2A -- Monday, February 14, 2011 f The Michigan Daily - michiganda lytom 2A - Monday, February 14, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom MONDAY: TUESDAY: WEDNESDAY: THURSDAY: FRIDAY: her Ivor y Towers Questions on Campus Professor Profiles Campus Clubs Photos of the Week 00 ARIFACT S AC TO IGLOO CHALLENGE Yale returns Peruvian artifacts iT r chigan al 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com STEPHANIE STEINBERG BRAD WILEY Editor inChief u esinessManatee 734-418-4115 ext. 1252 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 steinberg@jmichigandaily.com tmdbusiness@gmail.com After a three-year dispute concerning the removal ofmore than 5,000 artifacts from Machu Pic- chu in Peru, Yale Univer- sity announced on Friday that the artifacts it is dis- playing will be sentback to Peru, according to a Feb. 11 Associated Press article. Currently on exhibit at Yale's Peabody Museum of Natural History, the collection is now going to be featured in a center at the San Antonio Abad University in Cuzco, Peru, accordingtothe AP. The artifacts will be studied by Yale and San Antonio Abad University and will also be on public display. TYRA BANKS ATTENDS HARVARD Harvard University has a new celebrity student - Tyra Banks, according to a Feb. 1 article in New York Magazine. Enrolled in the Execu- tive Education programs at Harvard Business School, Banks is paying $31,000 to take atwo-week course for entrepreneurs focused on management for owners and presidents of compa- nies. New York Magazine reported that Banks has been spotted around Bos- ton donning a Harvard Business School sweat- shirt. Banks tweeted about the course and wrote, "Enriching my mind with these amazing buddies! They are sooooo intelli- gent! Geniuses!!!" THREE SPORTS TEAMS REINSTATED AT UC BERKELEY After five sports teams were cut at the Univer- sity ofCalifornia, Berkeley, three were reinstated last Friday, according to a Feb. 11 Associated Press article. Due to budget prob- lems, Berkeley announced in September that it would cut men's rugby, men's baseball, men's gymnas- tics, women's lacrosse and women's gymnastics, according to the article. However, Berkeley Chan-k cellor Robert Birgeneau ' announced on Friday that funding had been raised. to keep men's rugby, wom- ' en's lacrosse and women's gymnastics. Men's baseball and gymnastics didn't gain enough funds to continuer the programs, according HALEY HOARD/Daily to the article. The Beta Delta pledge class of Sigma Phi Epsilon -PAIGEPEARCY are challenged to build an igloo on Feb.12, 2011. Newsroom 734-418-411 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section artse@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales display@michigandaity.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaiy.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letters to the Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com tlassified Sales classified@michigaedaily.com Finance finance@michigandaily.com CRIME NOTES CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Bumper cars WHERE: 1170 West Medi- cal Center Lot M-15 WHEN: Friday at about 5:30 p.m. WHAT: A vehicle that was backing out of a parking space struck a passing car, University Police reported. That vehicle then struck a third vehicle, which was also attempting to back out of a parking space. Kicking and entering WHERE: Michigan League WHEN: Saturdayat about 1:30 a.m. WHAT: An unknown person kicked in the south entrance door of the Michi- gan League, University Police reported. Officers were unable to identify a suspect. Can you seal Chilled drunk me now? Ensemble performance WHAT: The UM Contemporary Directions ensemble will give a performance inspired by literary narratives written by Shakespeare, Rumi and other authors. WHO: School of Music, Theatre and Dance WHEN: Today 8 p.m. WHERE: Museum of Modern Art Exercise class WHAT: Drop-in recre- ational exercise classes will be held to fundraise for the Heart of Gold fund at the University's Cardiovascular Center. Zumba, Turbokick, and Yoga are some classes that will be available. WHO: MHealthy and UMove Fitness WHEN: Today at 4 p.m. WHERE: Central Campus Recreation Building Technologytalk WHAT: A lecture will about the transfer of tech- nology to private industries in order to improve U.S. global competitiveness. WHO: Office of the Vice President for Research WHEN: Today 4 p.m. WHERE: Weill Hall CORRECTIONS . An article in the Feb. 11 edition of The Michigan Daily ("Imagining Inanity")misidentified School of Music, Theatre and Dance sophomore Aimee Garcia. " An article in the Feb.10 edition in The Michigan Daily ("GEO seeks Cole- man's response on GSRAS") inaccurately quoted Uni- versity spokesman Rick Fitzgerald. He said"GSRAs are primarily students." * Please report any error in the Daily to correc- tions@michigandaily.com. The discovery of a fos- silized bone in Ethiopia has solved a problem that scientists have been debat- ing since 1974, The New York Times reported. The fossil- ized bone reveals that some hominids had the ability to walk like humans do today. The Michigan hockey team's sweep over Ohio State this week- end pulled the Wolverines to within one point of CCHA- leading Notre Dame. " FOR MORE, SEE SPORTSMONDAY After a snowstorm in Chicago, a local man sawa neighbor steal his shovel to the dig her vehicle out of the snow, the Wall Street Journal reported. In retaliation, the man used a snow blower to bury the woman's vehicle with snow and then uploaded a video of the woman cleaning her car. EDITORIAL STAFF KyleSwanson ManagingEditor swanson@michigandaily.com Nicole Aber Managing News Editor aber@michigandaily.com SENIORNEWSEDITORS:BethanyBiron,DylanCinti,CaitinHuston,JosephLichterman, DeonaThsby ASSST TNEWSEDITORS:RachelBrusstar,ClaireGoscicki,SuzanneJacobs,Mike Merar,1MicheleNarov,BriennePrusak,RaitlinWilliams Michelle Dewitt and opinioneditors@mchigandaily.com Emily Orley EditoialrPaeEdinors SENIOR ORIALPAEDITORS:AdaAli,AshleyGriesshammer,HarshaPanduranga ASSISTANT EDITORIALPAGEEDITORS:EaghanDavis,HarshaNahata,AndrewWeiner Tim ggoha ssand s sportseditors@michigandaily.com Sick Spar ManagingoesEditors SENIOR SPORTS EDITORS: Mark Burns,Michael Florek, Chantel Jennings, Ryan Karte, StephnJ. 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One copy is availabletfree of charge to all readers. Additionalcopies may be picked up at the taly's office for $2.Subscriptions for fallterm,startinginSeptembervia U.S.mailare IlO.Winterterm(anuarythrough Apri)is $115, yearlong (september through April) is $195. University affiliates are subject to areduced subscription rate.On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The AssociatedtCollegiate Press. 0I WHERE: 1500 East Medi- cal Center WHEN: Friday at about 7 p.m. WHAT: A former employee kept his University cell phone after moving out of the state and is likely still using it, University Police reported. WHERE: Northwood II Apartments WHEN: Saturday at about 6:15 a.m. WHAT: A shirtless stu- dent who was intoxicated knocked on a resident's door, causing a disturbance and demanding to be let in, Uni- versity Police reported. The student received an MIP. MORE ONLINE Love Crime Notes? Get moreonline at michigandaily.com/blogs/The Wire Bahrain security forces on alert amid protest calls *I Shiite opposition groups plan anti-government demonstration DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) - Bahrain's security forces set up checkpoints and clashed with marchers in at least one village yesterday as opposition groups blanketed social media sites with calls to stage the first major anti-government protests in the Gulf since the uprising in Egypt. The wide-ranging clampdown appeared directed toward Bah- rain's Shiite majority - which had led the drive for today's ral- lies - and reflected the increas- ing worries of the Sunni rulers who have already doled out cash and promised greater media reforms in an effort to quell the protest fervor. A prominent human rights activist predicted "chaos and bloodshed" if attempts are made to crush the planned demonstra- tions. The tiny kingdom of Bahrain is among the most politically vol- atile in the Gulf and holds impor- tant strategic value for the West as the home to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet. Bahrain's Shiites - accounting for nearly 70 percent of the population - have long complained of systematic dis- crimination by the ruling Sunni dynasty, whose crackdown on dissent last year touched off riots and clashes. Shiite-led opposition groups and others have joined calls for the demonstrations on a sym- bolic day - the anniversary of Bahrain's 2002 constitution that brought some pro-democracy reforms such as an elected par- liament. In Karzakan, a Shiite village in western Bahrain, riot police clashed with a small group of youths who staged a march fol- lowing a wedding ceremony. An Associated Press photographer saw several people injured and others gasping from tear gas. Security forces set up check- points around the Shiite vil- lages and throughout the capital Manama to monitor people's movements. Units also patrolled malls and other key spots in a clear warning against holding the rallies, which have been the focus of social media appeals and text messages for more than a week. One cartoon posted on a Bah- raini blog showed three arms holding aloft a mobile phone and the symbols of Facebook and Twitter. Bahrain's leaders, meanwhile, have stepped in with concessions to try to defuse the protests. Government media monitors began talks Sunday with news- paper publishers and others to draft new rules to limit state con- trols. The official Bahrain News Agency, meanwhile, launched a new multimedia service that includes social media applica- tions to seek more outreach. LUCA BRUNO/AP A woman shouts slogans against Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi during a protest in Milan, Italy, yesterday. 100,000 women rally aglnst Italian Premier Berlusconi Women say leader's alleged sexual acts degrades females ROME (AP) - More than 100,000 Italian women and their supporters turned out across the country to protest against Pre- mier Silvio Berlusconi, saying his dalliances with young women humiliate the sex as a whole and degrade female dignity. Backers of the 74-year-old Berlusconi, who is under inves- tigation for allegedly paying for sex with a 17-year-old girl, dis- missed the protests as strictly political. The teenager, a Moroccan night club dancer, has said Ber- Global Policy Perspectives Symposium The Middle East: U.S. Interests and Policies lusconi lavished cash and jewel- ry on her. Both deny having had sex with each other. Prostitution isn't a crime in Italy, but paying a minor for sex is. Prosecutors are requesting to put him quickly on trial in what has been the most sensational probe against Berlusconi in over a decade of criminal cases against him, mainly for dealings in his billion-dollar empire of TV, film, advertising and other business interests. The premier, who willingly acknowledges his fondness for pretty young women and is being divorced by his wife for his purported dalliances, claims he is being victimized by left-wing prosecutors who want to topple him from power. From the tiny island of La Maddalena in Sardinia, to larg- er cities like Naples, Venice and even foreign venues like Paris, where around 400 people gathered outside Sacre Coeur church to bang pots and pans, women pressed for Berlusconi to resign. In L'Aquila, the mountain town where Berlusconi has boasted about his reconstruc- tion efforts after the 2009 quake damage, women com- plained they were still wait- ing for government-promised funds for a center for abused women. Wednesday, February 16, 2011 4:00-5:30 p.m. Ford School of Public Policy Annenberg Auditorium 1120 Weill Hall More info: www.ipc.umich.edu In Memory of Jeffrey Druchniak 9/1/78 - 1/31/06 BA 2000 JD/MPP Class of 2008 "Nothing is ever wholly lost. That which is excellent remains forever apart of the universe" - R.W. Emerson Colin Kahl, Panelist Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for the Middle East, U.S. Department of Defense Molly Williamson, Panelist Scholar, The Middle East Institute Melvyn Levitsky, Discussant Professor of International Policy and Practice, University of Michigan Stephanie Swierczek, Moderator MPP/MENAS MA Candidate, University of Michigan ldd rnnalPolcyenter Sponsored by: International Policy Center, International Policy Students Association, U-M Debate Team, CMENAS 01 4 4