The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, February 20, 2007 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS DEWANA, India Fire sparked by train bombing kills 66 Leaders of India and Pakistan pressed ahead yesterday with their peace process, hours after twin bombs - apparently intended to disrupt their relations - sparked a fire that killed 66 people aboard a train that links the two rivals. The fire destroyed two coaches on the Samjhauta Express, about an hour after the train left New Delhi on its way to the Pakistan border. Officials said the attack was timed ahead of the arrival of Paki- stani Foreign Minister Khursheed Kasuri, who is expected today in the Indian capital. "This is an attempt to derail the improving relationship between India and Pakistan," Railway Min- ister Laloo Prasad told reporters. FRANKFURT, Germany Speculation on Chrysler's fate drives up stock With DaimlerChrysler AG put- ting all options on the table for its struggling U.S. unit, the auto indus- try is pondering the fate of Chrysler and whether its parent will jettison a brand that critics say has dulled the sheen of the legendary Mer- cedes marquee. Speculation about potential part- ners, or even a buyer, jumping in to use Chrysler's expansive parts and dealership network to gain entry to the U.S. market has ranged from a tie-up with Nissan and Renault to talk of a link with Hyundai to a homegrown deal with General Motors. The possibilities have driven DaimlerChrysler shares up by 12 percent since it first said it was mulling all options for the Chrys- ler Group. Yesterday they gained almost 4 percent more to 56.26 euros ($73.88) in German trading, their highest level since July 2001. DaimlerChrysler has kept mum since announcing last week that it had not ruled out any options for Chrysler - which, until a year ago, had kept the world's fifth-largest automaker profitable amid quality issues at the Mercedes Car Group. BAGHDAD Attack on U.S. military base kills two soldiers Insurgents staged a bold daylight assault against a U.S. combat post north of the capital yesterday - first strikingwith a suicide car bombing, then firing on soldiers pinned down in a former Iraqi police station. At leasttwo soldiers were killed and 17 wounded, the military said. Elsewhere, three U.S. soldiers were killed and two were wounded in a roadside bombing southwest of Baghdad yesterday, the U.S. military said. The military also announced the deaths of three Marines and one soldier since Sat- urday while conducting combat operation* in the western province of Anbar. The head-on attack north of Baghdad was notable for both its tactics and target. Sunni insur- gents have mostly used hit-and- run ambushes, roadside bombs or mortars on U.S. troops and avoided direct assaults on fortified military compounds to avoid U.S. firepower. It also appeared to fit a pattern emerging among the suspected Sunni militants: trying to hit U.S. forces harder outside the capital rather than confront them on the streets during a massive American- led security operation. NEW YORK JetBlue flights canceled again Low cost fares, quirky blue potato chips and even a mea culpa from JetBlue Airways' founder may not be enough to ease passen- ger anxiety yesterday as the airline braces for another day of disrupted flights. The company said it would be canceling almost a quarter of the day's flights but hopes to be fully operational today, almost a week after a Valentine's Day snowstorm, created a meltdown for the air- line. - Compiled from Daily wire reports 13 The number of cracked airplane windshields discovered so far at DenverInternationalAirport,ABC News reported. Up to 100 miles- per-hour winds have been ravag- ing the Colorado foothills. Since 1982, the Federal Aviation Admin- istration has recorded 20 cases of in-flight window cracking - 12 on commercial airplanes. All of the damaged planes were expected to return to service yesterday. QUADRUPLETS From page 1 "With my wife's support, this is pos- sible," he said. "We can survive." But the family always comes together on the weekends. They often take trips to local parks and museums and have visited the Tole- do Zoo and Cedar Point Amuse- ment Park. Weekdays begin for the family when the girls wake up at 7:30 a.m. After Luisa - the nanny the Coo- pers brought with them from their home in Chile - dresses and feeds them, the girls play together. The day continues with multiple feeding and nap sessions until 9:30 p.m., when the girls are placed in their cribs and the house is finally quiet. While life with four small chil- dren is chaotic, the Coopers don't seem to mind. "With kids, you have to assume you can't control everything," Coo- per said. "It's almost easier with four because you're more prepared." Cooper arrived at the Univer- sity of Michigan in fall 2004 after applying to several American uni- versities. Michelle planned to stay behind in Chile. But a week before Andres left, the Coopers learned Michelle was pregnant with fraternal twins. During a routine check-up a month later, doctors noticed that there were not two but four heart- beats. Andres Cooper remained at the University for one term before returning to Chile for New Year's in 2005. But a few days before Andres was set to return to Ann Arbor, Michelle began feeling ill. During the subsequent hospital trip, the couple learned that the babies were supposed to be born in the next couple days. "We had several months to fig- ure it all out," Cooper said. "But it was still a shock. I mean, from zero babies to four." Accordingto the AmericanAcad- emy of Pediatrics, the Coopers were the 52nd couple in the world to have quadruplets from two embryos. On Jan. 6, 2005, the quadruplets were born prematurely. The small- est weighed 1.8 pounds, the largest 2.1. They were kept under obser- vation in incubators for several months after their birth. Eight sur- geries later, they were ready to go home. Cooper took the next year off from the University to stay at home with his family. In December 2005, they relocat- ed to Ann Arbor so he could finish his studies. The Coopers say things are bet- ter here. While they speak fondly of Chile and their families, they agree that life in a quiet three-bedroom house on North Campus is better than the noise and pollution of city life back home in Chile's capital, Santiago. After he completes his PhD and his contract as a GSI expires, Coo- per and his family plan to return to Chile. There, he will work for the gov- ernment, which is currently help- ing to fund his education. Although both parents said they would love to send their children to daycare, they said the average cost is too high at $1,000 per child per month at local centers. "It feels like we already have our NINTENDO POWER SHAY SPAsIOLA/ooily Customers buy Japanese cartoon stuffed animals, imported fruit flaoored candies and collectibles at Wizzywig on East Liberty Street yesterday. MATH From page IA study began. Sekaquaptewa said that high levers of unintended stereotyping could remove the protection from low performance offered by low levels of gender identification. Low levels of both factors were necessary to predict higher exam performance. But either low gender identification or low implicit ste- reotyping was enough to predict an increased desire to pursue a math- related career. The study, published in last month's issue of the Journal of American Psychological Science, notes that it might be easier to reject stereotypes in the conscious setting of making career decisions than in the behavioral context of taking an exam. Sekaquaptewa said implicit ste- reotypes contribute to the under representation of women in math and related fields like science and engineering. Lower-level college math classes have roughly equal gender repre- sentation, Sekaquaptewa said. But that changes at high levels. "As we go up, something hap- pens along the way," she said. "By the time we get to women faculty in math and engineering, we're looking at about 7 percent women." Thirty-two percent of actuarial math majors and 30 percent of mathematical science students are women. Only eight of 69 (around 12 percent) honors and pure math sub- plan students are women. These are the fields most likely to lead to graduate research in math or sci- ence, said Carolyn Dean, the math department's chair of outreach and recruiting. Faculty figures mirror the stu- dent population. Just eight of the University's 68 tenure-track math professors are female. SOLUTIONS Dean expressed surprise at the low numbers of female math majors. She said that up until about five years ago, the department was approaching gender parity, at least atthe undergraduate level. Butthen the numbers hita plateau. Dean said she encourages infor- mal mentoring of female students to encourage their mathematical ambitions. "Those efforts add up," she said. "Mostly because the numbers are so small." While formal welcome recep- tions for women in math were important five or 10 years ago, Dean said that many incoming female graduate students now see such events as perpetuating a ste- reotype. Cinda-Sue Davis, the direc- tor of the Women in Science and Engineering program, pointed to a chilly climate that she said is "not particularlywelcoming" forwomen in science and math fields. The WISE program conducts outreach to elementary and high school students to encourage them to consider math and science careers. It also holds workshops for undergraduate and graduate own day care center here," Andres Cooper said. FlI - Sara Kase contributed to this report. (M g S f " women.Th Davis said women's performance in science and math classes often exceeds men's. Sekaquaptewa and Davis both emphasized that wom- en's underrepresentation in science and math fields is not due to a lack of ability, but is the fault of social- psychological factors. Administrators looking to encourage more women to go into math might learn from the case of A BRAND NEW FESTIVAL Breanna Turcsanyi, who gradu- ' O .. GRA E U hEATEf ated from the University in April . NIMATED with a degree in math. S She said she was one of only two other female students in the pure math program that year. At first, T TA T[ H ORT F[LMS she wasn't planning on pursuing THE LT NIM SHORT FILMS a career in advanced math, but instead considering becoming a 4 _= . E high school math teacher or com- puter programmer. Her summer research in the math department as part of the Research Experience for Under- graduates program changed that. Now she is waiting for responses from math doctoral programs where she hopes to do research on number theory. "Once I experienced (research), it made me realize it's not as impos- sible or scary as it sounds," she said. A math department-sponsored / trip to a women's undergradu- ate mathematics conference also helped convince her to apply to -TUESDAYF[B doctoral programs.Jp,20 INDaB2 "It was really cool to see so many girls as interested in math as I am and just to realize that (graduate research) really was a possibility," THEATRE n I I . Turcsanyi said. TICKETS 10.00--ON SALE NOW AT MAIN ART BOX OFFICE OR MOVIETICKETS.COM 888-440-8457 Michigan Classics Need more news in your life? Check out the Daily's blog at michigandaily.com/thewire Ad l Zl 11 i1mmar oftbal Please call 734.764.0515 for information Competitive and Recreational Leagues for Men's, Women's and Co-Rec Teams $650 - 10 games plus playoffs $1300 - Men's doubleheader - 20 games plus playoffs HALF SEASON CO-REC LEAGUE. 5 GAMES for $300! Call for details. Registration and Manager's Meeting will be held on REC]Monday, February 26th at 6:00 PM SPORTS Intramural Sports Building 606 East Hoover, Ann Arbor '-I