The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 20, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS ALLEGAN, Mich. Man, boy rescued from van roof in Kalamazoo River Police say a 52-year-old Allegan man and his 3-year-old nephew were rescued from the roof of a van that had rolled into the Kalamazoo River. The Allegan County sheriff's office says in a release that the van was in 10 feet of water off Echo Point boat launch Thursday afternoon when deputies arrived. A firefighter from Clyde Town- ship swam to the van and was tossed a safety line. A sheriff's lieutenant then swam to the van and returned to shore with the child. A member of the sheriffs dive team then helped James Birchfield to safety. Birchfield and the boy were taken to a local hospital and treated for hypothermia. DETROIT. GM analyst predicts solid November sales U.S. auto sales could top an annu- al rate of 10.8 million in Novem- ber, General Motors Co.'s top sales analyst said yesterday. That would mark the first month this year that sales jumped to such levels with- out the aid of Cash for Clunkers rebates, which boosted sales in July and August. Executive Director of Market Analysis Mike DiGiovanni says the industry is having a solid sales month through the first 19 days of November, another sign that the economy is beginning a slow recovery from recession. He also said GM could see its fourth straight month of market share gains in November. Others are a bit less bullish. The Edmunds.com automotive Web site forecasts an annual light vehicle sales rate of 10.3 million and J.D. Power and Associates predicts 10.2 million. The annual rate for Novem- ber, typically a slow sales month, is adjusted for seasonal variances. Edmunds predicts light vehicle sales will drop 4.5 percent this month when compared with year-ago results. J.D. Power estimates a 7.6 percent decline. LOS ANGELES U of Calif. approves big tuition hikes The governing board of the Uni- versity of California approved a $2,500 student fee increase yester- day after two days of tense campus protests across the state. The vote by the Board of Regents in a windowless University of Cali- fornia, Los Angeles, meeting room took place as the drone of protesters could be heard from a plaza outside. Scores of police in riot gear guarded the building. The 32 percent increase will push the cost of an undergraduate education at California's premier public schools to over $10,000 a year by next fall, about triple the cost of a decade ago. The fees, the equivalent of tuition, do not include the cost of housing, board and books. "Our hand has been forced," UC President Mark Yudof told report- ers after the vote. "When you don't have any money, you don't have any Wmoney." TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras Honduras interim president may take leave for vote Honduras' interim president said yesterday he may step down temporarily to allow voters to con- centrate on the upcoming presiden- tial elections. Roberto Micheletti said he will consult his advisers and those who have supported his government on whether he should step aside ahead of the Nov. 29 election and until at least Dec. 2, when Congress is scheduled to vote on whether to reinstate ousted President Manuel Zelaya. Micheletti did not say who would be in charge of the govern- ment if he takes the weeklong leave of absence. "My purpose with this measure is for the attention of all Hondurans to concentrate on the electoral pro- cess and not on the political crisis," Micheletti said in a message broad- cast on national television. He said he would immediately return to the presidency should threats to "order and security arise." - Compiled from Daily wire reports Al- Qaida sites in English rise: in number CHARLES BE N NETT/AP In this May 22,1990 file photo, Comedian Bob Hope laughs with television talk show host Oprah Winfrey during the taping of the "Oprah Winfrey Show" in Chicago. Oprah to announce ebnd of show today Sites serve as a recruiting tool, though most are not run directly by al-Qaida RIYADH,Saudi Arabia (AP) - Increasing numbers of English- language Web sites are spreading al-Qaida's message to Muslims in the West. They translate writings and ser- mons once largely out of reach of English readers and often feature charismatic clerics like Anwar al- Awlaki, who exchanged dozens of e-mails with the Army psychiatrist accused of the Fort Hood shootings. The U.S.-born al-Awlaki has been an inspiration to several mili- tants arrested in the United States and Canada in recent years, with his Web-based sermons often turn- ingup on their computers. "The point is you don't have to be an official part of al-Qaida to spread hatred and sectarian views," said Evan Kohlmann, a senior investiga- tor for the New York-based NEFA Foundation, which researches Islamic militants. "If you look at the most influ- ential documents in terms of homegrown. terrorism cases, it's not training manuals on build- ing bombs," Kohlmann said. "The most influential documents are the ones that are written by theologi- cal advisers, some of whom are not even official al-Qaida members." Most of the radical Islamic sites are not run or directed by al-Qaida, but they provide a powerful tool for recruiting ,sympathizers to its cause of jihad, or holy war, against the United States, experts who track the activity said. The number of English-lan- guage sites sympathetic to al-Qaida has risen from about 30 seven years ago to more than 200 recently, said Abdulmanam Almushawah, head of a Saudi government program called Assakeena, which works to combat militant Islamic Web sites. In contrast, Arabic-language radical sites have dropped to around 50, down from 1,000 seven years ago, bgcause of efforts by gov- ernments around the world to shut- them down, he said. AI-Qaida has long tried to reach a Western audience. Videotaped messages from its leader, Osama bin Laden, and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahri usually have English subtitles. But translations of writ- ings and sermons that form thy theological grounding for al-Qai- da's ideology, along with preachers like al-Awlaki, mostly eliminate the language barrier. Al-Awlaki's sermons have turned up on the computers of nearly every homegrown terror suspect arrested in the United States, Kohlmann said. Members of a group of Canadian Muslims arrested in 2006 for alleg- edly forming a training camp and plotting bombing attacks in Toron- to listened to his online calls for jihad, according to the case against them in court. Winfrey expected to begin show on new cable network in 2011 CHICAGO (AP) - "The Oprah Winfrey Show," an iconic broad- cast that grew from a local Chica- go talk show into the foundation of a multibillion dollar media empire, will end its run in 2011 after 25 seasons on the air, Win- frey's production company said last night. Winfrey, who became one of the most powerful women in enter- tainment from a seat on the couch of her set in Chicago's West Loop neighborhood, plans to announce the final date for her show during a live broadcast today, Harpo Pro- ductions Inc. said. A Harpo spokeswoman declined to comment yesterday on Winfrey's future plans except to say that "The Oprah Winfrey Show" will not be transferred to cable television. Winfrey is widely expected to start up a new talk show on OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network, a much-delayed joint venture with Discovery Communications Inc. that is expected to debut in 2011. OWN is to replace the Discovery Health Channel and will debut in some 70 million homes. CBS Television Distribution, which distributes "The Oprah Win- frey Show" to more than 200 mar- kets blanketing the United States, held outhope that itcould continue doing business with Winfrey, per- haps producing a new show out of its studios in Los Angeles. "We have the greatest respect for Oprah and wish her nothing but the best in her future endeavors," the unit ofCBS Corp. said in astate- ment. "We know that anything she turns her hand to will be a great success. We look forward to work- ing with her for the next several years, and hopefully afterwards as well." Winfrey's 24th season opened earlier this year with a bang, as she drew more than 20,000 fans to the city's Magnificent Mile on Michigan Avenue for a Chicago block.party with the Black Eyed Peas.- She followed up with a series of blockbuster interviews - Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield, exclusives with singer Whitney Houston and ESPN's Erin Andrews,' and just this week, former Alaska governor, GOP vice presidential candidate and best-selling author Sarah Palin. She found time between shows to lobby the Inter- national Olympic Committee in Denmark for Chicago's failed bid to host the 2016 Olympics. The loss of "The Oprah Win- frey Show" would be a blow to CBS Corp. because it earns a per- centage of hefty licensing fees from TV stations that use it. On a conference call with analysts two weeks ago, CBS Chief Executive Leslie Moonves said the contract with the show ran through most of 2011 and "if there's a negative impact, it wouldn't hit us until '12." CBS continues to sell several top shows into syndication, how- ever, including "Wheel of For- tune" and "Jeopardy." But many TV stations are struggling with falling advertising revenue and were unlikely to pay the same fees as in the past for Winfrey's show, which has seen ratings slip 7 per- cent from a year ago and saw its average viewership slip below 7 million last season. Winfrey started her broad- casting- career as a teenager in Nashville, Tenn., reading the news at WVOL. Two years later, Winfrey started co-anchoring news broadcasts on WTVF-TV in Nashville. In 1976 she moved to Baltimore to anchor newscasts at WJZ-TV before becoming host of the local talk show "People Are Talking." In 1984, she relocated to Chicago to host WLS-TV's morning talk show "A.M. Chicago" - the show was became "The Oprah Winfrey Show" one year later. She set up Harpo the following year and her talk show went into syndication, rising to become one of the most successful in the history of broad- casting. "I came from nothing," Win- frey wrote in the 1998 book "Journey to Beloved." "No power. No money. Not even my thoughts were my own. I had no free will. No voice. Hundreds cheer Palmn in Mich. Grand Rapids was first stop on'Going Rogue'book tour GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) - College students ditched class, employees skipped work and some huddled in the cold overnight just to make sure they get an orange wristband yesterday that would let them meet Sarah Palin. A line of more than a thousand people - some sporting Palin Power stickers and Palin T-shirts - moved slowly into a Barnes & Noble store yesterdayto see the for- mer Republican vice presidential candidate and Alaska governor on the first stop of her "Going Rogue" book tour. During the hours they waited, some broke out in chants of "Palin! Palin! Palin!" Scores more who couldn't get wristbands awaited Palin's arrival outside, braving the cold and yell- ing. "USA!" and "Sarah, Sarah!" at an event that took on the feel of a political pep rally. "She's a person of faith, she has a family, she has gone through a lotof the trials and tribulations we have. I'd vote for her in a heartbeat," said Lana Smith, a dispatcher at a bus companywhotookthedayoffwork, and had been waiting in line since 5:30 a.m. "Someday I hope her name is up in lights and I'll have had the privi- lege of meeting her," Smith said. The song "Only in America," a standard on George W. Bush's 2004 campaign stops, played as Palin's tour bus, painted to resemble the cover of her book, pulled up to the Woodland Mall in Grand Rapids. "I just can't tell youhow good it is. to be back in Michigan," the former Alaska governor said after getting off the bus carrying her youngest son, Trig. "Alaska and Michigan have so much in common, with the, huntin' and the fishin' and the hock- eymoms, and just the hardworking, patriotic Americans who are here." China continues detention, mistreatment of US geologist Chicago-trained Xue Feng charged with stealing state secrets BEIJING (AP) - Sometime into his longdetentionbyChina's feared state security agents, American geologist Xue Peng had something to show U.S. consular officials on their monthly visit. He rolled up his sleeve, revealing the burns where his interrogators pressed lit ciga- rettes into his arm. Xue also had something to say: He wanted his previously unpub- licized detention made public in hopes that the outcry would win his release. But Xue did not get his wish. His wife balked, as did the U.S.- based consultancy that employed him until months before he was detained, both saying that going public might hurt rather than help his case. The U.S. Embassy, caught between his desire to go public and his wife's wish for privacy, worked behind-the-scenes for his release. So two years after disappear- ing into custody, the University of Chicago-trained Xue (pronounced shway)remainsheld at anunknown location in Beijing, charged with stealing state secrets over the pur- chase of a commercial database on the oil industry. His case has been batted inconclusively between prosecutors and the courts, which twice asked for more evidence, acyording to a summary of the case prepared by Xue's wife and seen by The Associated Press. On Tuesday, President Barack Obama raised Xue's case at his Bei- jing summit with Chinese President Hu Jintao in the latest and highest- level intervention, said a White House official on the trip, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information. More than an instance of abu- sive, intransigent Chinese justice, Xue's case raises disturbing ques- tions about the quiet lobbying for- eign governments, companies and the families of detainees often use, believing it more effective with an authoritarian Chinese leadership. "Under difficult and danger- ous circumstances, Dr. Xue made it clear that he wanted the Ameri- can people to learn of his ordeal. I have little doubt thathad his wishes beenrespected,hiscase wouldhave already been resolved," said John Kamm, a human rights campaigner with a two-decade track record of getting prisoners released to whom the State Department turned for help this month. Beijing's State Security Bureau and the Procuratorate, or prosecu- tor's office, declined comment. A spokesman for the city's No.1 Inter- mediate Court, a Mr. Niu, said Xue's trial "is still in mid-process," where, according to the case summary, it has been since July. Xue's wife, Nan Kang, who was born in China like her husband and who lives with their children out- side Houston, has hired a lawyer. She said she wanted to keep her husband's detention quiet for fear that going public would have reper- cussions for their parents in China and disturb their two children, especially their young son., Kang declined to comment fur- ther publicly. In the case summary she wrote: "My husband denies the charge against him, and he believes that he was helping China attract inward investment and to improve the Chinese economy." The U.S. Embassy in Beijing said that it has monitored Xue's case since soon after his arrest, visiting him over 20 times, delivering mes- sages from his family and pressing for his release. It declined to release further details and would only say that Xue asked for his detention to be made public "some time ago." U.S. governments have for years weighed whether jailed dissidents and Anmerican prisoners are better served by public pressure, closed- door diplomacy or a combination of thetwo. The Obama administration has tried to keep any likely disputes over human rights, a perennial irri- tant in relations, from damaging a broader agenda crowded with the economic crisis, climate change, nuclear proliferation and other global issues. The AP learned of Xue's case last week. The U.S. Embassy initially requested that publication be with- held, saying it mightharm attempts under way to gain his release. But in recent days, the embassy has said it detects no progress in the case. Xue's wife has asked that the case not be made public out of concern for her family. Given Xue's wishes to go public and the lack of prog- ress, the AP decided to publish. "I have been writing letters to members of Congress, the Senate, the Bush administration, the Obama administration, at least two ambas- sadors in Beijing - Huntsman and Randt - trying hard over time to raise his case and make sure every- one was aware of it," said David Rowley, a geo-sciences professor at the University of Chicago who was Xue's doctorate thesis adviser. "I have tried to be an advocate, but in the wishes of Dr. Xue's wife, I have tried to keep this out of the public eye and tried to deal withthis privately." All Day Fish Fry Platter for $6.99 - &-6 7el 6? &i 10-C Domestic Bottles Start At $1 1 p 1 310 Maynard St.-Food To Go734.995.0100-Next to the Maynard Parking Structure H,-,,M A A