The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, December 9, 2009 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, December 9, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Psych exam ordered for man charged in son's death A judge has ordered a psychiat- ric evaluation for the man accused of fatally shooting his 15-year-old son after the boy admitted raping a 3-year-old girl. Wayne County Circuit Judge Brian Sullivan ordered the exami- nation for Jamar Pinkney Sr. yester- day, when the 37-year-old Highland Park man pleaded not guilty to first- degree murder in his son's Nov. 16 death. Authorities say that, after Jamar Pinkney Jr. confessed to molest- ing the girl, his father forced the teen to strip, marched him to an empty lot and shot him through the head. Defense attorney Cor- bett O'Meara has said the elder Pinkney was immediately remorse- ful and turned himself in to police. LUCASVILLE, Ohio Ohio executes inmate with one- drug injection An Ohio killer was put to death in an efficient 10 minutes yesterday in the first U.S. execution to use a single druginjection instead ofthe standard three-chemicalcombinationthathas come under legal attack because it can cause excruciating pain. Kenneth Biros, 51, was pro- nounced dead shortly after one dose of sodium thiopental began flowing into his veins at the South- ern Ohio Correctional Facility. The U.S. Supreme Court had rejected his final appeal two hours earlier. Experts had predicted that sodium thiopental - used in many parts of the world to put pets down - would take longer to kill than the old method. But the 10 minutes it took Biros to die was about as long as it has taken other inmates in Ohio and elsewhere to succumb to the three-drug com- bination. WASHINGTON Ex-FBI director to conduct review of Fort Hood shootings Ex-FBI director William Webster will conduct an independent review ofthe bureau's handling of informa- tion gathered about the Fort Hood shooting suspect before the deadly rampage, officials said yesterday. FBI Director Robert Mueller has asked Webster to take a look at how the bureau handled information about Maj.Nidal Hasan in the months before the shooting at the Texas mili- tary base that killed 13 people. Mueller had already ordered an internal review of the matter, and that review led to a secret report to the White House in late November. The new assignment for Webster takes the internal review a step fur- ther, and likely means a more pro- longed, in-depth inquiry. Webster is a former judge who also served as C5A director. In a statement, Mueller called Webster "uniquely qualified" for the job because he "has led independent reviews of various FBI systems and broader policies and provided valu- able recommendations. In this case, Judge Webster will have complete access and whatever resources nec- essary to complete the task." TEHRAN, Iran Students, militia clash in 2nd day of Iran protest Hard-line militiamen firing tear gas and throwing stones stormed a crowd of thousands of university stu- dents protesting for asecond day yes- terday, as Iran threatened a tougher crackdown on the opposition after the biggest anti-government demon- strations in months. More than 200 people were arrested in Tehran on Monday dur- ing protests by tens of thousands at universities nationwide, and Iran's top prosecutor warned further unrest would not be tolerated. He hinted authorities could even pursue the top opposition leader, Mir Hos- oein Mousavi, an escalation the gov- ernmenthas so farbalked at trans postelection turmoil. Masked motorcyclists - likely hard-line militiamen - harassed Mousavi athis Tehranoffice on Tues- day. An angry Mousavi confronted them, daringthem, "Kill me!" before being hustled away by aides, accord- ing to pro-opposition Web sites. - Compiled from [aily wire reports Wave of coordinated attacks kills at least 127 in Baghdad Officials blame Sunni insurgent alli- ance BAGHDAD (AP) - A suicide car bomb flattened acourtbuildingand an explosives-rigged ambulance blew down walls like dominos near the Finance Ministry during a wave of coordinated attacks yes- terday that targeted high-profile symbols of Iraqi authority. At least 127 people were killed. The blasts - at least five in total - marked the third major strike on government sites since August and brought uncomfort- able questions for Iraqi leaders. These include signs al-Qaida in Iraq is regrouping and concerns over the readiness of Iraqi forces to handle security alone as U.S. forces depart. The bombings also brought swift accusations about the STUDENT CODE From Page 1A Responsibilities. When the amendment first passed the assembly in October, it was grouped with a series of other amendments, including changing the Statement's language to make it gender-neutral, and designat- ing intimate partner violence as a distinct violation. The assembly passed all the recommendations at that time without debate. After talking to University pro- fessors and administrators from SACUA, MSA President Abhishek Mahanti decided the assembly should re-visit its decision to sup- port the change in the standard of evidence. Mahanti said the amendments were presented to the assembly a week before they were voted upon, but the representatives did not thoroughly look them over. "That process assumes that individuals would take time to look at it and gather evidence and arguments," Mahanti said. "What alarmed me was that it all passed by consent." When a proposal is brought before MSA, the matter is not debated before the full body unless there is an objection from one its members. Without an objection, the resolution passes by consent. motives behind the attacks. Offi- cials claimed a Sunni insurgent alliance, including members of Saddam Hussein's banned Baath Party, seeks to undermine the pro-Western government ahead of elections set for March 7 and the later withdrawal of U.S. combat forces. Authorities also faced angry questions about how bombers again found holes in Iraqi secu- rity. "If security falls apart, then everything will collapse," said Abbas al-Bayati, head of parlia- ment's defense committee and an ally of the Shiite government, as lawmakers convened an emergen- cy session. Another lawmaker, Saadi al- Barazanji, shouted: "If I were the interior minister, I would resign!" The attacks began with a sui- cide strike on a police patrol. An hour later, four more explosions rumbled across Baghdad in the MSA, along with University executive officers and SACUA, is given the opportunity to amend the Statement every three years. The changes that MSA approved in October were sent to SACUA, which reviews them and ultimate- ly decides whether to recommend them to University President Mary Sue Coleman for implementation. With or without SACUAs recom- mendation, MSA's amendments are sent to Coleman. Hwang, co-author of the origi- nal resolution, said that after pre- senting these changes to SACUA and hearing their debate on the change, she realized that MSA had not adequately discussed the amendment. "When we initially proposed it we didn't realize that there were so many other aspects of it and so many other implications that we had to consider," Hwang said. MSA Treasurer Vishal Bajaj, who only votes in the event of a tie, voted in favor of the resolution. He said that while he supports the efforts of those trying to make the process easier for victims of sexual assault, he doesn't support chang- ing the standard for all 20 viola- tions in the Statement. Beth Sullivan, a representative from the Center for the Education of Women, came to last night's MSA meeting and urged the assembly to support the change span of a few minutes. Suicide car bombings hit three sites: the main Appeals Court, an area out- side the Finance Ministry and a government compound that includes the Labor Ministry. A roadside bomb also went off near a university. Iraq's Health Ministry reported at least 513 people were wounded. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. However, mul- tiple bombings are a hallmark of al-Qaida. The past two major strikes on Iraqi government sites were coordinated blasts in August and October that took more than 255 lives. Sunni groups linked to al-Qaida eventually issued state- ments saying they carried out the attacks. Iraq'sgovernment, however, has tried to cast blame on Saddam loy- alists - even parading three sus- pects on national television who gave what officials termed confes- sions for the October attacks. to a preponderance of evidence standard. She said that most uni- versities adhere to this standard. According to Sullivan, the judi- cial body of the Greek system uses the preponderance of evidence standard in all of its cases. Sullivan read to the assembly a statement from Max Barack, the Judicial Vice President of the Interfrater- nity Council. In his statement, he urged the assembly to keep its rec- ommendation to lower the stan- dard of evidence. MSA Vice President Mike Rorro, who voted against last night's proposal, said that the assembly should take into consideration that the Greek system has already made this change and MSA.should recommend the University do the same. Rules and Elections Chair Michael Benson said this change would endanger those accused of violating the code. "We have to also look out for the right of the innocently accused, as well as the rights of the guiltily accused," Benson said. "Everyone deserves their fair day in court." - Scott Suh contributed to this report. STEM CELLS From PageA "Before today, we didn't have all of the approvals (from the Institutional Review Board)," Sue O'Shea, director of the Uni- versity's Center for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Biology, said in an interview yesterday. "Today we've finally cleared all the hurdles." The University's Consortium for Stem Cell Therapies - an organization that brings together researchers from across campus and from Michigan State Univer- sity and Wayne State University - will be responsible for deriving the stem cell lines. The consortium is now able to accept donated embryos that were created for reproductive purposes but were discarded either because they weren't needed anymore or they couldn't be used, according to the release. The consent of the donor must be documented in writing before the stem cells can be turned over to the consortium, in accordance with federal and state laws. Two million dollars of fund- ing for the new research will come from two private organi- zations, the Alfred A. Taubman Medical Research Institute and the Consortium for Stem Cell Therapies. - A current federal law states that taxpayer dollars, including those from the National Insti- tutes of Health, cannot be used to develop new stem cell lines. Once lines are developed, however, government funding can be used to cover the research. According to the release, Uni- versity researchers expect to cre- ate their first embryonic stem cell line by 2010. In addition to deriving embry- onic lines, consortium scientists will also work on techniques to convert adult skin cells into induced pluripotent stem cells, which function like embryonic cells, making them extremely valuable for research purposes. Accordingto O'Shea, the recent approval allows University scien- tists to begin this groundbreak- ing research. "It's tremendously important," O'Shea said. "For one, the exist- ing stem cell lines out there don't represent the world's population so now we have the tools to let us make more genetically diverse lines." With the approval, consortium scientistshcan also begin the pro- cess of creating stem cell lines fromhdisease-carrying patients, which will help them develop treatments for a variety of dis-- eases. "We want to obtain cells from: diabetics or people with Par-" kinson's because once there's an' embryonic stem cell line, we have" thousands of cells and we can try different treatments, so we can"* study disease progression along' with new medications," O'Shea said. Although the loosening of- the research restrictions was approved last year, groundwork for this project began long before- the votes were cast. "We've been working on this project for several years - even- before Proposal 2 was on the bal-. lot," O'Shea said. "We couldn't do any of the work we're doing if Proposal 2 had failed because it was illegal to make new lines in the state of Michigan." Feldman said researchers will- start collecting embryos at the' beginning of the new year and* will progressively increase their intake of donors' embryos. "We need to understand and become efficient with making lines before I cansay we canmake 30 or 40 lines," Feldman said. "We'll start in a very measured way to make sure we have all the operating procedures worked out- correctly." According to Feldman, in the past year, many potential donors have expressed interest in donat- ing their embryos for research. "We estimate we will receive between 40 and 200 donors over the first year or so. We will begin by accepting embryos from donors where we expect the embryos to be normal so we can develop initial lines," she said. Though the state constitu- tional amendment passed last' year, there is still some opposi- tion to stem cell research in the state. A group of state legislators, led by Sen. Tom George (R-Kal- amazoo), will present bills to the Senate Health Policy Commit-. tee today that could restrict the state's stem cell research. "It would certainly hinder our project in a big way," O'Shea said. "It's just an attempt to further regulate stem cell research. 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