The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 3 9 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, March 29, 2011 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS LANSING State issues new drivers licenses for Mich. residents Michigan motorists getting new driver's licenses will notice a different look. Secretary of State Ruth John- son said yesterday that new licenses will have better security features. State licenses last were changed in 2003. The updated ones begin circulating later this month. . They'll feature an intricate line pattern and outline of the state of Michigan with the Great Lakes on the front, as well as the Mackinac Bridge. For driv- ers who have joined the Michi- gan Organ Donor Registry, a red * heart and the word "donor" will appear on the card. NEW YORK, NY. NYU to build new Shanghai campus New York University has announced that it will create a degree-granting liberal arts campus in Shanghai. NYU Shanghai is scheduled to open in the fall of 2013. It will eventually enroll 3,000 under- graduate, graduate and profes- sional students. Classes will be taught in Eng- 4 lish. About 40-50 percent of the students will come from China. It will be the school's second major international campus. Last year, NYU opened a school in Abu Dhabi in United Arab Emirates. It also has a dozen smaller programs in other coun- tries. NYU has also embarked on an ambitious plan to expand its campus at home. The school plans grow its campus by 6 mil- lion square feet over the next two decades. SAN DIEGO, Calif. Thieves steal $44,000 of lawn art, statues San Diego County authorities are looking for art thieves who have made off with at least 18 metal, wood and concrete statues - including a 600-pound bronze moose. The North County Times reports the thieves have stolen nearly $44,000 worth of lawn art since October. Most of the thefts occurred in San Marcos and Ramona. The artworks included Bud- dha yard statutes, a life-sized aluminum colt, a 3-foot-tall statue of the Virgin Mary and a copper statue of three children valued at $15,000. Detectives suspect that the metal works may have been bro- ken up and sold to recyclers, while the other pieces might have been resold. SANAA, Yemen Looters set off ammunitions explosion, kills 78 Yemen's chaos deepened yes- terday when people looting a munitions factory set off an acci- dental explosion that killed at least 78 in an area torn from gov- ernment control by Islamist mili- tants exploiting the president's rapidly dwindling power. The militant seizure of the fac- tory and nearby towns amplified Western fears that the fragile Yemeni state could deteriorate quickly because of President Ali Abdullah Saleh's standoff with an opposition coalition of youth groups, military defectors, clerics and tribal leaders calling for his ouster. Saleh has cooperated closely with the U.S. in the battle against Yemen's branch of al-Qaida, which has used areas of Yemen 0 long out of state control to launch attacks including the attempt to bomb a Detroit-bound airliner with a bomb sewn into under- wear. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Auto industry to suffer damages from Japan quake CHARLIE NYE/AP Indiana Speaker of the House Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, right, is joined by Indiana Senate President Pro Tempore David Long, R-Fort Wayne, addressed the five-week walkout of House Democrats at the front of the House chamber on Thursday, March 7. Democrats return to Id. after labor union protests Japanese factories shut down from natural disaster TOKYO (AP) - The auto industry disruptions triggered by Japan's earthquake and tsu- nami will worsen in the coming weeks. Car buyers will have difficul- ty finding the model they want in certain colors, thousands of auto plant workers will likely be told to stay home, and com- panies such as Toyota, Honda and others will lose billions of dollars in revenue. More than two weeks since the natural disaster, inventories of crucial car supplies - from computer chips to paint pigments - are dwindling fast as Japanese fac- tories that make them struggle to restart. Because parts and supplies are shipped by slow-moving boats, the real drop-off has yet to be felt by factories in the U.S., Europe and Asia. That will come by the middle of April. "This is the biggest impact ever in the history of the auto- mobile industry," said Koji Endo, managing director at Advanced Research Japan in Tokyo. Much of Japan's auto indus- try - the second largestsupplier of cars in the world - remains idle. Few plants were seriously damaged by the quake, but with supplies of water and electricity fleeting, no one can say when factories will crank up. Some auto analysts said it could be as late as this summer. There are signs, though, that things might not be as bad as analysts are predicting. Nissan Motor Co., which has seen pro- duction stop in several areas, said Monday that it expects fac- tories to be back in operation in weeks rather than months. The company has studied all of its parts suppliers and com- panies that supply parts to them and has determined that the situation isn't as dire as some predictions, spokesman Brian Brockman said yesterday. Five-week walkout increased talks of legislative issues across the state INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Indiana House Democrats who fled the state five weeks ago to protest a Republican agenda they considered an assault on labor unions and public educa- tion returned to the Statehouse yesterday to resume work. Minority Leader Patrick Bauer said he and his fellow Democrats ended one of the longest legislative walkouts in recent U.S. history after win- ning concessions from Repub- licans over recent weeks on several issues. "We're coming back after softening the radical agenda," said Bauer, D-South Bend, whose return was greeted by cheering union workers. "We won a battle, but we recognize the war goes on." Republican House Speaker Brian Bosma gaveled in the chamber early yesterday eve- ning, giving the House its first quorum since Democrats fled to Illinois on Feb. 22. "It's refreshing and pleas- ant to see a full chamber," he said. But what Democrats actually achieved with the walkout is a matter of debate. The conces- sions are likely more than Dem- ocrats would have gained had they not boycotted - but won't stop the GOP agenda. Republicans had vowed throughout the standoff that they wouldn't remove items from their agenda, and by and large they won't have to. The only bill actually killed by the boycott was a "right-to-work" proposal that would prohibit union representation fees from being a condition of employ- ment. GOP legislators agreed to some changes on several other bills. For example, they agreed to cap for two years the num- ber of students who could par- ticipate in a voucher program usingtaxpayer moneyto attend private schools - but it would still be among the nation's most expansive use of vouchers when the limits expire. Repub- licans also agreed last week to reduce the number of govern- ment projects that would be exempt from the state's pre- vailing construction wage law, but the amended bill is still expected to pass. The Democrats' most signifi- cant achievement may be that people across the state are talk- ing about these issues. Bauer said the public needed a "time- out" to learn about the agenda pushed by Republicans who took sweepingcontrol of the House in 2010 elections. Thousands of people attend- ed Statehouse rallies during the walkout, and hundreds of people attended local town hall meetings. Many teachers said they didn't realize Repub- licans supported vouchers and other measures they think will erode public education, and some union members said they wished they had voted. In that sense, Democrats "punched above their weight," said Robert Dion, who teaches politics at the University of Evansville. "They got the attention of the state, and they were able to finagle some meaningful con- cessions that I don't think were necessarily offered all that will- ingly," Dion said. On the other hand, Dion said, Democrats have a bit of a black eye because the walkout lasted so long. The Democrats had fled to protest 11 pieces of legisla- tion, denying the House the two-thirds of members present needed to do business, since the state constitution requires a quorum to conduct any official business. Indiana's boycott began a week after Wisconsin's Demo- cratic senators left for Illinois in their three-week boycott against a law barring most pub- lic employees from collective bargaining. Wisconsin Repub- licans used a parliamentary maneuver to pass the law with- out them, and the matter now is headed to court. The Indiana standoff got a bit nasty at times - with name- calling, scathing political ads, rowdy rallies and fines total- ing more than $3,000 for most absent Democrats - but last week Republicans and Demo- crats seemed to tone down the rhetoric. The walkout had the poten- tial to force a special session or even a government shutdown if a new budget wasn't adopted before July 1. Bosma predicted that lawmakers would have plenty of late nights as they work toward the scheduled end of the regular legislative session April 29. "It's long past time to get to the people's business," Bosma said. "Hopefully we can make this work in five short weeks." Bosma said he didn't consider the changes to the government projects bill substantive. Fishermen barricade harbor from migrants 15,000 migrants enter Italy in wake of North Africa uprisings LAMPEDUSA, Italy (AP) - Exasperated Italian fishermen towed empty boats seized from illegal immigrants across the entrance of Lampedusa's harbor on yesterday to try to prevent any other vessels carrying North Africans from reaching the tiny island in the Mediterranean Sea. Other islanders overturned garbage bins to protest the relent- less arrival of illegal immigrants, including many now coming from Libyan shores. "Enough, we're full," read a slogan scrawled on a white sheet and carried by two protesters. More than 3,000 new migrants have arrived in the last three days alone on the island of 5,000 resi- dents, which lives off tourism and fishing. With the shelters on the island full, the migrants, many of them Tunisian men who fled the unrest in their homeland, have taken to sleeping on the docks or in makeshift tent camps in fields. The island has been flooded with more than 15,000 migrants since mid-January, when Tuni- sians overthrew their longtime strongman, but hundreds have been transferred to centers in other parts of Italy. The island is 60 miles (100 kilometers) east of the Tunisian coast, closer to Afri- can than the Italian mainland. As local women cheered, the fishermen on Monday pulled the migrants' seized boats across the harbor. The migrants simply watched from land, their laun- dry flapping from improvised clotheslines. The migrants' boats - often open-topped wooden fishing ves- sels purchased from smugglers - are spotted far offshore by Italian coast guard air and sea patrols, whose motorboats then escort the migrants to the island. Monday's blockade was a mostly symbolic act, since few migrants' boats have entered the small port or docked by themselves at Lampe- dusa. Angry islanders knocked over garbage bins along the roads Monday and several women chained themselves together, shouting that the migrants should no longer be broughtto shore. Gov. Snyder passes law to cut unemployment benefits Michigan jobless benefits to decrease from 26 to 20 weeks LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Gov. Rick Snyder yesterday made Michigan the first state in the country to lower the number of weeks jobless workers canx get state benefits, a trend other cash-strapped states may follow as a way to avoid taxing busi- nesses more for unemployment benefits. Snyder said he signed the bill reducing state benefits from 26 to 20 weeks because it will allow people out of a job now to get up to 20 more weeks of help from a federal program for those who used up their state and most of their regular fed- eral unemployment benefits. The change will allow them to extend unemployment benefits to 99 weeks. Those last 20 weeks of feder- al benefits would have expired for 35,000 Michigan residents in early April and for 150,000 residents by the end of 2011 if Snyder hadn't signed the bill by Friday. "Cuttingthem off so abruptly would have jeopardized the well-being of those who are try- ing hard to find work," Snyder said in a release after signing the bill in private. But critics, including Michi- gan's entire Democratic con- gressional delegation, said the Republican governor should have vetoed the bill rather than sign cuts in state jobless benefits into law. Nearly every state has offered at least 26 weeks of ben- efits for the past half-century, and Michigan's unemployment rate has been one of the nation's highest for the past five years. "Gov. Snyder's decision to sign this reckless measure cut- ting the lifeline for Michigan's unemployed will reverberate for years in Michigan," U.S. Rep. Sander Levin of Royal Oak said in a release. "Republicans hijacked a simple technical change to extend 100 percent federally funded benefits this year and gave Michigan the dubious distinction of becoming the only state in the union with 20 weeks of state unemploy- ment insurance." A letter urging Snyder to veto the bill was signed by Michi- gan's two U.S. senators, Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow, as well as Democratic Reps. Hansen Clarke, John Conyers, John Dingell, Dale Kildee, Gary Peters and Sander Levin. "Michigan would be the only state to have 20 weeks of state unemployment insurance and the first state to reduce benefits during a period of high unem- ployment. These are two dis- tinctions we do not want for our state," they wrote in the let- ter. They noted that Michigan's action could cause federal bene- fits to be reduced by an addition- al 16 weeks in Michigan, possibly costing jobless workers 22 weeks of state and federal benefits. Michigan added 71,000 jobs between February 2010 and last month, the first sustained job gain the state has seen inthe past decade, and its unemployment rate has taken the biggest tumble of any state in the country over the past year, from 13.5 percent to 10.4 percent. Still, finding a job isn't easy. Michigan last year ranked third- highest nationally inthe percent- age of unemployed workers who had been looking for a job for a year or more - 36 percent out of 590,000 workers, according to the federal Bureau of Labor Sta- tistics. State Democratic lawmakers supported the extension of the federal benefits but voted against the overall plan because of the other changes to the state jobless benefits system. Tuesdays Are South Of The Border C o dl acitec peclil All Kigkt $2.50 Tequila Sunrise & Vodka Drinks 2 tafi f Mexicm ane All Wi Nh COVE - .of595%J :l Ceif 7 't Y,sl 3f D n 8s >Yr . ae'9 7 5 6 9 3 5 7 7 9 8 6 4 3 5 6 3 4 6 7 4 5 478 9 1 x I I