The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, January 27, 2010 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, January 27, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS PASADENA, Calif. NASA to study Haiti earthquake faults via radar NASA will study Haiti's earth- quake faults with a series of over- flights by a jet equipped with a special airborne radar system. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena says a space agency Gulfstream jet carrying the system departed NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center in the Mojave Desert on Monday. Scientists had already planned a three-week aerial survey of Cen- tral America and added a series of flights over the island of Hispaniola after the magnitude-7.0 quake that devastated Haiti on Jan. 12. Principal investigator Paul Lun- dgren says the radar will image deformations of the Earth's surface and other changes involving post- earthquake geologic processes. JPL has been using the system since November to study Califor- nia's huge San Andreas and other major faults. NEW CITY. N.Y. Ex-NYC cop gets 5 years in prison for incident at school A former New York City police- man has been sentenced to five years in prison for holding a school superintendent at gunpoint. " The Rockland County district attorney's office said Peter Cocker was also barred from contacting South Orangetown Superinten- dent Ken Mitchell for 10 years. The sentencing was yesterday. The 37-year-old Tappan resi- dent had pleaded guilty to second- degree kidnapping. Last June, he stormed past a guard into a middle school and threatened to shoot Mitchell. The superintendent disarmed him dur- ing a struggle. Police later said the gun was not loaded. Prosecutors said Cocker had a sick child and was upset over the schools' swine flu policy. The defense said Cocker suf- fered from post-traumatic stress suffered while working for the New York Police Department. DETROIT Pregnant women dies in car crash Authorities say a woman who was seven-and-a-half months preg- nant and the fetus she was carrying died following a rollover crash on Interstate 94 in Detroit. Michigan State Police Sgt. Linda Mys says 23-year-old Shar- dae Homesly was thrown from an SUV following the midday Tuesday crash and the fetus was torn from her body by the force of the crash. Police say Homesly and the fetus were transported separately to St. John Hospital, where they were pronounced dead. Police say the Detroit woman was riding in a Jeep Liberty and wasn't wearing a seat belt. The male driver, who was treated and released from St. John Hospital, was wearing a seat belt. His name wasn't released. Police say the crash hap-. pened after the SUV was cut off by another vehicle and swerved. TEGUCIGALPA, HONDURAS Judge in Honduras clears generals, coup amnesty OKd A Supreme Court judge cleared Honduras' military commanders yesterday in the coup that toppled Manuel Zelaya, and hours later lawmakers approved amnesty for the ousted leader and all those involved in his removal. The two measures - combined with Wednesday's inauguration of a new president, conservative rancher Porfirio Lobo - appeared to spell the last chapter in the bitter political dispute that led to Hondu- ras' international isolation. Supreme Court President Jorge Rivera ruled the country's top gen- erals did not abuse their power in ordering soldiers to escort Zelaya out of the country at gunpoint June 28. "Prosecutors failed to prove the military chiefs acted with malice," he said in a statement. The prosecution's case did not question Zelaya's ouster itself - only whether the six members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff went too far in flying him to Costa Rica after he was arrested by soldiers in a dispute over a constitutional referendum. In State of the Union, Obama to tout plans to boost economy A Saab is scene at Crossway Saab in Montpelier, Vermont yesterday. Saab got a new life yesterday as General Motors Co. agreed to sell the Swedish car brand to the small Dutch luxury. GM to sell Saab for $74M Dutch automaker Spyker to purchase troubled brand DETROIT (AP) - A small Dutch automaker will try to do what U.S. auto giant Gen- eral Motors Co. couldn't - make money by selling Saab brand auto- mobiles in an increasingly com- petitive global marketplace. GM signed a deal yesterday to sell Saab to Spyker Cars NV for $74 million in cash plus $326 mil- lion worth of preferred shares in Saab. The deal hinges on a $550 million loan from the European Investment Bank, which the Swedish government on yesterday committed to guaranteeing. The sale is a coup for Spyker, which is based in Zeewolde, Netherlands, and a lifeline for Saab, which has lost money ever since GM bought a 50 percent stake and management control for $600 million in 1989. The Detroit automaker gained full ownership in 2000 for $125 mil- lion more. Saab employs around 3,500 people in Sweden and was within days of liquidation as part of GM's restructuring. Now GM will continue provid- ing vehicles and parts to the new company, to be called Saab Spyker Automobiles NV. Spyker CEO Viktor Muller knows that Spyker faces a huge challenge to turn Saab into a money maker, but said he's confi- dent it can be done. "I think what we can bring to the table is entrepreneurship and tenacity," he told reporters. Saab already was struggling as a niche brand with a small mar- ket share when GM bought it, and industry analysts say the Detroit automaker ruined Saab's unique character by supplying the unit with vehicles designed for other GM brands. Before GM, Saab specialized in egg-shaped aerodynamic small cars with rapidly sloping backs and four-cylinder engines. But sales dropped as loyal followers found the GM offerings no dif- ferent than those made by other mainstream brands. But Muller said Spyker will harness "the Swedishness of the brand" to reconnect with Saab's loyal following of 1.5 million driv- ers. "I think the unique heritage of the brand requires a very strong focus," he said. "If you are part of a very large conglomerate, it's very difficult to have focus on all. these brands." Spyker is estimating that it will make 100,000 Saabs a year, enough to be profitable. Asked whether production would stay in Sweden, Muller joked that it would be shortsighted to believe Saab buyers would remain loyal to the brand if the cars were made in Mumbai. Spyker also must quickly sign deals with GM or other automak- ers to design and build new Saabs, said Michael Robinet, an automo- tive analyst with CSM Worldwide in Michigan. Without deals, Saab will have to compete against global auto- makers with much lower costs that can pack features into their cars and sell them for less, Robi- net said. "They have to find a friend or work with other manufacturers to bring in the products that they want designed to their needs," he said. The sale came after an earlier attempt to sell Saab to another Swedish automaker fell through, and after GM's bid to sell the Sat- urn brand also collapsed. Pontiac and Saturn now will be phased out, and GM is trying to sell its Hummer brand to a Chinese heavy equipment maker. Robinet said GM's board pushed hard for the Saab sale, forcing management to move more quickly to focus on four core brands: Buick, Chevrolet, Cadillac and GMC. GM expects to close the sale by mid-February. The company gets a relatively small amount of cash but it unloads an expense. GM also retains the preferred shares, giving it a stake should the com- pany become profitable. The Detroit auto giant will continue to provide engines and transmissions to Saab for "an extended period of time," and it will keep making the 9-4X cross- over vehicle, said John Smith, GM's vice president of planning and alliances. Crossovers have the interior room of an SUV but are built on a car instead.of a truck frame.' Speech will try to move past recent troubles for the White House WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama will try to pivot past rocky times for the nation and him- self tonight in his first State of the Union address, offering a skeptical public repackaged plans to energize the economy, stem a tide of red ink and strengthen anti-terror defenses. He'll also be trying to revive his own "yes we can" image. One year into office, and a week after pledging to do better at "speaking directly to the American people," Obama faces urgent chal- lenges as he stands before lawmak- ers gathered in the Capitol and a prime-time television audience at home for the constitutionally man- dated ritual of U.S. governing. The country has lost more than 7 mil- lion jobs since the recession began two years ago, unemployment is stuck at 10 percent, and the govern- ment is grapplingwith arecord $1.4 trillion deficit. Obama's presidency is troubled as well. The percentage of Ameri- cans giving him a thumbs-up has fallen precipitously, from 74 per- cent when he took office to 56 per- cent now. He hasn't had a breakout legislative or diplomatic victory, and he's failed to break Washing- ton's partisanship as promised. Then last week, an upset Repub- lican victory in a Massachusetts Senate race threw Obama's signa- ture domestic priority, a sweeping health care overhaul, into jeopar- dy and shined a spotlight on eco- nomic angst now being taken out on him. Among the expected ideas in Obama's speech: an emphasis on education, with calls for more accountability for performance but also more money to support reforms. Obama's next budget proposal is likely to suggest con- solidating a series of elementary and secondary school programs, but overall, would increase Educa- tion Department spending more by than 6 percent. Obama will be using one of the presidency's loudest and grand- est megaphones to press several themes. They will be fleshed out in greater detail afterward as the president travels to Florida on Thursday and New Hampshire on Tuesday for jobs-focused appear- ances and when he submits his 2011 budget to Congress on Monday. Republican Gov. Bob McDon- nell of Virginia will deliver a televised response tonight, two months after putting his state in GOP hands in one of the party's major recent election victories. Among the freshly sharpened messages Obama will weave through his remarks: He's a fighter for struggling families and against Lawyers seek to silence al-Qaida linked scientist China issues warning of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan Issue raises tensions between Beijing and Washington BEIJING (AP) - Contacts with China's military would likely be the first to suffer if Beijing moves to retaliate over upcoming U.S. arms sales to Taiwan - the lat- est in a flurry of disputes elevat- ing tensions between Washington and Beijing. Foreign Ministryspokesman Ma Zhaoxu warned that the Obama administration risked damaging ties with China if it proceeds with the arms package deal, which is likely to include Black Hawk heli- copters and Patriot missiles. "Once again, we urge the U.S. side to recognize the sensitivity of weapon sales to Taiwan and its gravity," Ma told reporters yes- terday at a regularly scheduled news conference. He said failure to halt the sales would "impair ZARAGON.PLACE 7342.,2930 1EaU the larger interests of China-U.S cooperation." Ma's comments were echoed last week by the Cabinet's Taiwan Affairs Office which handles con- tacts with Taiwan, considered by Beijing to be a breakaway province. "Our stance of opposing arms sales to Taiwan by any country is consistent and clear," spokes- man Yang Yi said. "We feel that advancing the peaceful develop- ment of cross-strait relations is the only real way to benefit Tai- wan's peace and stability." Weapons sales to self-governing Taiwan is one of a string of sensi- tive issues roiling ties between China and the United States that have prompted pointed responses from Beijing. Last week, China issued a sharp counterattack after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rod- ham Clinton criticized Internet censorship and called on China to investigate cyberattacks against Google. The search giant has threatened to pull out of the world's most populous online market if Beijing doesn't relax its Internet censorship. Yesterday, another government spokesman rebuked Washington for Clinton's comments, saying they aimed to discredit China. An editorial in the official People's Daily the same day accused U.S. politicians of using the issue to "meddle in other nations' affairs on the one hand and to con- solidate American hegemony in cyberspace on the other hand." Arms sales to Taiwan are man- dated by a U.S. law requiring Washington to ensure Taiwan is capable of defending itself from Chinese threats, including the more than 1,000 ballistic missiles pointed at the island. Pakistani scientist accused of shooting U.S. Army personnel NEW YORK (AP) - Lawyers for aPakistani scientist accused of shooting at U.S. Army personnel in Afghanistan asked a judge yes- terday to stop her from testifying, saying her "diminished capacity" would result in a "painful spec- tacle indeed." Lawyers for Aafia Siddiqui said verbally and in a letter to Judge Richard M. Berman that the 37-year-old Pakistani scien- tist should not be allowed to tes- tify when the defense case begins today despite her repeated stat- ed desire to do so. Prosecutors declined to immediately comment on their opinion regarding the request. Siddiqui's trial, which began with opening statements last week, has featured repeated out- bursts by Siddiqui in which she decries the court proceedings as unfair and challenges the testi- mony of government witnesses. She has been escorted from court several times. Siddiqui's lawyers said there is precedent for denying the right to testify to a defendant who has been disruptive in court and who intends to testify about issues that are not relevant to the charges. The lawyers wrote that their client's desire to testify "are driv- en by an irrational and- delusional belief that she can convince lis- teners that she can bring world peace." In a footnote, they said their conversations with her regarding what she would talk about if she testifies show that her perceived ability "to bring world peace, especially between the United States and the Taliban, appears to be the primary, if not sole, topic." Siddiqui is on trial on charges that she attempted to murder U.S. Army officers and FBI agents in an Afghan police station in July 2008 by picking up a rifle and firing it as she was about to be questioned. U.S. authorities say it happened as she was about to be questioned after she was caught a day earlier carrying handwritten notes ref- erencing a "mass casualty attack" and listing the Brooklyn Bridge, Statue of Liberty and other New York City landmarks. i 1 H,-,,OK TEH 0 FR I I N AL 512 E. William (734) 663-3379 LIMITED TIME OFFER For Our Friends at The U CUSTOMER APPRECIATION Lunch Buffet M-F 11-2pm $2 OFF our Lunch Buffet With Beverage Included Just Present Your U of M I.D. Offer Expires: 2/26/10 - Compiled from Daily wire reports i