The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com' Tuesday, April 13, 2010 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, April 13, 2010 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS MORGANTON, Ga. Navy plane crashes, three dead, one missing A Florida-based Navy plane just missed a house and crashed in dense woods in north Georgia on yesterday, killing three crew mem- bers, and authorities were looking for a fourth person believed to be aboard, officials said. Naval Air Station Pensacola spokesman Harry White said authorities have not confirmed whether the pilot was among those killed when a T-39N training plane went down at 4:26 p.m. No one on the ground was injured, he said. The plane was part of Training Air Wing6, which conducts routine cross-country missions through Fannin County, where it crashed, about two hours north of Atlanta, on the edge of the North Carolina and Tennessee borders, White said. Searchers found three bodies. The twin-jet plane can carry two pilots and seven passengers, according to a Navy Web site. PROVIDENCE, R.I. Brown student claims he was wrongly expelled for an alleged rape A former Brown University stu- dent alleges in a lawsuit unsealed yesterday that he was removed * from campus more than three years ago after being falsely accused of rape by the daughter of a major donor and fundraiser for the Ivy League school. William McCormick III and his parents say university adminis- trators gave him a one-way ticket home to Wisconsin after he was accused of rape in the fall of 2006. McCormick alleges the school never told the police about the rape allegations and accepted them as true without doing an investiga- tion. The lawsuit says the father of the accusing student is a Brown alum- nus who has "donated and raised very substantial sums of money," _ was in regular contact about the allegations with school administra- tors and contacted university presi- dent Ruth Simmons directly. JERUSALEM * Israeli hospital to be constructed over graves Israel's prime minister has * decided a new emergency room for a hospital near Gaza will be built on its original site, despite the discov- ery of graves there. Benjamin Netanyahu reversed an earlier decision by his Cabinet to move the new facility more than 100 meters away because of the ancient pagan graves. Yesterday's announcement is sure to win praise from doctors. They warned that if rockets hit Ashkelon again, the trip from a sep- arate emergency room to Barzilai Hospital could be fatal. Ashkelon, a southern coastal city of 100,000, has been hit often. But this could spark political trouble. An ultra-Orthodox Jewish partyin Netanyahu's ruling coalition * had originally insisted on the move. There was no immediate comment from the party, whose leader serves as deputy health minister. PARIS * French TV broadcasts Taliban hostage pleas French television station bowed yesterday to Taliban demands and broadcast pleas from two French journalists held captive in Afghan- istan who are facing the threat of death unless a prisoner-hostage swap is worked out. French officials declined to comment on the threat and said they were consulting with the relatives of the two journalists who were captured in December in Afghanistan while covering Prance's military presence north- *east of Kahul. The Talihan circulated a video statement hy the hostages that was posted on an Islamist Web site on Sunday, according to the SITE Intelligence Group that monitors extremist communica- Stions. It demanded a French TV broadcast of the comments and said three months of negotiations had failed. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Obama names picks to replace Justice Stevens Russian officials and investigators work near the wreakage of the Polish presidential plane that crashed Saturday just out- side the Smolensk ariport in western Russia. Officials Sa human error may have caused Polish presidential plane crash Montana Judge Sidney Thomas a new name among Obama's options WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Barack Obama's candidates for the Supreme Court include a new name, federal appeals court Judge Sidney Thomas of Montana, and at least six others who were contenders when Obama chose his first high court nominee last year, The Associated Press has learned. Among the others under con- sideration are former Georgia Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears, federal appeals court judges Diane Wood and Merrick Garland, Solici- tor General Elena Kagan, Michi- gan Gov. Jennifer Granholm and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano. The president is seriously reviewing about 10 people as a potential nominee to replace Jus- tice John Paul Stevens, who is retir- ing this summer. Seven of those names are now confirmed to the AP by the admin- istration. A senior administration official said the president's consideration is not just centered on the three peo- ple receiving the most public atten- tion: Wood, Kagan and Garland. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because no announce- ments have been made about the people Obama is considering. Thomas, 56, of Billings, Mont., serves on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the largest of the nation's appellate courts. He was nominated to the federal bench in July 1995 by then-President Bill Clinton and confirmed by the Sen- ate in January 1996, with no con- troversy, in a voice vote. He comes from Western roots - born in Bozeman, Mont., bachelor's degree from MontanaState Univer- sity, law degree from the Univer- sity of Montana. Thomas worked in private practice in Billings and was an adjunct community college law professor there for years before becoming a federal judge. The White House yesterday quickly ended speculation about another potential nominee: Secre- tary of State Hillary Rodham Clin- ton. Her named had been floated as a possibilityby Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, but White House press secre- tary Robert Gibbs said Obama "is going to keep her as his secretary of state." Obama's list includes three people whom he interviewed as finalists when the court had an opening last year - Wood, Kagan and Napolitano. The president ulti- mately nominated federal Judge Sonia Sotomayor to replace retir- ing Justice David Souter. She was later confirmed in a 68-31 vote by the Senate. With his second nomination in less than a year, Obama is in a far different position this time. He has the experience of having gone through a successful search, and a ready-made listofnamesfrom that effort. But administration offi- cials say Obama is also intent not to rely onthe candidates from lastctime and that new ideas are in the mix, cautioning about an over-reliance on conventional wisdom. So far, most of the known can- didates under Obama's review are familiar within Washington's polit- ical and legal circles. As for Thomas, an individual who answered the phone at his chambers in Billings said he was not in town on Monday and a mes- sage was notimmediately returned. Attorneys who know him well described him as an independent thinker. The sprawling 9th Circuit, based in San Francisco, is widely perceived as liberal. But Ber- nard "Bud" Longo, a conservative Republican and a former law part- ner with Thomas, said that label does not apply to Thomas. Russia maintains plane had no technical problems WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Rus- sian investigators suggested human error may have been to blame in the plane crash that killed the Polish president and 95 others, saying yesterday there were no technical problems with the Soviet-made plane. The Tu-154 went down Saturday while trying to land in dense fog near a Smolensk airport in west- ern Russia. All aboard were killed, including President Lech Kaczyn- ski and dozens of Polish political, military and religious leaders. They had been traveling in the Polish government-owned plane to attend a memorial in the nearby Katyn forest for thousands of Pol- ish military officers executed 70 years ago by Josef Stalin's secret police. The pilot had been warned of bad weather in Smolensk, and was advised by traffic controllers to land elsewhere - which would have delayed the Katyn obser- vances. He was identified as Capt. Arkadiusz Protasiuk, 36, and the co-pilot as Maj. Robert Grzy- wna, 36. Also in the cockpit were Ensign Andrzej Michalak, 36, and Lt. Artur Zietek, 31. In Warsaw, there was concern the pilots may have been asked by someone in the plane to land at Smolensk instead of diverting to Minsk or Moscow, in partto avoid missing the ceremonies. Polish Prosecutor General Andrzej Seremet said Polish investigators talked to the flight controller and flight supervisor and "concluded that there were no conditions for landing." "The tower was advising against the landing," Seremet said. The plane was equipped with an instrument landing system, or ILS, said Col. Wieslaw Grze- gorzewski of the Polish Defense Ministry. "I can confirm the pilots were preparing for landing without the ILS system," he said. "The airport didn't have the ILS system." Russian media reports said the Smolensk airfield is a former mili- tary air base that lacks equipment for automatic landings. The business daily Kommer- sant said yesterday that about 50 military personnel maintain the airport which is used only sporadically for official visits. It said the airfield has no perma- nent traffic controllers, and they are brought from the city of Tver when it's necessary. Kommersant also said that that the pilots had been informed about the bad weather in the area while the plane was still over Belarus, but the captain said he would see conditions for himself and then make a decision. Polish investigators said they will listen tothe cockpitconversa- tions recorded on the black boxes to see if there were "any sugges- tions made to the pilots" from other people aboard the plane. Other Russian officials said the pilots were offered the chance to landin Moscow, MinskorVitebsk, but they chose Smolensk, despite four failed attempts before the fifth and fatal approach. Polish media reported in August 2008 that pilots flying Kaczynski to Tbilisi refused the president's order to land there because of the country's war with Russia, diverting instead to Azer- baijan. In remarks on Russian tele- vision, Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov told a government meeting including President Dmitry Medvedev that the data recorders on the plane were found to have been completely func- tional, which will allow a detailed analysis. "It is reliably confirmed that warning of the unfavorable weather conditions at the North airport and recommendations to go to a reserve airport were not only transmitted but received by the crew of the plane," he said. Russian investigators have almost finished reading the flight recorders, said Alexander Bas- trykin, Russia's chief investigator. "The readings confirm that there were no problems with the plane, and that the pilot was informed about the difficult weather conditions, but neverthe- less decided to land," Bastrykin said during a briefing with Rus- sian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Smolensk. The wreckage will remain on site through midweek to speed the investigation, Russian Deputy Transport Minister Igor Levitin said. In Warsaw, the acting presi- dent, Bronislaw Komorowski, moved yesterday to start appoint- ing replacements for the many posts left vacant in the presiden- tial office. He appointed a retired general, Stanislaw Koziej, as new National Security Bureau chief, and said the first task he was set- ting him was a review of the rules for travel of top military officials. Both Russia and Ukraine declared a day of mourning yes- terday, as Poles struggled to come to terms with the tragedy that eliminated so many of their gov- ernment and military leaders. Tens of thousands watched as Kaczynski's body, returned Sun- day to Warsaw, was carried in a coffin by a hearse to the presi- dential palace. His twin brother, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the former prime minister, was present. Adam Bielan, an aide to Jaro- slaw, said the two brothers spoke briefly Saturday morning when the president called his twin just before the plane crash to say they would be landing soon. At U.N. headquarters in New York, the U.N.'s blue and white flag flew at half-staff Monday in Kaczynski's memory. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed his "most profound condolence at such a tragic passing away of President Lech Kaczynski, with whom I have been working very closely, especially on climate change." 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