2A - Monday, October 8, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2A - Monday, October 8, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom DODGE DEATH 9hic fiiigan Oily 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com JOSEPHLICHTERMAN RACHEL GREINETZ Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1252 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 lichterman@michigandaily.com rmgrein@michigandaily.com Football player tweets about school Ohio State's third-string quarter- before an athlete. back, Cardale Jones, used his Twit- ter account as an outlet to question POLICE SEA the necessity of attending classes, CAUSE OF NOR the Lantern reported Friday. STUDENT I "Why should we have to go to class if we came here to play Police in Evans FOOTBALL, we ain't come to play tigating the drow SCHOOL, classes are POINTLESS," western Universi Jones tweeted. Wilmette Harbor, Jones deleted the tweet shortly western reported F after publishing it, but it received 50 According to t retweets and 12 favorites before it western, a fisherm was removed. Maddula's body in Lantern staff writer Patrick Maks Sept. 27. He was l asserted that the tweet doesn't off-campus party. express the sentiments of the foot- Police are ques ball team, noting that other OSU and retracing Ma football players try to emphasize funeral was held it the importance of being a student N.Y. on Oct. 1. CRIME NOTES False alarm Cash bash NRCHING FOR RTHWESTERN DROWNING ton, Ill. are inves- ning of a North- ty sophomore in the Daily North- Friday. the Daily North- nan found Harsha Lake Michigan on ast seen leaving an stioning residents ddula's steps. His n New Hyde Park, STATUE OF LIMITATIONS TO REPORT SEXUAL MISCON- DUCT ELIMINATED Duke University announced the elimination of a statute of limitations for reporting sexual misconduct, the Duke Chronicle reported Sunday. The statute of limitations, the time in which students can report misconduct, was eliminated due to student pushback. Larry Moneta, Duke'svice president for student affairs, wrote in an e-mail to students: "The discussions about the statute of limitations have brought to light our need to continue our aggres- sive approach to minimizing sexual harassment and assault at Duke." - JENNIFER CALFAS Newsroom 734-418-4115 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales display@michigandaily.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaily.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com letterstothe Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classified@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com a a TRAcY KO/Daily Students playing in the 3rd Annual DOdgeball Tournament for Breast Cancer Research. WHERE: Palmer Drive Parking Structure WHEN: Friday at 12:30 p.m. WHAT: A vehicle was found at the Palmer Drive parking structure with its windowbroken, University Police reported. The owner said he accidentally broke the window earlier. Rack raid WHERE: South Quad Residence Hall WHEN: Friday at about 3:00 p.m. WHAT: A person reported that their bike was stolen from a residence hall bike rack between 7 p.m. Oct. 4 and 11 a.m. Oct. 5, University Police reported. There are no suspects. WHERE: Legal Research Building - WHEN: Friday at about 1:50 p.m. WHAT: An ATM was found damaged, University Police reported. The door looked as if it had been forcibly opened, but there didn't appear to be any entry. iLost my phone WHERE: The Dana Building WHEN: Friday at about 11:55 a.m. WHAT: An iPhone 4 was reportedly stolen off a printer on the second floor of the Dana Building, University Police reported. There was no tracking software on the phone. CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Law lecture Career talk WHAT: Lawrence Lessig, WHAT: Andrew Keller, a professor of law and chief counsel of the leadership at Harvard Law Senate Foreign Relations School, will discuss how Committee, will speak money corrupts Congress. about international career The event will also be live options within the U.S. streamed on the web. government. WHO: Ford School of WHO: Center for Public Policy International and WHEN: Today at 4 p.m. Comparative Law WHERE: Weill Hall, WHEN: Today at 4:15 p.m. AnnenbergAuditorium WHERE: Hutchins Hall CORRECTIONS Authors forum 9 An article in the Oct. 5 edition of The Michigan WHAT: A presentation of Daily ("Group unites the Chicana por Mi Raza first-generation col- project, which features lege students on cam- archival material and oral pus")misstated that histories of the Chicana E. Royster Harper is a Feminist movement. Maria E .rster arprcisea Cotera and Shana Kimball first-generation college will speak. student. She is not. WHO: Institute for the Humanities Please report any WHEN: Today at15:30 p.m. error in the Daily to WHERE: Hatcher Graduate corrections@michi- Library, Gallery gandaily.com. Maine state Senate candidate Colleen Lachowiczisfacingattack ads criticizing her for playing World of Witchcraft, NBC News reported. The Maine Republican Party claims the Democrat made "outrageous" comments on the site. The Michigan football team defeated Purdue, 44-13, in West Lafayette on Saturday, vaulting into a first-place tie in the Big Ten Legends Division. >> FOR MORE, SEE SPORTSMONDAY, INSIDE The Susan G. Komen Foundation refused a proposed donation from Pornhub.com for breast cancer research, The Huffington Post reported. The porn site is looking for another breast cancer foundation to donate to. EDITORIAL STAFF Andrew Weiner Managing Editor anweiner@michigandaily.com Bethany BirOManaging es E ditor biron@michiandaily.com SONES EDTnORS:HHleyGlatthon,HaleyGoldbergonazaoi yh, PaigePearcyAadam Rubenfire AsSSISnNEWS EDITORS: Giacomo Bologna, Anna Rozenberg, Andrew Schulman, TimothylRabb and opinioneditors@michigandaily.com AdrienneRoberts Editorial PagetEditors SENIOREDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: MelanieKruvelis,HarshaNahata, VanessaRychlinski ASSISTANT EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Jesse Klein, Sarah Skaluba Stephen Nesbitt Managing Sports Editor nesbitt@michigandaily.com SENIOR SPORTS EDITORS: Everett Cook, Ben Estes, Zach Helfand, Luke Pasch, Neal Rothschild, Matt Slovin ASSSA=NSORSn DInTOS:S a::ad,:MichaelLaurila,MattSpelich, Colleennhomas,cLiz Vkelic, Danilassera~n Leah Burgin Managing Arts Editor burgin@michigandaily.com SENIOR ARTSEDITORS: ElliotAlpern, David Tao,Kayla Upadhyaya ASSISTANT ARTSEDITORS:Jacob Axelrad, Laren Caserta, Matt Easton,Kelly Etz, AnnaSadovskayachieStachowian Erin Kirkand and photo@michigandaily.com SENIOR PHOTOEDITORS:Terra.Molengraff, ToddNeedle ASSISTANTPHOTOEDITORS:Adam Glanzman, Austen Hufford, AllisonKruske MarleneLacasse,AdamSchnitzer Alicia Kovalcheck and design@michigandaily.com Amy Mackens ManagingDesigntEditors Dylan Cinti and statement@michigandaily.com JenniferXu Magazine Editors DEPUTYMAGAZINEEDITOR:ZachBergson,KaitlinWilliams Hannah Poindexter copy chief copydesk@omihigandaily.com SENIOR COPY EDITORS: Josephine Adams, Beth Coplowitz BUSINESS STAFF Ashley Karadsheh Associate Business Manager Sophie Greenbaum Production Manager SeanJackson Special Projects Manager Connor ByrdFinance Manager Meryl HultengNational Account Manager The Michigan Daily(I SSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students atthe Universityof Michigan.O One copy is available free of charge to all readers: Additional copes may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, viaUsS. mal are $110. intete (rm(anuary through Aprilis $115, yearlong (September through Apri)is $19s. University affiliates are subject to areduced subscriptionrate.On-campussbscriptionsfor falltermare$.tSubscriptionsmust bepepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. Libyan parliament ousts prime minister in vote No-confidence vote comes after overthrow of Gadhafi Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi waves to the crowd gathered for a speech marking the 1973 war with Israel. Egypt's new president gives h imself high grades in speech Leader is first freely elected president of Egypt CAIRO (AP) - Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi has given himself high grades on his handling of some of the nation's pressingproblems,spendingmuch of a nearly two-hour speech late Saturday talking in painstaking detail about fuel, trash and bread, while sidestepping key issues in the nation's transition to democratic rule. But the speech in many ways was also as much about style as it was about substance, and the 61-year-old Morsi, the first freely elected president in Egypt's history, used his address to project the image of an energetic leader in touch with the needs of the people. That appeared aimed at drawing a sharp contrast with his 83-year-old predecessor, Hosni Mubarak, who was widely perceived in the waning years of his long rule as out of touch with reality. Morsi, who hails from the Muslim Brotherhood, the country's largest and best- organized political group, made a slew of promises during his campaign, vowing to end Egypt's fuel shortages, improve the quality of the heavily subsidized bread, check surging crime, clean the streets of trash and ease traffic congestion. Speaking to a crowd of tens of thousands in Cairo at Egypt's largest sports stadium, Morsi claimed that scientific methods used to gauge progress on the five issues gave him a success rate of 80 percent on bread, 60 percent on traffic, 40 percent on garbage collection, 85 percent on fuel and 70 percent on security. But he also sought to stress the magnitude of the challenges he faces, and hit back at critics who charge that he was spending too much money and time traveling abroad and that his habit of offering Friday prayers at a different mosque every week was costly and disrupted traffic on what is supposed to be the quietest day of the week. He said his nine foreign trips to date - Saudi Arabia (twice), China, Iran, Belgium, Ethiopia, Turkey, the United States and Italy - secured for Egypt pledges of billions of dollars of investment and monetary aid and that his Friday prayers, which entails the deployment of hundreds of policemen and troops, were cost free. "I am still living in a rented apartment," he said to bolster his argument that he was not abusing his authority. "If anyone sees me driving a new car that is not owned by the state should report it." "They are trying to find a hole in a seamless white dress," he said of his critics. "We have a glorious future ahead of us." But his speech touched only in passing on the simmering dispute over the drafting of a new constitution. Liberals, women and minority Christians say the process has been hijacked by Morsi's fellow Islamists. He also did not touch on the restrictions that critics say have been placed on freedom of expression in the three months since he took office and the return of abuses by the police - documented by human rights groups. Morsi also offered no vision for the future of the nation, where nearly half of its estimated 83 million people live below or just above the poverty line. He declared himself married to the fight against corruption, but offered no ways to improve basic services such as medical care, education or housing for the poor. The president's critics remained unimpressed, by both the speech and the successes he touted in it. TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) - Libya's parliament ousted the country's new prime minister in a no-confidence vote on Sunday, the latest blow to hopes that political factions could agree on a government charged with restoring stability after last year's civil war. Mustafa Abushagur was the first prime minister to be elected after the 2011 overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi. He represented an offshoot of the country's oldest anti-Gadhafi opposition movement, and was considered a compromise candidate acceptable to both liberals and Islamists. But his proposed Cabinet was struck down by a legislature representing dozens of divided tribes, towns, and regions across the country, many of whom feel they are owed the spoils of victory over Gadhafi. He was forced to withdraw his first ministerial line- up under pressure and his second attempt to submit one resulted in his ouster. In a short statement on Libya al-Wataniya TV after the vote, Abushagur said he respected the decision made by the General National Congress as part of Libya's democracy but warned of instability if it takes too long to elect his replacement. "There should be quickness in the election of the prime minister and formation of the government so the country does not slip into a vacuum," he said. Hehad25daysfromhis Sep. 12 appointment by parliament to form a Cabinet and win the legislature's approval, but that deadline expired on Sunday. The Congress voted A 125 to 44 in favor of removing him as prime minister, with 17 abstaining from voting. He had just put forth 10 names for key ministerial posts Sunday when the no-confidence vote was held. Until a replacement can be elected by the parliament, management of Libya's government is in the hands of the legislature. The Congress will have to vote on a new prime minister in the coming weeks. The incoming leader will be responsible for rebuilding cfinceton WIN A FREE COURSE! Stop by our office at the corner of South University and Forest and register to win a free course grad classroom course of your choice. 800-2ReviewI/SOO-273-8439 PrincetonReview.com fl-Is Libya's army and police force and removing major pockets of support for the former regime. On Sunday, around 1,000 people protested in the capital Tripoli outside the congressional headquarters to demand that militias operating alongside the army end a partial siege of the town of Bani Walid, considered a major stronghold of former regime loyalists. They called for a peaceful solution to the standoff that has already sent families fleeing from the town in anticipation of a strike. *I