The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, December 9, 2013 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, December 9, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Regional group OKs $2.3B plan to widen I-94, I-75 A consortium of southeast- ern Michigan governments has endorsed a $2.3 billion plan to widen two stretches of Inter- states 75 and 94 serving Detroit and its suburbs. The commission of the South- east Michigan Council of Gov- ernments voted 24-7 Friday to proceed with plans to add lanes to I-94 north of downtown Detroit and I-75 in the city's northern suburbs. The vote means that plan- ners can hire a project manager to proceed with engineering studies and contact with those affected by the projects, Michi- gan Department of Transporta- tion spokesman Rob Morosi told MLive.com. Opponents say the projects will encourage even more sub- urban sprawl in metropolitan Detroit. PHILADELPHIA Storm along East Coast dumps snow, snarls traffic A powerful storm that crept across the country dropped snow, freezing rain and sleet on the Mid-Atlantic region and headed northeast Sunday, turning NFL playing fields in Pennsylvania into winter wonderlands, dump- ing a foot of snow in Delaware and threatening a messy Monday commute in the northeast corri- dor. The storm forced the cancel- lation of thousands of flights across the U.S. and slowed traffic on roads, leading to a number of accidents, including a fatal crash on the Pennsylvania Turnpike near Morgantown that led to a series of fender-benders involv- ing 50 cars that stranded: some: motorists for up to seven hours. More than two dozen vehicles were involved in another series of crashes on nearby Interstate 78. SAN FRANCISCO Transformation project planned for Mich. ski hill Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra speaks on Thai TV pool Monday in Bangkok, Thailand. Yingluck said that she will dissolve the lower house of Parliament and call elections to calm the country's deepening political crisis. Thai parliament dissolved as PM calls for elections Surprise move comes as protestors threaten govt. overthrow BANGKOK (AP) - Thailand's prime minister announced Monday she will dissolve the lower house of Parliament and call elections in an attempt to calm the country's deepening political crisis. The surprise move came as 100,000 protest- ers vowing to overthrow her government marched through the streets of Bangkok for a "final showdown." Prime Minister Yingluck Shi- nawatra's appeared emotional and her voice shook as she spoke in a nationally televised address Monday morning. "After listening to opinions from all sides, I have decided to request a royal decree to dis- solve Parliament," Yingluck said, breaking into regular pro- graming. "There will be new elections according to the demo- cratic system." She said the Election Com- mission would set a date "as soon as possible." It was unclear whether the move would ease the country's. political standoff, which deep- ened Sunday after the main opposition party resigned from the legislature en masse. Pro- test leader Suthep Thaugsuban has repeatedly said that calling fresh elections would not be enough to end the conflict, and he made no immediate comment on Yingluck's announcement. Police estimated that about 100,000 protesters were out on the streets of the Thai capital. Thailand has been plagued by political turmoil since the army toppled Yingluck's broth- er Thaksin in a 2006 coup. In broad terms, the conflict pits the Thai elite and the educated middle-class against Thaksin's power base in the countryside, which benefited from populist policies designed to win over the rural poor. "We will rise up. We will walk on every street in the coun- try. We will not be going home again," Suthep said Sunday. His supporters have occupied the Finance Ministry and part of a vast government complex for more than a week. "The people who will be going home empty- handed are those in the Thaksin regime." Many feared the day could end violently when demon- strators converge from nine locations on Yingluck's office at Government House. More than 60 Thai and international schools in Bangkok have closed as a precaution. As Yingluck spoke, long col- umns of protesters paralyzed traffic on major Bangkok boule- vards. They filled a major four- lane road in the city's central business district, waving flags, blowing whistles and holding a huge banner that said, "Get Out Shinawatra." Since the latest unrest began last month, at least five people have been killed and at least 289 injured. Violence ended sud- denly last week as both sides paused to celebrate the birthday of the nation's revered king, who turned 86 Thursday. The crisis boiled over after Yingluck's ruling party tried to ram a controversial amnesty bill through the legislature. Critics say it was designed mainly to bring back Thaksin, who lives in self-imposed exile in Dubai to avoid jail time for a corruption conviction he says was politi- cally motivated. Abhisit Vejjajiva, the leader of the Democrat party and a former premier, said Yingluck's government had become "ille- gitimate" since then, and his party had no choice but to pull out of the lower house. The Democrats held 153 of the 500 seats in the legislative body, according to the latest figures on their website. Abhisit said the resignations were effective immediately. "The solution to our current problems needs to start with the showing of responsibil- ity," Abhisit said. "The prime minister has never showed any responsibility or conscience." The minority Democrats - who are closely allied with the Copper Peak jump looks for comeback to world stage IRONWOOD, Mich. (AP) - It's been nearly 20 years since athletes soared into the sky off the Copper Peak ski jump near Ironwood, Mich. But change is in the air. The board that operates the western Upper Peninsula land- mark is backing a new plan they hope will put Copper Peak back on the international stage and attract athletes from around the world for ski jumping - and not just in the winter, accord- ing to the Duluth (Minn.) News Tribune. "This is really big news for ski jumping in the United States," said Bryan Sanders, a 1992 U.S. ski jumping Olympian and member of the Copper Peak board. "This makes us relevant again on the world scene." Two key components of the plan are transforming Copper Peak from its present status as a ski-flying hill to a ski-jumping hill, and bringing summer ski jumping to the venue by 2016. Copper Peak, which opened in 1970, features a 267-foot steel jump structure - that's about 26 stories high - built atop a 365-foot rock outcrop- ping about 10 miles northeast of Ironwood. Ski flying is similar to ski jumping but takes place on larger hills that allow for longer jumps. Copper Peak had been the only ski flying hill in the West- ern Hemisphere - and one of just six in the world - but it was small for that circuit. So the Copper Peak board, backing from the Federation of International Skiing (FIS), wants to make the transition to the largest ski-jumping hill in the world. "We haven't flown at Copper Peak in a number of years. Our hill has not progressed in size (as other slopes) have length- ened their landing slopes," said Charlie Supercynski, president of the Copper Peak board. "So the question is, what kind of a hill are we? Are we a small flying hill, or do we want to become a large jumping hill?" And the answer, backed by a unanimous vote of the Copper Peak board last month, is to fol- low the FIS plan and switch to ski jumping. That will require, among other renovations, reshaping the hill to meet FIS ski jumping specifications. In conjunction with the switch from ski flying to ski jumping, the plan envisioned by FIS and the Copper Peak board includes the addition of sum- mer ski jumping. How does summer ski jump- ing work? The landing zone "is essen- tially skiing on plastic - a spe- cially designed surface that looks like spaghetti that you stack up like shingles on a roof," Supercynski said. It approxi- mates snow, allowing skiers to glide along as they land. The jump itself would be outfitted with ceramic tile or a refrigerated ice surface - that's still to be determined - that athletes would glide down to make their runs. The sport has grown in pop- ularity in Europe because the warmer weather conditions are more favorable for fans, and there are fewer variables for skiers to contend with. Events Food-tech startups Senators cail for eameras aim to replace eggs and chicken The startup is housed in a garage-like space in San Fran- cisco's tech-heavy South of Mar- ket neighborhood, but it isn't like most of its neighbors that develop software, websites and mobile- phone apps. Its mission is to find plant replacements for eggs. Inside, research chefs bake cookies and cakes, whip up batches of flavored mayonnaise and pan-fry omelets and French toast - all without eggs. Funded by prominent Silicon Valley investors and Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Hampton Creek Foods seeks to disrupt a global egg industry that backers say wastes energy, pollutes the environment, causes disease out- breaks and confines chickens to tiny spaces. SEOUL, South Korea N. Korea purges Kim Jong Un's powerful uncle North Korea announced Mon- day that it has purged leader Kim Jong Un's uncle, considered the country's second most powerful official, accusing him of corrup- tion, drug use, gambling, wom- anizing and generally leading a "dissolute and depraved life." The young North Korean lead- er will now rule without the rela- tive long seen as his mentor as he consolidated power after the death of his father, Kim Jong Il, two years ago. Jang Song Thaek's fall, detailed in a lengthy dis- patch by state media, is the latest and most significant in a series of personnel reshuffles that Kim has conducted in an apparent effort to bolster his power. -Compiled from Daily wire reports on train tracks, engineers After NY train derailing, pair of lawmakers demand new safety measures NEW YORK (AP) - A week after four people died in a New York commuter train derailment, two federal lawmakers proposed Sunday that trains nationwide be outfitted with cameras point- ed at engineers and at the tracks. "I know you're going to hear from Metro-North that there are costs, but the costs of these audio and visual recorders is minus- cule, in fact negligible, compared to the hundreds of millions of dollars that this tragic incident will cost Metro-North in the end," said Sen. Richard Blumen- thal of Connecticut who joined New York Sen. Charles Schumer for a news conference at Man- hattan's Grand Central Termi- nal. Last Sunday, a Metro-North Railroad train approached a curve on the tracks just north of Manhattan going 82 mph - nearly three times 30 mph speed limit. Rail cars careened off the tracks, with the front car ending up inches from the water where the Hudson River meets the Harlem River. A lawyer and union leader for the derailed train's engineer, William Rockefeller, have said the train's hypnotic motion may have caused him to experience a "nod" or a "daze" at the controls. The Democratic lawmakers are urging the Federal Railroad Administration to demand the implementation of a measure they say might prevent the kind of deadly Metro-North derail- ment that also left dozens of people injured. The National Transportation Safety Board first recommend- ed installation of the audio and video recording cameras in loco- motives and operating railway cabs five years ago. The railroad administration issued a statement saying that safety was its "highest priority" and 2012 was the safest year in railroading history. "We support the use of cam- eras in cabs to further improve safety," the agency said, adding that it continues to work with the NTSB on the investigation into the New York accident. The NTSB said it has a "long history of advocating for improvements stemming from fatal accidents." "In an era where the average citizen has a device in their pock- et capable of recording audio and video, installing cameras in locomotives for accident investi- gation and prevention purposes simply moves the railroad indus- try into the 21st century," NTSB Chairman Deborah A.F. Hers- man said in a statement. Schumer said fatigue was suspected in two other colli- sions - one in Iowa, in 2011 and another in Newton, Mass., in 2008 - and might have been proven if cameras were present. He said such images might have caught behavior patterns that could have been prevented in the future. "Get on board and implement these recommendations now," Schumer said, directing his com- ments to the Federal Railroad Administration, which has the power to demand the changes. The railroad administration has yet totake any regulatory action putting these recommendations in place. "Shame on Metro-North for failing to adopt this system," Blumenthal said. "Shame on the operators of this railroad for failing to move forward with a recommendation that is so cost effective. Keep people alive." The Metropolitan Transpor- tation Authority, which runs Metro-North, released a state- ment late Sunday detailing immediate changes to improve safety on curves and bridges. Those improvements include the installation of new sig- nal safety protections at the crash site that - starting Mon- day - will warn engineers of approaching speed reductions and automatically apply the train's emergency brakes if speed is not lowered to the 30 mph maximum in the curve. The Online Revolution: Learning. without Limits (Dec 1p @4PM1 ~Arthr ierj \Watgreen Drama FEATU RI NG courseraco-founder & co-CEO Daphne Koller We are at the cusp of a major transformation in higher education. In the past year, we have seen the advent of massive open online courses (MOOCs). In this interactive talk, Prof. Koller will discuss this far-reaching experiment in education, including examples & preliminary analytics. She will also discuss why this model can support an improved learning experience for on-campus students, & provide access to education to students around the world. Register today engin.umich.edu/form/mellorlecture2Ol3 JAMES R. MELLOR LECTURE SERIES KS MICHIGAN ENGINEERING aUNI f IOFUAN