6A - Wednesday, April 16, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com = . . rH , r I BIT Malaysian acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein speaks during a press conference regarding the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Tuesday, Apri15. Robotic submarine stll searching for Malaysianjet I PROGRESS From Page 1A troversial of the BSU's demands called for the University increase Black student enrollment to 10 percent of the student body. Even before the consideration of race was banned under Proposal 2, Black students did not represent 10 percent of the studentbody. The University often cites the challenge of convincing under- represented minority students to enroll and not choose more highly ranked Ivy League schools which may be able to offer more competi- tive financial aid packages. Beginning winter term, BSU students will assist at admissions events in an attempt to increase the number of underrepresented minority applicants. BSU stu- dents will develop a process for current students to encourage applicants to enroll at the Uni- versity. The BSU also demanded greater availability of affordable housing closer to Central Cam- pus. Though the BSU's original demand did not touch on trans- portation, the University's initial plan to address affordable hous- ing will focus on the availability of transportation to areas fur- ther from campus. This spring, a pilot program will launch that provides trans- portation for students living in neighborhoods beyond Ann Arbor. The University created a program through the Dean of Students office where students can apply for limited funding to cover certain transportation costs. However, the release did not mention additional initia- tives to improve affordable hous- ing beyond the transportation program. The University also empha- sized its commitment to creating a new Trotter Multicultural Cen- ter on Central Campus and noted that a group has been created to begin exploring the design, pro- gramming and location for the new center. In addition to the regular funding allocated to the Trotter Center, the University provided $300,000 announced at the end of January to make changes that will improve the building's safe- ty and make it more comfortable for students. Some changes are already underway. The report also cited a new social identity and bystander intervention program set to launch in the fall, Change It Up, as a mechanism for addressing the BSU's demand for updated Race & Ethnicity requirements. The program will engage incom- ing residence hall freshmen on the topic of race. More direct changes to the Race & Ethnicity distribution requirement were not articu- lated, but the release noted BSU students will meet with associ- ate deans from each school and college to further discuss poten- tial changes to the require- ments. Additionally, after a survey determined that emergency funds for students were not exhausted for the academic year, BSU leaders determined a great- er effort was needed to publicize the availability of these funds. As a result, a central website was created to provide students with contact information for emer- gency funding and programs in each undergraduate college. And to address the BSU's concerns about a perceived lack of access to historical documents related to the Black Action Movements of the 1960s, many of which are not central- ly located in various archives across campus, an initial group of Bentley Historical Library documents related to student protests in the 1960s have been digitized. A long-term plan for the remaining documents is also being created. Finally, a proposal increasing funding for the BSU was gener- ated and is pending legal and budgetary review. The review is scheduled to be completed by June. "We realize that these meet- ings with administration were only small wins," LSA senior Geralyn Gaines, BSU secretary, wrote. "They were only the beginning. There is still a lot of work to be done on both ends. I do hope that the demands of the Black Wolverines continue to be high on the priority list for the University in order to reach the long-term goals we created together as students and mem- bers of the administration." Still, both sides expressed a positive outlook in regard to the progress. E. Royster Harper, vice president for student life, was already looking ahead to next year. "I'm looking forward to build- ing on the great progress we've made this year and staying in dialogue with the students," Harper said in the release. "We have identified a number of next steps and will, for example, con- tinue our work on Trotter, the race and ethnicity class require- ments and recruiting of under- represented minority students." LSA junior Tyrell Collier, the speaker of the Black Student Union, lauded the process as an important step in addressing diversity on campus. Collier was unavailable for comment Tues- day evening. "I think this movement, in all of its facets, served as a huge reality check for both University officials and the University of Michigan community at large," Collier wrote in a release. "How- ever, it opened the door for us to have a constructive dialogue on the challenging issues facing U-M's campus and get to work on finding ways to alleviate these problems. Working hand-in- hand with University officials proved to be the best method for tackling tough issues facing the student body." U.S. Navy sub in Indian Ocean has yet to find debris from missing plane PERTH, Australia (AP) - A robotic submarine looking for the lost Malaysian jet contin- uedits second seabed search on Wednesday as up to 14 planes were to take to the skies for some of the final sweeps of the Indian Ocean for floating debris from the ill-fated airliner. The U.S. Navy's Bluefin 21 submarine began its second 20-hour underwater mission on Tuesday after cutting short its first because the ocean waters where it was sent were too deep, officials said. The unmanned sub is pro- grammed to hover 30 meters (100 feet) above the seabed, but it started searching atop a patch that was deeper than the sub's maximum operating depth of 4,500 meters (15,000 feet), the search coordination center and the U.S. Navy said. A built-in safety feature returned the Bluefin to the sur- face and it was not damaged, they said. The data collected by the sub was later analyzed and no sign of the missing plane was found, the U.S. Navy said. Crews shifted the search zone away from the deepest water before sending the Bluefin back for Tuesday's mission, the U.S. Navy said. The search coordination cen- ter said 11 military planes and three civilian planes would search a 55,000-square-kilo- meter (21,000-square-mile) expanse of ocean on Wednes- day centered 2,000 kilometers (1,300 miles) northwest of the Australian west coast city of Perth. Eleven ships would also join the search. Isolated showers were fore- cast in the search area with sea swells up to 2 meters (6 feet, 7 inches) and visibility of five kilo- meters (3 miles), the center said. With no wreckage from the Boeing 777 yet found, authori- ties said this week that the days of the surface search were num- bered as the hunt for the remains of Flight 370 moved under the waves. Search authorities had known the primary search area for Flight 370 was near the limit of the Bluefin's dive capabilities. Deeper-diving submersibles have been evaluated, but none is yet available to help. A safety margin would have been included in the Bluefin's program to protect the device from harm if it went a bit deeper than its 4,500-meter limit, said Stefan Williams, a professor of marine robotics at the Univer- sity of Sydney. "Maybe some areas where they are doing the survey are a little bit deeper than they are expecting," he said. "They may not have very reliable prior data for the area." Meanwhile, officials were investigating an oil slick about 5,500 meters (3.4 miles) from the area where the last underwater sounds were detected. Crews collected an oil sam- ple and sent it back to Perth for analysis, a process that will take several days, said Angus Hous- ton, the head of the joint agency coordinatingthe search off Aus- tralia's west coast. He said it does not appear to be from any of the ships in the area, but cautioned against jumping to conclusions about its source. The submarine is pro- grammed to take 24 hours to complete each mission: two hours to dive to the bottom, 16 hours to search the seafloor, two hours to return to the surface, and four hours to upload the data. The Bluefin can create a three-dimensional sonar map of any debris on the ocean floor. WAS' FING TIME DURING CLASS? WASTE IT WITH US. 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Another European Union official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of a lack of authorization to reveal details, said the deci- sion, adopted unanimously bythe trade bloc's 28 foreign ministers, needed to be enshrined in legal documents, and that they will be drafted quickly. The decision was reached at a meeting of the ministers domi- nated bythe crisis in Ukraine and how the EU should respond, Ash- ton told a news conference. "Foreign ministers roundly condemned the illegal armed activity in eastern Ukraine over recent days. We are issuing a very direct call on Russia to publicly repudiate this activity," Irish For- eign Minister Eamon Gilmore said. Some ministers arrived in Luxembourg talking tough. The coordinated action of armed pro-Russian groups occupying government buildings in eastern Ukraine "is something that is being planned and brought about by Russia," and needs to be met with further sanctions, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said. Russia has strenuously denied involvement in the escalation of armed violence in eastern Ukraine, but several EU min- isters noted events there have echoed what happened in the Crimean Peninsula before Russia unilaterally annexed it. "The problem is it looks very, very similar to what happened previously in the Crimea. So you know, if it looks like a horse and it walks like a horse, it's usually a horse - and not a zebra," said Frans Timmermans, foreign minister of the Netherlands. Like many matters in the European Union, though, levying sanctions requiresthe unanimous consent of member states. What ministers were able to agree on Monday was a public warning that "any further steps by the Russian Federation to destabilize the situation in Ukraine would lead to additional and far-reach- ing consequences in a broad reach of economic areas" between EU countries and Russia. Preparatory work on just what those economic measures could be is proceeding. On Thursday, Ashton is sched- uled to meet in Switzerland with Secretary of State John Kerry and the foreign ministers of Rus- sia and Ukraine. Some EU mem- ber country governments will be closely watching the Kremlin delegation's actions to deter- mine whether it's time to move to what, in the trade bloc's jargon. I' 4 i A