The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 28, 2013 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, February 28, 2013 - 5A ZARAGON From Page 1A ed parties in September 2012, said when they awoke, they were being sexually assaulted. In the most recent case, the student reported that the suspect inap- propriately grabbed her. University Police spokeswom- an Diane Brown said the crime alert was sent out after the stu- dent in the Feb. 15 case agreed to file a report with the Ann Arbor Police Department, which has jurisdiction over the case because it occurred off campus. The student had initially report- ed the assault to a University employee, but did not want to file a police report. The suspect has been identi- fied as a 31-year-old Asian male with short black hair and brown eyes. He is between 5'6" and S'7" tall and weighs 140 pounds. According to the description, he looks younger than his actual age. The two other students have not filed a report with AAPD, but they did report the assaults to University employees. Brown said Ann Arbor Police have made initial contact with the suspect, but he has not been arrested at this point in the investigation. LSA senior Guanheng Wu, a resident of the seventh floor, said the reported apartment hosts parties regularly. Wu's roommate, LSA senior Brian Cutler, doesn't know any of the residents of the reported apartment, adding that people on the floor generally keep to them- selves. LSA junior Brian Kulick, another resident of the seventh floor said he was surprised an incident like this could occur in his apartment building, but added people should be careful at parties regardless of the par- ty's location. "Everyone should take away that we need to keep an eye out for each other at parties," Kulick said. LSA and Kinesiology junior Mallory Campbell, an eighth- floor resident of Zaragon Place said she believes building man- agement should evict the suspect in order to ensure the safety of the buildings residents. "It's pretty scary to think that someone living in my apartment is sexually assaulting people," Campbell said. "It's a little bit scary to think that I could be on an elevator with him." - The University's Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center is open Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to Sp.m. in the Michigan Union. It also offers a 24-hour crisis line at (734) 936-3333. - Daily News Editor Katie Burke contributed reporting. SELF-CARE From Page 1A with him that can keep him from needing to ever have to use drugs again?"' he continues. "(People believe) once an addict, always an addict." Trish Meyer, program direc- tor for outreach and education at the Depression Center, said other events during the conference focused specifically on actions students could take to cope with depression. "The closing panel was about the new online tools that stu- dents can use for their self-care that incorporate strategies from cognitive behavioral therapy," Meyer said. "These are sort of coping skills that students can use to help manage depression or even to just manage your every- day stress rather than just clini- cal depression or anxiety." Meyer said the conference provided a unique opportu- nity for the department and 21 University schools and depart- ments to work together to raise awareness about self-care. She believes the support from the community shows a Universi- ty-wide understanding of the prominence of depression on college campuses. "The reason (the schools and departments donated money) was so that we could offer free registration to all students," Meyer said. "I think it's really a testament to the University of Michigan campus that differ- ent departments recognize the importance of recognizing this issue." Sharon Smith, director of career and counseling services at Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Mich., has previously attended the annual conference. Once again, she said the conference proved useful for mental health professionals. "It's really good every time," Smith said. "We are already doing everything that they have talked about in the sessions (at Aquinas College), just in a small- er budget. It's good to be assured that we're doing what we should be doing." LEO From Page 1A been meeting generally weekly since starting talks in Novem- ber," he said. "My understanding is they're making good progress" Fitzgerald stressed that the negotiations are best left for the negotiators. "It's our approach that it's important that negotiations take place at the bargaining table," Fitzgerald said.-"It's really impor- tant that we honor that process and not talk about what may be proposed or what may be dis- cussed outside the bargaining table." According to Robinson, LEO wants to have a contract ham- INTERNET From Page 1A College also experienced techni- cal issues. Elwood Downing, a spokes- man for Merit, said the compa- ny's technicians determined the source of the issue was at one of Merit's core routers located in Chicago, where Merit engineers were able to determine the core router was not forwarding the packets to the greater Internet. Once the company discovered the issue, Downing said engineers LOANS From Page 1A ing plans for policymakers to consider that might help avoid a repeat of the mortgage meltdown for today's student loan borrow- ers." Cordray and Secretary of Edu- cation Arne Duncan submitted a report to Congress last July that showed there are more than $8 billion in defaulted private stu- dent loan balances. The report mered out at least two weeks before the new restrictions on unions take effect in Michigan on March 25 because members must wait two weeks to vote on a con- tract. A resolution proposed Tuesday night in support of "equal pay for equal work" was stalled on the floor of the CSG assembly and won't be voted on until at least March 12 - the next time the assembly meets. Resolutions require two reads before they can be passed. The second read of a resolution is held at a later meeting, and a motion that the resolution be put on its second read that same meeting - which requires two-thirds sup- port of the assembly - did not pass. Robinson said he felt the administration held the opinion of CSG in high esteem and having the support of the assembly could only have helped LEO's cause. "Central Student Government, as the representative body of U of M students, could have spo- ken with some authority about how students feel so, I think that would have influenced the administration," he said. He added that had he known the procedures of CSG, he would have submitted the resolution earlier. Rackham representative Pat- rick O'Mahen, a member of the Graduate Employees' Organiza- tion, was frustrated by the delay. While he noted that just because students voted against a second read, that didn't mean that the assembly did not support the resolution. Still, he noted that the time-sensitive nature of the reso- lution would have made a vote worthwhile. The resolution drew a fair amount of discussion from the assembly and multiple represen- tatives said they weren't comfort- able voting on a resolution they had just read. Still, even CSG President Man- ish Parikh - despite not having a vote in the assembly - weighed in on the issue, arguing that a second read should be held. He said he trusted the judgment of O'Mahen and Rackham repre- sentative Ben Alterman - two of the most vocal proponents of the resolution. Whistle -blower lawsuit claims Navy kickbacks Scheme claimed charges were first brought in February 2011. Mariano, of to go back as far as South Arlington, Va., remained 2004, first filed in his job until 2011, according to court filings. He has pleaded in 2006 not guilty in the criminal case. His lawyer, Robert Corrente, said his client had not yet been PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - served by the lawsuit. He would A recently unsealed whistle- not comment on the allegations blower lawsuit claims a former contained in the lawsuit. civilian Navy employee from Dutta-Gupta and two others Virginia and a now-defunct have pleaded guilty in federal Navy contractor engaged in a court in Rhode Island in the bribery and kickback scheme criminal case. Dutta-Gupta going back to at least 2004. admitted paying $8 million in The lawsuit, first filed in bribes over more than a decade. a federal court in Georgia in His lawyer did not return a 2006, predates by more than message seeking comment on four years criminal charges the lawsuit. brought by federal prosecutors Patrick Nagle, a former exec- in Rhode Island in 2011 that utive for ASFT, pleaded guilty allege a similar scheme by some to charges of conspiracy to of the same people cost the gov- commit bribery for signing off ernment $10 million. on false and inflated invoices A spokeswoman for the U.S. that were submitted by subcon- Department of Defense would tractors even though he knew not comment on why the con- the work had largely not been tractor and Navy employee done. Another man, Russell were allowed to continue their Spencer, has admitted acting alleged criminal conduct for as a middleman for funneling years after authorities were kickbacks to Mariano through first alerted to it. a company he owned. He plead- The lawsuit says the allega- ed guilty to conspiracy to com- tions were reported in May mit bribery. 2006 to the Defense Depart- None of the three has been ment and the U.S. attorney for sentenced. northern Georgia. Other filings Mariano's father, Ralph say the government was decid- Mariano Jr., of North Provi- ing whether to intervene in dence, R.I., and his girlfriend, 2007 but had not yet completed Mary O'Rourke, a former exec- an investigation. utive at ASFT, have pleaded not A spokeswoman for the guilty to the federal criminal Department of Defense said charges. The younger Mariano she could not comment on and O'Rourke are charged with investigations, while the U.S. counts including conspiracy, attorney's office in Georgia theft of government property referred questions to its coun- and wire fraud. Mariano Jr., terpart office in Rhode Island. who is in his 80s, is accused of A spokesman in Rhode Island tax evasion. would not comment. The whistle-blower suit Both cases center on alleged was first brought in May wrongdoing by former civilian 2006 by Rekha and Karan Navy employee Ralph Mari- Vasudeva, who say they ano and Anjan Dutta-Gupta, were involved in setting up founder of the Navy contractor a Roswell, Ga., company Advanced Solutions for Tomor- that was used to issue ficti- row, or ASFT, which had offices tious invoices to ASFT and a in Georgia and Rhode Island company owned by Spencer. and has since gone out of busi- It makes a number of other ness. allegations against other peo- The criminal case and the ple and companies, includ- whistle-blower suit say Maria- ing about bid-rigging in U.S. no, who worked for the Naval Army contracts. An Army Undersea Warfare Center, had spokesman said he could not power to add or refuse millions comment on matters under of dollars in payments to con- investigation or on open law- tractors and used that power to suits. orchestrate a scheme in which While the criminal case he would approve payments to accuses Mariano and Dutta- ASFT, which would then fun- Gupta of wrongdoing back nel some of the money back to to 1996 and makes similar him and others through shell allegations to the 2006 whis- corporations. tle-blower suit, many of the ASFT held $120 million specific claims in the cases in Navy contracts when the are different. -\ov3D A moved everything over manually to another path. Rob Belinski, a representative for Information and Technol- ogy Services operations, con- firmed Tuesday that students on University computers could access CTools, umich.edu and Wolverine Access because they are housed on the University's intranet, which is powered by local servers. However, any non- University websites were inac- cessible. Although University e-mail could be accessed, it appeared that no mail could be sent or received. Downing said the problem only affected a small percent- age of people served by Merit Network, as the malfunction occurred after normal busi- ness hours. Merit engineers are reviewing the incident further to determine if itwas a hardware or software malfunction at the core router. LSA sophomore Jeffrey Butler said he had three midterms com- ing up this week and was "livid" when he lost access to his cours- es' resources on the CTools web- site Tuesday night. He said he usually studies late at night and the Internet malfunction was "extremely inconvenient." "I got through it, but it unnerved me a lot," Butler said. LSA freshman Ryne Menhen- nick said being unable to access CTools was an issue for him the night before he had an exam. He said he solved the complication by going to the Union and using site computers to print materials. "It made studying for mid- terms difficult ... I was pretty stressed out," Menhennick said. -Daily News Editors Alicia Adamczyk and Taylor Wizner and Daily Staff Reporter Danielle Stoppelmann contributed reporting. also noted that because private loan repayment options are less flexible than federal ones, bor- rowers are having a more difficult time paying these loans off. The CFPB says it's beginning to gather information on the stu- dent loan burdens, the options available for students to lower monthly loan payments, exam- ples of alternative payment pro- grams in other markets and "the most effective mechanisms for communicating with distressed borrowers." Pam Fowler, the executive director of the University's Office of Financial Aid, said in an e-mail interview that the CFPB's intentions are identical to that of the Pay As You Earn program, but stressed that both programs are extremely important for the many students that have taken out loans. "There is so much informa- tion out there about college, the cost of college and student debt, that it would make most students think twice or three times about going to college at all-and that would be the true tragedy here," Fowler wrote. Fowler said effective commu- nication with borrowers is essen- tial for successfulloan repayment, and the source of such a message is especially critical. "If (the message) comes from the government, I fear students ho are in trouble will think it is not a helpful message but a punitive one and ignore it," Fowler said. "The message has to come from someone viewed as non-threatening by the stu- dent and I doubt that is the gov- ernment." Frat raises funds LIKE JOURNALISM AND CHEAP WINE? JOIN THE DAILY! for pledge surgery Emerson College's Phi Alpha Tau to pay for gender change procedure BOSTON (AP) - A college fraternity in Boston has raised more than twice the money needed to pay for a new pledge's gender transition surgery. The Phi Alpha Tau frater- nity at Emerson College began raising money for sophomore Donnie Collins early this month after his insurance com- pany wouldn't cover his breast removal surgery. Their initial goal was $4,800, but dona- tions had exceeded $17,000 by Wednesday afternoon, more than double the procedure's $8,000 price. In a note posted this week with a thank-you video on You- Tube, Collins said the surgery with a Springfield plastic sur- geon would be scheduled this week. "I don't even know what to say because the words 'thank you' don't do it anymore," Col- lins, 20, said on the video. "I know that for me, person- ally, feeling guilty and feeling like, 'Am I worth all this?' has been huge theme of my exis- tence in general," he said. "You just have to let it go because if people want to help, you have to let them help you." Extra money donated in the ongoing campaign will go to a group that gives grants for sim- ilar surgeries for transgender people. I: