The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, January 13, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DEARBORN, Mich. Dog owner pleads guilty to animal cruelty A man who had hundreds of live and dead Chihuahuas and Chihuahua mixes in his Detroit- area home has pleaded guilty to an animal cruelty charge in a deal that keeps him out of prison. Fifty-six-year-old Kenneth Lang Jr. of Dearborn made the plea yesterday in Wayne County Circuit Court. He had faced up to four years in prison. Under the deal, Lang gets five years' probation, may not own animals and must pay $3,000 restitution to the Animal Legal Defense Fund. In July, authorities found Lang was hoarding the dogs. They say some dead dogs in freezers in the home may have been killed with an injection. Defense lawyer James Schmier says his client needs treatment for an obsessive-compulsive dis- order. KANSAS CITY Woman unhappy with McDonald's cheeseburger A woman has been charged with trashing a McDonald's res- taurant in Missouri because she was unhappy with her cheese- burger. Police said they received many tips after releasing video of the Dec. 27 incident. In the video, which has been viewed hundreds of thousands of times online, a customer is seen throwing a sign and a water dis- penser over a counter and pushing three cash registers to the floor. Yesterday, the Jackson Coun- ty prosecutor's office charged 19-year-old Alesha McMullen of Kansas City with Class D felony property damage. It wasn't imme- diately known if McMullen has an attorney. A phone listing for her could not be found. Police say McMullen told offi- cers her order was prepared wrong and the restaurant refused to give her a refund. SAO PAULO, Brazil j U.S. pilots face charges in Brazil A Brazilian appeals court has ruled two American executive jet pilots should face negligence charges for a 2006 midair colli- sion that killed 154 people. The ruling overturns a judge lwho dismissed those charges in 2008 against Joseph Lepore of Bay Shore, New York, and Jan Paladino of Westhampton Beach, New York. Defense lawyer Joel Weiss said yesterday he would likely appeal the new decision. The executive jet collided over the Amazon with a Boeing 737 on Sept. 29, 2006 - killing all aboard the Boeing. Prosecutors accused the pilots of accidentally turning off a tran- sponder that transmitted the smaller jet's location and failing to follow their flight plan. Weiss says Brazilian controllers set the planes on a collision course. TOKYO Man kills 2 patrons in Japanese bar A man opened fire at a bar in western Japan yesterday, killing two people and wounding one seriously before taking his own life. Guns are strictly controlled in Japan, and shootings are rare. When such attacks do occur, they are often linked to gangsters known as yakuza. Police in Habikino City in Osaka prefecture were inves- tigating the gunman's motive, police official Mitsuyuki Oda said. The Kyodo News agency said the gunman was a city employee and could have been targeting his mother-in-law as a result of a family dispute. Police are trying to confirm if an elderly women who was killed was a relative of the gunman. Both the elderly woman and a man in his 20s were pronounced dead at a hospital. A man in his 5s is in critical condition, Oda said. Oda said the gunman - identi- fied as 49-year-old Yasuhisa Sugi- ura - was also pronounced dead at the hospital. - Compiled from Da~y wire reports Regent Ilitch exploring gubernatorial bid, had meeting at White House President Obama asks Congress for more war funds After Lt. Gov. drops out of Democratic race, nomination is wide open LANSING, Mich. (AP) - University of Michigan Regent Denise Ilitch met yesterday with White House officials to explore a possible Democratic bid for Michigan governor. Ilitch, whose father owns the Detroit Red Wings and Tigers, met with staff there Tuesday, with President Barack Obama "stopping by the meeting," according to a White House offi- cial. The official spoke on the con- dition of anonymity because of not being authorized to discuss the matter publicly. Denise Ilitch is not the first Michigan gubernatorial hopeful to meet with White House staff, and the meeting indicates the White House has not yet settled on a favorite. Obama is keeping an eye on the contest in this bat- tleground state, which he doesn't want to see slide into GOP hands as New Jersey and Virginia did last year. Several Democrats are look- ing closely at the race now that presumptive Democratic front- runner Lt. Gov. John Cherry has withdrawn, including House Speaker Andy Dillon and Lan- sing Mayor Virg Bernero. Both have set up committees to raise money and explore a possible run. Ilitch has not established an exploratory committee, but could set one up soon. A lawyer who owns Ambassador Maga- zine and Denise Ilitch Designs, she brings a combination of business and political experi- ence that could make her a good choice to replace Gov. Jennifer Granholm. State Rep. Alma Wheeler Smith has been in the hunt for the Democratic nomination since mid-2009 and Sen. Han- sen Clarke was the first to jump in last week after Cherry with- drew. U.S. Rep. Bart Stupak, for- mer Genesee County Treasurer Dan Kildee and Michigan State University Trustee George Per- les are among other Democrats contemplating a run. Yesterday marked the end of the governor's race for former state Rep. John Freeman. Like Cherry, he cited problems raising money as the reason he dropped out, noting in a statement that "the amount of money required to runa viable campaign was out of reach." Freeman served six years in the state House representing the area around Madison Heights before leaving because of term limits in 1998. He most recently led a group pushing for changes to health care in Michigan. He announced his withdrawal from the race on Facebook and Twit- ter. Additional $33 billion would aid war efforts in Iraq and Afghan. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Obama administration plans to ask Congress for an additional $33 billion to fight unpopular wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, on top of a record request for $708 billion for the Defense Depart- ment next year, The Associated Press has learned. The administration also plans to tell Congress next month that its central military objectives for the next four years will include winning the current wars while preventing new ones and that its core missions will include both counterinsurgency and counter- terrorism operations. The administration's Qua- drennial Defense Review, the main articulation of U.S. military doctrine, is due to Congress on Feb. 1. Top military command- ers were briefed on the document at the Pentagon on Monday and yesterday. They also received a preview of the administration's budget plans through 2015. The four-year review outlines six key mission areas and spells out capabilities and goals the Pentagon wants to develop. The pilotless drones used for sur- veillance and attack missions in Afghanistan and Pakistan are a priority, with a goal of speeding up the purchase of new Reaper drones and expansion of Preda- tor and Reaper drone flights through 2013. The extra $33 billion in 2010 would mostly go toward the expansion of the war in Afghani- stan. Obama ordered an extra 30,000 troops for that war as part of an overhaul of the war strategy late last year. The request for that additional funding will be sent to Congress at the same time as the record spending request for next year, making war funding an espe- cially difficult pill for some of Obama's Democratic allies. Military officials have sug- gested that the 2011 request would top $700 billion for the first time, but the precise figure has not been made public. U.S. officials outlined the coming requests on condition of anonymity because the budget request will not be sent to Con- gress until later this month. Obama's request for more war spending is likely to receive support on Capitol Hill, where Republicans will join moderate Democrats to pass the bill. But the budget debate is also likely to expose a widening rift between Obama's administra- tion, - it sees more troops and money as necessary to winning the war - and Democratic lead- ers, who have watched public opinion turn against the mili- tary campaign. "The president's going to have to make his case," House Speak- er Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters last month at her year- end briefing. The 2010 budget contains about $128 billion for military operations in Iraq and Afghani- stan. That figure would rise to $159 billion next year under the pro- posals prepared for Congress. The Pentagon projects that war funding would drop sharply in 2012, to $50 billion, and remain there through.2015. That is a cal- culation that the United States will save money from the with- drawal of forces in Iraq, as well as a prediction that the Afghani- stan war will begin to wind down in the middle of 2011. Obama has promised that U.S. forces will begin to withdraw from Afghanistan in July 2011, but his defense advisers have set no time limit for the war. The Pentagon projects that overall defense spending would be $616 billion in 2012; $632 bil- lion in 2013; $648 billion in 2014; and $666 billion in 2015. CARETL PEDRE/AP People running past rubble of a damaged building in Port-au-Prince, Haiti yesterday. The largest earthquake ever recorded in the area shook Haiti yesterday, collapsing a hospital where people screawed for help. After deadly earthquake, .S. to aid Haitian recovery get a tall brewed coffee for $1.00 1741 Plymouth Rd " Ann Arbor L F E EBIGGBY - for franchise info www.biggby.com COFFEE Good at this location only. Not good with any other offer No copies of this coupon will be accepted. Offer expires 01/19/10. H-.,,0( Rescue teams sent to Haiti civilians facing disaster WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. yesterday was dispatching disaster rescue teams to earth- quake-stricken Haiti, where a U.S. official said a "serious loss of life" was expected. President Barack Obama said his thoughts and prayers were with the people of Haiti and that the U.S. stood ready to help the impoverished Caribbean nation. While telephone lines were down in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince and cell phone communication was spotty, U.S. officials there reported "signifi- cant damage." "There were some people (from the embassy) in the city when the earthquake first happened," State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said. "They reported structures down. They reported a lot of walls down. They did see a number of bodies in the street and on the sidewalk that had been hit by debris. So clearly, there's going to be serious loss of life in this." Frank Thorp, a retired rear admiral who ran the Navy's public information office until recently, said he believed his daughter-in- law was trapped in the rubble. Thorp said he was told last night that his son's wife, Jillian Thorp, 24, had used her cell phone to call from help from a Haitian Minis- tries mission house run by Nor- wich.Missions based in Norwich, Coon. White House officials said Obama had asked aides to make sure U.S. personnel at the embassy were safe. There are fewer than20 U.S. military personnel in Haiti, largely working with the embassy there. Officials said Obama told them to start preparing in case humanitarian assistance was needed. The State Department, the U.S. Agency for International Develop- ment and U.S. Southern Command have started to coordinate. USAID said it was sending a disaster assistance response team and had activated its partners, the Fairfax County (Va.) Urban Search and Rescue Team and the Los Angeles County Search and Rescue Team. USAID disaster experts also would assist. Secretary of State Hillary Rod- ham Clinton said from Hono- lulu that the U.S. was gathering information about the quake and its impact, and that the U.S. was offering full assistance - civilian and military - to Haiti. Clinton spoke with the deputy chief of U.S. Embassy in Port-au- Prince, David Lindwall, before making a speech in Honolulu. "We have been in touch with the embassy," State Department spokesman Gordon Duguid said in Washington. "They report significant damage in town, but the embassy is unaffected. The embassy is workingto get in touch with Haitian government as well as trying to ... account for Ameri- cans." "Haitian phone lines are down and cell phone coverage is under- standably unreliable," he said. The U.S. ambassador to Haiti was in the country, but was at his residence, which is in Petionville, and the phones lines were out, Duguid said. "The embassy is in touch with ambassador via radio." The State Department set up a toll-free number to call for infor- mation about family members in Haiti: 1-888-407-4747. The department said some callers may receive a recording because of heavy volume of calls. "Our embassy is also trying to make contact with the Haitian government," Duguid said late Tuesday. "There are emergency meetings going on right now in Washington to identify assets that can be moved quickly into the area. U.S. search and rescue teams have been put on alert, and we are trying to assess the status of the airport. As President Obama has said, we will assist in any way we can." "Our people in Haiti are literal- ly in the dark," Crowley said. "And now the people at the embassy actually - they've got generators there, so our embassy has to be able to function," but with lim- ited abilityto assess what has hap- pened outside and how to-begin sending assistance. The Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance will be assembling a team to send to Haiti, Crowley said, including search and rescue experts from the U.S. Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., chair- man of the House Foreign Affairs Western Hemisphere subcommit- tee, said, "This is the worst pos- sible time for a natural disaster in Haiti, a country which is still recovering from the devastating storms of just over a year ago." Grand Openin $20.00 Haircuts & $25.00 Express Pedicure Come to the Daily's next mass meeting. WEDNESDAY NIGHT 8 PM AT 4?0 MAYNARD