The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, January 31, 2011 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, January 31, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Thousands of fish dead in Erie and St. Clair lakes Officials say cold weather and a fish virus likely are to blame for thousands of dead gizzard shad found recently in Lakes Erie and St. Clair, the St. Clair River and the Detroit River. The Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News report that the weather and viral hemorrhagic septicemia, or VHS, are suspect- ed in the fish deaths. Researchers from Michigan State University and the University of Toledo took samples of dead shad Thursday and Friday that showed signs of the fish virus. Shad deaths are typical in the winter. It's expected to take a month to determine whether the fish had VHS. Although not dangerous for humans, the virus has previously caused large fish kills in Lakes Ontario, Erie and Huron. It also has turned up in Lake Michigan. NEW YORK Ex-Anne Klein designer Charles Nolan dies in N.Y. Fashion designer Charles Nolan, known to have a passion for American classics but skew them with a modern edge and personal touch, died yesterday at age 53. Nolan, who also was noted for his political interest, had battled cancer several years ago, and it came back this past fall and moved aggressively, said Mag- gie Savage, the vintage buyer for the Charles Nolan store in Man- hattan's Meatpacking neighbor- hood. The store was open yeserday, said Savage, who added that its future was unclear but that she hoped it would continue. Women's Wear Daily, which firstzreported Nolan's death on its website, said he died of liver cancer. Nolan took a hiatus from the fashion industry in 2003 and worked on former Democratic Vermont Gov. Howard Dean's presidential campaign. MONTERREY, Mexico Six bodies found * burned in Mexico Mexican authorities say six bodies found outside the north- ern city of Monterrey were burned so badly that investiga- tors couldn't determine the cause of death or the victims' gender. A Nuevo Leon state prosecu- tors' spokeswoman says the bod- ies were found on a dirt road north of the city yesterday morn- ing and bore the hallmarks of cartel killings. The spokeswoman said cartels have been known to burn bod- ies to prevent identification and to terrorize rivals. She spoke on condition of anonymity because she is not authorized to be identi- fied by name. TOKYO Residents return to homes after volcanic activity About 600 people are return- ing home after seeking shelter, overnight as a volcano in south- ern Japan spewed ash and smoke over nearby towns. Hirokazu Taniyama, an offi- cial in Miyazaki, said last Mon- day that 612 people stayed in elementary schools for the night after volcanic activity increased last Sunday. He said most of them were returning home. The explosive eruption at the 4,662-foot (1,421-meter) Shin- moedake volcano Thursday was its first major eruption in 52 years. Releases of ash and smoke have continued since then. Taniyama said nobody has been injured in the eruptions. The government has restricted access to the mountain. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton shakes hands with Haitian presidential candidate Jude Celestin at the U.S. Haitian ambassador's residence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti yesterday. CiInton: U.S. wi not so aid to Haiti Gov. Rick Snyder: Immigrants could help state economy Initiative to Tobotman, a former Democratic state lawmaker connected to attract educated, Global Detroit, an effort to boost the economy by making the entrepreneurs region more welcoming to immi- grants. "It's been an untapped LANSING, Mich. (AP) - market." Efforts in Detroit and Ann Arbor Global Detroit cites Duke Uni- could serve as launching pads versity research indicating a third in Michigan's attempt to attract of Michigan's high-tech startup more highly educated, foreign- companies founded between 1995 born help to revitalizeits economy. and 2005 had at least one immi- Gov. Rick Snyder has asked grant founder. state officials to develop an ini- A U.S. Small Business Admin- tiative to encourage immigrants istration report found that 16 per- with advanced college degrees cent of all Michigan businesses to come to Michigan to live and started between 1996 and 2007 work. were started by an immigrant. The Republican governor says Immigrants living in southeast the effort could help reverse the Michigan are more likely to have "brain drain" thathampers Mich- college degrees than non-immi- igan's ability to attract high-tech grants, according to the Global industries. Detroit study. Foreign-born stu- In an era where much of the dents are awarded 44 percent of immigration debate focuses on all master's degrees in engineer- keeping illegals out, there's a ing and 62 percent of engineering movement in Michigan to keep doctorates in Michigan. more of the legal foreign nation- Foreign-born residents als in the state after they graduate account for roughly 6 percent of with advanced degrees from uni- Michigan's population. versities here. The state is hoping to attract Studies suggest they could play more entrepreneurs like Vinay a key role in creating new busi- Gupta, an Ann Arbor-based busi- nesses and jobs for Michigan resi- nessman originally from India dents. who has started a half-dozen "There's a growing awareness companies including a software about the potential," said Steve firm called Janeeva. College case tests drug law changae Aid continues amid questions about the nation's next leader PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) - The United States has no plans to halt aid to earthquake- ravaged Haiti in spite of a crisis over who will be the nation's next leader but does insist that the president's chosen succes- sor be dropped from the race, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said yesterday. Clinton arrived yesterday in the impoverished Caribbean nation for a brief visit. She met with President Rene Preval and earlier met with each of the three candidates jockeying to replace him. Only two candidates can go on to the delayed second round, now scheduled for March 20. The U.S. is backing an Orga- nization of American States recommendation that the can- didate from Preval's party, gov- ernment construction official Jude Celestin, should be left out in favor of populist rival Miehel Martelly. The top U.S. official at the United Nations, Susan Rice, said recently that "sustained sup- port" from the United States required the OAS recommen- dations be implemented. Many Haitian officials, including lead- ers of Preval's Unity party and Martelly, interpreted that to mean the U.S. was threatening an embargo and cutting off aid. Clinton flatly rebuffed that suggestion. "We're not talking about any of that," she said yes- terday. "We have a deep commit- ment to the Haitian people," she told reporters. "That goes to humanitarian aid, that goes to governance and democracy programs, that will be goingto a cholera treatment center." Asked if there were any set of circumstances that would prompt Washington to cut off aid, Clinton said, "At this point, no."' Still, she insisted that the United States would press the recommendations by interna- tional monitors after a disorga- nized, fraud-ridden first-round presidential vote in November. They determined that Preval's preferred successor, Celestin, finished last and should drop out. Celestin has yet to do so. "We're focused on helping the Haitian people," Clinton said ahead of the meetings. "One of the ways we want to help them is by making sure that their political choices are respected." Haiti is in a deepening and potentially destabilizing politi- cal crisis. The announcement of preliminary results from the disputed first round led to riot- ing in December. Final results are expected to be announced Wednesday. Just five days after, on Feb. 7, comes the constitutional end of Preval's five-year term. A law passed by an expiring Senate last May would allow him to remain in power for an extra three months, but it is not clear if his government would continue to be recognized by donor countries. But Preval has said he does not want to hand power to an interim govern- ment. "That's one of the problems we have to talk about," Clin- ton said. "There are issues of a continuing government, how that can be structured. And that's what I'm going to be discussing."w Leaders of Preval's party said last week that they would agree with Celestin stepping down, but the candidate has not com- mented since and his lawyers continue to plead his case to the electoral council. It is not clear what Preval himself thinks. Yesterday afternoon, each of the bickering presidential can- didates arrived by SUV at the black metal gates of the U.S. ambassador's sprawling resi- dence for individual meetings with Clinton. Martelly came and went first. Mirlande Manigat, the former first lady who led the polling, met with Clinton second. Celestin's meeting came last. Only Manigat stopped to talk to a small gaggle of mostly for- eign reporters waiting atcthe gate. "You don't get the sense that the United States wants the election to be canceled but you can feel that they would like there to be stability," the law professor said. "(Clinton) asked me what conditions I could find to make these elections more acceptable. I said a climate of calm ... (and) that they would make some changes in the elec- toral council." Acknowledging the tight time frame for Haiti, Clinton said she wanted to hear ideas on how Hai- ti's transition should be handled but then make her own assess- ment on the best way forward. The political crisis comes as the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation tries to restart its economy after decades of stifling poverty and unemploy- ment, and the massive loss of life and infrastructure in last year's earthquake. Hundreds of thousands of people remain in homeless camps and rpajor rebuilding has not started. Columbia University students ask for rehab instead of prison sentence NEW YORK (AP)- They were students who juggled an elite edu- cation with criminal extracur- riculars, dealing an array of drugs from Ivy League dorm rooms and frat houses, prosecutors say. But beneath the surface of academic success, some of the Columbia University students charged in a campus drug take- down struggled with substance abuse, their lawyers say. Attorneys for two of the five studentsplan to ask a court to pre- scribe treatmentinstead of prison - one of the most high-profile tests so far of a recent overhaul of New York's once-notoriously stringent druglaws. The outcome will be watched closely by opponents and propo- nents of2009 changes to mitigate what were known as the Rock- efeller drug laws. Backers called the lesser punishments a more effective and humane approach to drug crime; critics said they gave drug peddlers a pass. With the bid for what's known as' 'diversion"to treatment, the Columbia bust "is probably the case that's going to cause light to be shed on what these new laws mean: When diversion is appro- priate, and what the Legislature intended when it cut back so dras- tically the Rockefeller laws," said Marc Agnifilo, who represents one ofthestudents, Christopher Coles. Coles and fellow students Harrison David, Adam Klein, Jose Perez and Michael Wymbs were arrested in December, have pleaded not guilty and are due back in court in March. Authori- ties called the arrests one of the largest drug takedowns at a New York City college in recent mem- ory, and the prestigious setting made the case a media magnet. 15,000 Pakistani protesters rally against American official U.S. Embassy says official detained illegally by gov't LAHORE, Pakistan (AP) - Hard-line Islamic leaders on Sunday rallied at least 15,000 people against an American official arrested in the shoot- ing deaths of two Pakistanis and warned the government not to cave in to U.S. pressure to release the man. The protest in the eastern city of Lahore, where the shoot- ings took place, came as the U.S. Embassy once again insisted that the American has diplo- matic immunity and was being detained illegally by Pakistan. But Pakistan has refused to budge, saying the matter must be decided by the courts. The spat has revealed the fragility of a relationship Wash- ington believes is crucial for success in Afghanistan and against al-Qaida. Large protests by hard-line Islamic groups, which have significant influ- ence in Pakistan, could make it even more difficult for the gov- ernment to free the American. "We warn the government and administration that ... if they help the arrested Ameri- can illegally, then this crowd will surround the U.S. Embas- sy and presidential palace in Islamabad," Hafiz Hussain Ahmed, a senior official in the Jamiat Ulema Islam party, said during Sunday's rally. The U.S. has said the Ameri- can, who has not been named, acted in self-defense when he shot two armed men who approached his car in Lahore on Thursday. But many questions have been left unanswered, includ- ing exactly what the American did at the U.S. Embassy and why he was carrying a gun. The lack of clarity has fueled media speculation he may have been a CIA agent or security contrac- tor, as well as questions over whether he qualified for diplo- matic immunity. The embassy attempted to provide a little more clarity in a press release Sunday titled "Facts About Diplomatic Immu- nity." It said the man is a mem- ber of the embassy's "technical and administrative staff" and thus enjoyed the same crimi- nal immunity that all diplomats have under the Vienna Conven- tion on Diplomatic Relations. But legal arguments are unlikely to sway ordinary Paki- stanis, many of whom dislike the U.S. and distrust their gov- ernment in its dealings with Washington. This animosity is especially pronounced among hard-line Islamic groups, which oppose the war in Afghanistan and object to Pakistan's alliance with the U.S. in fighting the Taliban and al-Qaida. Sunday's demonstration was organized by Jamaat-ud-Dawa, which is widely believed to be a front for the militant group that attacked the Indian city of Mumbai in 2008 and killed 166 people. The rally was origi- nally called to protest changes to Pakistani laws that mandate the death penalty for insulting Islam. But many of the speakers used the opportunity to stoke anger over the recent shoot- ings. "An American scoundrel has killed two innocent youths in the streets of Lahore," said the leader of Jamiat Ulema Islam, Maulana Fazlur Rahman. "It should be decided in the courts and any decision beyond the courts will not be acceptable to us. There should be an end to American hegemony in Paki- stan." Lahore police chief Aslam Tareen said there were between 15,000 and 20,000 people at the rally in the center of the city. We all make mistakes! s't enake not taint the.Ps-iscetan Iteview MCATCousee oftheas * Over105 Hours of LIVE In-Class Instruction *5 separate-intectors, BioO.-Chen, G-Chem, PhysicsVerbal '17 Compter- BasedTestswitlsxtdistic:on-sereats -SatisfationGuaranteed *FREEVerbalAcelerator -15 Hours, a$299value "FREE Super io Re-view-5 Hours, a $99value "4,30 Pages of Materials to Takemane dr ne-x MCAT tt day is February 8th ONLY 10 days left to enroll! 8O wst AINensuim me a