The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, December 1, 2011 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, December 1, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING House panel OKs bill to allow more charter schools A state House committee' approved a measure yesterday that would allow for more pub- lic charter schools in Michigan, and supporters said they believe it could gain final passage by the end of the year. The Republican-led House Education Committee voted 11-6, mostly along party lines, in favor of the legislation, which would end some numerical and geographical limits on char- ter schools. The bill, narrowly approved by the Republican-led Senate in October, now awaits a vote on the House floor. "We're confident, but I don't want to make it sound like a done deal," said Dan Quisenberry, president of the Michigan Associ- ation of Public School Academies, which represents charter schools in the state. DALLAS Checklist from Apollo 13 spaceship sells for $388,375 A checklist used by Apollo 13 commander James Lovell to make calculations that helped guide the damaged spacecraft home has been sold at auction for $388,375. Dallas-based Heritage Auc- tions sold the checklist yesterday as part of a batch of U.S. space pro- gram artifacts being offered dur- ing its "Space Signature Auction." The checklist was sold to an anonymous collector. The pre- auction estimate for the checklist was $25,000. Michael Riley, senior histo- rian at Heritage, says that with- out the checklist, the crew would not have known their position in space. On April 13, 1970, an oxygen tank exploded as the spaceship was four-fifths of the way to the Hazing persistant problem for Fla. marching band An Egyptian woman shouts slogans at a protest in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, yesterday. Egypt's military rulers are taking credit for the strong turnout in the country's first parliamentary elections since the ouster of Hosni Mubarak. U.S. students warnedto avoid protests in Egypt Death of Florida A&M drum major believed to be result of hazing MIAMI (AP) - Two decades ago, the now-ousted director of the Florida A&M band warned in a letter about the dangers of haz- ing among the famed "Marching 100" ensemble, saying "it would be very difficult for the univer- sity and the band should someone become killed or hurt." In the following years, how- ever, hazing seemed to become a bigger - if not a more public - problem. Police investigated sev- eral serious cases and students were arrested. Anti-hazing work- shops were held. Dozens of band members were suspended. Uni- versity officials and the march- ingband community were keenly aware of the persistent hazing, yet it continued and is believed to have played a role in the death this month of a 26-year-old drum major, Robert Champion. Champion's death started a blame game of sorts, with the historically black college in Tal- lahassee firing its band director, Julian White, accusing him of "misconduct and/or incompe- tence." In turn, White released more than 150 pages of docu- ments showing that he warned the university for years about what was going on. The chair of the Board of Gov- ernors, which oversees Florida's public universities, wrote a letter to FAMU trustees Tuesday saying it would investigate whether the university administration took appropriate action to address White's concerns. A former band member told The Associated Press on Tues- day that White looked for ways to eradicate a culture of hazing that existed in many instrument sec- tions of the band. White invited band members to anonymously report hazing and even had police come along on some away games, former drum major Timothy Bar- ber told AP. In 2001, trumpeter Marcus Parker was paddled so severely that he ended up hospitalized with kidney damage. White had police escort the trumpet section off the field to be interrogated to show he would not tolerate haz- ing, Barber said. About a dozen people pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor and received probation in that case, though it's not clear what actions, if any, the university took to pun- ish them. After the arrests, White approached Barber for help in getting rid of hazing. One area he focused on: A white wall in the band's practice field where nicknames for the instrument sections were prominently dis- played. Becoming a member of these groups - the clarinets were known as "The Clones" and the tubas were the "White Whales" - meant becoming part of a tradition and a band that has played Super Bowls, the Gram- mys and presidential inaugura- tions. But some sections had their own violent initiation rituals. White bought buckets of white paint and asked Barber to cover up the section nicknames on the wall. "Tim, we have to find a way to eradicate these subsections of the band," Barber said White told him. "Cover the names so they see this is not somethingsupport- ed by the band staff." Three American students arrested in protests near Tahrir Square last month MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Every year American colleges and universities send more than 270,000 students to study abroad and more of them are choosing unconventional des- tinations, which in places like Egypt can entice students to ignore well-meaning warnings from back home and plunge into the political upheaval in the streets. "I think the temptation is there, to wrap up in a keffiyeh and try to look like any other Egyptian revolutionary, to feel a little exhilaration from a kind of danger you don't get in Amer- ica," said Wittney Dorn, 20, of Appleton, Wis., who is studying at the American University in Cairo. Universities have been repeat- ing the importance of striking the right balance between safety and cultural immersion after the Nov. 20 arrest of three Ameri- can students during the protests near Tahrir Square, the Cairo roundabout that has been the epicenter of the Jan. 25 uprising against ousted President Hosni Mubarak. Dorn said in an email from Cairo that she's been follow- ing the advice she got from both from American University and her home college, St. Olaf in Northfield, to avoid crowds, political demonstrations and Tahrir Square specifically. ' "It's not a brilliant idea to go exploring an area where people are being killed, despite how tempting it may be to watch his- tory unfold before one's eyes," Dorn wrote. A survey earlier this month from the nonprofit institute of International Education found more than 270,000 U.S. students studied abroad dur- ing the 2009-10 school year, up about 4 percent from a year earlier. Most went to western Europe: Britain, Italy, Spain and France. But the survey found increasing numbers in less traditional destinations; Egypt, for example, hosted 1,923 Americans, up 8 percent. Web site aids Mich. WASHINGTON e s po uai U.S. lawmakers jobless population against training * Iraqi police force Democrats and Republicans are joining together in harshly criticizing a State Department program for training Iraq's police force. Lawmakers at House Foreign Affairs ' subcommittee hearing yesterday said it was a waste of money to spend nearly $900 mil- lion in the 2012 budget year on Iraqi police training. They cited an October report from a U.S. government watch- dog that said the training pro- gram lacked focus, could become a "bottomless pit" for U.S. dollars and may not even be wanted by the Iraqis. That audit also found that only about 12 percent of the money actually will go to helping the Iraqi police. It said most will pay for security and other items such as living quarters for trainers. VATICAN CITY Pope seeks end to death penalty Pope Benedict XVI voiced support yesterday for political actions around the world aimed at eliminating the death penalty, reflecting his stance as an oppo- nent of capital punishment. He made the comments dur- ing his weekly public audience to participants at a meeting being promoted by the Catholic Sant'Egidio Community on the theme "No Justice without Life." He said he hopes "your deliber- ationswill encourage the political and legislative initiatives being promoted in a growing number of countries to eliminate the death penalty." Benedict, like his predecessor Pope John Paul II, has appealed for commutation in a number of death penalty cases, many in the United States. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Pure Michigan Talent Connect launched yesterday LANSING, Mich. (AP) - State efforts to better match Michi- gan residents with "tens of thousands" of unfilled jobs will include a new website offering workers and employers one-stop shopping for career planning, job openings and education and training, Gov. Rick Snyder told The Associated Press. The GOP governor will dis- cuss the Pure Michigan Talent Connect website today when he delivers a special message on developing talent at Delta College in University Center near Saginaw. It's the fifth pol- icy address of his first year in office. Earlier speeches focused on changes he wants to see in education, local government, health and wellness, and infra- structure. The new Talent Connect web- site, which went live yesterday, is designed to create a central hub that can help new workers and those trying to get back into the job market assess their skills, evaluate the return on invest- ment for an education or train- ing program, browse careers and connect with mentors. "It's really about creating a website, a web environment, where people can go through and ... and find out good infor- mation about connecting talent with jobs and careers, and giv- ing people better tools to build their career on," Snyder told the AP. "We have tens of thousands of open positions in Michigan and ... we're not necessarily turning out people with the skill sets to match up with those." The governor's recommenda- tions for developing talent are aimed at lowering the state's double-digit unemployment rate. Although the resurgent domestic auto industry is help- ing Michigan add jobs faster than many other states, it's tied with Mississippi for the state's third-highest jobless rate at 10.6 percent, behind only Nevada and California. Now Leasing Full Scale Gym, Yoga Studio, Sauna & Steam Rooms, Theater, Game Room 2 Hot Tubs, BBQ Grills, Study Lounges, Group Meeting Spaces and morel Fully Furnished Luxury Apartments With in-unit Washer & Dryers Located 3 Minutes from the Diag @ S. University & S. Forest Private Balconies & Exclusive 14th Floor Penthouses . Information Event in honor of WorldAIDS Day Thursday, Dec. 1st 6:30 pm School of Public Health Room 1655 800.424.8580 -peacecorps.gov -facebook.com/UMpeacecorps