The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, April 2, 2012 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, April 2, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS PIERSON TOWNSHIP, Mich. Boy's body found after boat sinks Authorities have recovered the body of a 16-year-old boy who was fishing with two people when their boat started sinking. The Montcalm County sher- iff's office says the body of Dal- ton Gustinis was found Saturday in Little Whitefish Lake in Mont- calm County, 25 miles northeast of Grand Rapids. He was last seen Thursday night. Two other boys got to shore and survived. The victim likely swam in a different direction and drowned. Gustinis was a student at Tri County High School. SAN FRANSCISCO Poor weather puts Coast Guard rescue on hold U.S. Coast Guard crews were waiting for the weather to improve before sending a helicopter to take three sailors injured in a storm from a yacht about 400 miles off the Califor- nia coast, a Coast Guard spokes- man said yesterday. The Coast Guard cutter Ber- tholf with a helicopter on board was within range of the yacht, but could not send a rescue crew to the stricken vessel because of the weather conditions, Coast * Guard Petty Officer Caleb Critchfield said early yesterday afternoon. Critchfield could not provide an estimate when the helicopter would be able to launch. ALLENTOWN, Pa. Man can't enter U.S. to attend son's funeral service A Mexican national said he has been barred from entering the United States to bury his 10-year-old son, a U.S. citizen who died Tuesday in a house fire in northeastern Pennsylvania that killed three other people. Attorneys for Fidelmar "Fidel" Merlos-Lopez are trying to win humanitarian parole so he can attend the funeral, but say U.S. Customs and Border Protection has rebuffed their efforts. Damien Lopez died in a Shenandoah row house along with his cousin, aunt and 7-month-old half-brother. The funeral is set for today, with burial tomorrow, "I told the customs officer that all I want is a permit to see my boy for one last time. They treat me as if I am a criminal," Lopez, 34, a bus driver, said in an inter- view Saturday. Lopez has been waiting at the U.S.-Mexico border near Laredo, Texas, since the fire. 0 LONDON U.K. to potentially monitor citizens' e-mail messages Every e-mail to your child. Every status update for your friends. Every message to your mistress. The U.K. government is pre- paring proposals for a nationwide electronic surveillance network that could potentially keep track of every message sent by any Brit to anyone at any time, an indus- try official briefed on the govern- ment's moves said yesterday. Plans for a massive government database of the country's phone and e-mail traffic were abandoned in 2008 following a public outcry. But James Blessing of the Inter- net Service Providers' Association said the government appears to be "reintroducing it on a slightly dif- ferent format." Britain's Home Office declined comment, saying an announce- ment would have to be made to Parliament first - possibly as soon as next month. There was no indication of exactly how such a system would work or to what degree of judi- cial oversight would be involved, if any. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Suu Kyi perserveres in Myanmar historic vote Activist and former prisoner elected to parliament YANGON, Myanmar (AP) - She struggled for afree Myanmar for a quarter-century, much of it spent locked away under house arrest. Now, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate whose nonviolent campaign for democracy at home transformed her into a global icon is on the verge of ascending to public office for the first time. Aung San Suu Kyi, 66, was elected to parliament yesterday in a historic victory buffeted by the jubilant cheers of support- ers who hope her triumph will mark a major turning point in a nation still emerging from a ruthless era of military rule. If confirmed, the election win will also mark an aston- ishing reversal of fortune for a woman who became one of the world's most prominent pris- oners of conscience. When she was finally released in late 2010, just after a vote her party boy- cotted that was deemed neither free nor fair, few could have imagined she would make the leap from democracy advocate to elected official in less than 17 months, opening the way for a potential presidential run in 2015. But Myanmar has changed dramatically over that time. The junta finally ceded power last year, and although many of its leaders merely swapped their military uniforms for civilian suits, they went on to stun even their staunchest critics by releas- ing political prisoners, signing cease-fires with rebels, relaxing press censorship and opening a direct dialogue with Suu Kyi - who they tried to silence for decades. As results came in yesterday night from the poll watchers of Suu Kyi's party, spokesman and campaign manager Nyan Win projected the opposition would secure most of the vote, winning 40 of 45 parliamentary seats at stake. Those included four in the capital, Naypyitaw, considered a stronghold of the ruling party whose leaders helped build it. The opposition had contested 44 seats. Yesterday's by-election was called to fill vacant seats in Myanmar's 664-member bicam- eral assembly, and the military- backed government had little to lose by holding it. The last vote had already been engineered in their favor - the army was allotted 25 percent of the seats, and the ruling party won most of the rest. AIRRIDE From Page 1A While the buses will stop more frequently at the two off- campus stops than they will at the Central Campus Transporta- tion Center, AATA officials said they expect University students to take advantage of the service. AATA board chairman Jesse Bernstein said the service could be a "perfect opportunity" for students' parents to shuttle between Ann Arbor and the air- port, adding that AirRide came to fruition partly from the Uni- versity's encouragement of the plan to service their faculty and staff. "They're very supportive, because they want to get their people to the airport back and forth cheaply and efficiently," Bernstein said. "They've been very cooperative." A variety of political fig- ures were also present at the announcement, including U.S. Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.), state Reps. Jeff Irwin (D-Ann Arbor) and Rick Olson (R-York Township) and Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje. Dingell said the cooperation between the parties involved in AirRide is a contrast from the polarized climate in Washing- ton, D.C. "This is just one example of how this community works together," Dingell said. "I wish, perhaps, as I come back from Washington, I could come and say that Congress is doing as well." Olson added that AirRide is an important addition to the city, noting that it serves as ful- filling a"missinglink." "(In) every other city in this county, when you want to get to downtown or wherever, there are alternate ways of getting there," Olson said. "Ann Arbor doesn't have that other than a cab, and that's a costly way, and it's also not an energy efficient way. Ann Arbor and Detroit - it's an anomaly when it comes to major cities in the United States." Kirk Steudle, director of the state's department of trans- portation and an attendee of Friday's announcement, also praised the service for its fulfill- ment of Republican Gov. Sny- der's transportation message this fall. In an interview in September, AATA spokeswoman Mary Sta- siak said the proposed service was not intended to compete with AirBus, an airport shuttle sponsored by the Central Stu- dent Government that runs during breaks for University students. "(AirBus) service plays a very, very important role when there are a tremendous amountof pas- sengers traveling between the airport and Ann Arbor at really high-peak periods, and we don't see ourselves replacing that at all," Stasiak said. "In fact, we would encourage people to use that service." SAM From Page1A attending. Earlier in the week, Helsel said 150 people from LSSU were planning to attend the confer- ence, but changed their minds upon hearing the weather report. Regardless, Helsel said he was pleased with the students who did come. "I still think that it was a good event," Helsel said. "I think that the people that were here were really enthused." The weather also deterred University students from mak- ing the trip to Lansing, and only a handful of students attended. LSA junior Sean Walser, chair of the Central Student Govern- ment's External Relations Com- mission, helped plan this year's rally and said CSG had planned on taking a bus until student support waned as a result of the weather forecast. "A lot of people were look- ing at the weather this week and realizing that was going to be cold and rainy," Walser said. "We didn't want to spend the money on it if it wasn't going to be used." LSA junior Aditya Sathi, vice speaker of CSG, was among Uni- versity students in attendance at the rally, and discussed medical amnesty and the important of student advocacy. In particular, Sathi addressed House Bill 4393, which would amend a previous law to effec- tively implement medical amnesty on a state-wide level. The bill easily passed the Michi- gan House of Representatives, but has yet to be voted on by the senate. "We have the opportunity to save lives here, and why, why is it that the state senate has not voted on thisbill yet?" Sathi said. "Why is it that it hasn't gone on to the governor's desk?" Another speaker at the event was David Knezek, president of the University of Michigan- Dearborn Student Govern- ment. Knezek is graduating this semester and running for state representative as a Democrat. "For me, higher education personally is the biggest issue and I think it ties in very inti- mately to the economy and Michigan's well-being," Knezek said. Eli Karttunen, treasurer of the Undergraduate Student Government at Michigan Tech- nological University, said he drove 10 hours from Michigan Tech in Houghton, Michigan to Lansing to stand out in the blus- tery weather. "It's so important to be here and to actually show state leg- islators that students matter," Karttunen said. "It is 30 to 40 degrees out here, it's raining, it's cold - it's awesome though." While attendance may have been lower than expected for the SAM rally, Gage said the organization has been grow- ing, noting that the University's recent affiliation with SAM has been mutually beneficial. "That not only helps us as an association get stronger, but it helps U of M elevate their stu- dent voices to the state-wide level," Gage said. "It's definitely a great partnership that I hope only gets stronger." Car bombs in Thailand kill 14 Muslim insurgents suspected as cause attacks HAT YAI, Thailand (AP) - Suspected Muslim insur- gents staged the most deadly coordinated attacks in years in Thailand's restive south,.kill- ing 14 people and injuring 340 with car bombs that targeted Saturday shoppers and a high- rise hotel frequented by foreign tourists. A first batch of explosives planted inside a parked pickup truck ripped through an area of restaurants and shops in a busy area of Yala city, a main com- mercial hub of Thailand's res- tive southern provinces, said district police chief Col. Krit- sada Kaewchandee. About 20 minutes later, just as onlookers gathered at the blast site, a second car bomb exploded, causing the major- ity of casualties. Eleven people were killed and 110 wounded by the blasts. More than 5,000 people have been killed in Thailand's three southernmost provinces - Narathiwat, Pattani and Yala - since an Islamist insurgency flared in January 2004. "This is the worst attack in the past few years," said Col. Pramote Promin, deputy spokesman of a regional secu- rity agency. "The suspected insurgents were targeting peo- ple's lives. They (chose) a bus- tling commercial area, so they wanted to harm people." A blast also occurred Satur- day at a high-rise hotel in the city of Hat Yai, in the nearby province of Songkhla. Officials had initially attributed that blast to a gas leak, saying it was unrelated to the attacks blamed on insurgents. But after inspect- ing the hotel's underground parking lot, authorities found a severely damaged sedan and a hole created by the explosion's impact. STEM CELL - From Page1A budget, but we don't have docu- ments that specifically provide those kinds of data because the research, as you know, is done in a variety of settings all across the campus," Wilbanks said. "The data isn't collected that in that form." Wilbanks also said that the committee's request was uncon- stitutional, noting that state law promotes research of stem cells in the state. "(In order) to ensure that physicians can conduct the most promising forms of medi- cal research in this state, Article 1, Section 27 of the state Consti- tution - a provision passed by popular vote in 2008 - states, 'any research permitted under federal law on human embryos may be conducted in Michi- gan,"' Wilbanks said. Wilbanks added that since the University's research com- plies with federal law and the limitations and requirements set out in the constitutional amendment, the state cannot obstruct it by asking for its data. "Our belief is that there is a clash with what the constitu- tional amendment requires the University to do when perform- ing this research, and what this specific language (in the state's higher education budget) has asked," Wilbanks said. Neither Fitzgerald, Wil- banks, nor University Spokes- woman Kelly Cunningham, the University's director of public affairs, were able to estimate how much of the University's state appropriation is at stake in the budget disagreement. The University is one of two institutions, along with Michi- gan State University, in the state being scrutinized under the provision in the fiscal year 2012 state higher education budget. Though Republican Gov. Rick Snyder's budget proposal would raise state higher educa- tion funding 3.1 percent from last year's budget, Coleman and University Provost Philip Hanlon have been critical of the proposal's institution of perfor- mance-based funding. Coleman told the Senate Advisory Committee on Uni- versity Affairs at its meeting last week that the performance metrics could have "unintended consequences" for the Univer- sity in ignoring its strong gradu- ate programs and research. "We've been proposing alternatives with every breath we have," Coleman said at the meeting. State Rep. Jeff Irwin (D- Ann Arbor) said the recom- mendation by the House was a realization that the aims of the performance metric system may potentially harm Univer- sity research programs. Irwin said even the threat of stripping the University of funding could damage the University's abil- ity to attract and retain world- class researchers. "We have, in Michigan, this tremendous jewel which is the University of Michigan, where life-saving research and cutting-edge research hap- pens," Irwin said. "And here, we have, in Lansing, this group of legislators who are trying to (involve) their religious stances in their roles as legislators and make Michigan's government more closely adhere to their interpretation of what the Bible says. That's damaging the Uni- versity." Despite the threat of funding cuts, Wilbanks and Fitzgerald said the University would not immediately send in the data requested by the state Legisla- ture. Wilbanks stressed that the committee's recommenda- tion still needs to pass in the full House and Senate, and be signed by Snyder before the threat materializes into a loss of aid, adding that the bill would likely be changed before Snyder signs the final budget. Fitzgerald added that the University would stand firm in its protection of research inita- tives. "At this point, we've sub- mitted our response, and our response will stand," he said. MCAT'CourSes *HHE'" S U 2o ( The Department of Communication Studies The Howard R. Marsh Center present a lecture by STEPHEN BLOOM 2011-2012 Howard R. Marsh Visiting Professor of Journalism CAN WE WEAN AMERICA FROM THE KARDASHIANS? Wednesday, April 4, 2012 Reception 4:30 pm - Lecture 5:00 pm The Vandenberg Room in the Michigan League 911 North University Avenue Ann Arbor, Mj 48109-1265 For directions, please see http://uunions.umich.edu/leage/maps/directions/ Contact the Department of Communication Studies (734.764.0423) for more information. 4 At