2A - Monday September 24, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Ele Midjiian0alij 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com JOSEPH LICHTERMAN RACHEL GREINETZ Editor in Chief m esiness Manager 734-4t8-41t5 eat. t2S2 734-4te-4115 eat. t241 tichterman@michigandaitycom rmgrein@michigandaiycom Prof. recieves insightful religious artifact A FALL A FTE'RMn'nI Karen King - a professor at the Harvard Divinity School, a constituent school of Harvard University - recently uncov- ered a scrap of papyrus that is raising questions around the world about Jesus, The Har- vard Crimson reported Tues- day. The finding has renewed speculation on whether Jesus was married, and brought back into question the role of women and married men in modern religion. King is planning to continue researching the history of the piece of parchment, and to col- laborate with other religious studies scholars to pursue all CRIME NOTES 1 possible implications or mean- ings of the phrase. The individual who provid- ed King with the artifact has chosen to remain anonymous. UNIVERSITY OF INDI- ANA TO OPEN SCHOOL OF PHILANTHROPY The Indiana Commission for Higher Education, a board that oversees the state's insti- tutions of higher education, has approved Indiana Univer- sity's proposal to open a School of Philanthropy, the Indi- ana Daily Student reported Wednesday. The School of Philanthropy will educate students who hope to work in non-profit organiza- tions and will be an extension of the University's Center on Philanthropy, a research insti- tute that is currently part of IU's School of Liberal Arts. "The transformation of the Center to a new School of Phi- lanthropy will allow us to take full advantage of other Uni- versity resources in related areas and provide unparalleled education and research oppor- tunities in this area for our students," Indiana University President Michael McRobbie said in a statement. - CHANNING ROBINSON PL rt&JUJU t&r 1 rrNXlNvviti Newsroom 734-418-4s opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Artssection arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales display@michigandaily.com Online Sales onlineadshyichigandiy.cons News Tips newss@michigandaily.com Letterstothe Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classified@michigandaily.com Finance fisonceyyesichigandaily.om 0 0 TRACY KO/Daily The Michigan Union on Sunday. CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES ACLU meeting Library EDITORIAL STAFF AndrewWeiner ManagingEditor anweiner@michigandaily.com Behanylion Managiges Eaditor biron@michigndaily.com SENIOR NEWSEDTORS:Haley Glaton,HaleyGoldbergRayza Goldsmith, PaigePearcy,Adam Rubenire ASSISTA NT NEWS EDITORS: Giacomo Bologna, Anna Rozenberg, Andrew Schulman, PeterShahin,K.C.Wassman Timothy Rabb and opinioneditors@michigandaily.comr Adrienne Roberts EditorialPageEditors SENIOREDITORIALPAGE EDITORS:MelanieKruvelisHarshaNahata,Vanessa Rychlinski ASSISTANT EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Jesse Klein, Sarah Skaluba Stephen Nesbitt Managing Sports Editor nesbitt@richigandaily.com SENIOR SPORTS EDITORS: Everett Cook, Ben Estes,ach Helfand, Luke Pasch, Neal Rothsch ild, Matt Slovin CleenThms, ,Liz5Vukelic,,5Danielssern~s LeahBurgin Managing ArtsEditor burgin@michigaridaily.com SENIOR ARTS EDITORS: Elliot Alpern, David Tao, Kayla Upadhyaya ASSISTANT ARTS EDITORS: JacobAxelrad, Laren Caserta, MattEaston,Kelly Etz, AnnaSadovskaya,CioeStachowiak Erin Kirkland and photo@michigandaily.com Alden Reiss Managing Photo Editors SENIOR PHOTOEDITORS:TerraMolengraff,Todd Needle ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITORS:Adam Glanzman,Austen Hufford, AllisonKruske MareneLacasse,AdamSchnitzer Alicia Kovalcheck and design@michigandaily.com Amy Mackens Managing Design Editors Stopped cold Lifted while 1.0.1* WHERE: Hutchins hall WHEN: Friday at about 7:15 a.m. WHAT: An suspect tried to open the locked doors of a refrigerator, University Police reported. The individual did not gain entry, and bent the door handles while attemptingto open it. BUS-ted WHERE: 115 Zina Pintcher P1. WHEN: Friday at about 7:35 p.m. WHAT: A car was involved in a two-vehicle accident with a city bus, University Police reported. The driver of the car was cited for not having his license. lifting WHERE: Intramural Sports Building WHEN: Friday at about 11:02 p.m. WHAT: A wallet was reported stolen from the weight room between 5:50 p.m. and 6:30 p.m., University Police reported. Time delay WHERE: Mott Children's Hospital WHEN: Friday at about 5:10 p.m. WHAT: A laptop was stolen from a hospital room in April, University Police reported. The larceny was reported to a supervisor when it occurred, but not to Hospital Security. WHAT: The University's undergraduate chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union will present its plans for the fall semester. Staff from the state branch of the ACLU will be in attendance. Topics include civil liberties and law. WHO: ACLU-University of Michigan chapter WHEN: Tonight at 8 p.m. WHERE: Michigan Union, Parker Room China debate WHAT: Peter Navarro, director of the movie Death by China, will lead a dis- cussion with Public Policy Prof. Phil Potter on China's role in the U.S.'s economic decline. This event is a part of the Ford Policy Union. WHO: International Policy Center WHEN: Today at 4 p.m. WHERE: Weill Hall workshop WHAT: Librarians will hold an informational work- sop to introduce students to the University's library system, with an emphasis on engineering resources. Registration is required. WHO: Teaching and Tech- nology Collaborative WHEN: Tonight at 5 p.m. WHERE: Duderstadt Center Interntional law workshop WHAT: Professors will dis- cuss the fundamental rights of individuals in the new member states of the Euro- pean Union. WHO: Center for Interna- tional and Cooperative Law WHEN: Today at 4:15 p.m. WHERE: Hutchins Hall, room 138 A tree trimmer was killed after getting caught under a pile of palm fronds, the Los Angeles Times reported. Tree trim- ming has a fatality rate three or four times higher than that of a police officer or fire- fighter. Michigan commited six turnovers, including fiveinterceptionsonfive straight throws, in its first loss to Notre Dame in four years. FOR MORE, SEE SPORTSMONDAY, INSIDE Brownwood, Texas may reuse its wastewater to survive a severe drought, Fox News reported. The town proposed building a purificaion system that cycles toilet water through treatment plants and then back into the water supply. 0 Dylan Cinti and statement@michigandaily.com Jennifer Xu Magazine Editors DEPUTY MAGAZINE EDITOR: Zach Bergson, Raidlin Williams Hannah Poindexter CopyChief copydesk@michigandaily.com SENIORCOPYEDITORS:JosephineAdams,BetbCoplowitz BUSINESSSTAFF Ashley Karadsheh Associate Business Manager Sean Jackson saesManage, Sophie Greenbaum Production Manager Connor Byrd Finance Manager Meryl Hulteng National Account Manager The Michigan Daily (ISSN10745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to as readers.Additionalcopies maybe picked up atthesDaly's office for $2s Subscriptionslfor fall term, starting in september, via U.S.mail are $110. Winrtetrm (January through April) is $115, yearlong (september through April) is $195. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate.On-campus subscriptionsfor falltermare$35.Subscriptionsmustbeprepaid. The Michigan Daly is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. Germany investigates ex-Nazi 0 Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi speaks to reporters during a joint news conference in July with Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki, unseen, at the Presidential palace in Cairo, Egypt. Egypt's president wants to distance country from U.S Morsi tells NYT that Egypt will be more independent CAIRO (AP) - On the eve of his first visit to the United States as Egypt's president, Islamist Mohammed Morsi said he will demonstrate more independence from the U.S. in decision-mak- ing than his predecessor Hosni Mubarak and told Washington not to expect Egypt to live by its rules. Morsi sent that message in an interview with the New York Times after a wave of violence erupted across the Muslim world over an amateur film produced in the U.S. that was deemed offen- sive to Islam and its prophet Muhammed. The film raised news tensions between Washing- ton and Egypt. Morsi criticized U.S. dealings with the Arab world, saying it is not possible to judge Egyptian behavior and decision-making by American cultural standards. He said Washington earned ill will in the region in the past by backing dictators and taking"avery clear" biased approach against the Pal- estinians and for Israel. "Successive American admin- istrations essentially purchased with American taxpayer money the dislike,ifnotthehatred, of the peoples of the region," he told the paper in the interview published late Saturday, drawing a clear dis- tinction between the American government and the American people. Those administrations "have taken a very clear biased approach against something that (has) very strong emotional ties to the people of the region that is the issue of Palestine." He stressed that unlike his predecessor, Mubarak, he will behave "according to the Egyp- tian people's choice and will, nothingelse." But with an Islamist presi- dent at the helm of the Arab world's most populous country, there are already differences and changes of focus. Morsi has been expected to distance himself from what many Egyptians saw as Mubarak's compliance with Washington's agenda in the Mid- dle East, especially because his Muslim Brotherhood group has been a vocal critic of U.S. policy in the region and in the Muslim world. In the interview, Morsi dis- missed criticism that he respond- ed too slowly when protesters managed to scale the walls of the heavily fortified U.S. Embassy in Cairo on Sept. 11. The demonstra- tors replaced the American flag with a banner carrying the Islam- ic declaration of faith. While he praised President Barack Obama for moving "deci- sively and quickly" to support Arab Spring uprisings against longtime authoritarian leaders, he said Arabs like Americans want to live "free in their own land, according to their customs and values, in a fair and demo- cratic fashion." He has strongly criticized the Syria regime for violently repress- ing the uprising there, tried to warm relations with the Palestin- ians, and has dealt with tensions between the Middle East and the West over the anti-Islam film. The Times asked Morsi if the U.S. was an ally, to which he replied with a laugh by saying: "That depends on your definition of ally." But he quickly followed by saying he wants a real friendship with the U.S. "I think what I am trying seriously (is to) look into the future and to see that we are real friends." Philadelphia man confirms he was an SS guard BERLIN (AP) - Germany has launched a war crimes investiga- tion against an 87-year-old Phila- delphia man it accuses of serving as an SS guard at the Auschwitz death camp, The Associated Press has learned, follow- ing years of failed U.S. Justice Department efforts to have the man stripped of his American citizenship and deported. Johann "Hans" Breyer, a retired toolmaker, admits he was a guard at Auschwitz during World War II, but told the AP he was stationed outside the facility and had nothing to do with the wholesale slaughter of some 1.5 million Jews and oth- ers behind the gates. The special German office that investigates Nazi war crimes has recommended that prosecutors charge him with accessory to murder and extradite him to Germany for trial on suspicion of involve- ment in the killing of at least 344,000 Jews at the Aus- chwitz-Birkenau death camp in occupied Poland. The AP also has obtained documents that raise doubts about Breyer's testimony about the timing of his departure from Auschwitz. Experts estimate that at least 80 former camp guards or others who would fall into the same category are likely still alive today, almost 70 years after the end of the war. Authorities in the Bavar- ian town of Weiden, who have jurisdiction, are currently try- ing to determine if the evidence is sufficient for prosecution. Breyer acknowledged in an interview in his modest row house in northeastern Phila- delphia that he was in the Waffen SS at Auschwitz but that he never served at the part of the camp responsible for the extermination of Jews. He said he was aware of what was going on inside the death camp, but did not wit- ness it himself. "We could only see the outside, the gates," he said. For more than a decade, the Justice Department waged court battles to try to have Breyer deported. They largely revolved around whether Breyer had lied about his Nazi past in applying for immigration or whether he could have citizenship through his American-born mother. That legal saga ended in 2003, with a ruling that allowed him to stay in the United States, mainly on the grounds that he had joined the SS as a minor and could therefore not be held legally responsible for participation in it. Breyer testified in U.S. court that he served as a perimeter guard at Auschwitz I, which was largely for prisoners used as slave laborers, though it als had a makeshift gas chamber used early in the war; it was also the camp where SS doctor Josef Mengele carried out sadistic experiments on inmates. But he denied ever serving in Auschwitz II, better known as Auschwitz-Birkenau, the death camp area where the bulk of the people were killed. He also said he deserted in August, 1944 and never returned to the camp, though eventually rejoined his unit fighting outside Berlin in the final weeks of the war. Classes Start: Jan 9th, Jan '3'", Jan 20'" 800-2Review 1800-273-84391 PrincetonReview.com c in , .et'n"Review n 5 .aidlooarccademarksioiTPR Education'tP"H'ld'"ss."U C fi UEWU KU 5,