The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, A pril 21 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT 440 lbs. of cocaine seized by police at Canadian border Canadian authorities say bor- der agents have seized about 440 pounds of cocaine in two busts at the Ambassador Bridge that links Detroit and Windsor, Ontario. The Canada Border Services Agency said yesterday both busts happened after searches of Cana- da-bound tractor-trailers. The agency says its agents dis- covered about 176 pounds (80 kilo- grams) of cocaine April 12 inside a truck. The agency tells the Detroit Free Press a 45-year-old Bramp- ton, Ontario, man faces drug traf- ficking charges. The agency says the bust came three days after agents found about 264 pounds (120 kilograms) of cocaine in a search that led to the arrest of two Quebec men, ages 29 and 39. NEW YORK GM spent $2.8M in federal lobbying in first quarter General Motors Corp. spent $2.8 million lobbying the U.S. govern- ment in the first three months of 2009, while the company was sur- viving on $13.4 billion in federal loans, according to a government J filing. The Detroit automaker said it spent the money lobbying a range of issues, including the economic stimulus package, environmen- tal, consumer safety and health issues. h The automaker's lobbying costs fell 15 percent from the $3.3 mil- lion it spent in the fourth quarter of 2008, but are up from the $2.7 million it spent in the third quar- ter, according to filings. GM spokesman Greg Martin said the company did not spend any of its lobbying budget on obtaining government assistance, nor did it spend any of the federal aid it has received thus far on lobbying. "We're a part of arguably one of the most regulated industries and we provide a voice in complex policy discussions," Martin said. "We meet-strict reporting require- ments." MORGANTOWN, W. Va. FBI workers accused of spying on dressing room Two FBI workers are accused of usingsurveillanceequipmenttospy on teenage girls as they undressed and tried on prom gowns at a char- ity event at a West Virginia mall. The FBI employees have been charged with conspiracy and com- mitting criminal invasion of pri- vacy. They were working in an FBI satellite control room at the mall when they positioned a camera on temporary changing rooms and zoomed in for at least 90 minutes on girls dressing for the Cinder- ella Project fashion show, Marion County Prosecutor Pat Wilson said yesterday. Gary Sutton Jr., 40, of New Milton and Charles Hommema of Buckhannon have been charged with the misdemeanors and face fines and up to a year in jail on each charge if convicted. Sutton has been released on bond, Wil- son said, and Hommema is to be arraigned later this week. Wilson did not know Hommema's age. LONDON Steven Hawking hospitalized, very ill Stephen Hawking, the Brit- ish mathematician and physicist famed for his work on black holes, was rushed to a hospital yesterday and was seriously ill, Cambridge University said. Hawking has been fighting a chest infection for several weeks and was being treated at Adden- brooke's Hospital in Cambridge, the university city northeast of London, the university said. "Professor Hawking is very ill," said Gregory Hayman, the univer- sity's head of communications. "He is undergoing tests. He has been unwell for a couple of weeks." Later in the afternoon, Hayman said Hawking was "now comfort- able but will be kept in hospital overnight." The illness had caused Hawking to cancel an appearance at Arizona State University on April 6. - Compiled from Daily wire reports SMOKING From Page 1A products for students, faculty and staff. University employees will also have reduced co-pays on prescription cessation products, Winfield said. In the fall of 2010, Winfield said the committee will bring the proposed policy before Univer- sity administrators for an official review. But until that point, Winfield said there are still several ques- tions as to how the policy will be implemented to create a smooth transition for all members of the University community. Because this plan is still in the develop- mental stages, Winfield said it is important to get input from many different groups on campus, as well as from other private com- panies that neighbor University property. "What we want to do is hear from people about how we can get from here to our goal, and what that goal will look like in terms of impact on people," Win- field said. Winfield brought up various challenges that may arise with the implementation of such a policy, including how to deal with smok- ing at football game tailgates, near performing arts centers and on the University golf course, in which guests of the University are often present. Winfield discussed the policy with members of the Senate Advi- sory Committee on University Affairs at its meeting yesterday, and said another concern is how to handle potential apprehen- sions of international students who may come from countries in which smoking is an intricate part of their culture or national tradition. The University's Department of Public Safety will not give out tickets for violations of the policy, Winfield said, but specific repercussions for disobeying the policy are being discussed. There will also be changes made to the Statement of the Student Rights and Responsibilities Handbookto reflect the new policy, he said. Winfield said he expects there will be some dissent regarding the policy, but that in two years time, most of the dialogue will be exhausted. "I think most smokers under- stand that over the years their behavior is not conducive to non- smokers, and I suspect that those smokers have come to grips with this to some degree," he said. Similar policies have already been implemented on more than 260 college campuses across the country, including the University of California at San Francisco, Indiana University and the Uni- versity of Iowa, according to the press release. Karen Whitney, chair of the Indiana University Purdue Uni- versity Indianapolis Smoking Pol- icy, said the tobacco-free policy was well received by members of the university community when it was implemented in August 2006. Whitney, IUPUI's dean of students, said the smoke-free policy's compliance with the uni- versity's mission as a health and life sciences campus has allowed the university to be highly suc- cessful in its implementation of the regulation. "It has significantly reduced smoking on university property," Whitney said. "It has changed and reformed the campus. It is now considered unacceptable to smoke on campus." Whitney said while the policy has improved the air quality on campus, there is no evidence that it has reduced the cost of health care for its faculty and staffE But smoke-free policies are not welcomed by all, including George Koodray, New Jersey state coordinator for The Smok- er's Club of the Citizens Freedom Alliance. Koodray said banning smoking on college campuses is part of a growing trend to punish people for non-obtrusive, legal behavior. "We don't understand why in America the law should penalize people for a practice that's not offensive to anyone," Koodray said. "This kind of a ban on the consumption of a legal product doesn't have adverse affects on anyone. We just can't under- stand where this policy is coming from." Koodray said everyone, includ- ing nonsmokers should be wor- ried about the implementation of this policy, as it could lead to bans on other legal substances. "A lot of people may not object to this kind of policy because they don't smoke," Koodray said. "But down the road, it's a slippery slope, where we see this taking form to other prohibitions in the future that people don't approve of but are completely legal." Engineering freshman Chris Pike, a smoker, said although he thinks the University shouldn't be able to conduct students' per- sonal behavior, it is still a good thing they are trying to imple- ment. "I guess they can tell us what to do; it's a public university," Pike said. "But we nay to enhere. Detroit Free Press reporter Jim Schaefer, right, lifts Senior Managing Editor Jeff Taylor as reporter M.L t rick, left, celebrate their Pulitzer Prize for local reporting yesterday in Detroit. Free Press wins Pulitzer for the Detroit mayor scandal coverage Reporters Schaefer and Elrick first to uncover Kwame's text messages to Beatty DETROIT (AP) - Struggling simply to survive as readership and advertising drop, the Detroit Free Press celebrated winning a Pulit- zer Prize yesterday for its report- ing of a sex scandal that brought down the city's mayor. Minutes before the Pulitzer was announced, most of the Free Press staff crowded into the close quar- ters around the cluttered corner desks of Ji Schaefer and M.L. Elrick, the main reporters on the story. When Elrick, reading from a computer screen, announced, "It looks like we won," applause exploded and continued for nearly two minutes. Schaefer and Elrick hugged, as did other staffers. "The community is in a better place now than it was a year ago, and although we take no joyin what Detroit had to go through, we take a lot of satisfaction that we did our job well," Paul Anger, Free Press vice nresidentand editorsaidlin an interview. "We upheld the First Amendment. We upheld the pub- lic's right to know, and Detroit can move forward with confidence." Schaefer and Elrick were the first to uncover steamy text messages between a married Kwame Kil- patrick, the mayor at the time, and Christine Beatty, his chief of staff. Excerpts were first published in January 2008 and led to both being charged and eventually jailed. The reporting opened the door to intense scrutiny of Kilpatrick, his finances and the operations of the mayor's office. The paper has not said how it obtained the messages, which revealed that Kilpatrick and Beat- ty lied about their affair under oath during a 2007 whistle-blowers' trial. The messages were left on Beatty's city-issued pager. Following a short investigation, Wayne County prosecutor Kym Worthy charged Kilpatrick and Beatty in March 2008 with per- jury, misconduct and obstruction of justice. Kilpatrick was required to leave the mayor's office after he pleaded guilty to two counts of obstruction of justice and no con- test to assault. The award for local reporting is the ninth Pulitzer for the Free Press, and Elrick and Schaefer were elated to have been a part of it. Elrick said he was once offered a job as Kilpatrick's press secretary but turned it down. "In retrospect I made probably thebestcareerdecision Ievermade by not taking that job," he said. "The reason that job was attractive is because this guy had all the tools to be the greatest mayor of the 21st century, and he threw it all away." In an interview after the award was announced yesterday, Schaefer said: "This whole thing has been a real emotional roller coaster ride for me, from extreme sadness for the city of Detroit to have to go through this, to joy when Kym Worthy charged the mayor." It's been a tough year for Detroit in general. The mortgage crisis has hit the city as hard as any place in the country. The turmoil of the domestic auto industry continues to lead to job cuts and add to the city's skyrocketing unemployment. As the economy has foundered, the fortunes of the Free Press and its main competitor, The Detroit News, have dimmed. Home delivery has been reduced to the three days a week most pop- ular with advertisers - Thursdays, Fridavs and Sundavs