into the operations of the plane's owner, weather, the plane's airworthiness, maintenance records and cockpit voice record- ings. The five-member board will receive the report and others later this year. Its members then issue a conclusion on the probable cause of the crash. Killed along with Jones and Serra were cardiac surgeon Dr. Martinus Spoor, pediatric cardio- thoracic surgery trainee Dr. David Ashburn, and transplant donation specialists Richard Chenault II and Richard LaPensee. MSA From Page 1A "Student sponsors are backing out at this time, but (MSA is) still providing," said Neil Thaneder, president of Detroit Partnership. Jordan Salin, former chair of MSA's Budget Priorities Commit- tee, said the assembly received very few complaints from student organizations that did not receive their desired amounts of money in his tenure. But he added that the changes to the application have produced positive results. "We gave out more money than in recent years," Salin said. "There was a noticeable improvement in the quality of applications attrib- uted to the application changes." According to MSA treasurer Vishal Bajaj, the Budget Priorities Committee is typically allocated between $125,000 and $130,000 each semester and the Community Service Committee is typically allo- cated about $45,000 each semester to provide to student groups. Bajaj said this is considerably higher than the 40 percent of MSA's overall funds required to go to the Budget Priorities Commit- tee and 20 percent required to go to the Community Service Com- mittee by MSA's constitution and compiled code. Despite the detailed process for fund allocation, there are student groups on campus who feel they are not given a fair shot bythe MSA budget committees. Andrew Dalack, co-chair of Students Allied for Freedom and Equality, a pro-Palestinian orga- nization, said the new funding process lacks transparency, which raises many issues for him. "It is unclear why sometimes we receive more or less money for cer- tain events," he said. Dalack said he thinks the fund- ing allotment discrepancy may have something to do with politics. "The political opinions of the members of BPC and CSC may affect our ability to get funding," he said, "especially if individual mem- bers of the various funding bod- ies fundamentally disagree with SAFE's mission and principles." Averill said any students whose neutrality might be compromised - for example, if they are members of certain groups - don't provide input on that group's funding. She said the opinions of individual members are not a factor in decid- ing funding allocation. "We all understand there are a million organizations on campus with different ideas and ideolo- gies and everything," Averill said. "Nothing gets factored in as to whether you agree with them or not. Obviously it's veryimportant to the campus to have differing view- points, so that's not a factor at all." Averill said some of the basic standards to decide whether or not a group or event will be provided funding are the impact it would have on the student body - she said an educational event would be likely to earn more funding than a social one - and the scope of the group. "If it's (a student organization) that includes a very large portion of the student body, either in the event or the group itself, that's one of the things to kind of determine how much we're going to contrib- ute to it," Averill said. Bajaj, who used to be the trea- surer for the Indian American Stu- dentAssociation, said he had agood experience earning MSA funding, but that he does think there are problems with the system. "I think the problem lies within the fact that to get that money, it was having to beat the system," he said. "You have to realize there are certain things they're never going to fund and there are certain things they're always going to fund." Bajaj said he thinks the problem lies mostly with new and up-and- coming student organizations that don't know how to get around the process. He said MSA should make the process more transparent so student organizations know what it consistently funds and doesn't fund. "I think that's the problem, stu- dent organizations shouldn't have to feel they have to trick MSA," he said. "It should be easier and more transparent." MSA also considers financial need of each group when deter- mining fund allocation. The com- mittees take into consideration whether or not the funds from an event go to charity and if organiza- tions need MSA backing to oper- ate. "Basically we want to give them the money to allow them to oper- ate, but if they have enough money to operate themselves, then they don't have financial need," Averill said. Conner Sandefur, president of the Native American Student Asso- ciation, said his group was upset after it was denied funding for one of its events earlier in the year. Sandefur said his group was told the funding was denied because - it already had enough money in its account. That money, how- ever, was earmarked for its powwow fundraiser, Sandefur said, and was not meant for the event. "We still had the event but our account was depleted because we had thought we had a strong proposal and were count- ing on the funding," Sandefur said. "This left us at a disadvantage for our powwow." Later in the year, when NASA requested funds from MSA for its powwow because its savings had been spent, the group was denied again, Sandefur said. The assembly told the organization the reason it was denied was because the money it would make on admissions tick- ets at the powwow would cover the costs of the event. "I'm not sure how the funding committee made the determina- tion that they understood our bud- get more clearly than we do," he said. Averill said if any organizations are not content with the funding they are granted, they are given the opportunity to appeal. "People come to appeals a lot, and a lot of the time people who do come to appeals end up getting more money because it's usually very legitimate reasons why they're there," she said. Despite the many complaints of a lack of transparency, inefficient processes and budget commit- tee members who make decisions subjectively, there are many cam- pus groups that say MSA has been extremely helpful when it comes to funding. Reid Benjamin, treasurer of Relay For Life, said the funding process is very effective in a multi- tude of ways. He stated that the necessary training about the process and available meetings with MSA rep- resentatives helps to make things run efficiently. "I have a hard time saying any- thing negative about the process because it's gone so smoothly," Benjamin said. Julia Hawley, treasurer of the Solar Car Team, said MSA has been very beneficial to their cause as well. "Usually they give us a pretty good portion and overall we've had a positive experience," Haw- ley said. "We always ask for more money than we think we can get but MSA is always generous." Bajaj said he plans to reform the funding process while he is MSA treasurer, possibly increas- ing the amount of money allocated to the Budget Priorities Commit- tee among other changes, to make funding easier for student groups. One of the issues with student funding is that it is a system of reimbursements, Bajaj said. There- fore, if student groups do not have enough money up front, they still cannot host events, even though MSA will ultimately provide them funding. Bajaj said he also plans to put the entire application online and hold more individual funding work- shops, possibly even approach- ing student organizations rather than having student organizations approach MSA. SICK OF THE DORMS? 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