The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam Thursday, September 17, 2009 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, September17, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS ANN ARBOR, Mich. Rodriguez says he didn't see Mouton's punch Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez says he didn't see linebacker Jonas Mouton (MOO'-tahn) throw a punch at Notre Dame lineman Eric Olsen. Rodriguez faced questions yes- terday as video of the incident dur- ing Saturday's 38-34 Wolverines victory spread on the Internet. Mouton appears to swing at Olsen's chin after getting up from the turf after Olsen fell on him. Rodriguez says an official would have called any infraction and says Mouton won't face discipline. Weis said Sunday he was sending videotape of several plays to the Big Ten offices seeking answers to why certain calls weren't made, includ- ing "punches to the face after plays were over." He says he got a response from the Big Ten but says it's a private matter. WASHINGTON, D.C. Advocacy group ACORN to investigate video An advocacy group says it is ordering an independent investi- gation after two employees were caught on camera appearing to advise a couple posing as a prosti- tute and pimp to lie about the wom- an's profession. ACORN chief executive Bertha Lewis said 'Wednesday that the group will work with its advisory council to name an independent auditor and investigator to exam- ine all the systems and processes called into question by the video. Lewis says ACORN, which stands for Association of Com- munity Organizations for Reform Now, will refuse new admissions into its service programs, effective immediately. ACORN's steps cospe as Repub- licans urge the Justice Depart- ment to investigate the group, which in addition to the hidden- camera video is under scrutiny for several voter-registration fraud SEOUL SOUTH KOREA Chinese envoy meets North Korea nuclear strategist China's presidential envoy met with North Korea's top nuclear strategist amid intensifying inter- national efforts to persuade Pyong- yang to return to stalled six-nation talks on its atomic weapons pro- grams. Dai Bingguo, special envoy of Chinese President Hu Jintao, had a "candid and in-depth exchange of views" on bilateral, regional and international issues with the North's Fist Vice Foreign Minister Kang Sok Ju on Wednesday, Pyongyang's offi- cial news agency said. Kang is North Korean leader Kim Jong Il's chief foreign policy brain and has been the main strategist for dealing with the standoff over its nuclear programs for decades. The Chinese delegation also included Beijing's chief nuclear negotiator, Wu Dawei. The North's Korean Central News Agency said in a brief dis- patch that the talks went "in a com- rade atmosphere" but did not give further details on their discussions. Still, it is widely believed that the nuclear row was a key topic among the "international issues" they dis- cussed. PITTSBURGH Google acquires ReCAPTCHA Google has acquired a Carnegie Mellon University spin-offthat seeks to cut down on spam and fraud at Web sites while digitizing books. ReCAPTCHA offers simple word puzzles that users must solve when registering at a Web site or complet- ing an online purchase. Computers can't decipher the twisted letters and numbers, ensuring that real people and not automated programs are at the keyboard. Unlike other word puzzles, how- ever, ReCAPTCHA's text comes from actual books, letting the system create a digitized version in the pro- cess. Terms of the deal, announced yes- terday, were not disclosed. Google said the ReCAPTCHA tool will con- tinue to be available for use on any Web site. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Baucus unveils health care reform plan GOP criticizes long-awaited plan from Senate Finance Commitee chair WASHINGTON (AP) - His calls for compromise rebuffedby Repub- licans, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Finance Committee unveiled sweeping legislation yes- terday to remake the nation's costly health care system largely along the lines outlined by President Barack Obama. Sen. Max Baucus' proposal, months in the making, drew quick criticism from liberals who said his vision was too cramped and from Republicans who deemed it overly expansive. Yet whatever its fate, its mere release marked a critical turning point in Congress' long and tumultuous debate over Obama's top domestic priority. The Finance Committee is to meet next week to vote on the plan, and after combining it with another panel's bill, Major- ity Leader Harry Reid intends to begin debate on the Senate floor late this month or early Octo- ber. Across the Capitol, Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been waiting to see Baucus' health care prescrip- tion before advancing compan- ion legislation toward a vote by the House. "We cannot let this opportu- nity pass," Baucus, D-Mont., said as he outlined a $856 billion plan' designed to protect millions who have unreliable insurance or no coverage at all, at the same time restraining the explosive growth of medical costs. Congressional budget experts estimated the proposal would reduce the ranks of the uninsured by 29 million over a decade. They also predicted the plan would trim federal deficits by $49 billion over the same period and suggested sav- ings in the range of hundreds of bil- lions of dollars might result for the decade that follows. Many of the bill's major provi- sions would be delayed until 2013, SUSAN WALSH/AP Senator Max Baucus (D-Mont.) explains his health care proposal ata press conference in Washington, D.C. yesterday. after the next presidential election. But the impact of one of the key concessions Baucus made in a so-far-unsuccessful search for Republican support - allowing cooperatives, rather than the fed- eral government, to sell insurance in competition with private indus- try - was judged harshly. "They seem unlikely to establish a significant market presence in many areas of the country," wrote Douglas W. Elmendorf, head of the Congressional Budget Office. Supporters claim the co-ops would compete effectively with pri- vate companies and help hold down the cost of insurance, but CBO's assessment is likely to re-energize advocates of direct government competition. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs called the overall legislation an "important building block" that "gets us closer to com- prehensive health care reform." Reid, too, described it as "another important piece to the puzzle" on the road to health care legislation. Pelosi said that while the bill would do less than House legisla- tion to make coverage more afford- able, its emergence "will move this historic debate forward." Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, who has labored to keep his rank and file united in opposition, called ita par- tisan proposal that "cuts Medicare by nearly a half-trillion dollars and puts massive new tax burdens on families and small businesses, to create yet another thousand-page, trillion-dollar government pro- gram. Only in Washington would anyone think that makes sense, especially in this economy." FBI searches Colorado house in terror probe Denver man with suspected links to al-Qaida questioned over possible New York City bomb plot AURORA, Colo. (AP) - Federal agents yesterday searched the home of a suburban Denver man identi- fied by law enforcement as having a possible link to al-Qaida, carting away several boxes of evidence. The FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force went through the home of NajibullahZazi, as well as the near- by residence of his aunt, Rabia Zazi, FBI special agent Kathleen Wright said Wednesday. Zazi denies that he's a central figure in a terrorism investigation that -fed fears of a possible bomb plot and led to several police raids in New York City on Monday. Zazi, 24, was being interviewed at FBI headquarters in Denver late Wednesday but was not under arrest, according to his attorney, Arthur Folsom. Zazi provided authorities a DNA sample, a fin- gerprint, handwriting samples and information about his travel his- tory, Folsom said. "My client is not involved in any terror plot," Folsom declared. "He answered every question they had." The U.S. Attorney's Office in Denver said it had no immediate comment. One agent wearing protective clothing escorted a dog belonging to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives into Zazi's apartment. FBI agents left Zazi's apartment with at least six boxes. One box was labeled "swabs," and others were marked "fragile" and "glass." Agents also escorted three women and a man from the apart- ment. Two of the women covered their faces with headscarves, and the third used a canvas chair to shield her face. All were driven away in an SUV. The searches came a day after two law enforcement officials told The Associated Press that a joint FBI-New York Police Department task force had put Zazi under sur- veillance because ofsuspectedlinks to al-Qaida. The task force also feared Zazi may be involved in a potential plot involving homemade hydrogen per- oxide-based explosives like those cited in an intelligence warning issued Monday, said the officials, who spoke on anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the investigation. After Zazi traveled to New York City over the weekend, FBI agents and police officers armed with search warrants seeking bomb materials searched three apart- ments and questioned residents in a predominantly Asian neighbor- hood in Queens. Naiz Khan, an Afghan immi- grant who grew up with Zazi in New York City, said the FBI ques- tioned him for about two hours about Zazi, whom he said stayed at his apartment last week. No arrests were announced, and the FBI and NYPD have refused to discuss the case. New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and FBI Direc- tor Robert Mueller said Wednes- day there are no specific terrorist threats to the city. "There are no guarantees. We live in a dangerous world," said Kelly, who called New York the world's best-protected city. ijiji th