I 2A - Wednesday, December 4, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com I i EPArdlian Daily 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com ANDREW WEINER KIRBY VOIGTMAN Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4118 eat. 1202 734-418-4115eat. 1241 atweiter@michigatdaily.com kvoigman@michigandailycom U of Maryland Senate to examine marijuana policy A subcommittee of the Univer- sity of Maryland Student Senate will examine the policy of medi- cal marijuana on campus, The Diamondback reported Tuesday. The use of marijuana for medicinalor recreational purpos- es is banned on campus. Mikayla Hellwich, a senior horticulture and crop production major, pro- posed new legislation to the sen- ate that would allow the use of the drug on campus for medicinal purposes only. "I think that it's necessary to be compassionate for people who are sick. I know that this is con- sidered a taboo issue, but really it shouldn't be," Hellwich said. "It should be common sense that people who are sick should have access to the medicinetheyneed." Senate Chairman Vincent Novara noted that the examina- tion would go no further than using marijuana as a medicine. He said the senate has no inter- est in entertaining the idea of the drug for recreational purposes. University of Arkansas receives $3-million gift for Dept. of Chemical Engineering The Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Arkansas received a $3 million donation from alum Kevin Brown and his wife, Marie, The Arkan- sas Traveler reported Tuesday. The gift will be used to create an endowed department head chair within the College of Engi- neering. The donation allows the university to hire other profes- sors out of the budget, since the endowment head is not being paid from that source. This will result in a lower student-to-fac- ulty ratio. "This is a critical need, since endowed positions help us remain competitive with our peers," Chancellor G. David Gear- hart said in a press conference. "Kevin and Marie's giftwill make a tremendous impact within the College of Engineering." - RACHEL WADDELL Newsroom 734-418-4115 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com SpotslSection sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales dailydisplay@gma il.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaily.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com letters tothe Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Sectin photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales . classifed@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com 0 VIRGINIA LLANU/Uaily LIA senior Fernando Coello speaks ata student panel on the divisions in the LGBTQ+ community at the Michigan Union Tuesday. CRIME NOTES CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Not so stolen MCard fraud Percussion Discussion for WHERE: Fletcher Carport WHERE: Central Campus performance perfectionists WH EN: Monday at about 5:30 p.m. WHAT: A subject reported a bike theft in progress, University Police reported. When officers made contact with the alleged bike thief, they determined he was the owner of the bike. Recreation Building WHEN: Monday at about 5 p.m. WHAT: A subject tried to enter the facility using his father's MCard, University Police reported. The subject was warned and the card was confiscated. WHAT: The University of Michigan Percussion Studio end the semester with a juzz and world fusion concert. WHO: School of Music, Theatre & Dance WHEN: Today at 8 p.m. WHERE: Moore Building, McIntosh Theatre WHAT: Discuss strategies to manage perfectionist ten- dencies in school and work. WHO: Counseling and Psy- chological Services WHEN: Today from 4:15 p.m. to 5 p.m. WHERE: Michigan Union, CAPS Office Taken tickets Where's my WHERE: University Golf Course WHEN: Monday at about 9:15 a.m. WHAT: Four football tickets were stolen aboard a charter bus traveling between Lansing and Ann Arbor Nov. 2, University Police reported. There is a possible person of interest. wallet: WHERE: Michigan Sta- dium WHEN: Monday at about 4 p.m. WHAT: At wallet was reported stolen during Saturday's football game, University Police reported. Several charges were made nn+the -o-Amcredi; enrck Fracking policy Spanish discussion lunch break Students in Shanghai led the rankings in a global education sur- vey released Tuesday, CNN reported. The United States ranked 36th out of 65 coun- tries represented in the Organization for Economic Cooperation survey. Eco-friendly practices have flourished since University President Mary Sue Coleman launched an integrative assessment on sustainability in 2009. FOR MORE, SEE STATEMENT, INSIDE The most popular Black Friday purchase at Walmart were tow- els, NBC News reported. Between 6 p.m. on Thanks- giving evening through the following day, almost three million towels were sold in Walmart stores. EDITORIAL STAFF MatthewSlovin ManagingEditor mjslovin@michigandaily.com AdamRubenfireManagingNewsEditor arube@michigandaily.com SENIOR NEWS EDITORS: Alicia Adamzyk, Katie Burke, Peter Shahin, K.C. 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Ore copyis avaiable feeo charge toallreaders Addionalcopiesmay be pickedupattheoaily'sofficefor$2.Subscriptionsfor fal term. startingin September, via U.S mail are $110. Winter term January through April)is sirs, yealnglSpembrthroughApril)is $95.Uiversity afliate areutol a redued subi"on ra"eOn-campussrinrfa lltermare$35.Subscriptionsmuteprpaid. The Michigan Daily is amember of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. 0 WHAT: Join three profes- sors in a discussion on the Toxics Release Inventory and how disclosure of infor- mation can inform policy decisions. WHO: Center for Local, State and Urban Policy WHEN: Today from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. WHERE: Weill Hall, Annenberg Auditorium WHAT: Practice Spanish language skills during a brown bag lunch held each Wednesday. WHO: School of Nursing WHEN: Today from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. WHERE: 300 N. Ingalls Building, Nick's Cafe Union official: New York train engineer 'nodded' at controls Updated healthcare.gov gets mixed reviews in first week Questions about employee mount after speed determined factor in crash YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) - An engineer whose speeding com- muter train ran off the rails along a curve, killing four people, nod- ded at the controls just before the wreck, and by the time he caught himself it was too late, a union official said Tuesday. William Rockefeller "basically nodded," said Anthony Bottali- co, leader of the rail employees union, relating what he said the engineer told him. "He had the equivalent of what we all have when we drive a car," Bottalico said. "That is, you some- times have a momentary nod or whatever that might be. How long that lasts, I can't answer that." Rockefeller's lawyer did not return calls. During a late-after- noon news conference, federal investigators said they were still talking to Rockefeller, and they wouldn't comment on his level of alertness around the time of the Sunday morning wreck in the Bronx. Separately, however, two law enforcement officials said the engineer told police at the scene that his mind was wandering before he realized the train was in trouble and by then it was too late to do anything about it. One of the officials said Rockefeller described himself as being "in a daze" before the wreck. The officials, who were briefed on the engineer's comments, weren't authorized to discuss the investigation publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity. Questions about Rockefeller's role mounted rapidly after inves- tigators disclosed on Monday that the Metro-North Railroad train jumped the tracks after going into -H-, 0 a curve at 82 mph, or nearly three times the 30 mph speed limit. Dozens of people were hurt. "He caught himself, but he caught himself too late. ... He powered down, he put the train in emergency, but that was six seconds prior to derailment," Bot- talico said. Rockefeller, who was operating the train from the front car, was treated at a hospital for minor injuries and was released. National Transportation Safe- ty Board member Earl Weener repeated that it was too soon to say whether the accident was caused by human error. But he said investigators have found no problems with the brakes or sig- nals. Alcohol tests on the train's crew members were negative, and investigators were awaiting the results of drug tests, the NTSB official said. On the day of the crash, Rock- efeller was on the second day of a five-day work week, reporting at 5:04 a.m. after atypical nine-hour shift the day before, Weener said. "There's every indication that he would have had time to get full restorative sleep," Weener said. Weener didn't address spe- cifically what the engineer was doing in the hours before his shift started but said part of the inves- tigation will be creating a 72-hour timeline of his activities. Bottalico said Rockefeller "never said anything about not getting enough sleep." But he said the engineer had switched just weeks earlier from the night shift to the day shift, "so he did have a change in his hours and his cir- cadian rhythms with regard to sleep." The New York Police Depart- ment is conducting its own investigation, with help from the Bronx district attorney's office, in the event the derailment becomes a criminal case. Rockefeller, meanwhile, stayed out of sight. But his union and for- mer co-workers spoke up in his defense. FOR (AP) people ment's are gi the ui zippin tion p facing and ev The tion h impro on he. of No' first w update Brol in Utal of eve fully s erage, hour o cial ov naviga impro did or ple sig and W But zation hospit in Iow saw n, from which on. Am. of reve Health hospit said M tion's: did no ment o "We for to were v Crowe Mor visited 380,0( noon' technc Fe Sit ds acknowledge times had dropped to 1 second and error rates were under 1 e is still a work percent, according to figures from the Centers for Medicare in progress and Medicaid Services. "The system has been stable tT LAUDERDALE, Fla. all day," CMS communications - Counselors helping director Julie Bataille said use the federal govern- Tuesday, stressing they were online health exchange still continually updating the ving mixed reviews to site. pdated site, with some But Compuware Corp., g through the applica- which has been monitoring the rocess while others are site on thousands of personal the same old sputters computers around the coun- -en crashes. try, said several states still had Obama administra- response times of more than sad promised a vastly 8 seconds Tuesday morning. ved shopping experience Wisconsin's average response althcare.gov by the end time is over 18 seconds, accord- vember, and this is the ing to the company. -eek for users to test the Still, Michael Smith, a vice rd site. president for Compuware kers and online assisters Corp., says the site's opera- h said Monday that three tions have improved sig- ry four people success- nificantly. Their data shows igned up for health cov- 26 states had unacceptable on the online within an response times in late Octo- f logging in. A state offi- ber. He said the government -erseeing North Dakota's is likely measuring response tors said he had noticed times from a data center with vements in the site, as ultra-fast Internet speeds ganizations helping peo- that are not reflective of real- n up in parts of Alabama world conditions on user's isconsin. regular computers. staffers at an organi- Roberta Vann, a certified in South Florida and a application counselor at the al group with locations Hamilton Health Center, in 'a and Illinois said they Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, o major improvements said the site worked well for the federal website, her Monday morning but she 36 states are relying became frustrated later when the site went down. anda Crowell, director "You can get to a point, but nue cycle for UnityPoint it does not allow you to select h-Trinity, which has four any plans, you can't get eligi- als in Iowa and Illinois, bility (information). It stops onday that the organiza- there," she said. "The thought 15 enrollment counselors of it working as well as it was t see a marked improve- didn't last long." an the site. In South Florida, John e had very high hopes Foley and his team of navi- day, but those hopes gators were only able to -ery much quashed," said successfully enroll one of Al. a handful of return appli- re than 1 million people cants who came to their I the site Monday and office before glitches start- 10 browsed the site by ed, including wonky esti- Tuesday. Thanks to the mates for subsidy eligibility. ology fixes, response He worried about how they would fare with the rough- ly 50 other appointments scheduled later in the week. 0 Although frustrated, most were not deterred, he said. "These are people that have policies going away, who have health problems. These are people that are going to be very persistent," said Foley, an attorney and certified coun- selor for Legal Aid Society of Palm Beach County. Despite the Obama admin- istration's team of technicians working around the clock, it's not clear if the site will be able to handle the surge of appli- cants expected by the Dec. 23 deadline to enroll for cover- age starting at the beginning of the year. Many navigators also say they're concerned the bad publicity plaguing the troubled website will prevent people from giving the system another try. Federal health officials acknowledged the website is still a work in progress. They've also acknowledged the importance of fixing back- end problems as insurers struggle to process applica- tions because of incomplete or inaccurate data. Even when consumers think they've gone through the whole process, their information may not get to the insurer without prob- lems. In less than an hour Mon- day, Starla Redmon, 58, of Paris, Ill., was able to success- fully get into a health plan with help from an enrollment counselor. Redmon, who jug- gles two part-time jobs and has been uninsured for four years, said she was surprised the website worked so well after hearing reports about its problems. "Everything she typed in, it went through," said Red- mon, who chose a bronze plan and will pay about $75 a month after a tax credit. "It was the cheapest plan I could go with." 0 0. tr