The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, February 4, 2013 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, February 4, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS ALLEGAN, Mich. 15 inches of snow in West Michigan, more expected Western Michigan is clean- ing up after a winter storm that brought 15 inches or more of snow in some areas, and the National Weather Service says up to 10 inches of fresh snow is possible through Monday night. The weather service says parts of Allegan, Kent, Ottawa and Van Buren counties got more than 15 inches between Wednesday night and Saturday night. It says fresh snow will start falling Sun- day, bringing two to four inches inland and localized accumula- tions of up to 10 inches along Lake Michigan. In populous southeastern Michigan, two to three inches of fresh snow is expected by late Monday. BOSTON Bus hits overpass in Boston, more than 30 injured A charter bus carrying high school students from Pennsylva- nia crashed when it attempted to pass under a low bridge in Bos- ton on Saturday night, injuring more than 30 people, four seri- ously, and leaving some trapped for more than an hour, authori- ties said. The students had been in the area to visit Harvard University. The bus, which was carrying 42 students and adult chaperones, was heading back to the Phila- delphia area when it struck an overpass on Soldier's Field Road, a major crosstown road, at around 7:30 p.m., Massachusetts State Police said. Authorities said the Calvary Coach bus did not belong on the road, where a 10-foot height limit is in place and over-sized vehicles are not authorized. State Police said the driver, whose name was not released, "failed to heed signs" warning of the height limit and will likely be cited for an overheight violation. LOS ANGELES School reforms bring backlash in Los Angeles Thefederalgovernment'spush for drastic reforms at chronically low achieving schools has led to takeovers by charter operators, overhauls of staff and curricu- lum, and even school shutdowns across the country. It's also generated a grow- ing backlash among mostly low- income, minority communities. Some residents see the reforms as not only disruptive in strug- gling neighborhoods, but also as civil rights violations since turn- around efforts primarily affect black and Latino students. CAIRO Riot police 0 beating caught on camera in Egypt An Egyptian man who was beaten and dragged naked by riot police during a violent pro- test changed his story on Sunday, telling prosecutors that secu- rity forces harmed him - a day after he accused protesters of undressing and assaulting him. The beating was caught on camera by The Associated Press, and the video was broadcast live on Egyptian television late Friday as protests raged in the streets outside the presidential palace. The AP video showed police trying to bundle the naked man into a police van after beat- inghim. The beating prompted a rare statement ,of regret from the Interior Ministry, which prom- ised to investigate the attack. The president's office said it was pained by the images and called the assault "shocking." -Compiled from Daily wire reports Activist calls for increased prison reform Speaker says current system stands as new form of slavery By AARON GUGGENHEIM DailyStaffReporter Late Friday evening, Robert King, a former member of the Black Panther Party, spoke to a crowded room in Rackham Auditorium on what he said are the inequities of the American criminal justice system and the prison-industrial complex. King, weathered and soft- spoken, has spent much of his life in the corrections system, 29 in solitary confinement. To speak about prison reform, he has traveled to 20 different countries and 47 states to speak about prison reform. He also has spoken about the need to release Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace, both of whom are still being held in an Angola in soli- tary confinement after 36 years for the alleged murder of a pris- on guard. Woodfox, Wallace and King, the subjects of several documentaries, are collectively known as the Angola Three. King said that his experience growing up in New Orleans in the 1950s was an experience in systematic racism: "Igrewup in aculture orsoci- ety where some people where considered second-class citi- zens," King said. "Every person of color was considered a suspect when a crime was committed." As a black 22-year-old with time served, King became the suspect for a local robbery soon after release from a stint in pris- on. Despite not matching the description of the perpetrator, he was arrested and eventually sentenced to 35 years in prison.. "I felt that the system, to put it in a six-letter word, was rot- ten," King said. "I began to see that it was time to take matters into my own hands ... I was not against the system, the system was against me." King escaped from prison once and when he was recap- tured, King said he began his involvement with the Black Pan- ther Party because it advocated for reform of the criminal jus- tice system and for unequivocal equal treatment of black people. Reflecting on his time in Angola, King said the prison sys- tem was comparable to slavery in the manner in which it dehu- manized him and other inmates. "I don't think people really understand the impactof prisons ... there is a little bit of madness in prison," he said. "All parts of prison demoralize and dehu- manize." King said he survived prison because he became politicized on the topic of prison reform and strove not to let the prison sys- tem impact his mental health as it did for so many others in soli- tary confinement. "I was impacted by Angola. I must admit that everybody was to some degree," he said. "(But) I was determined not to let it impact me the way it impacted other people." Law School student Gabe Newland, symposium direc- tor for the Michigan Journal of Race and Law, helped organize the event with student group Human Rights Through Educa- tion. The event was a prelude to a symposium on solitary confine- ment that was held Saturday. Newland said King was brought to speak because of the growing discussion in the pris- on-reform movement on how solitary confinement constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. He added that many states are coming around to eliminating solitary confinement as a cost- saving measure. "(We wanted) to bring togeth- er people who look at this prob- lem from different angles," Newland said. Reform of the prison system is something that will benefit soci- ety as a whole, he added. "I think all of us have a stake in what's going on here," Newland said. "What we do to people who we are punishing for crimes says a lot about who we are as a society." LSA junior Ciarra Ross said she was appreciative of the event because of how it fit in with the current LSA theme semester "Understanding Race." "It was definitely necessary ... I definitely appreciate it quite a bit," Ross said. Ross said she agreed with King's description of the pris- on system as a continuation of slavery. "Slavery has just taken a new form and this is a reality that slavery still exists." General Motors Chief Executive G. Mustafa Mohatarem talks about the auto industry markets abroad at the Asian business conference Friday. GM exec. speaksat23rd annual Asian business event E em To Asia B eral M Musta future his ke of nea evenin Hos from s campu panels expert countr and Ja financ nology Foc autom Mohat look f tradin highlig try's marke "If. xecutive notes countries that are now 'rich,' auto industries played a very uto industry's key role in them becoming rich," Mohatarem said. "As per capita erging markets grows, the demand for transpor- tation grows with it. The two are By KASEY COX interlinked." Daily StaffReporter In his address, Mohatarem presented graphs and charts kick off the 23rd annual illustrating how GM observes usiness Conference, Gen- trends - population trends - and totors chief economist G. decides where they want to go fa Mohatarem debated the next. However, poverty, politi- of the Asian economy in cal instability and a countries' ynote address to a crowd changing economic policies must rly 100 people on Friday be taken into account, he said. g. "Just because there is a large ;ted by a mixed board. population, it doesn't mean it's chools and colleges across going to take off," Mohatarem is, the conference also had said. on Saturday that included Mohatarem said there will be speakers on regions and challenges for China as intra- ies including China, India Asian trade grows and China pan, as well as experts on continues to allow North Amer- e, entrepreneurship, tech- ica and Europe to dominate their rand transportation. export market. using mostly on the "If you look at discussions in otive industry in China, the 1980s, they often asked when arem discussed what to Japan would pass the U.S.," or when investing in and Mohatarem said. "Now we are g with foreign nations. He seeing the same discussion with ghted that the auto indus- China." importance in emerging On Friday, the audience rep- ts, especially in Asia. resented a variety of young you look at most of the professionals, faculty and lead- ers of Asia and other multina- tional companies. Among them, undergraduate LSA and Busi- ness School students listened and expressed their excitement about the Saturday panels. LSA freshman Zach Wloch said that the description of the China panel, though it is a vague topic, captivated his interest. "I came here just to find out more aboutwhat the futureholds for markets in Asia and to learn more about business as a whole," Wloch said. "It was interesting it gave me a different perspective on different topics. I didn't really know much about the topic of automotive markets in China and other Asian countries. It was more learning new things." Ross masters student Muriel Makarim was co-chair confer- ence organizer and said she took away that it's crucial to adapt to various cultures within Asia from Saturday's ASEAN/finance panel speaker, Zachary Emig, director of securitized product trading at Deutsche Bank. "There is no one strategy to do business in Asia since every country is so different," Makarim said. "Companies need to be aware of that to be successful." Bus driver fatally shot . Details emerge about 65-year-old alleged shooter MIDLAND CITY, Ala. (AP) - As an Alabama standoff and hostage drama marked a sixth day Sunday, more details emerged about the suspect at the center, with neighbors and officials painting a picture of an isolated man estranged from his family. Authorities say Jim Lee Dykes, 65 - a decorated Viet- nam-era veteran known as Jimmy to neighbors - gunned down a school bus driver and abducted a 5-year-old boy from the bus, taking him to anunder- ground bunker on his rural property. The driver, 66-year- old Charles Albert Poland Jr., was buried Sunday. Dykes, described as a loner who railed against the govern- ment, lives up a dirt road out- side this tiny hamlet north of Dothan in the southeastern corner of the state. His home is just off the main road north to the state capital of Montgomery, about 80 miles away. The FBI said in a statement Sunday that authorities con- tinue to have an open line of communication with Dykes. The little boy requested Cheez- Its and a red Hot Wheels car, both of which were delivered to the bunker, a separate state- ment said. Authorities had said they also were delivering medi- cine and other comfort items, and that Dykes was making the child as comfortable as possible. In the nearby community of Ozark on Sunday, more than 500 people filed into the Civic Center to pay a final tribute to Poland, who was being hailed as a hero for protecting the other children on the school bus before he was shot Tuesday. Poland is now "an angel who is watching over" the little boy, said Dale County School Superintendent Donny Bynum, who read letters written by three students who had ridden on Poland's bus. "You didn't deserve to die but you died knowing you kept everyone safe," one child wrote. Outside the funeral, school buses from several counties lined the funeral procession route. The buses had black rib- bons tied to their side mirrors. Dykes grew up in the Dothan area. Mel Adams, a Midland City Council member who owns the lot where reporters are gath- ered, said he has known Dykes since they were ages 3 and 4. He said Dykes has a sister and a brother, but that he is estranged from his family. Adams said he didn't know what caused the falling-out, but that he knew Dykes "had told part of his family to go to hell." Midland City Mayor Virgil Skipper said Dykes' sister is in a nursing home. Adams said that law enforcement officers have talked to Dykes' family mem- bers and advised them not to speak with reporters, and that officers told his sister there was nothing she could do to help the child in the bunker. Session 1: May 28 -June 27 Session 11: July 2 -August 6 " Day and evening classes - Live on campus at three convenient New York locations .Competitive tuition rates * Credits transfer easily bMonth-long study a broad options