The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, A pril 15, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Detroit man sues to block demolition of rail depot A Detroit man wants to derail the possible demolition of the Michigan Central Station. Stanley Christmas filed suit Monday against the city and City Council, contending the 96-year- old building is protected by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966. The council on April 7 approved a resolution seeking emergency demolition of the decrepit 17-story building long considered a symbol of Detroit's decay. Mayor Ken Cock- rel Jr. wants to use $3.64 million in federal stimulus funds to raze the station, which closed in 1988. City attorneys will outline the process to the council on April 28. Mayoral spokesman Daniel Cher- rin says the city has made no firm plans regarding the depot's fate. Christmas ran for mayor in 2005 and in the Feb. 24 special mayoral election, drawing 103 votes. HILLSDALE, Mich. Hillsdale's youngest mayor won't seek re-election The city's youngest mayor is ready to move on. Michael Sessions was 18 when he won a 2005 write-in campaign in Hillsdale, a city of 8,200 located 85 miles southwest of Detroit. The 21-year-old announced yes- terday he won't seek re-election be- cause he is to graduate from Hills- dale College in 2010 and his career plans may prevent him from com- pleting a second four-year term. Sessions registered to vote one day after his 18th birthday in Sep- tember 2005 and signed up as a write-in candidate the day after that. He financed his campaign with $700 earned by working at a french fry wagon at local fairs and carnivals. After defeating the incumbent by two votes, Sessions appeared on national news programs and on the "Late Show with David Letter- man." MOMBASA, Kenya Somali pirates on hijack spree since the weekend A Somali pirates were back to business as usual yesterday, defi- antly seizing four more ships with 60 hostages after U.S. sharpshoot- ers rescued an American freighter captain. "No one can deter us," one bandit boasted. The freed skipper, Richard Phil- lips, will return home to the United States today, after reuniting with his 19-man crew in the Kenyan port of Mombasa, according to the ship- ping company Maersk Line Ltd. Thebrigandsgrabbed moreships and hostages to show they would not be intimidated by President Barack Obama's pledge to confront the high-seas bandits, according to a pirate based in the Somali coastal town of Harardhere. "Our latest hijackings are meant to show that no one can deter us from protecting our waters from the enemy because we believe in dying for our land," Omar Dahir Idle told The Associated Press by telephone. "Our guns do not fire water. I am sure we will avenge." MONTPERLIER, Vermont Vt. may set aside harshest penalties for 'sexting' Parents, school districts and law enforcement have been grap- pling with what to do with teen- agers who take sexually explicit photos of themselves with their cell phone cameras and send them to friends. Vermont legislators are moving to get rid of one option: child por- nography counts that result in life- time listings on the state's Internet sex offender registry. Legislation passed by the Ver- mont Senate and pending in the House would remove the most seri- ous legal consequences for teenag- ers who engage in "sexting." The bill would carve out an exemption from prosecution for child por- nography for 13- to 18-year-olds on either the sending or receiving end of sexting messages, so long as the sender voluntarily transmits an image of himself or herself. - Compiled from Daily wire reports N. Korea set to restart nuclear programs Officials oust U.N. inspectors, pull out of negotiations SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - North Korea said yesterday it was restarting its rogue nuclear pro- gram, bootingU.N. inspectors and pulling out of disarmament talks in an angry reaction to U.N. Secu- rity Council condemnation of its April 5 rocket launch. Pyongyang ordered U.N. nucle- ar inspectors to remove seals and cameras from its Yongbyon nuclear site and leave the country as quickly as possible, the Inter- national Atomic Energy Agency said. North Korea told the IAEA it was "immediately ceasing all cooperation" and "has decided to reactivate all facilities and go ahead with the reprocessing of spent fuel," according to a state- ment from the U.N. agency. White House spokesman Rob- ert Gibbs condemned the decision, saying the international commu- nity will not accept North Korea until it abandons what Washing- ton calls its pursuit of nuclear weapons. The North must "cease its provocative threats," he said. Russia also deplored the move and urged its neighbor to rejoin six-nation talks, which have been held since 2003 in an attempt to get Pyongyang to give up its nuclear program in exchange for aid and other concessions. Brit- ain's Foreign Office said the break with the IAEA was "completely unjustified." China - Pyongyang's main ally and the host of the talks - called for calm on all sides. Despite its defiance, ana- lysts say North Korea, one of the poorest countries in the world, is unlikely to abandon the talks altogether. They suggested North Korea could be trying to draw the United States into direct negotia- tions, which it has long sought. Hajime Izumi, a North Korea expert at the University of Shizuo- ka in Japan, said the North Kore- an reaction was designed to "bring the United States to the negotiat- ing table and squeeze maximum concessions from it." All 15 members of the Security Council, including China and Rus- sia, agreed Monday to condemn the April 5 launch as a violation of U.N. resolutions and to tighten sanctions against the regime. The U.N. statement was weaker than the resolution Japan and the Unit- ed States had pursued. North Korea claims it launched a communications satellite as part of a peaceful bid to develop its space program as Kim Jong I embarked on his third term as leader. The U.S. and others call the launch an illicit test of the tech- nology used to fire an interconti- nental ballistic missile, even one eventually destined for the U.S. A Security Council resolution passed in 2006, days after North Korea carried out an under- ground nuclear test, prohibits Pyongyang from engaging in any ballistic missile-related activity - including launching rockets that use the same delivery tech- nology as missiles mounted with warheads, Washington and other nations say. Under a 2007 six-party deal, North Korea agreed to disable its main nuclear complex in Yong- byon north of Pyongyang in return for1 million tons of fuel oil and other concessions. In this May 14, 2008 file photo, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich testifies in front of the Senate on Capitol Hill Gingrich considers run for White House in2012 Former Speaker of the House's media blitz raises suspicions about potential run ATHENS, Ga. (AP) - More than a decade after he stepped down as speaker of the House into what seemed like almost certain politi- cal oblivion, Newt Gingrich is back and seemingly more relevant than ever. Gingrich seems to be every- where these days, headlining an endless circuit of GOP dinners, popping up on TV news shows, authoring yet another best-selling book and acting as a policy guru to out-of-powercongressionalRepub- licans on how to do battle with the Democratic White House. As beleaguered Republicans look for a standard bearer after last year's disastrous election, they've been tossing around the names of flashy new stars like Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the 2008 vice presi- dential candidate, and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, young and Indian American in a party that's increasingly identified with older white men. But could the GOP's savior instead be a wonkish, twice- divorced throwback to the fiercely partisan Republican rev- olution? Gingrich has managed to keep himself in the public eye since leaving the House, but the blitz of public appearances in recent months is reminiscent of the run- up to 2007, when he toyed with a presidential run only to abandon it before the primaries began. Now, some are speculating that the for- mer congressman from Georgia is laying the groundwork for a White House bid in 2012. Grover Norquist, a prominent conservative and president of Americans for Tax Reform, said Gingrich is on nearly every Repub- lican short list of possible White House prospects. "One of the ways you judge these guys is how hard they're working, and Newt is out there hustling," Norquist said. Gingrich does not exactly dis- courage such presidential specu- lation. Instead he argues he is busy with work for a pair of think tanks - American Solutions and the Center for Health Transforma- tion - that give him a platform to speak on a dizzying array of issues: from childhood obesity and nucle- ar weapons i North Korea to off- shore oil exploration. "I really love trying to solve problems. I get very excited about it," Gingrich, 65, said after teach- ing a law school class recently at the University of Georgia. With Gingrich, a former college history professor, the ideas some- times come so fast and furious that even supporters say they can feel overwhelned by a conversation with him. Rich Galen, a Washington- based Republican strategist and former Gingrich aide, called him the GOP's "intellect-in-chief." "He's always been the idea man," Galen said. Ex-Il. governor pleads not guilty Blagojevich denies charges of fraud and racketeering CHICAGO (AP) - Ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich pleaded not guilty to racketeering and fraud charges yesterday, defiantly embarking on a long journey to clear his name but facing serious money problems and without ateam of lawyers in place. "I'm glad this process has finally begun," the impeached former gov- ernor told the media throng that spilled into the street in front of the courthouse afterhe andhisbrother, Robert, were arraigned on corrup- tion charges. "It's the end of the beginning in one respect but it's the begin- ning of another aspect" of the case, Blagojevich said. "That is the beginning of me being able to prove and clear my name and be vindicated of what are inaccu- rate allegations." Blagojevich, 52, is charged with scheming to sell Presi- dent Barack Obama's former U.S. Senate seat, attempting to extort campaign money from companies seeking state business and plotting to use the financial muscle of the governor's office to pressure the Chicago Tribune to fire editorial writers calling for his impeachment. The accu- sations led to his ouster as governor, but he repeated yesterday what he has been saying for months - that he is not guilty. The former governor appeared to be in his element as the focus of a major political story yet again. He chatted ami- ably with reporters, and when one television cameraman stood atop a concrete pillar outside the courthouse to get a shot from above, he obligingly looked up and smiled. Blagojevich was arrested Dec. 9 after authorities said he was heard on FBI wire- taps discussing swapping the Obama seat for a Cabinet post, a new job or campaign money. A federal grand jury returned a 19-count indictment April 2 that alleges corruption begin- ning before Blagojevich even took office. At the 10-minute arraign- ment, Blagojevich and the only attorney currently on his case, longtimefriendSheldonSorosky, entered a plea of not guilty. U.S. District Judge James B. Zagel then started a sequence of legal maneuvers that attorneys said would most likely lead to a Blagojevichtrial ayear ortwo down the road. Blagojevich faces charges including racketeering conspiracy, wire fraud, extortion conspiracy, attempted extortion and making false statements. Most of the charg- es carry a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Prosecutors must give the defense team mounds of documents and recordings made over years of investigation. Defense attorneys can then be expected to ask Zagel to throwoutmuch of it. "The circumstances of these wiretaps hasn't been flushed out yet," said DePaul University law professor Leonard Cavise. "We can expect all kinds of motions to suppress evidence. They will chal- lenge the warrants. They will chal- lenge whether the government had probable cause" to tap Blagojevich's home and campaign office phones. Chrysler debtholder talks pick up pace; M stalled Banks and creditors hold $6.9 billion in secured debt from Chrysler DETROIT (AP) - The pace of negotiations between Chrysler LLC and its debtholders picked up this week, but talks at General Motors Corp. have slowed as both companies face looming govern- ment deadlines to cut their debt in order to stay out of bankrupt- cy. Banks and other Chrysler creditors that hold $6.9 billion in secured debt are preparing a counteroffer after they rejected a proposal from the automaker and the government to erase the loans for $1 billion, according to a person briefed on the negotia- tions. At GM, a group representing bondholders is still waiting for a counteroffer from the company, according to another person with knowledge of the talks. Both people spoke on condition of anonymity because the negotia- tions are private. The Treasury Department is getting involved in the nego- tiations with GM and Chrysler's debtholders after the companies failed to finalize their restruc- turing plans by the government's original March 31 deadline. President Barack Obama gave the automakers more time, but with instructions to make even tougher cuts. Last week, the Treasury Department was pressing GM to offer bondholders a small amount of its stock in exchange for their $28 billion of GM debt, according to published reports. That would be much less gener- ous than a similar offer GM made two weeks ago. There'smore urgency atChrysler because the Auburn Hills-based company is a little more than two weeks away from its new April 30 deadline to get concessions from its creditors and unions and ink a deal with Italian automaker Fiat Group SpA. 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