The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, November 30,2011 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, November 30, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Proposal could help heating fund for poor residents Michigan House Republi- cans have a plan to protect low- income residents from potential utility shut-offs this winter, their leaders said yesterday. Lawmakers announced plans to put $62 million into the state's emergency relief fund to help keep the heat on for low-income residents. The money would come from federal funds that Republicans say could be used for the heating program. The plan also would formalize the end of the collection of a util- ity charge that ratepayers have been assessed. A state appeals court in July struck down the financing system used by Michi- gan's Low Income and Energy Efficiency Fund. The new legislative plan would refund the about $40 mil- lion that had continued to be collected to affected utility rate- payers. MCARD From Page 1A staff or faculty ... same thing goes for them." LSA is the last school with- in the University to move to the new system. The Medical School has used a system simi- lar for a number of years, and College of Engineering build- ings on North Campus have operated on the system for about a year. Brown said the new Mcard system is hardest to implement for LSA buildings because so many people who aren't affili- ated with LSA use the school's facilitates. On Sept. 7, students received an e-mail encouraging them to trade in their Mcards before Nov. 1. The notice also indicat- ed that extra locations to trade in Mcards would open tempo- rarily to quicken the exchange process. Despite the Nov. 1 deadline, students, faculty and staff can still exchange their old Mcards for news ones, accordingto Brown. The Michigan Daily could not obtain the number of peo- ple who have already gotten new Mcards as of last night. Under the new system, buildings will be open to the public until 6 p.m. Between 6 p.m. and 10 p.m., the buildings will only be accessible to those with new Mcards, Brown said. After 10 p.m., buildings will be closed to those without special access, which includes people who are members of certain organizations that use the facilities. There are some exceptions to these hours, like buildings that have computer labs, accordingto Brown. Business junior Nikhil Kulkarni exchanged his Mcard to make it more conve- nient when entering buildings. "This way, now I can get into the buildings after hours," Kulkarni said. "I don't have to always walk around to the entrances that are open." LSA sophomore Tanika Raychaudhuri also got the new Mcard so she could easily access the buildings. "I just did because they sent out an e-mail sayingthatif you didn't it might be hard to get into certain University build- ings at night," Raychaudhuri said. "I thought it might be good just to get it changed." Since new law, some stores see increased sales of liquor From Page1A Galyana added that beer case and liquor sales have risen by 5 percent over the last month at the store, in accordance with his prediction last month that cus- tomers would alternatively buy cases of beer or liquor as an alter- native to kegs. Other local keg retailers have seen less of a decline in keg sales. Sunny Bhagat, owner of Blue Front Kegs on Packard Street, said he could not tell if his keg sales declined from October to November. However, he said many of his customers knew of the law's implementation before coming in to buy a keg. In fact, Bhagat found out about the law when three or four of his cus- tomers told him they read about it in the newspaper. "It doesn't make a differ- ence to them," Bhagat said, add- ing that most of his customers haven't reacted negatively when filling out the tags. The store's unchanging sales of beer cases - which, Bhagat noted, cost more per amount of beer than kegs - since last month also obscured whether the law has had any effect on keg sales, he said. And though beer keg sales in Bhagat's store this November are down 50 percent from last November's numbers, he said part of this is due to the failing economy and fewer home football games this month. "It fluctuates because of the games and finals," Bhagat said. Skeptics of the law pointed to the difficulty of enforcement as one reason the law would not be effective on preventing minors from gaining access to alcohol. Irwin said he has always thought the law would not achieve the cultural changes necessary to eliminate underage drinking. "It's already plenty illegal to buy alcohol as an underage person or to provide alcohol to an underage person, so I'm not sure how this law is going to change that or make it any more intense," he said. However, Irwin acknowl- edged, like Meadows and Bhagat, that one month not enough time to project the law's impact. "If we were able to check back in on this in a year and find out what really happened, we might have a better idea of whether this was a bona fide effort to really reduce underage drinking or just an opportunity for some folks to take credit for doing something about underage drinking," he said. "I suspect that we'll look back and determine that the lat- ter of the two choices was right ... but I'm open to being proven wrong." WASHINGTON INVISIBLE House votes to ease From Page 1A airport screening for military The House yesterday voted unanimously to allow military travelers on official duty to get a special preference to move through airport security checks faster. The bill, approved 404-0, would give the Homeland Secu- rity Department six months to devise a preference system for the Armed Forces. The legisla- tion went to the Senate. If the bill becomes law, the earliest beneficiaries would likely be troops returning from Afghanistan next year and their family members, who also would receive preferential treatment. TEHRAN; Iran British Embassy stormed by angry Iranian protesters Hard-line Iranian protest- ers stormed British diplomatic compounds yesterday, hauling down the Union Jack, torching an embassy vehicle and pelting buildings with petrol bombs in what began as an apparent state- approved show of anger over the latest Western sanctions to pun- ish Tehran for defiance over its nuclear program. The hours-long assault on the British Embassy and a resi- dential complex for staff - in chaotic scenes reminiscent of the seizing of the U.S. Embassy in 1979 - could push already frayed diplomatic ties toward the breaking point. Iran's parliament approved a bill Sunday to downgrade rela- tions with Britain, one of Ameri- ca's closest allies with diplomatic envoys in the Islamic Republic. OSLO, Norway Norway killer found insane, unfit for prison Confessed mass killer Anders Behring Breivik belongs in psy- chiatric care instead of prison, Norwegian prosecutors said yes- terday after a mental evaluation declared him legally insane dur- ing a bomb-and-shooting ram- page that killed 77 people. The court-ordered assessment found that the self-styled anti- Muslim militant was psychotic during the July 22 attacks, which would make him mentally unfit to be convicted and imprisoned for the country's worst peace- time massacre. The report, written by two psychiatrists who spent 36 hours talking to Breivik, will be reviewed by an expert panel before the Oslo district court rules on his mental state didn't have enough evidence to justifiy holding him longer. -Compiled from Daily wire reports either reflected or scattered from the object," he said. "If there's no light coming into your eyes, then things become unperceivable." However, unlike the magi- cal cloaks used by fictional wizards, Guo said the coating can't completely hide an object because it can't conceal the object's shadow. Acoated object must be placed against a dark background to become com- pletely invisible. The carbon nanotube could potentially be used by the military for national security purposes, like concealing an airplane against the night sky, according to Guo. Guo's curiosity about objects and their visibility extends to the study of space. He said he is particularly intrigued by the properties of dark mat- ter - invisible space matter that accounts for much of the universe's mass and may have similar properties to the carbon nanotubes. Guo hypothesizes that the coating could potentially cover extremely large objects like planets. "It's certainly possible to hide an object of that size," he said. FUNDING From Page 1A parency. Speaker of the Assembly Matthew Eral said some MSA members were uncomfortable that such a large transfer could be made by the finance commit- tee without the entire assem- bly's input. "There does need to be more legislative oversight for the transfer of funds that large," Watson said. Watson said he expects Eral to write a resolution creating more legislative oversight for financial issues, which he said he will support. The transfer was deemed necessary by the Finance Com- mittee because student organi- zations requested more money than expected during the first and second cycles of funding this semester. The current sys- tem has three cycles during which student organizations can apply for funding. The three funding applica- tion due dates for this year are Sept. 30, Oct. 28 and Dec. 2. Because so much funding was allocated during the first two cycles, the Student Organiza- tion Funding Commission had less money than usual for the third cycle. However, this financing sys- tem for student organizations won't be in place much longer. After Jan. 1, MSA will employ a new funding method in which student organizations won't need to wait for a new cycle to apply for funding, but can instead do so based on need. This semester, Watson and MSA Vice President Brendan Campbell have been working independently of the Student Assembly to implement the new system. "Brendan and I actually ran on the promise that we were (goingto) change funding, part- ly because it doesn't really work for student orgs," Watson said. Watson said many student organizations form at the end of cycles or don't plan far enough ahead, making it difficult to receive funding from the current system. Watson added that MSA will have abetterunderstanding of how much funding organiza- tions are requesting and will be able to allocate funds more accu- rately in the future. "Essentially, we're making more funding available to stu- dent orgs without increasing the actual amount of money we're using, which I think is beautiful," Watson said. He added that the delay in the system's implementation is due to unresolved MSA administra- tion issues, but he is confident in the new method's effectiveness. WEST From Page 1A groups perceive things. "Anytime you talk about race, you're not just talking about semantic facts, you're talk- ing about the legacy of white supremacy that has convinced people of color that they're less beautiful, less intelligent and less human. And they believed it," West said. He added that the summit is intended to draw attention to racial issues, even if these issues engender discomfort. "When you're talking about making race heard, you're going to hear some things you're not used to hearing," West said. But according to West, every- one is interconnected and inter- dependent. "I believe even the people in the crack houses are our broth- ers and sisters because they can bounce back," West said. "Mal- colm Little was a drug addict and a gangster, Elijah (Muhammad) loved him enough to turn that Negro into one of the greatest freedom fighters of the 20th cen- HILLEL From Page 1A interview that the ideal candidate would have experience with both Israeli and American culture. "We are looking for an educa- tor who can facilitate informal ... learning opportunities that will strengthen students' relationship with Israel and enhance their overall college experience," Rosen wrote. According to Hillel's proposal, 6,000 University students identify as Jewish. In 2011, 326 University students participated in Taglit- Birthright Israel - a program that allows Jewish students to travel to Israel for 10 days free of charge. This number was the most of any participating institu- tion. Because many University stu- dents participate in Taglit-Birth- right Israel, having an Israeli professional on campus to guide students before and after partici- pating in the trip would improve the program, Rosen wrote. tury named Malcolm X." West also told audience mem- bers to keep abreast of interna- tional developments. "Keep track of what is going on in Africa with the elections in Cairo .." he said. "Watch, because our destiny is strictly tied to theirs on a global level." West concluded by discussing the racial disparity in drug con- victions in the United States. "Young black people take 13 percent of drugs, white brothers and sisters take 13 percent of the drugs, young black folks are 62 percent of drug convictions," he said. "But we're not supposed to talk about this. We need to tell the truth now." According to West, President Barack Obama any complicates discussions about race. "I love Barack Obama, but he profoundly confuses things because it leads people to think, 'How can the black folks pos- sibly be upset when we have a black president sitting in a white house?' But that is progress. I won't deny that." West ended his presentation by saying that civil rights icons like Martin Luther King Jr. and "We have a responsibility to fol- low up on (Taglit-Birthright Israel students') experiences in a deeply meaningful way, and we think a powerfulwayrto do that is through relationships," Rosen wrote. The fellow would also devote 20 percent of his or her time to work with the greater Ann Arbor Jewish population, according to Rosen. LSA senior Naomi Scheiner- man, who serves as Israel chair on Hillel's programming board, said the fellow would be a "sha- liah" - which means messenger in Hebrew - for students. Malcolm X were driven by love. "The love of Martin was so deep for the country, for poor people, for working people, for Vietnamese babies," he said. "It was so profound, people couldn't take it, you had to kill him. Mal- colm X was the same way. Their love wasn't a play thing." School of Education senior Christian Little said West's pre- sentation resonated with her. With plans to work for Teach for America next year, she lauded West's speech. "I thought it was absolutely inspiring," Little said. "I'm really about education revolution, and what he was saying about loving someone to the point that it is col- orblind is just really amazing." LSA senior Garrett Johnson, who is studying history, said West's speech shed light on criti- cal issues such as oppression and inequity. "There's incredible social inequality, much of (which is) structural and based on histori- cal precedence," Johnson said. "... It's something that needs to be discussed and made known to as many people as possible as it has begun to be." "There are a bunch of Israe- lis on campus, but having a pro- fessional Israeli perspective on campus adds to the diversity and multiculturalism (of the Univer- sity)," Scheinerman said. She added thatthe fellow would also bring valuable political expe- rience to share with members of the campus community. "Having someone who is Israeli here will prove beneficial to have an informed perspective (on the Arab-Israeli conflict)," Scheiner- man said. "From a political per- spective, it's important to hear from firsthand experience." LIKE THE DAILY ON FACEBOOK WANT TO TAKE A CLASS WITH A PROFESSOR WHO GIVES A LOT OF A'S? Check out: www.maizeand- bluereview.com SEE COURSE EVALUATIONS AND GRADE DISTRIBUTIONS SPONSORED BY THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~ ~ uesit ofMichiga T E ljL RD ONf TV~ Muslim Engieerng Student's Association December 1st HP Sponsored by 6:30FM 10ft U M EC,C ED O O No hC sat Go Noah,FLIY Stamps MESA~frotter COE uiou 1 I