The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS TAYLOR, Mich. Man arraigned in second-degree murder case A man has been arraigned on a second-degree murder charge in the hit-and-run death of a Tay- lor auxiliary police officer who 9 was helping lost motorists on an expressway shoulder when another t vehicle struck him. Forty-year-old Nino E. Delpiano of Dearborn appeared by video yes- terday for the brief hearing in 34th District Court. He's also charged with man- slaughter with a motor vehicle, leaving the scene of a fatal acci- dent and driving with a suspended license. A judge ordered Delpiano held on a $5 million cash bond until his preliminary examination Sept. 22. Lt. Dan Kromer stopped along Wa Interstate 94 Tuesday night to help hou a lost couple. The 54-year-old was a police volunteer for 20 years. His funeral is Thursday. LOS ANGEL ES 'green' school filled With toxic soil Students at a new green themed school named for noted conser- vationists Rachel Carson and Al c Gore don't have to go far for a les- son in environmental contamina- C] tion: Their $75 million campus was laden with toxic soil. Los Angeles Unified district offi- Hu cials have spent $4 million to clean duu up the site of the new Carson-Gore tiv Academy of Environmental Stud- tor ies, which is set to open today. hot The three-acre site, located in the a low-income neighborhood west me of downtown LA, was contami- pat nated with carcinogenic solvents R that leaked from 17 underground ret storage tanks discovered during Bou construction. The land had been inc previously used by light industrial ing businesses. squ. The school district said the pro school has been cleared by state toxic control authorities and is off ready to receive its 675 elementary tiga students, whose curriculum will tha be sprinkled with environmental int themes. the Grin SEATTLE Th Lesbian fights 'don't .the ask, don't tell' in veh tan * federal trial of com SEATTLE (AP) - Opponents gin of the "don't ask, don't tell" pol- inv icy against gays serving in the ley, military are hoping for another res major legal victory as a federal I trial begins today over whether ant to reinstate a lesbian flight nurse pert discharged from the Air Force ent Reserve. _ The trial comes just days after a federal judge in California declared "don't ask, don't tell" an unconsti- tutional violation of the due pro- cess and free speech rights of gays and lesbians. While the ruling does not affect the legal issues in the case of former Maj. Margaret Witt, gay rights activists believe a victory - and her reinstatement - could help build momentum for repealing the policy. "There's already political momentum to do something to repeal this unfair statute," said Aaron Caplan, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles who is on Witt's legal team. "Judicial pr{ opinions from multiple jurisdic- tions saying there's a constitutional problem with this ought to encour- age Congress to act more swiftly." yea MEXICO CITY of p and Most wanted drug Am sto trafficker arrested lin frau Mexican marines have arrested are Sergio Villarreal Barragan, a pre- be sumed leader of the Beltran Leyva hav cartel who appears on the coun- try's list of most-wanted drug traf- for, fickers. hav An official in Mexico's Navy tells we The Associated Press that Barragan, of - alias "El Grande," was captured and in the state of Puebla. The official Im spoke on condition of anonymity in a si line with department polic' of Barragan appears o; !'2009 Cal Attorney General's Officr list of ann Mexico's most-wanted drug traf- T fickers and has a roughly $2 million Am reward for his capture. He is listed wat as one of the top leaders of the Bel- I tran Leyva cartel. in Barragan's capture comes two to weeks after the arrest of Edgar non Valdez Villarreal, or "The Barbie," rem another alleged capo linked to the and Beltran Leyvas. ma bat - Compiled from the Daily wire reports Iraq Monday, September 13, 2010 - 3A EPA probes the effects of drilling for oil lter Plywaski, 81, bends a piece of pipe yesterday found in the ashes of his home west of Boulder, Colo. Plywaski lost his ise and a cabin in the wildfire that destroyed 169 homes. uthorities search for .o o. w ldfires source EPA aims to prevent water pollution as a result of drilling ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - The oil and gas industry is urging the Environmental Protection Agen- cy to keep a narrow focus in its study of how a drilling technique that involves blasting chemical- laced water into the ground may affect drinking water - while environmental groups want the study to cover everything from road-building to waste disposal. The issues will be aired today in two-minute speaking slots at an EPA hearing twice postponed last month because of security concerns over rallies and crowds anticipated in the thousands. The hearing, the last of four around the country, will be held in two sessions today and two more on Wednesday at The Forum in Binghamton, 115 miles southwest of Albany. The EPA is taking comment on how broadly to construct its study of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, a tech- nique for releasing natural gas from rock formations thousands of feet underground by injecting at high pressure millions of gal- lons of water mixed with chemi- cals and sand. Congress directed the EPA to take a new look at fracking as gas drillers swarm to the lucrative Marcellus Shale region beneath Pennsylvania, New York, West Virginia and Ohio and other shale reserves around the country. Con- cerns that the process can poison private wells and water aquifers have driven opposition, while the industry insists there's no evi- dence linking fracking to any con- taminated water sources. In Wyoming, which also has large shale reserves, the EPA has told residents in Pavillion, a farming and ranching area, not to drink water from about 40 nearby wells. Residents speculate their water supplies have been polluted by fracking, but the EPA's tests have been inconclusive. Just last week, the EPA asked nine major gas drilling companies to voluntarily disclose the chemi- cals used in fracking. Drilling companies, calling their chemical formulas proprietary, have large- ly sought to avoid that disclosure. Fracking is specifically exclud- ed from regulation under the fed- eral Safe Drinking Water Act, in part because of a widely quoted 2004 EPA study that concluded the process posed no threat to drinking water sources. That study was widely criticized for, among other things, its narrow focus on coalbed methane depos- its and its lack of independent field studies. Environmental groups hope the new EPA study will validate their position that there are many risks that need to be addressed by regulators at the federal level. Colorado fire auses hundreds of tizens to evacuate BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - ndreds of people evacuated ring one of the most destruc- e wildfires in Colorado his- y returned to their scorched mes yesterday, surrounded by dreary sight of burnt trees, Ated mailboxes and uneven ches of blackened ground. Residents were allowed to urn to their homes in the ulder foothills as firefighters hed closer to fully contain- the blaze that has burned 10 are miles and investigators bed its cause. A senior law enforcement icial familiar with the inves- ation told the Denver Post at authorities are looking o whether a fire pit sparked wildfire, which could mean tminal charges are possible. e newspaper did not name the cial. Authorities previously said fire may have started after a ticle crashed into a propane k. The sheriff's office is aware the Post article but won't mment on the cause or ori- of the fire because it's under estigation, said Sarah Hunt- , a spokeswoman for the fire ponse. Like other residents, Nancy d Jim Edwards picked up a mit yesterday morning to re- er their neighborhood, but they found out that the roads leading up to where they live is still closed. Jim Edwards said they might drive as far as they're allowed. "We might take a ride, but it is really heartbreaking to see the stuff," he said. Edwards said he spotted their house through a telescope from Flagstaff Mountain outside Boul- der and saw that it was destroyed. "It looked like a nuclear disas- ter," Nancy Edwards said. She said they plan to rebuild. At one destroyed property, all that was left was a stone chim- ney surrounded by walls of brick about waist high. Saplings in the front yard were burnt and barely their trunks remained. A barbe- cue grill lay upside down, along with seven metal mailboxes nearby. The house's separate garage had been reduced to a heap of ashes. As residents returned home, some plead for privacy from the media. Utility workers were restoring electricity to the homes where residents had returned, repair- ing and installing new poles and lines. Qwest also was working to fix about 3,000 telephone and DSL lines. Fire officials warned that much of the area is dangerous because of downed power lines and poles, damaged roads and exposed mine shafts. Still, Boulder firefighting operations were being scaled back and some crews are being relieved six days after the wild- fire there erupted and quickly destroyed at least 166 homes. The fire was 73 percent yesterday and officials said full containment was expected by this evening. Fire spokesman Terry Kras- ko said yesterday firefighters have been overwhelmed by the community's gratitude and are especially touched by a wall of thank-you notes at their com- mand camp. "That's probably one of the hardest walls for all the fire- fighters to go up to," Krasko said. "They really have a tough time with that. The community sup- port has been tremendous for them." So far, the fire has cost more than $6.7 million to contain. Winds drove the fire out of con- trol and strong gusts later in the week triggered fears that it might spread into the city of Boulder. Officials urged resi- dents to prepare to evacuate, but fire lines held and no evacuations were needed. The Boulder Sheriff's Office is leading the investigation into the cause and origin of the fire, with assistance from the U.S. Forest Service. The loss of homes sur- passed that of the 2002 Hayman fire in southern Colorado, which destroyed 133 homes and 466 outbuildings over 138,000 acres, or more than 215 square miles. That fire was started at a campground by a U.S. Forest Ser- vice employee who burned a let- ter from her estranged husband. She served six years in prison for it and was released in 2008. Across county, Tea Party holds rallies Tea Party members gather in cities from D.C. to Sacramento to spread message SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - Tea party activists gathered in cit- ies on each coast and in between yesterday to spread their message of smaller government and focus their political movement on the pivotal congressional elections in November. Several thousand people marched along Pennsylvania Ave- nue from the Washington Monu- ment to the Capitol, many carrying signs reading "Congress You're Fired" and "Let Failures Fail and "Impeach Obama." "It wouldn't bother me to make a clean sweep," said Michael Power of Decatur, Ala., endorsing term limits for members of Congress. "There are some good ones, but we can lose those." In Sacramento, an estimated 4,000 people poured into the former McClellan Air Force Base site for the "United to the Finish" rally - far fewer than the 25,000 to 50,000 crowd organizers had predicted. Leslie and Gary Morrison of Redding drove 150 south to Sacra- mento with their dog Phoebe, just two weeks after flyingtoWashing- ton to attend a large rally hostedby conservative commentator Glenn Beck. They said they liked the feel- ing of solidarity at the tea party events. "This is a way to get people focused before the election," Les- lie Morrison said. "And it's a way to get the tea party's true numbers seen." Many attending rallies in WashYwore red, white and blue clothing and carried yellow flags with the picture of a snake coiled above the inscription "Don't Tread On Me." In St. Louis, they packed the area between the Gateway 'Arch and the Mississippi River, and ven- dors sold lemonade, meat on sticks, T-shirts and other souvenirs. Vine years after Sept 11., americans' skepticism -rustrates U.S. Muslims Many Muslims Within the U.S., domestic ter- ror has become a greater threat, unable to escape while ignorance about what Islam teaches is widespread. ejudice nine years More than half of respondents in a recent poll by the Pew Forum after attack for Religion & Public Life said they knew little or nothing about NEW YORK (AP) - Nine the Muslim faith. rs of denouncing terrorism, Some U.S. Muslims say their raying side-by-side with Jews national organizations share the I Christians, of insisting "Fm blame, for answering intricate erican, too." None of it could questions about Islam with plati- p aseason of hate against Mus- tudes, and failing to fully exam- s that made for an especially ine the potential for extremism aught Sept. 11. Now, Muslims within their communities. Mus- asking why their efforts to lim leaders often respond when accepted in the United States terrorists strike by saying Islam ve been so easily thwarted. is a "religion of peace" that has We have nothing to apologize no role in the violence instead of we have nothing to fear, we confronting the legitimate con- ve nothing to be ashamed of, cerns of other Americans, these have nothingthat we're guilty Muslim critics say. - but we need to be out there "There's a quaintness and d we need to express this," said naivete or outright whitewash- am Mohammed Ibn Faqih in ing of some very complex issues," ermon at the Islamic Institute said Saeed Khan, who teaches Orange County in Anaheim, at Wayne State University in if., the day before the 9/11 Detroit. "This has caused a lot tiversary. of frustration for a lot of Muslim There is no simple way for Americans, myself included." erican Muslims to move for- The summer frenzy about rd. Islam in America has revolved mages of violence overseas around Park51, a community the name of Islam have come center and mosque planned two define the faith for many blocks from New York's ground i-Muslims at home. The U.S. zero. Opponents and supporters tains at war in Afghanistan, of the center converged on the d although America has for- area for protests and counter- illy declared an end to its com- protests Saturday after the morn- operations in Iraq, U.S. troops ing memorial ceremony at the re continue to fight alongside World Trade Center site. qi forces. In recent months, mosques in Tennessee, California, New York and elsewhere have been shot at and vandalized. Threat- ening messages were left at one mosque. A Florida pastor caused a global uproar with his ultimately unfulfilled threat to make a bon- fire of Qurans on Sept. 11. Many Jewish, Roman Catholic, mainline Protestant, evangelical, atheist and other groups have responded with an outpouring of support for Muslims, but suspi- cion remains high among many Americans. Islamic centers have become a focus of non-Muslim fears. Federal authorities have placed informants in mosques, saying doing so is a critical counterter- rorism tool. Muslim groups have separately created national cam- paigns encouraging congrega- tions to monitor for any sign of radicalization, but they have also complained bitterly about the use of informants, worried the inno- cent will be caught up in the net police have set for criminals. Akbar Ahmed, professor of Islamic studies at American University, found a wide range of mosques - from literalist to modernist to mystical - while researching his book, "Journey Into America, The Challenge of Islam." He said many mosques are engaged in internal struggles between Muslims with rigid and modernist views, but he found none that fit the imaginings of anti-Muslim conspiracy. theo- rists. L Featuring Products by Kerastase & Oribe KERASTASE 208 E. Washington St. Ann Arbor MI 48104 734) 997 7030 www saloxlcom ES U ..,,Ki