* The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 1, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS bETROIT City reports 58 fires during Halloween Detroit reports 58 fires during the first two days of the three-day Halloween anti-arson watch period officials call Angels' Night. Mayor Dave Bing's office said yesterday that the 58 fires as of midnight Saturday are eight more than at that point in 2009. Volunteers are working with city officials on a "Watch Your Block" anti-arson campaign. The city says 119 fires were reported last year over the three- day period, down from 136 in 2008. More than 800 fires were started in 1984, the height of what then was known as Devil's Night. Flint firefighters handled eight fires on the night before Hallow- een, compared with five in the same period lastyear. NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. Lawyers dispute suicide allegations in Rutgers case Lawyers for two former Rutgers University freshmen accused of webtasting a male classmate hav- ing sex with another man are dis- puting allegations against them. , Dharun Ravi and Molly Wei were charged with invasion of privacy after prosecutors say Ravi used a webtam Sept. 19 to capture his roommate, Tyler Clementi, having a gay sexual encounter. Clementi jumped to his death off the George Washington Bridge days later. But Steven Altman and Rubin Sinins, who represent Ravi and Wei respectively, told The Star- Ledger of Newark that the web- cam stream was only viewed on a single computer and did not show the men having sex. Law enforcement officials wouldn't discuss the lawyers' claims, citing the ongoing investi- gation. Ravi and Wei recently with- drew from Rutgers. Prosecutors are considering whether to charge them with a hate crime. ISTANBUL 32 wounded in Istanbul bombing A suicide bomber blew himself up yesterday beside a police vehi- cle in a major Istanbul square near tourist hotels and a bus terminal, wounding 32 people, including 15 policemen. The attack in Taksim Square, which was followed by police gunfire and sent hundreds of panicked people racing for cover, coincided with the possible end of a unilateral cease-fire by Kurdish rebels, but there was no immediate claim of responsibil- ity. Turkey, a NATO ally that has deployed troops in a noncombat role in Afghanistan, is also home to cells of radical leftists and Islamic militants. Istanbul police chief Huseyin Capkin said the bomber tried but failed to get into a parked police van and detonated the bomb just outside the vehicle, blowing himself to pieces. Riot police are routinely stationed at Taksim, a popular spot for street demonstra- tions that abuts a major pedestrian walkway whose shops and restau- rants are usually packed. At least 32 people, including 15 police officers, were injured, at least two of them seriously, Istan- bul Gov. Huseyin Avni Mutlu said. SAO PAOLO Brazil elects first female president A former Marxist guerrilla who vas tortured and imprisoned dur- ing Brazil's long dictatorship was elected yesterday as president of Latin America's biggest nation, a country in the midst of an eco- Oomic and political rise. A statement from the Supreme Electoral Court, which oversees elections, said governing party candidate Dilma Rousseff won the rlection. When she takes office Jan. 1, she will be Brazil's first female leader. With nearly 95 percent of the * allots counted, Rousseff had 55.6 percent compared to 44.4 percent for her centrist rival, Jose Serra, the electoral court said. Rousseff, the hand-chosen can- didate of wildly popular President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, won by cementing her image to Silva's, whose policies she promised to Continue. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Hasan Jamali/AP Ao unidentified Yemeni man walks past the UPS office on Saturday in San'a, Yemen. Yemeni authorities are checking dozens more packages in the search for those who tried to mail bombs to Chicago-area synagogues in a brazen plot that heightened fears of a new al Qaida terror attack. Pol ce continue hunt for Yemen bomb suspects Police arrest young medical student, detain mother SAN'A, Yemen (AP) - Their first suspect in custody, Yemeni police continued to search for the terrorists believed respon- sible for mailinga pair of power- ful bombs to attack the United States. U.S. and Yemeni officials were increasingly seeing al-Qai- da's hand in the failed plot. Yemeni police arrested a young woman who was a medical stu- dent on suspicion of mailing a pair of bombs powerful enough to take down airplanes, officials said Sunday. They also detained her mother. Investigators were hunting the impoverished Mideast country for more conspirators. U.S. officials included in that group the same bombmaker suspected of design- ing the explosive for a failed bomb- ing on a Detroit-bound airliner last Christmas. Authorities were also looking at two language institutions the plotters may have been associated with. The explosives, addressed to Chicago-area synagogues, were pulled off airplanes in England and the United Arab Emirates early Friday morning, touching off a tense search for other devices. More details emerged Saturday about the plot that exploited secu- rity gaps in the worldwide ship- ping system. British Prime Minister David Cameron said he believes the explosive device found in central England was intended to detonate on the plane, while British Home Secretary Theresa May said the bomb was powerful enough to take down the aircraft. A U.S. offi- cial said the second device found in Dubai was thought to be simi- larly potent. But it still wasn't clear whether the bombs, which officials said were wired to cell phones, timers and power supplies, could have been detonated remotely while the planes were in the air, or when the packages were halfway around the world in the U.S. Still, the fact that they made it onto airplanes showed that nearly a decade since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, terror- ists continue to probe and find security vulnerabilities. Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh told reporters that the Unit- ed States and United Arab Emir- ates had provided intelligence that helped identify the woman sus- pected of mailing the packages. A Yemeni security official said the young woman was a medical student and that her mother also was detained, but officials pointed to additional suspects believed to have used forged documents and ID cards. One member of Yemen's anti-terrorism unit said the other suspects hadbeen tied to al-Qaida. Yemeni and U.S. officials spoke on condition of anonymity to dis- cuss the ongoing investigation unfolding on three continents. Al-Qaida's Yemen branch, known as al-Qaida in the Ara- bian Peninsula, took credit for the failed bomb last Christmas that used PETN, an industrial explosive that was also in the mail bombs found Friday. The suspected bombmaker behind the Christmas Day attack, Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri, is also the prime suspect in the mail bomb plot, several U.S. officials said. Al- Asiri also helped make another PETN device for a failed suicide attempt against a top Saudi coun- terterrorism official last year. The official survived, but his attacker died in the blast. Obama's toxin proposal may enforce more site cleanups Officials to examine areas contaminated by dioxin MIDLAND, Mich. (AP) - The government has spent many mil- lions of dollars in recent decades cleaning up sites contaminated with dioxin and, in extreme cases, relocating residents of entire neighborhoods tainted by the toxin. But tough new pollution stan- dards proposed by the Obama administration could require additional dioxin cleanups at scores of abandoned factories, military bases, landfills and other locations declared safe years ago, officials say. If the guidelines receive final approval, federal and state offi- cials will examine sites with known dioxin contamination to identify those needing work and what the work will cost. Among those expected to be reviewed are notorious places such as the former village of Times Beach, Mo., where about 2,000 people were relocated in the 1980s after dioxin-laced waste oil was sprayed on roads to control dust. The Environmental Protec- tion Agency plan has escalated a decades-long debate over the danger of dioxin, a family of chemical byproducts from industries such as pesticide and herbicide production, waste incineration and smelting. One form of dioxin was in Agent Orange, the defoliant used by U.S. forces during the Vietnam War. The EPA is expected to make a final decision this fall on the new standards. But congressio- nal critics and chemical com- panies say the agency is acting hastily and should wait until it completes a reassessment of dioxin's health effects in the coming months. "They're proposing these sweeping changes to regula- tions without giving us an idea of how many sites will be affected, how many homes will be affected, what the economic impact would be," said Rep. Dave Camp, a Republican whose Mich- igan district includes a SO-mile- long watershed polluted with dioxin from a Dow Chemical Co. plant. EPA officials say they want to move ahead because they are convinced dioxin is hazardous at lower concentrations than previ- ously thought. If necessary, they say, the standards can be adjusted later. "We're driven by the need to protect against excessive risk of both cancer and non- cancer health concerns," said Mathy Stanislaus, EPA assistant administrator for solid waste and emergency response. "We believe (the current standards) are not sufficiently protective and more stringent numbers are needed." The Associated Press obtained an EPA list of 92 current and: former Superfund locations where records show that dioxin is among the soil contaminants, making them candidates for a review under the new standards. Color & Design Group 208 E. Washington St. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (734) 997-7030 www.salonxi.com Featuring Products by KERASTASE H,-,.,