The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, February 7,2011 - - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, February 7, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING, Mich. Women prisoners may be forced to pay restitution A fightisemergingover wheth- er female prisoners who won a lawsuit after being sexually vic- timized in Michigan's corrections system should have to pay some of the money to the victims of their own crimes. A 2009 settlement came called for $100 million to be paid to up to, 900 female inmates who under- went sexual assaults, groping or harassment from prison guards over 16 years. Some of those women also face restitution orders for their crimes. The Michigan attorney general's office has been trying to learn what restitution orders are in effect for 15 women convicted of felonies in Oakland County and believed to have been part of the settlement. Of the 15, seven have been released from prison and dis- charged from parole, four remain in prison and four are on parole. Together, they owe $172,814 in restitution. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio 11 shot, one killed j at Youngstown State house party Two men have been arrested and charged in a shooting at an Ohio fraternity house that killed one student and injured 11 people at a party near Youngstown State University campus, police said yesterday. Each man is charged with aggravated murder, shooting into a house and 11 counts of felonious assault, Youngstown police Chief Jimmy Hughes said. The suspects are in their early 20s and from the Youngstown area, but he withheld their names pending further investigation. One suspect surrendered to police, and the other was arrested at his home, he said. Hughes said he wasn't sure if either man has a criminal record. TEHRAN, Iran American hikers appear in court Two Americans accused of spying appeared in a closed-door Iranian court session yesterday to begin trial after an 18-month detentionthathas broughtimpas- sioned family appeals, a stunning bail deal to free their companion and backdoor diplomatic out- reach by Washington through an Arab ally in the Gulf. All three - two in person and one in absentia - entered not guilty pleas during the five- hour hearing, said their lawyer, Masoud Shafiei. He added that he was barred by Iranian law from giving any further, details of the proceed- ings. But he noted that the judge decided for at least one more ses- sion in Tehran Revolutionary Court, which deals with state security cases including some of the high-profile opposition fig- ures arrested in the violent after- math of Iran's disputed election in 2009. He described the jailed Ameri- cans - Shane Bauer and Josh Fat- tal - as appearing in good health and said they sat next to him dur- ing the trial session. JONESBORO, Ark. Cow gives birth to set of triplets Guess it runs in the family: A descendant of an Arkansas cow famed for giving birth to triplets multiple times has birthed her own set of triplets. Rancher David Jones tells the Jonesboro Sun his mixed-breed cow named Nosy Rosy gave birth to the triplets on Jan. 25. Accord- ing to Oklahoma State University researchers, beef cattle have triplets in one of about 105,000 pregnancies. Jones says he named Nosy Rosy's calves Larry, Curly and Moe. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Obama plans to visit Northern Michigan President will discuss expanding Internet access MARQUETTE, Mich. (AP) - President Barack Obama willvisit Marquette on Thursday to talk about expanding Internet access, the White House said Friday. In his State of the Union address, Obama called for expanding high-speed wireless Internet access to 98 percent of Americans within five years. Doing so is part of a three-part plan the president outlined to help America "win the future." White House spokesman Rob- ert Gibbs said Marquette, a port city in Michigan's Upper Peninsu- la, is an example of a place where local businesses have been able to grow because of increased access to the Internet. Obama won polit- ically important Michigan during the 2008 presidential election. Obama is expected to tout Northern Michigan University's 4G WiMax network, a new wire- less technology that promises faster data speeds than most cur- rent cellular broadband networks. Northern Michigan, in Mar- quette, is the only university in the U.S. using the technology, said university spokeswoman Cindy Paavola. "Obviously we're very excited. Presidents don't stop by the U.P. every day," Paavola said. Former President George W. Bush made a campaign swing through the area in the summer of 2004. Students at the university are happy that school is in session this time around - though the weather will certainly be more of a factor in February. "They're very tech-savvy, regardless of what their major is. To be able to show off the technol- ogy that they use every day to the president of the United States is fantastic," Paavola told The Asso- ciated Press ina phone interview. More details about the presi- dent's visit are expected later. "We're a rural communi- ty that's really trying to take advantage of all the technology programs that the federal govern- ment is making available," said Bill Vajda, the city manager of Marquette. He said it's important to them to have all the high-tech advantages to open up markets. "Just having him show up is a lot of excitement for a little town like ours,"Vajda said. The White House had been calling the university for weeks to find out about the network and the general broadband situation in Marquette and the Upper Pen- insula, Paavola said. The school thought it was going to get a men- tion in the State of the Union address, but didn't. Now officials know why. SOLIMAN OTEIFI/AP Egyptian Vice President OmarSuleiman, center, meets yesterday with representatives of anti-government protesters in Cairo. Egyt's VP meets withi Muslim Brotherhood Schools, banks reopen as protests continue CAIRO (AP) - Egypt's vice president met with the out- lawed Muslim Brotherhood and other opposition groups for the first time yesterday and offered sweeping concessions, includ- ing granting press freedom and rolling back police powers in the government's latest attempt to try to end nearly two weeks of upheaval But the opposition leaders held firm to a demand the gov- ernment rejects: that President Hosni Mubarak step down immediately. And the source of the opposition's sudden power - the youthful protesters filling Cairo's main square -'said they weren't even represented at the talks and won't negotiate until Mubarakis.gone...... "None of those who attended representus,"saidKhaledAbdul- Hamid, one leader of a new coali- tion representing at least five youth movementsathat organized the 13-day-old protests. "We are determined to press on until our number one demand is met" - the ouster of Mubarak. "The regime is retreating," Abdul-Hamid told The Associ- ated Press. "It is making more concessions every day." At the same time, there were signs that the paralysis grip- ping the country since the crisis began was easing yesterday, the first day of Egypt's work week. Some schools reopened for the first time in more than a week, and so did banks - though for only three hours, with long lines outside. A night curfew remains, and tanks continue to ring the city's central square and guard government buildings, embas- sies and other important institu- tions. Since protests began Jan. 25, the 82-year-old Mubarak has pledged not to seek another term in elections to be held in September. The government promised that his son Gamal, who had widely been expected to succeed him, will not do so. Mubarak appointed a vice presi- dent - Omar Suleiman - for-the. first time since he took office three decades ago. He sacked his Cabinet, named a new one and promised reforms. And on Saturday, the top leaders of the ruling party, including Gamal Mubarak, were purged. Yesterday brought another concession that would have been unimaginable just amonth ago in this tightly controlled country: Suleiman's meeting with opposi- tion groups including the funda- mentalist Muslim Brotherhood, which has been outlawed since 1954 but is the ruling party's largest rival. Egypt's opposition - essen- tially banned by the government for decades - has long been hampered by a lack of cohesive- ness. Sunday's talks could be a sign the government is trying to divide and conquer as it tries to placate protesterswithout giving in to their chief demand. Mubarak is insisting he can- not stand down now or it would only deepen the chaos in his country. The protesters, skepti- cal of a regime they blame for repression, corruption and wide- spread poverty, vow to maintain their pressure until Mubarak leaves. The United States gave key backing to the regime's gradual changes on Saturday, after Presi- dent Barack Obama signaled more strongly that it was time for Mubarak to leave. Yesterday, speaking to Fox News ahead of the Super Bowl football broad- cast, Obama said he would not be drawn into predicting when Mubarak would leave office. "Only he knows what he's going to do," Obama said. Former Tunisian ruling party suspends activities Interior Minister's move seen as first step toward dissolving party TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) - Tuni- sia's interior minister yesterday- suspended all activities of the country's former ruling party amid the most serious protests since the country's autocratic president fled into exile less than a month ago. Fahrat Rajhi suspended all meetings of the Democratic Constitutional Rally, known as the RCD, and ordered all party offices or meeting places it owns closed - ahead of a demand to dissolve the party, a ministry statement said. The RCD embodied the poli- cies of former President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who fled into exile Jan. 14 after a month of nationwide anti-government protests. The party became a key instrument by which Ben Ali maintained power, and by which corruption spread. Should the RCD be dissolve, it would be among the most sweeping moves since Ben Ali's departure. The official TAP news agency, which carried the statement, said the measure was taken --because of the "extremeurgen- cy" of the situation, a reference to deadly weekend protests around Tunisia, and to "pre- serve the higher interests of the nation." The announcement came hours after crowds pillaged, then burned a police station in the northwestern city of Kef a day after police shot dead at least two demonstrators. It was the worst violence in Tunisia since Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia, ending 23 years in power. Protests have also erupted in other corners of the North African country, which is being run by a caretaker government before presidential elections to be held in six to seven months. Pennsylvania judge accused of sending children to jail for cash Prosecutors: Judge he reigned over juvenile court in a "harsh, autocratic and arbi- made $2.8 million trary" manner. The ex-judge shmhas said he didn't believe he was, in scheme breaking the law. Hillary Transue, 19, plans to ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) - watch the trial from afar. Kids in Luzerne County had a Now a college sophomore powerful incentive to stay out in New Hampshire, Transue of the courtroom of Mark Ciava- appeared in Ciavarella's court- rella, a fearsome, zero-tolerance room in 2007 and spent a month judge who tossed youths into in awilderness campforbuilding juvenile detention even when a MySpace page that lampooned their crimes didn't warrant it. her assistant principal. She did Ciavarella ordered a 13-year- not have an attorney when she old boy to spend 48 terrifying went before Ciavarella, nor was days in a private jail for throwing she told of her right to one. a piece of steak at his mother's Whatever Ciavarella's fate, boyfriend during an argument. she said, the important thing An honor roll student who had is that he no longer wields any never been in trouble before power. Ciavarella and another was sent to the same jail, PA implicated judge, Michael Cona- Child Care, because she gave the han, left the bench shortly after middle finger to a police officer. being charged in January 2009. A girl who accidentally set her "I don't care if he's away for house ablaze while playing with seven minutes or seven years," a lighter languished in PA Child she said. "The man's reputation Care for more than a month - is destroyed, and he's never going forced to shower naked in front to do this to children again." of male guards, she says, and Ciavarella's attorney declined. prohibited from hugging her comment. family during rare visits. Court documents outline a She was only 10 years old. scheme in which Conahan, then PA Child Care's beds were Luzerne County's president filled with young offenders who judge, forced the county-run didn't belong there, prosecutors juvenile detention center to close allege, because its owner was in 2002 and helped PA Child paying kickbacks to Ciavarella. Care LLC, a company owned Today, the disgraced former by his friend, secure contracts judge will stand trial in one of worth tens of millions of dol- the biggest courtroom scandals lars to house youth offenders at in U.S. history - a $2.8 million its new facility outside Wilkes- bribery scheme known as "kids Barre. for cash." Ciavarella, who presided over A state panel that investigated juvenile court, sent youths to PA the scandal called Ciavarella Child Care and to a sister facility "Dickensian" in his treatment of in western Pennsylvania while juvenile offenders and said that he was taking payments from the owner and the builder of the facilities, prosecutors said. He ran his courtroom with "com- plete disregard for the constitu- tional rights of the juveniles," in the words of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, including the right to legal counsel and the right to intelligently enter a plea. Megan, whose last name is being withheld by The Asso- ciated Press, was perhaps the youngest defendant to appear in Ciavarella's courtroom. At age 10, she had set fire to a piece of paper in her bedroom. She thought she put it out, but the paper smoldered and eventually set her room ablaze. No one was hurt. Though the landlord didn't want to press charges and Megan had no history of delin- quency, Ciavarella claimed she committed arson and sent her to PA Child Care. She left the courtroom in handcuffs and shackles. In an interview with AP, Megan said she was forced to shower naked in front of two or three men her first morn- ing at the facility. She said she assumed they were guards. She said they told her it was a "one- time" requirement. "It made me feel really uncomfortable and nervous and shaking because I didn't want anybody to see me naked, and I was really shy," she said. Megan cried herself to sleep almost every night she was in the detention center. After she got out, classmates teased her mercilessly. She dropped out of school and enrolled in a cyber- school. U-M Computer Showcase Michigan Union . Pierpont Commons http://showcase.itcs.umich.edu - www.apple.com/education