The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam Friday, September 23, 2011 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, September 23, 2011 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS LANSING, Mich. Michigan State, Wayne State may lose state funds A Republican lawmaker is sponsoring a bill that would strip Michigan State University and Wayne State University of some state aid. Rep. Bob Genetski of Saugatuck says the proposal was introduced recentlybecause some lawmakers don't think the universities com- plied with the intent of a require- ment aimed at keeping tuition increases below 7.1 percent for the 2011-12 academic year. State budget director John Nixon ruled earlier this year that the universities were in "tech- nical compliance" with tuition restraint provisions. But there were differing interpretations of how the academic year was defined and how tuition increases were calculated. Michigan State has about $18 million at risk with the new mea- sure. Wayne State would lose about $13 million. Both universities have said they're in compliance with the law. CHICAGO Illinois launches Asian carp anti- hunger program Minced Asian carp tacos? How about spaghetti with carp sauce? Illinois officials hope serving the invasive species on a plate is the creative solution to two big problems: controlling the plank- ton-gobbling carp from enter- ing the Great Lakes and record numbers of people facing hunger. But the idea has major obstacles, mainly overcoming people's nose- crinklingresponse to eating a fish that grows to 100 pounds and is able to sail out of the water - a trait spotlighted in YouTube vid- eos. "We are in unchartered water here," said Illinois Department of Natural Resources spokesman Chris McCloud. "Why remove them and put them into a landfill when you can take them and use them for good? If we can get past the name 'carp' and the percep- tion ... we can prove this is going to be a highly nutritious, cheap meal." HAVANA Swimmer plans to attempt Cuba to Florida swim again Cuban authorities said yester- day that American Diana Nyad plans to take another shot at what would be a record swim from Cuba to Florida after falling short of her goal last month. An email from Cuban press officials invited journalists to an encounter with the famed endur- ance swimmer today at a marina in Havana. "Diana Nyad will offer a news conference before once again beginning to swim across the Florida Straits between Havana and Key West, in continuation of the attempt realized on Aug. 7," the invitation read. BERLIN Pope talks ethics in German speech Pope Benedict XVI addressed Germany's parliament in the historic Reichstag building yesterday, warning that politi- cians must not sacrifice ethics for power and evoking the Nazi excesses of his homeland as a les- son in history. Amid scattered protests out- side and a boycott by some law- makers, Benedict began his first state visit to Germany in a bid to stem the tide of Catholics leaving the church while acknowledging the damage caused by the clerical sex abuse scandal. The pope spoke for 20 min- utes in the Reichstag, which was torched in 1933 in an incident used by Hitler to strengthen his grip on power. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Chrysler, UAW talks break down r ANDREW BURTON/A Iranian President Mahmnoud Ahmadinejad speaks during the 66th session of the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters yesterday. Ahrn,-adinej ad attacks U.S. during U.N. speech Two sides still disagree over key financial issues DETROIT (AP) - Negotia- tions over a new four-year con- tract between Chrysler and the United Auto Workers have bro- ken down as both sides refuse to budge on key financial issues, two people briefed on the bar- gaining said yesterday. The talks ended late Wednes- day in a dispute over the num- ber of workers who are paid an entry-level wage, said the peo- ple, who asked not to be identi- fied because the negotiations are private. Chrysler Group LLC, which is losing money, wants no limit on cheaper entry-level workers. The union wants a cap on the number of those workers, who make $14 to $16 an hour, about half of what a longtime union employee earns. "There was a line drawn in the sand," one of the people said. "Somebody's going to have to give." Chrysler factories continue to operate under a contract extension. Detroit's three carmak- ers are each negotiating labor agreements with the UAW, which represents 113,000 work- ers at the companies. The new contracts would be the first since two of the automakers - GM and Chrysler - nearly col- lapsed during the recession and needed government bailouts in 2009. Ford Motor Co. didn't need a bailout but took billions in private loans to survive. GM and the union agreed to a tentative contract last week. Chrysler was expected to be the second Detroit automaker to reach a deal. Instead, Chrysler and UAW negotiating teams were sent home after the talks resulted in a stalemate. The union said it will now focus on talks with Ford. No more bargaining with Chrysler is scheduled. The company is against any limit on entry-level workers because it would raise labor costs. About 12 percent of Chrysler's 23,000 factory work- ers now are paid the lower wage and the carmaker plans to hire thousands more over the next four years as it retools factories to make new models. The union, on the other hand, wants a deal similar to what GM agreed to - a 25 per- cent cap on the number mak- ing entry-level pay by the end of 2015, the people said. Then, entry-level workers would have a chance to make higher pay, a key issue for the union. Long- time workers earn about $29 an hour. Chrysler has more entry- level workers than GM or Ford, and as a result, its hourly labor costs are the lowest of the Detroit companies. The union agreed to a lower tier of wages in 2007 to help Detroit's carmakers survive financial troubles, and to avoid pay cuts for veteran workers. Besides setting wages at General Motors Co., Ford and Chrysler, the contracts influ- ence pay at U.S. factories run by foreign carmakers, auto parts makers and other manufactur- ers. Before talks broke up, Chrysler and union negotia- tors extended their current contract. That extension lasts another month. Negotiators at Chrysler have settled all non-economic issues and were nearing an agreement before the stalemate, the people said. UAW President Bob King was involved in the talks when they broke down, one of the people said. UAW spokeswoman Michele Martin would not comment. Talks with Chrysler already were strained before the break- down. Last week, CEO Sergio Marchionne sent a letter to King accusing him of failing to show up to complete nego- tiations as scheduled. King wouldn't discuss the letter. Diplomats from 30 countries walk out during Iran president's talk UNITED NATIONS (AP) - American diplomats led a walkout at the U.N. General Assembly yesterday as Iran's President Mahmoud Ahma- dinejad fiercely attacked the United States and major West European nations as "arrogant powers" ruled by greed and eager for military adventurism. The two U.S. diplomats, who specialize in the Middle East, were followed out of the cham- ber by diplomats from more than 30 countries. They included the 27 European Union members, Australia, New Zealand, Soma- lia, Liechtenstein, Monaco, San Marino and Macedonia, a U.N. diplomat said. Israel boycotted the speech. Ahmadenijad's fiery anti- U.S. and anti-Israeli rhetoric has been a staple of the General Assembly's ministerial meet- ings. Last year, Ahmadinejad pro- voked a walkout by the U.S., EU, and others when he said a majority of people in the United States and around the world believe the American govern- ment staged the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks in an attempt to assure Israel's survival. The provocative comments prompted the U.S. delegation to walk out of Ahmadinejad's U.N. speech, where he also blamed the U.S. as the power behind U.N. Security Council sanc- tions against Iran for its refusal to halt uranium enrichment, a technology that can be used as fuel for electricity generation or to build nuclear weapons. Ahmadinejad's speech pit- ted the poverty and unhappi- ness of most countries against the riches and power of the U.S. and unnamed European nations that he accused of perpetuating wars, causing the current global economic crisis and infringing on "the rights and sovereignty of nations." He attacked the United States and European colonial powers for abducting tens of millions of Africans and making them slaves, for their readiness "to drop thousands of bombs on other countries," and for domi- nating the U.N. Security Coun- cil He singled out the U.S. for using a nuclear bomb against Japan in World War II and imposing and supporting mili- tary dictatorships and totalitar- ian regimes in Asia, Africa and Latin America. "It is as lucid as daylight that the same slave masters and colo- nial powers that once instigated the two world wars have caused widespread misery and disorder with far-reaching effects across the globe since then," Ahma- dinejad said. "Do these arrogant powers really have the compe- tence and ability to run or gov- ern the world?" Adm. Mullen blames Pakistan for assault on U.S. Embassy Complaint made at International Criminal Court WASHINGTON (AP) - The top U.S. military officer yester- day accused Pakistan's powerful intelligence agency of backing extremists in planning and exe- cuting the assault on the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan last week and a truck bomb attack that wounded 77 American sol- diers days earlier. In his last congressional tes- timony before he retires next week, Adm. Mike Mullen, chair- man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, insisted that the Haqqani insur- gent network "acts as a veritable arm" of Pakistan's Inter-Servic- es Intelligence agency, under- mining the uneasy U.S.-Pakistan relationship forged in the terror fight and endangering American troops in the nearly 10-year-old war in Afghanistan. Pakistan is "exporting vio- lence" and threatening any suc- cess in Afghanistan, Mullen said. "In choosing to use violent extremism as an instrument of policy, the government of Paki- stan, and most especially the Pakistani army and ISI, jeop- ardizes not only the prospect of our strategic partnership but Pakistan's opportunity to be a respected nation with legitimate regional influence," Mullen said. "They may believe that by using these proxies, they are hedg- ing their bets or redressing what they feel is an imbal- ance in regional power. But in reality, they have already lost that bet." Mullen's harsh words marked the first time an American official had direct- ly tied Pakistan's intelligence agency to the attacks and sig- naled a significant shift in the U.S. approach to Islamabad. In the past, U.S. criticism of Pakistan largely had been relayed in private conver- sations with the countries' leaders while American offi- cials publicly offered encour- aging words for Islamabad's participation in the terror fight. In recent days, U.S. officials have been explicit in linking the government to extremists who are attacking American forces in Afghanistan. "With ISI support, Haqqani operatives plan and conducted that truck bomb attack, as well as the assault on our embassy," Mullen told the Senate Armed Services Committee. He also said the United States had credible information that Haqqani extremists, with help from the Pakistani intelligence agency, were responsible for the June 28 attack on the Inter-Con- tinental Hotel in Kabul and other small but effective assaults. The Joint Chiefs chairman has nurtured ties with the Pakistan- is, meeting with officials more than two dozen times, including a 2 1/2-hour session last week in Spain with his Pakistani coun- terpart, Army Chief Gen. Ashfaq Pervez Kayani. Mullen reaffirmed his support for continued U.S. engagement with the nuclear-armed Pakistan and warned of the consequences if the relationship breaks down. poetry series presents An Evening with Pulitzer Prize-winning Poet Franz Wright September 23, 2011, 7pm Reading from his newest work - / /u(/c rc/c '' a// Reception and book-signing to follow. CONTACT: Sarah MessEr LOCATiON: 71t w Ytsberty Rd Ann Arbor Copper Clord Mountain Ars All readings andConversations are FREE Emrail: sarah.ccrnarts.org and open to the pub05 Teleplone 035-0 47 Ono Pause Poetry and Itdprogrmsi are sponvdIn partb A. - ce"""sor Q Up to $7,500 award 71 Pre-candidate doctoral students 7 International component required 7 Proposals must integrate all three areas Marshali m. weinberg (BA. a)