. The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 7, 2011 -- 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, October 7, 2011 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Governor Snyder announces plan to seek re-election Gov. Rick Snyder says he plans to seek re-election in 2014. The first-term Republican made the comment during an appearance yesterday in Grand Rapids. Speaking at the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel, Snyder said he remains committed to the "10- year plan" he developed with his family. That included two years of campaigning and eight years as governor. The businessman-turned-poli- tician recently told The Associat- ed Press he wasn't tied to running for a second term if he's gotten done in four years what he set out to do, but didn't rule out seeking re-election. EL CENTRO, Calif. Prince Harry to receive military training in U.S. Prince Harry will arrive in the United States next week to begin a two-month military helicopter training course to prepare him for combat. The prince, who is a British Army captain, will start at the Naval Air Facility at El Centro where he will fly Apache heli- copters in the remote California desert near the Mexican border. The facility hosts allied troops throughout the year because its hot, dusty conditions replicate Afghanistan's harsh environment and the clear weather allows for constant flying. WASHINGTON Gabrielle Giffords returns to capital for Navy ceremony Looking thrilled to be among friends and colleagues, Demo- cratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D- Ariz.) returned to Washington yesterday to attend a Navy retire- ment ceremony for her husband, former astronaut Mark Kelly. The visit marks the Arizona congresswoman's second trip to the nation's capital since she was shot in the head last January while meeting with constituents in Tuc- son. About 30 people, including Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, greeted her and Kelly with a standing ovation as they entered the Secretary of War suite at the Eisenhower Executive Building next to the White House. Giffords walked slowly and with a notice- able limp, wearing running shoes with her suit, but she looked over- joyed to see some of her fellow lawmakers again. JERUSALEM Israelis remember Babi Yar massacre With tears in his eyes, Michael Sidko laid a wreath of flowers at Israel's official Holocaust memo- rial during a solemn ceremony yesterdaymarking70years since a World War II massacre he barely escaped. Sidko was six when he was taken with his family to the Babi Yar ravine outside Kiev, Ukraine - then part of the Soviet Union - to be murdered along with the rest of that city's Jews. In the two-day killing spree in Sep- tember 1941, Nazi troops gunned down more than 33,000 Jews and buried them in mounds of dirt. Among those murdered were Sidko's mother and two of his sib- lings. He and his older brother, Grisha, were among the few who managed to escape the killing fields. "How is it that everyone was killed and only we survived?" he asked, hands quivering. "I still can't believe what happened there and how I managed to get away. I thank God I am here today." At 76, he is one of the only living survivors of an atrocity that has become one of the defining events of the Nazi genocide of 6 million Jews. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Federal mandate creates college price calculators KATHY KMONICEK/AP Detroit Tigers catcher Alex Avila celebrates after New York Yankees' Alex Rodriguez struck out in the ninth inning, and the Tigers won Game 5 of baseball's American League division series 3-2 last night. Tigers beat Yankees 3-2 to advance toALCS Online estimator helps students plan education budgets It sounds likea simple question: How much is a college actually goingto cost? In fact, it's a slippery one. But thanks to a federal mandate, a new tool to help students and fami- lies pin down an answer is finally arriving this month: a fairly simple online calculator to estimate what you can expect to payto attend any college in the United States. The new "net price calculators" - manyalreadyup and running on college websites ahead of the Oct. 29 legal deadline - are designed to provide the non-binding cost estimatesbased on afew relatively straightforward questions about family finances. More broadly, they're supposed to help students navigate one ofthe most confusing aspects of the col- lege matchmaking process. While a school's "list price" is usually easy enough to identify, students often don't hear until long after they've applied and gotten accep- tance letters what will be their "net price" - the sometimes sub- stantially lower cost after scholar- ships and discounts are applied. Now colleges are obliged to make the estimating calculators publicly available on their web- sites. Supporters predict two main effects, both positive. Some fami- lies may be surprised how much college will still cost them, but at least they'll know more accurately which schools are affordable, and how much they need to save. Other families, meanwhile, may be pleasantly surprised by the discounts, and won't cross off potential matches for fear they're unaffordable. That could lead to more stu- dents considering high-priced pri- vate institutions where applicants are often scared off by sticker price shock. "For those of us who are higher cost, we get ruled out right off the bat," said Linda Parker, director of financial aid at Union College in New York, which has had its version of the net-price calcula- tor running on its website since January. "When they find out we have pretty generous scholarships we offer, and we meet full demon- strated need for the students we admit, it's not out of their reach." At private, nonprofit four-year colleges, the most recent College Board annual survey reported published tuition and fees: aver- aged $27,293. That's expensive, to be sure. But fewer people realize full-time students at those schools receive grant aid and tax breaks totaling on average $16,000. The average net cost of attending pri- vate colleges has actually declined over the last five years. Take the example of a fic- tional Massachusetts family, the Medians, choosing between the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, the state's public flag- ship institution, or to Amherst College, an elite private liberal arts school two miles down North Pleasant Street. Amherst College has much higher prices but also a 10-figure endowment and sub- stantial financial aid to spread over its small student body. Detroit Tigers vying for first World Series title since 1984 NEW YORK (AP) - The Detroit Tigers survived a tense trip back to Bronx, with Jose Val- verde and the bullpen holding on time and time again to beat the New York Yankees 3-2 last night to win the deciding Game 5 of their AL playoff series. Don Kelly and Delmon Young hit consecutive home runs in the first inning, then Doug Fister and the Tigers spent the rest of a thrilling game tryingto preserve their lead. They did - barely - and advanced to the AL champion- ship series against Texas. "It was a gutsy win, especially with all the opportunities they had," Kelly said. Joaquin Benoit followed Max Scherzer in the seventh and walked Mark Teixeira with the bases loaded, pulling the Yankees within a run. Benoit struck out Nick Swisher with a 95 mph fastball to keep the lead. Then in the eighth, Brett Gardner singled with two outs before Derek Jeter flied out to Kelly just in front of the right- field wall. Valverde finished with the only 1-2-3 inning for Detroit after the first, getting his second save of the series and remaining perfect in 51 chances this year. After Valverde struck out Alex Rodriguez to end it, the Tigers' closer crouched and pumped both arms as his teammates ran out to celebrate. "The Yankees are so good that I would be lying if I said it didn't give me a little extra satisfaction to be able to do it here in the fifth game," Tigers manager Jim Ley- land said. "This will be a game I'll remember for the rest of my life." While the Yankees were elim- inated in the postseason with a one-run loss at home for the first time since the 1926 World Series against St. Louis, Detroit won an all-or-nothing postseason game for the first time since beating the Cardinals in Game 7 of the 1968 World Series. With the Tigers vying for their first World Series title since 1984, ace Justin Verlander will start the ALCS opener at Texas on Saturday night against the Rangers' C.J. Wilson. This will be Detroit's first trip to the ALCS since 2006. Before a new Yankee Stadium record crowd of 50,960, New York had its chances, but the Yankees went 2 for 9 with run- ners in scoring position and 0 for 4 with the bases loaded, and they stranded 10 runners. While the Yankees led the AL with 97 wins during the regular season, the early exit in the first round and second straight sea- son without a World Series title will set off a restless offseason search for more starting pitch- ing and offense. Rodriguez was 0 for 4 with three strikeouts and hit .118 in the series (2 for 18) and Teixeira batted .167 (3 for 18). Robinson Cano, whose fifth-inning solo homer started the comeback attempt, was the Yankees' pri- mary offense with nine RBIs. Kelly and Young homered on the sixth and seventh pitches from Ivan Nova, the Game 1win- ner who led rookies with 16 wins during the regular season and hadn't loss in the majors since June 3. The homers were the first back-to-back postseason shots in Tigers' history, and it was the third homer of the series for Young, who was acquired from Minnesota on Aug. 15. Kelly was a surprise starter at third to some. Unseasonably warm weather, field fires threaten fall harvest Farmers in take precautions to protect crops LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Farm- ers usually hope for sunny weather to help speed their har- vest, but weeks of unseasonably warm temperatures have dra- matically increased the risk of field fires, prompting growers to take extra precautions as they navigate equipment through dry crops. Thousands of acres of farm- land already have caught fire recently, including giant blazes this week in central Nebraska and south-central South Dako- ta. The National Weather Service has issued "red flag warnings" for firefighters and land manage- ment agents in Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, western Mis- souri, eastern Colorado, North Dakota and South Dakota. The warning indicates a heightened fire danger in those regions. "It's not unusual to have some fires this time of year," said Denny Gorton, president of the South Dakota Firefighters Asso- ciation. "But to have this many fires, of this size, with thousands and thousands of acres burning - that's extremely unusual." Although a little rain is pos- sible this weekend, the weather is expected to remain warm. The dry weather also means the moisture content of corn and soybeans in many areas is far less than ideal, and unless it improves farmers will be paid less for their crops. Regardless of the conditions, farmers have little choice but to begin harvesting when their corn, soybeans or other crops are ready. Bruce Rowher, who grows corn and soybean near the northwest Iowa town of Paul- lina, said he narrowly avoided a fire recently on his property. "I saw what looked like dust blowing across the field and then realized the dust started at a point in the middle of the field so I got out there and found embers trying to ignite," he said. Rowher, 59, said it appeared some wires on his combine shorted out and heated up dust that had accumulated on the machine. Rowher, who keeps a fire extinguisher, water and a shovel on his combine, managed to douse the embers before they could flame up. "If I hadn't been looking and been in the right place at the right time it could have had a different result," Rowher said Thursday, as he was finishing up harvesting 500 acres of soy- beans. Earl Ziegler, a 62-year-old soy- bean famer from southern Min- nesota, said this year is the worst he's seen for fires. He knows of six fires in his county alone. He said all farmers can do to reduce the risk is to check their equip- ment closely. Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi fans his face during the Forum of Kings, Princes, Sultans, Sheikhs and Mayors of Africa in Tripoli on Sept. 82010. Gadhafi rallies Libyans to disobey new government Former Libyan leader makes his first public remarks in weeks TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) - Moammar Gadhafi called on Libyans to take to the streets and wage a campaign of civil disobedience against the coun- try's new leaders yesterday - the first word from the fugitive leader in just over two weeks. Gadhafi said the National Transitional Council, which has assumed leadership of the country since then-rebel forces swept into Tripoli in late August, has no legitimacy because it was not nominated or appointed by the Libyan people. He called on his countrymen to "go out in new million-man marches in all cities and villages and oases." "Be courageous, rise up, go out in the streets," he said. "Raise the green flag in the skies ... the conditions in Libya are unbearable." Gadhafi made the appeal in an poor quality audio recording and it was not possible to verify his identity, but it was broad- cast on Syrian-based Al-Rai TV, which has become the mouth- piece of his resistance. Revolutionary forces, aided by NATO airstrikes, have gained control over most of the North African nation and forced the leader and two of his sons into hiding. Gadhafi has made several speeches on Al-Rai as he tries to rally supporters, who are still waging fierce resistance in his besieged hometown of Sirte, the town of Bani Walid southeast of Tripoli and pockets in the south. He was last heard on Sept. 20 calling the revolution a "charade gaining its legitimacy through airstrikes." The International Red Cross, meanwhile, delivered medical supplies and other humanitar- ian aid to civilians in Sirte amid rapidly deteriorating condi- tions. Dibeh Fakhr, a spokeswoman for the International Commit- tee of the Red Cross, said two trucks entered Sirte and distrib- uted the goods, which included baby milk, hygiene kits, diapers and clean drinking water. It was the ICRC's third suc- cessful foray into the Medi- terranean coastal city since Saturday, but the first time aid workers reached the main hos- pital. Sirte, 250 miles (400 kilome- ters) southeast of Tripoli, is the most important of the pro-Gad- hafi cities that are still holding out against Libya's new rulers, and its defenders have put up a fierce resistance, with the two sides trading artillery, tank and mortar shelling. 001, TWITTER THROWDOWN FOLLOW @MICHIGANDAILY SO WE CAN BEAT THE STATE NEWS THE BATTLE ENDS OCT. 15