The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2A - Wednesday, November 14, 2012 2A - Wednesday. November14, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailv.com JOG TN THE MOONLIGHT (94t atdiigan DAMl 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.niichigandaily.com JOSEPH LICHTERMAN RACHEL GREINETZ Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1252 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 lichterinan@michigandaily.com rmgrein@michigandaily.com It takes a village If the conventional sum- director of the] mer internship and research ect, said the g project doesn't appeal to you, last year through the Kenya Project is here to Entrepreneurshi help. sity initiatived Each year, the Kenya Proj- encourage devel ect allows a group of stu- implementation dents to create and develop business proposa business solutions to the Zhao said the social and economic prob- community w: lems faced by the citizens of options focusedc Kithoka, Kenya. As Univer- with the causec sity undergraduate students social impact."I travel to Kithoka for three for internationa weeks during the summer, drive to improv Kenyan locals and students conditions of pe work together in developing third world help sustainable entrepreneurial a platform wher solutions to their problems. ness majors cou Lucy Zhao, founder and skills to bringa CRIME NOTES Missing meds WHERE: Briarwood Family Practice WHEN: Monday at 1:30 p.m. WHAT: Several medical items have been discovered missingfrom the Briarwood Forced e Family Pratice, University Police reported. There are no burglary suspects as of now, and the investigation is pending. Kenya Proj- coup began h MPowered p, a Univer- designed to opment -and of student als. MPowered as lacking on "business of making a Her passion i issues and e the living eople in the ed to create re non-busi- ld use their about social change. "A lot of times people think that entrepreneurs are business people, but this is not necessary," Zhao said. "Some of the greatest entre- preneurs I know are involved with medical and tech start- .ups." The Kenya Project allows students to design their own experiences. It also allows for the opportunity to trans- late their various concen- trations and passions into. a solution -model, applying their knowledge to a bigger cause. Members of the L -AMRUTHA SIVKUMAR complete with he CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Grad School CORRECTIONS success panel Newsroom 734-418-4115 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales display@m ichigandaily.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaily.com News Tips newslmnichigandaily.com Letters to the Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classified@michigandaily.com Finance finance@mnichigandaily.com .6 University MRun team take a night run on campus, adlamps and reflective vests. itry ,-,--A TT7 Once was lost but now found WHERE: Palmer Drive Parking Structure WHEN: Monday at about 6:40 p.m. WHAT: A GPS device was taken from a parked vehicle, University Police reported. The owner later found the device. WH ERE: Northwood IV WHEN: Monday at about 9 p.m. WHAT: A resident reported that she found her security chain broken off her door frame, University Police reported. There was no evidence of entry. WHAT: Faculty panelists will share their personal experiences and offering suggestions for success. WHO: Center for the Edu- cation of Women WHEN: Today at noon WHERE: Rackham Graduate School, 4th Floor Assembly Hall Pharmacy lecture WHAT: James Galloway, acting regional director of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Service, will discuss Million Hearts - a public and private-sec- tor partnership dedicated to heart disease prevention. WHO: College of Pharmacy WHEN: Today at noon WHERE: Rackham Graduate School, Ampithe- ater " A Nov.13 article in The Michigan Daily ("SACUA. inquires into increase in grievances filedby fac- ulty') misstated which meetings were poorly attended. Subcommittee meetings, rather than SACUA meetings proper have low attendence. " A Nov. 12 article in The Michigan Daily ("Universityhelps mili- taryfamilies") incor- rectly stated that there is a $160 cost to par- ticipants forthe Home- Front Strong program. The program is free. A former high school valedictorian and University of Michigan student was accused of stabbing his mother to death in the family's home, ABC News reporteid. Koch Pyne was found dead in the family's garage by her now ti-year-old daughter. 2 Twenty-somethings spend a disproportion- ate amount of money on food and alcohol. How do your spending habits stack up? ,> FOR MORE, SEE THE STATEMENT INSIDE A man was arrested after police found his 18-month-old daughter locked in a dog cage while he was asleep and intoxicated, ABC News reported. A neighbor called police after finding the oldest child outside the family home and the residents unresponsive. 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One copy is available free of charge to aI readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily's office for $2. Subscriptions for fail term, starting inSeptembeir a U.S.mailare $110. winter term (anuary through Aprilis $11s, yearlong (September through April) is $19s. University affiliates are subect to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press 4 Florida socialite started Petraeus investigation r Threats from Paula Broadwell triggered concerns from FBI TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - If you were to diagram the increasingly tangled sex scandal surround- ing former CIA Director David Petraeus, nearly all lines would lead back to one person: Jill Kel- ley, a 37-year-old Tampa social- ite who hosted parties for the nation's top military brass. The raven-haired woman's complaint about anonymous, threatening email triggered the investigation that led to Petrae- us' downfall. And now she is at the center of an investigation of the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan over alleged "inap- propriate communications" between the two. Kelley is a close friend'of the Petraeus family, and photo- graphs circulating the Internet show her posing for pictures at parties, sometimes in short dresses with Petreaus, his wife, and sometimes her husband, a cancer surgeon. Kelley served as a sort of unofficial social ambas- sador for U.S. Central Command in Tampa, hosting parties for the general when he was command- er there from 2008-10. She met Gen. John Allen while he was at Central Command, and now investigators are looking at some of the 20,000-plus pages of documents and emails between Allen and Kelley that have been described as "flirtatious," according to a senior defense official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to discuss the case publicly. Allen denies that he has engaged in any wrongdoing. For her part, Kelley has kept a low profile since Petraeus' affair with his biographer, Paula Broadwell, became public after Kelley told an FBI agent that she had received a threatening S U n-O K U email, which later turned out tobe from Broadwell. Investigators are still look- ing into whether any classified documents were ever leaked or in the wrong hands. Outside Kelley's stately, two-story brick home in South Tampa, a horde of media gath- ered. A woman believed to be Kelley was seen inside the large windows of the house, which has a half-dozen white columns, black shutters and a neatly mani- cured lawn. A silver Mercedes 5500 in the driveway has a license plate marked "Honorary Counsel," perhaps belonging to Kelley's twin sister, Natalie Kha- wam, who is an attorney also lives at the home. Ken Walters, aneighbor, called the Kelleys good friends, but said he doesn't see them all that often. Walters said he went to a party the couple had to celebrate their first son's baptism. The Kelleys have two other children. "Natalie and her sister, they're certainly not shrinking violets," he said. Jill Kelley's brother David Khawam told WPVI-TV in Phila- delphia on Monday night that details of the allegations surged fast. "It's happened extremely quickly, we're talking 12, 24 hours, maximum, since we've found out about this. It's a shock. We're trying to figure out where the pieces are falling right now," Khawam said in the interview done at his offices in Westmont, N.J. He said that his family left Lebanon for Huntingdon Valley in Montgomery County in Penn- sylvania in the 1970s to escape turmoil and fighting. His par- ents opened a Middle Eastern food restaurant in Vorhees, N.J., called Sahara. "My family is very patriotic; we came from Lebanon at a young age," he said. At some point, the Jill Kelley married and moved to Florida with her husband, who works at a cancer clinic in the area. Leaders plan to cede national sovereignty to fix euro banking and fiscal crises BRUSSELS (AP) - Euro- pean finance ministers inched toward strengthening their banking sectors and the man- agement of their economies at a meeting in Brussels on Tues- day, but put off decisions on comprehensive solutions to the region's financial crisis. Weakness, in the banking sector and inadequate moni- toring of national budgets were among the prime causes of Europe's three-year crisis, which has seen several coun- tries struggle with too much debt. Fixing those areas is cru- cial not only to ending the cur- rent crisis but also preventing a repeat. European leaders have agreed, in theory, to cede sig- nificant amounts of sovereignty to fix those problems. As part of this plan, the European Cen- tral Bank will be put in charge of all of the banks in the 17 countries that use the euro by as early as next year. And they have proposed giving the Euro- pean Commission, the Euro- pean Union's executive arm, the power to review and even reject their national budgets to prevent against overspending. But actually implementing those ideas has proved difficult. Germany, for instance, is wary of ceding control over its banks while Britain is nervous that a coordinated eurozone banking sector will have a greater say in discussions over regulations that apply to all 27 nations of the EU. And several countries are concerned about the voter backlash that would be sparked by handing too much power to the Commission. After months of heightened activity over banking and eco- nomic oversight - a move that markets and investors have largely welcomed' - it seems the EU has now put on the brakes while it hamniers out the details. Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter said, for instance, that creatinga single supervisor for all the banks may require a time-consuming treaty change. That would knock the EU way off its timeline of getting a supervisor at least partially in place next year. "I don't want to speed up without having discussed the best solution," she said. "Speed kills when we don't have the best solution." It's unclear how long mar- kets will wait, though. official figures due later this week are expected to show the eurozone fell into recession - technical- ly defined as two consecutive quarters of economic contrac- tion - inthethird quarter. Even Germany, the continent's larg- est economy, is slowing, as was evident in an unexpected drop in the ZEW survey of investor confidence on Tuesday. "There is still the same lack of urgency that has sent the markets into a frenzy on numerous occasions in the past few years," said James Hughes, chief market analyst, for Alpari. Meanwhile, Spain's banks desperately need an infusion of cash and are hoping to get it from the European bailout fund. But they won't be allowed to until they are under the watchful eye of the ECB. So any delay in setting up the supervi- sor system would delay a Span- ish rescue. Hundreds of protesters were convergingon the Greek capital's main square outside Parliament on Sunday evening, as lawmakers debated the 2013 budget, which includes cuts demanded by international creditors in order for them to approve the next vital batch of rescue loans. EU conference on bankingto expose national policy dvideS