The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, December 6, 2011- 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, December 6, 2D11 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS LANSING, Mich. Gov. Snyder talks high-speed transit with fed. officials Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder and Detroit Mayor Dave Bing met with federal officials in Washing- ton on Monday to discuss ways to beef up transportation in south- east Michigan, the country's larg- est metropolitan area without a high-speed transit system. The meeting was a follow-up to one this fall that resulted in U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, Snyder and Bing announcing new efforts to get high-speed buses in the region. The goal is to improve transpor- tation options and cut down on traffic congestion, Snyder spokes- woman Sara Wurfel said. Snyder recommended in Octo- ber that a new Regional Transit Authority be set up to establish high-speed bus routes leading from downtown Detroit to its suburbs and Ann Arbor, home to the University of Michigan. NEW YORK 16,000 Holocaust Ohio to request death penalty for C-raigslist killer Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks at Tommy's Ham House in Greenville, S.C. on Nov.30. ingrich ears up for South Carolina primary Alleged murderer currently jailed for drug and prostitution charges CLEVELAND (AP) - A self- styled chaplain suspected in a deadly scheme to rob people who replied to a Craigslist job ad will be charged with murder and attempted murder in attacks on four victims and could face the death penalty, a prosecutor said yesterday. The chief prosecutor in north- east Ohio's Summit County, Sherri Bevan Walsh, said local officials in southeast Ohio and state and federal officials signed off on an agreement to let her office take the lead against Rich- ard Beasley, 52. Three deaths and the wound- ing of a fourth man are part of the investigation in the plot to lure victims with the promise of a farm job in southeast Ohio. "In deciding where and how to try this case, our primary con- cern was doing what is in the best interest of the victims and their families," said Walsh, who noted that most of the victims are from the Akron-Canton area. Beasley, who has been jailed in Akron on unrelated prostitution and drug charges, has denied involvement in the Craigslist slayings. Email and phone mes- sages seeking comment were left yesterday for his attorney han- dling the drug case. Beasley was arrested in November after authorities linked him to the alleged Craig- slist plot. An acquaintance of Beasley's, Brogan Rafferty, 16, of nearby of Stow, faces juvenile charges of aggravated murder, complicity to aggravated murder, attempt- ed murder and complicity to attempted murder in the death of one man and the shooting of another. Authorities say the plot's first victim, David Pauley, 51, of Nor- folk, Va., came to Ohio in mid- October after answering the Craigslist ad. A friend has said Pauley was desperate for work and eager to return to Ohio. Police say he was killed Oct. 23, and his body was found Nov. 15. Family members had contact- ed police concerned they hadn't heard from him. Timothy Kern, 47, of Mas- sillon, whose body was buried near an Akron shopping mall, answered the ad and was last seen Nov. 13, authorities said. The body of Ralph Geiger, the potential third victim, was found in a shallow grave Nov. 25. A South Carolina man also answered the ad and was shot Nov. 6 before escaping, police say. The murder and attempted murder charges will cover those four men, said April Wiesner, spokeswoman for the prosecu- tor. No timetable has been set for filing charges, she said. Beasley was a Texas parolee when he returned to Ohio in 2004 after serving several years in prison on a burglary convic- tion. He was released from an Akron jail on July 12 after he posted bond on a drug-traffick- ing charge. Texas officials say he never should have been released from jail and that they issued a warrant for his arrest because the charge violated his parole. Beasley appeared briefly in an Akron courtroom last week on the drug charge, wheeled into court after he apparently became ill and said he needed a wheelchair. Conservative voters victims to receive may be turned away German pensions After a year of tough negotia- tions, Germany has agreed to pay pensions to about 16,000 addi- tional Holocaust victims world- wide - mostly survivors who were once starving children in Nazi ghettos, or were forced to live in hiding for fear of death. The agreement announced yesterday between the New York- based Claims Conference and the German government is "not about money - it's about Germany's acknowledgment of these peo- ple's suffering," said Greg Schnei- der, the conference's executive vice president. "They're finally getting recog- nitionof the horrors theyendured.- as children," he told The Associ- ated Press. BONN, Germany Afghanistan in need of financial support until 2024 Afghanistan will need the financial support of other coun- tries for at least another decade beyond the 2014 departure of foreign troops, Afghan President Hamid Karzai said yesterday at an international conference. But the conference on the future of Afghanistan in Bonn was overshadowed by a public display of bad blood between the United States and Pakistan, the two nations with the greatest stake and say in making Afghani- stan safe and solvent. Pakistan boycotted the meet- ing to protest an apparently errant U.S. air strike last month that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers along the rough border with Afghanistan. The strike fur- thered the perception in Paki- stan that NATO and the U.S. are its true enemies, not the Taliban militants that operate on both sides of the border. "It was unfortunate that they did not participate," U.S. Sec- retary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said. DAMASCUS, Syria Syria agrees to Arab observers under conditions Syria said yesterday it would agree to allow Arab League observers into the country as part of a plan to end almost nine months of bloodshed, but placed a number of conditions, including the cancellation of deeply embar- rassing economic sanctions. Arab League chief Nabil Elar- aby swiftly rebuffed Damascus' demands, and the Syrian oppo- sition accused President Bashar Assad's regime of wasting time and trying to trick Arab leaders into reversing punitive measures against Damascus. Compiled from Daily wire reports by past marriages NEWBERRY, S.C. (AP) - For three decades, the Republi- can who won South Carolina's presidential primary has also won the GOP nomination. That record helps explain why Newt Gingrich, a self- described lover of history, is working more aggressively than any of his competitors to organize activists and volun- teers ahead of the Jan. 21 pri- mary, essentially pinning his candidacy on a state filled with Christian conservatives. His chief rival, Mitt Romney, is approaching South Carolina tentatively. He invested huge Budget for London Olympics at risk Auditors claim event is likely to require increased funding LONDON (AP) - Britain's spending watchdog warned London Olympic organizers today that they run a risk of exceeding their 9.3 billion- pound ($14.6billion) budget for hosting the event and have lit- tle room for unforeseen costs. The National Audit Office report concluded that while the venues are on time and largely complete, "not every- thing is rosy." The report came as British Olympic officials announced that they had dou- bled the funding for security operations at venues, raising overall security costs for the 2012 Games to more than 1 bil- lion pounds ($1.6 billion). "The government is confi- dent that there is money avail- able to meet known risks, but, in my view, the likelihood that the games can still be funded within the existing 9.3 billion- pound public sector funding package is so finely balanced that there is a real risk more money will be needed," said Amyas Morse, the head of the National Audit Office. If that's the case, Olympic officials would be heading back hat in hand to British taxpapers who are already embroiled in tough economic times. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development expects the U.K. economy to contract in this current quarter and in the first three months of 2012 and grow only 0.5 percent next year. Britain's National Audit Office, an independent orga- nization, examines public spending on behalf of Parlia- ment. sums in the state in the 2008 presidential race only to bail just days before the vote when it became clear he would lose big to Arizona Sen. John McCain. Many voters couldn't overlook their skepticism of Romney's Mormon faith and his reversals on some cultural issues. The others in the 2012 race are treating South Carolina as an afterthought while they bank their candidacies on one of the two states that vote first, Iowa and New Hampshire. Enter Gingrich, who's enjoy- ing a burst of momentum after a summer campaign meltdown. "I do believe South Carolina will be the decisive primary," the former House speaker from Georgia told Republicans who packed a theater in Newberry last week. "If we win here, I believe Iwill be the nominee." But victory in the state won't come easy for the thrice-mar- ried Gingrich. He has acknowwledged hav- ing an extramarital affair, an issue that may turn off Chris- tian conservatives who hold great sway in South Carolina. Gingrich, a recent convert to Catholicism, frequently makes a point of talking about his close partnership with third wife Callista. He has advocated a "humane" approach to immi- gration that would let longtime residents work toward citizen- ship. Critics have labeled that as "amnesty" for millions of for- eigners who are illegally in the United States, and that's anoth- er potent issue in the state. Approximately 40 percent of every incoming PharmD class coansistts of former LSA nstudents. So. You want one good reason to earn a pharmacy degree from the University of Michigan? Here are 12 good reasons, for starters: 1. Financial support unequalled by any other U.S. pharmacy school. 2. Outstanding pay. 3. Job security in economically uncertain times. 4. Unlimited opportunities to improve people's lives. 5. Unparalleled career choices. 6. Continuous growth potential. 7. Life and career mobility. 8. The power to apply medical knowledge at the forefront of technological innovation. 9. Membership in an influential alumni network spanning the globe. 10. The prestige of owning a degree from one of America's top-ranked pharmacy schools. 11. One-to-one learning with world-renowned faculty. 12. A small college environment within a major, academic institution. Choosing the right career requires equal parts knowl- edge, insight, and planning. If you are weighing your career options, please be sure to attend one of the pre- pharmacy counseling sessions listed below. To learn more about Michigan's PharmD Program, visit the College Web site at www.umich.edu/-pharmacy. Or contact the U-M College of Pharmacy at 734-764- 7312 or at mich.pharm.admissions@umich.edu. Pre-Pharmacy Sessions at the U-M College of Pharmacy: Academic Year 2011-2012: Thursday, Sept. 15, 2011 - 4-5 pm, Pharmacy Building, Room 1019 Thursday, Oct. 20, 2011 - 4-5 pm, C.C. Little Building, Room 1567 Monday, Nov. 21, 2011 - 4-5 pm, C.C. Little Building, Root 1567 Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011 - 4-5 pm, C.C. Little Building, Room 1567 Monday, Jan. 23, 2012 - 4-5 pm, C.C. Little Building, Room 1567 Thursday, Feb. 16, 2012 - 4-5 pm, C.C. Little Building, Room 1567 Tuesday, Mar. 27, 2012 - 4-5 pm, C.C. Little Building, Room 1567 Friday, Apr. 6, 2012 - 4-5 pm, C.C. Little Building, Room 1567 Your future never looked brighter. A