(betAidlian &II - - - - IIUNDPIA XW EIN TY I XWOYEA RS F ELI)ITIO I RLEi 7M Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, December 12, 2011 michigandailycom MICHIGAN DAILY EXCLUSIVE Misunderstood. In 2008, walk-on running back Mike Milano was suspended from the Michigan football team for allegedly attacking hockey player Steve Kampfer outside of a bar. Milano told the Daily his account of what happened that night as described in his recent book "Michigan Men?" S TATE APPROPRIATIONS Budget director: Funding model rewards schools 'U' leaders say formula funding may be unfair By PAIGE PEARCY Daily StaffReporter Despite objections from University leaders, the state is moving toward implementing a new funding mechanism for higher education that's aimed at increasing the amount allo- cated to school throughout Michigan. The planned release of the state budget in January will create a new process for fund- ing state higher education institutions. Before the over- haul, money was distributed on a school-by-school basis, but the new budget could pro- vide a formula that will decide the amount of money given to each of the state's public uni- versities. This year the state allo- cated about $268.5 million to the University, a 15-percent decrease from last year, but that amount could change with the implementation of the new policy. Despite the difficulty,' designing a fair allocation system, State Budget Director John Nixon said in a telephone interview he's developing the formula in hopes of increasing funding for higher education. "There hasn't been a sys- tematic approach, so there's really no rhyme or reason to why universities are getting funding," Nixon said. "Moving to a formula really will allowus to bring all the 15 institutions together, establish a baseline and then really be able to mark our improvements, and show our improvement over time which I think will hopefully justify more funding going into the system." The University has spoken out against the new formu- la because of the variations between the state's public uni- versities. In a communication to the University's Board of See BUDGET, Page 3A ByLuke Pasch As you climb to the Cho La pass of the Himalayas, your body tells you to stop every few steps to catch your breath. You lift your face to inhale, and a gust of freez- ing wind smacks you in the cheeks. Then the exhale feels like a vacuum sucking all remaining oxygen from your lungs. At 20,000 feet, it's one of Mother Nature's cruelest tricks. After three weeks of climbing, a beatenup Mike Milano finally made it to Cho La. He had clambered up snow-covered boulders and balanced himself alongside narrow cliffs as the wind bullied him around. He slept on floors that felt, like ice, and because he couldn't breathe the cold air through his nose, he consistently woke up with a burning tongue. His head pounding and his body bone-tired, he realized that not a whole lot exists at 20,000 feet. No phones, no roads, no electricity. Not even the occasional dinging cowbell of local yaks he had heard closer to base camp - once a sporadic assurance that maybe he wasn't alone. Milano had teased death every day of the climb, and his only companion was a hired Sherpa who spoke broken English at best. Hewondered ifanyone wouldknowifsomethinghappened to him. Who would tell his family if something went wrong? How long would it take for news to travelto quaint Rocky River, Ohio? He worried, but only briefly. He was far from his family. His body ached. His stomach longed for something that tasted like home. Yet deep within, Milano has always possessed a stabiliz- ing sense of calm. It certainly came in handy half a year earlier, as he stood in front of a jury, awaiting a decision on his felony charges. From the middle of the pass, Milano looked up at the Himala- yas, and he smiled. I am not perfect. I have manyflaws, some I have confronted, and some I still deny. I have made mistakes and done things that I am flat-out embarrassed of or ashamed of doing. Though what happened in the early morning ofOct.12,2008, is not one ofthem. Mike Milano isn't a particularly imposing figure. He's stocky, with a natural, athletic build. But at 5-foot-6, it's hard to believe the guy was once a running back for the Michigan football team. Then again, maybe former head coach Lloyd Cafr just had an affinity for tailbacks with a low center of gravity, as Milano played alongside the runty Mike Hart. Milano met with me last month to relive the events of Oct.12, 2008 - a morning that, for better or worse, changed the course of his life. It's not a story Milano enjoys telling, though he has spent years composing a book on the event. In some ways, getting his words on paper was a solution to avoid discussing it. "I don't talk about the book," Milano said bluntly. "Since I've written it, I hate when people ask questions about it because. what it is is reaching into the most painful memories I have and reliving theminvivid detail." See MILANO, Page 5A UNIVERSITY TECHNOLOGY 'U' purchases adult Internet addresses .xxx domain names bought to protect reputation By RAYZA GOLDSMITH Daily StaffReporter The University now owns a number of adult web addresses. On Dec. 6, the University bought 21 domain names regis- tered under the new ".xxx" suf- fix - an alternative to the more common .com and .org suffixes - that was created to distin- guish between pornographic sites and others on the Inter- net. The University decided to purchase these domain names to protect the University from affiliations with pornographic websites, according to Univer- sity officials. University spokesman Rick Fitzgerald said the Univer- sity, like many other schools around the country, decided to buy .xxx domain names for University-associated terms like "MGoBlue" to protect the school's name from exploita- tion. "In one way it's kind of a routine step, but a very impor- tant one," Fitzgerald said. "We think that in order to take the right steps to protect the repu- tation and the good name of the University, (we) kind of look at See DOMAINS, Page 3A ANIMAL RIGHTS PETA says cats killed after research SINGING OUT LOUD FOIA data shows unreported euthanizations By KATIE WILLIAMS Daily StaffReporter People for the Ethical Treat- ment of Animals revealed through documents obtained by Michigan's Freedom of Information Act Thursday that cats used for intubation training for the University's Survival Flight program were euthanized, though University officials claimed they had been adopted. Mark Lowell, associate pro- fessor of emergency medicine and medical director of the Survival Flight Course - a University program that trains flight nurses on efficient meth- ods of medical treatment while under pressure during emer- gencies - originally claimed in a Michigan Daily viewpoint in January that three cats used in laboratory experiments in 2010 were adopted. However, information obtained by PETA through the state's open records law and given to The Michigan Daily indicates that two of the three cats used in 2010 were eutha- nized after training instead of adopted, unlike previously reported. In a statement of response on Friday, the Office of the Vice President for Research said the University had previously corrected an "unintentional" error on its Animal Research site in August that incorrectly detailed the number of cats euthanized since 2002 - seven of 23 total were euthanized, and 16 were adopted. "The cats were adopted out whenever possible, but medical conditions, behavioral prob- See PETA, Page 3A Members of the Out Loud Chorus, an LGBT singing group, perform Christmas carols in Nickels Arcade Friday night. WEATHER HI:39 GOTANEWSTIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEWS ..................2A SUDOKU.....................5A Call 734-418-4115 ore-mail Student robbed across from School of Ed. building Vol. CXXII, No. 66 OPINION...................4A CLASSFIEDS ...............6A TOMORROW - LO: 32 news@michigandaily.comandlet us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THEWIRE 20 TheMichiganSouy ARTS............. A SPO RTSMONDAY. 1