The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Judge throws out FBI's case against Michigan militia A federal judge dismissed the most serious charges yes- teray against seven members of a Michigan militia who were rounded up as homegrown extremists accused of plotting war against the U.S., saying their expressed hatred of law enforcement didn't amount to conspiracy against the govern- ment. The decision is an embar- rassment for the government, which secretly planted an infor- mant and an FBI agent inside the Hutaree militia four years ago and claimed members were armed for war in rural southern Michigan. U.S. District Judge Victoria Roberts granted requests for acquittal on the most serious charges: conspiring to commit sedition, or rebellion, against the U.S. and conspiring to use weapons of mass destruction. Other weapons crimes tied to the alleged conspiracies also were dismissed. CONIFER, Colo. Colorado fights to control wildfire Yesterday, investigators were trying to determine whether a controlled burn designed to min- imize wildfire risk reignited and became a stubborn mountain wildfire that forced hundreds of residents to flee their homes and may have caused the deaths of two people. Federal agencies dispatched two large air tankers to tackle the 7-square-mile blaze that damaged or destroyed 28 struc- tures and resulted in mandatory evacuations of 900 homes south of the commuter town of Conifer, about 8,200 feet up in the Rock- ies foothills and 25 miles south- west of downtown Denver. Some 450 firefighters frm Colorado, Idaho, Nevada and Utah were sent to assist 250 fire- fighters on the ground. PHILADELPHIA Catholic diocese accused of cover-up Prosecutors read dozens of confidential church documents aloud in court yesterday to try to prove the Philadelphia archdio- cese routinely buried complaints that priests were molesting chil- dren.. Monsignor William Lynn is the first Roman Catholic offi- cial in the U.S. charged with endangering children by keeping accused priests in parish work. The letters and memos read in court yesterday centered on now-defrocked priest Edward Avery. Avery, known as "the Smiling Padre," adopted six Hmong children and moonlight- ed as a disc jockey at parties and nightclubs throughout his three- decade church career. MOSCOW, Russia Russian president blasts Romney's * Cold War rhetoric Russian President Dmitry Medvedevyesterdaysharplysug- gested that Mitt Romney use his head and remember what year he's living in after the Republi- can presidential contender said Moscow was America's "No. 1 geopolitical foe." Romney described Russia in those terms while criticiz- ing President Barack Obama for his caught-on-tape remarks to Medvedev that he would have more room to negotiate on mis- sile defense if he is re-elected in November. During a briefing yesterday in Seoul, where he and Obama were attending a nuclear security summit, the Russian leader said Romney's remarks "smacked of Hollywood" and sounded as if they came from the Cold War era. =Compiled from Daily mire reports ADAM GLANZMAN/I LSA freshman Daniel Morales speaks at a meeting of the Coalition for Tuition Equality last night. From Page 1A ous events to raise awareness in recent months, including a lec- ture on immigration reform last month by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jose Antonio Vargas. Morales didn't become a legal resident until last summer and said he often felt ashamed in high school because of his immi- gration status. "I just lied to my friends and told them I was really bad at driving and that's why I didn't drive," Morales recounted. "I feared being reported and sent to (live in) a country I had never been to." Morales said he was encour- aged by the University's recep- tion of the coalition's goals and emphasized the importance for tuition equality in his speech. "We're talking about human beings who don't want a leg up, who don't want an advantage in any way," Morales said. "(They) simply want to be treated like everyone else." LSA sophomore Evelyn Gal- van, a PILOT representative, said she decided to help with the forum because she believes undocumented students from Michigan should be able to pay in-state tuition costs and wants to get others involved. "One of the things that we think is very important is ... really looking at the University as working for us," she said. "At the end of the day, every office that is here is here to work for the students and to make the students' time here better." Galvan said PILOT and CTE have attended multiple meet- ings of the University's Board of Regents to discuss the issue and MINTS From Page 1A Forrest said MINTS is looking to invest in more University- generated startups in the future and has set aside money to fund further programs. University technology reaches markets through the University's Office of Technology Transfer, which provides assistance to Univer- sity startups and makes Uni- versity-developed innovations available to other companies. Crossbar, Inc., which is still in negotiations with the Uni- versity over the amount of money it will receive, developsg the production of memristor chips, which provide faster and Get the best of the Internet on our website each and every day with #MICHLINKS have continued to attempt to connect with the student body. "Now that we have done the awareness things, we really want this event to be the action planning of this whole move- ment," Galvan said. "We do have a panel, but it's not just a panel. It's about everyone get- ting involved in the discussion on why we value higher educa- tion." The event featured four pan- elists and a question and answer session, after which the attend- ees were broken into smaller groups to discuss ways to help the undocumented students. Public Policy junior Kevin Mersol-Barg, who formed CTE, said he was happy with the turnout for the "low-key" event. "The people we had on the panel provided really powerful narratives and powerful infor- mation that I think people could take away from this," Mersol- Barg said. "I think the kind of impact we had will be long-last- ing, (and) the people here will advocate for this to the various communities they come from. " He said the forum provided an avenue to "localize" the problem and clear up any per- petuated falsehoods about the issue. "If you put a face to the issue, if you tell them, 'Are you going to deny this individual a Univer- sity education?' I think they're going to have a much harder time saying yes," Mersol-Barg said. "When you move away from a statistics-based argu- ment towards one where it's a real human that's affected by the barriers, the financial bar- riers, I think that's often times really effective." denser software memory capac- ity. The chips could operate at 1,000 times the speed of Flash, according to a University press release. Wei Lu, an associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sci- ence, co-founded Crossbar and said he has high expectations for the memristor chips, though he noted they won't be produced immediately. "It's a major market and a major product, so it will definite- ly take some time," Lu said. Lu added that the technol- ogy for the chip production was developed in 2005 when he began his tenure at the Universi- ty. Some of Lu's former students are employees of Crossbar and Juan Martinez, one of the panelists and principal of Cesar Chavez Academy in Detroit, highlighted the number of undocumented students in Detroit who would benefit from access to in-state tuition costs and financial aid. "This year, 45 of our stu- dents, (which is) 35 percent, are undocumented," Martinez said. "I've seen the look of hopeless- ness as they get closer to gradu- ation ... they have no idea what they're going to do when they graduate." Panelist Kimberly Reyes, a research assistant at the Nation- al Forum on Higher Education for the Public Good, discussed the need for colleges and uni- versities to make their own poli- cies on undocumented students, separate from any state policies. "States do not admit stu- dents," Reyes said. "Colleges and universities do." The final panelist, Karina Moore, director of admissions at the University's School of Art & Design, discussed the vari- ous undocumented populations in Michigan who would benefit from increased tuition equality. "This is not just a Latino issue," Moore said. "They are all citizens of our state who want to be actively engaged in our com- munity ... and cannot be." Rackham student Eliza- beth Barrios, who came to the U.S. from Venezuela, said she attended the event to stand in solidarity with the undocu- mented immigrant students. "I myself am an immigrant," Barrios said. "I guess I feel a lot of sympathy for the plight of other immigrants regardless of their legal status." are working on the chip produc- tion. He said the chips will replace hard drives in storing flash memory and may be used either independently or with other technologies. Lu added that Crossbar is grateful for the University's support in its endeavors, since investment in technology pro- duction is rare. "(Chip production) is very expensive and that's why many people are not funding," Lu said. "It's also high risk, but obviously, if the technology is right, the return is very high too." Lu said he could not comment on the amount the University will invest since Crossbar is still in negotiations. COURT From Page 1A in the Affordable Care Act com- pelling Americans to either pur- chase health insurance or pay a fee - is unconstitutional, itcould invalidate the entire law or leave the legislation standing without the mandate. Friedman said he anticipates that the court will most likely uphold the individual mandate on the basis that Congress has the authority to regulate interstate commerce and do what it deems necessary. "This seems to me to be a mechanism that is perfectly plausible, perfectly reasonable for Congress, and it's a matter of political choice," he said. "And I think the court in the end is not going to find that it was beyond Congress's power." However, for the Supreme Court to uphold the mandate, one of the five more conserva- tive members on the bench would have to join its four liberal-lean- ing justices -Ruth Bader Gins- burg, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Stephen Breyer. Friedman said he expects one of the five more conservative jus- tices - Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito Jr. or Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. - to vote along with the court's liberalbloc of the Court. "It's conceivable, I suppose, that all five will stick together and knock it out," he said. "But it'd be the first time in 70 years that the Supreme Court is knock- ing out a major, comprehensive piece of federal legislation on the grounds that it's beyond Con- gress power." The Affordable Care Act cen- ters on a provision that allows young adults to stay on their families' insurance policies until the age of 26. Last September, the Center of Disease Control and Prevention announced that the number of insured young adults SHIRVELL From Page 1A attorney,Deborah Gordon, claim- ingthat she unlawfully interfered in the processing of the case, before ultimately filing to remove her from litigation of the incident in November 2011. Specifically, Shirvell said Gordon persuaded special investigator Mike Onde- jko in his examination of Shirvell for "job-related impropriety" that led to his termination. "Ms. Gordon used her prior relationship with the investiga- tor Mike Ondejko to basically ... get me fired," Shirvell said in an interview with The Michigan Daily in October. Gordon countered by fil- ing a motion against Shirvell in December 2011, stating his claims were unjust. "He claims that everything I've under the age of 26 increased by about 900,000 between Janu- ary 2010 and March 2011. The Obama administration attributed the rise to the provision in the Affordable Care Act. The uptick lowered the per- centage of uninsured 18-to-25 year olds to 24.2 percent in 2011's second quarter from the 28 percent in third quarter of 2010, according to a Gallup poll released the same week as the CDC data. Matthew Davis, an assistant professor in the Medical School and Ford School of PublicPolicy, said the provision could remain in place even if it is invalidated since it might bolster the election chances of members of Congress. "If you think about it, a young adult who can get his or her par- ents' plan can potentially bring in two votes, because the young adult votes, and so does the par- ent," Davis said. While Davis said the provi- sion may continue, ,the planned expansion of Medicaid and the establishment of state market- places for insurance plans could fail without federal funding. At the University, a University Health Services survey found that 9.4 percent of undergraduate students are uninsured, Robert Winfield, the University's chief health officer and UHS director, said in an interview last week. The figure marked a 2-percent increase over the last three years. Winfield said while fewer stu- dents are opting to enroll in the University-offered insurance program - 1,350 are enrolled today, compared to 3,000 a decade ago - the investment is worthwhile. "It's pretty common for appen- dicitis to be $10,000 to $15,000, or a bill for an auto accident to be substantially higher than that," he said. "Everything we can do to assure a higher level of insurance for poor students is a good idea." The Associated Press contributed to this report. said about him to the media is def- amation, but he claims everything he said about Chris Armstrong is not defamation," Gordon told the Daily at the time. "But me saying he's irresponsible is defamation?" Since the incident, Armstrong started a scholarship for students at the University in who have been victimized by acts of bul- lying. The initial allotment for the fund is $100,000 and will be givento incoming freshmen. Dur- ing an event at Rackham Audito- rium last November, Armstrong said the decision to create the fund was a join effort between himself and his parents to inspire students to excel and transcend the effects of bullying. "My parents and I decided to start a scholarship for students who've been bullied, to come to the University of Michigan ... and show students how it gets better," Armstrong said. S eray '"e""t "tte"o ""pu Stop in our Palmer Commons or SPH locations and mention the' Sudoku Special for this great deal: 16 oz. Caramel Conundrum Latte for $1.99 - ,loUmD 2012 Orren C. Mohier Prize LectureU 2012 Orren C. Mohler Prize Lecture Friday, March 30, 2012 " 7:00pm New Worlds: the Search for Planets outside the Solar System Scott Tremaine Institute for Advanced Study member of the National Academy of Sciences In the past fifteen years, hundreds of planets have been found around other stars. The ultimate goal is to find Earth-like planets that could sustain life. 182 Dennison Bldg., 500 Church St. Sponsored by the Department of Astronomy http://goo.gl/unXhm (734) 764-3440 9 A £ A4 At I