110 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com T c D c a Tuesday, February 22,.2011 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT * Striking musicians ask mayor to move venue for address Striking musicians are asking Mayor Dave Bing to cancel his State of the City address at the home of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. The musiciansmadethe request Monday - one day before Bing is scheduled to deliver his speech at the Max M. Fisher Music Center, site of Orchestra Hall. Detroit Federation ofMusicians president Gordon Stump says in a release that "holding the State of the City address essentially means the mayor, city council and guests are supporting the management of the DSO in this strike." JUNEAU, Alaska Alaska state rep. refuses airport pat-down search An Alaska state lawmaker is making her way back to the state Capitol after refusing a pat-down search at a Seattle airport, a spokeswoman said. Rep. Sharon Cissna underwent a body scan as she was preparing to leave Seattle-Tacoma Interna- tional Airport Sunday and was then required to undergo the pat- down by Transportation Safety Administration officials, said Michelle Scannell, her chief of staff. Scannell' said the TSA called for the pat-down because the scan showed Cissna had had a mastec- tomy. The TSA, on its website, says * security officers "will need to see and touch your prosthetic device, cast or support brace as part of the screening process." Scannell did not elaborate beyond the statement. TSA spokesman Kawika Riley, after being asked to respond to Cissna's comments, issued a general state- ment that did not mention Cis- sna or the Anchorage Democrat's claims. BAMAKO, Mali 36 people killed in Mali stampede At least 36 people were killed in a stampede yesterday when a crowd surged against a metal barrier after a Muslim ceremony, Mali's minister of interior security and civil protection said. Sadio Gassame said the stam- pede at Bamako's Modibo Keita Stadium took place during a cer- emony marking the Muslim holy period of Maouloud. The incident occurred as tens of thousands of people were attempting to leave through a metallic enclosure. Anguished families gathered outside the.capital's Gabriel Toure Hospital where the staff was pre- paringto post a list of the dead. At least 64 others were wounded. Sidiki Coulibaly was visibly shaken as he waited for the dread- ed news. "I've already had it con- firmed that my aunt died. We are now trying to find out what hap- pened to her daughter. She's just 10 years old. They go to this event together everyyear," he said. ASUNCION; Paraguay Former dictator's son dies of cancer The eldest son of the late dic- tator Alfredo Stroessner has died in Paraguay, and a human rights activist said yesterday the death makes it more difficult to recover a huge fortune amassed by his family.. Gustavo Stroessner, a former air force colonel, died of lung can- cer Sunday, according to officials at La Costa hospital. He was 66. Stroessner fled with his father when the dictatorship fell and spent two decades in exile in Bra- zil. The former dictator died in 2006 at the age of 93 in Brasilia, and his son finally returned to Asuncion last year after a judge ruled the statute of limitations on charges of illegal enrichment had expired. -Compiled from Daily wire reports College, programs abroad attempt to attract minorities EMANUEL EKRA/AP South African soldiers providing security for South African President Jacob Zuma wait for his arrival at the airport in Abidjan, Ivory Coast yesterday. Ivory Coast troops attack opposition neighorhoods More than 80 percent of students who study abroad are white PHILADELPHIA (AP) - When Sade Adeyina's college roommate started bugging her about studying abroad togeth- er, she never thought she could afford a semester in Italy. Yet the friendly peer pressure - combined with financial aid and timely academic advising - led Adeyina to say "Arrivederci!" to Temple University in Philadel- phia and head overseas for the first time. Educators want more minor- ity students to follow the lead of Adeyina, an African-American graphic design major. Foreign study is seen as crucial to student development and even as a key to national security, yet minority participationbadlylags their over- all presence on college campuses. "It's really a matter of persuad- ing young students of color that this is possible for them and this is necessary forrthem," saidPeggy Blumenthal, executive vice presi- dent of the Institute of Interna- tional Education. "You come back changed, more self-confident." About 81 percent of study- abroad students are white, although whites represent 63 per- cent of enrollment in higher edu- cation, according to 2008-09 data released in November by the New York-based institute. Blacks comprise 4.2 percent of study-abroad students but are13.5 percent of the college population. Latinos are 6 percent of study- abroad participants but nearly 12 percent of higher ed students. Asian-Americans, representing 6.8 percent of college students, are slightly overrepresented in study abroad at 7.3 percent. Barriers often include lack of funds, fear of racism, worries about delayed graduation, and few role models - either family or faculty - who have traveled abroad. But better marketing might help. Instead of touting foreign study as an essential cultural experience, universities could stress it as a path toward self-reli- ance, independent thinking and valuable job skills, said Augus- tana College researcher Mark Salisbury. At least six killed, 15 injured in deadly, military attacks ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast (AP) - Elite troops loyal to the sit- ting president Laurent Gbagbo entered opposition neighbor- hoods in Ivory Coast's biggest city yesterday, throwing gre- nades, firing machine guns and attacking the population with rocket launchers, witnesses said. The attack happened as an African Union delegation arrived in a last-ditch effort to find a solution to the crisis that has gripped this nations since a contested election nearly three months ago. At least six people were killed during the yesterday assault, including a 14-year-old boy who was rushed to a local clinic in the Treichville district of Abidjan. Doctors said he died of blood loss and a reporter saw his corpse, his chest and abdo- men crisscrossed by hundreds of shrapnel wounds. A few blocks away, dozens of community members sat vigil around a second body, this one of a young man draped in a bloody sheet who had half his face torn off by what witnesses said was fire from a machine gun mounted on the back of a police truck. A reporter was led to the spot where two more people had died, and whose bodies had been taken away. At least 15 people were wounded and those that could talk say they recognized the signature red berets of the presidential guard as well as the elite unit's insig- nia on the trucks. The crackdown happened in neighborhoods that support opposition leader Alassane Ouattara, who is the interna- tionally recognized president of Ivory Coast. He is expected to receive the AU delegation today inside the hotel where he has been barricaded since the Nov. 28 election, unable to govern the country he was elected to lead because the sitting presi- dent refuses to go. Laurent Gbagbo, who has been in power for a decade, has refused to accept the results issued by his country's elec- toral commission which are considered legitimate by the United Nations and all the international observation mis- sions. The country's constitu- tional council, headed by one of Gbagbo's closest advisers, has overturned those results. While the sound of explo- sions echoed through the town, the pomp and ceremony that accompanied the arrival of four African presidents sent to resolve the political crisis con- tinued as if nothing was going on. The AU delegation first went to the presidency and is expected on Tuesday to head to the Golf Hotel, a resort hotel on an arm of Abidjan's lagoon where Ouattara and his staff live under 24-hour U.N. guard. The panel created by the Afri- can Union comes on the heels of numerous other mediation efforts and is the latest attempt to try to find a graceful exit for Gbagbo, who has been able to cling to power because he still controls the army. The U.N. estimates close to 300 people have been killed since the vote, a majority of whom were supporters of Ouat- tara. The five president panel includes the presidents of Chad, Mauritania, South Africa and Tanzania. Another panel mem- ber, Burkina Faso's President Blaise Compaore, canceled his trip to Abidjan after a vio- lent youth militia aligned with Gbagbo descended on the air- port late Sunday, saying they planned to attack Compaore's convoy if he attempted to enter the country. Of the five, Compaore has been the most vocal supporter of Ouattara. By contrast, Zuma has suggested that the results, which have already been cer- tified by the United Nations and accepted by governments around the world, should be reviewed. Neither side believes the mediation effort will work. Gbagbo's advisers have said they will not accept the pan- el's conclusions if the panel attempts to tell Gbagbo to leave: Ouattara's side is equally pessimistic. His prime minister, Guillaume Soro, said last week he expects the negotiation attempt to fail. He called on Ouattara's supporters to launch an 'Egypt-style' revolution. In Ouattara neighborhoods over the weekend, police opened fire in places where res- idents were attempting to hold meetings. On Monday, shots could be heard ringing out from Treichville including what sounded like heavy artillery. Large caliber bullet holes riddled the storefronts in Treich- ville and a hole 2-feet in diameter was visible in the concrete side of a building that, witnesses say, was blown open by a rocket. Doc- tors say security forces used gre- nades during the operation. Chicago prepares to elect next mayor Candidates aim to force second vote in April runoff CHICAGO (AP) - Former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel's main rivals in the race to succeed Chicago Mayor Rich- ard Daley spent yesterday doing some last-minute campaigning and scratching for every vote they could find in the hopes of forcing anApril runoff. Former Chicago schools presi- dent Gery Chico and former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley Braun each predicted would receive the votes necessary to deny Emanuel an outright victory today and to force a two-person runoff. The fourth major candidate, City Clerk Miguel del Valle, also has pleaded with voters through- out the campaign to send the race to a runoffso they have more time to decide. "We expect a runoff and I think you'll see that tomorrow and then we can get the race on and going right away," said Chico, who spent much of yesterday riding Chicago Transit Author- ity trains and telling commuters what he plansto do if elected. There will bean April 5 runoff between the top two vote-getters unless someone receives more than 50 percent of the vote today. Recent polls showed Emanuel nearing that margin with Chico, Braun and del Valle fighting for second place. Two other candi- dates - William "Dock" Walls and Patricia Van Pelt-Watkins - are also running. "It's probably going to wind up in a runoff, but that's ok, we can handle that," Braun said during a fiery South Side news conference attended by some of her most powerful backers, including the Rev. Jesse Jackson and U.S. Reps. Bobby Rush and Danny Davis. Davis, who withdrew from the race in December in what he called an act of black unity, is fea- tured in a new radio ad in which he asks voters to back Braun and recounts how his fatherused to tell him that the Bible says "any manwho willnot support his own house isworse than an infidel." I op -Wf . Mm - W! . W wp m 1 m University of Arizona establishes new National Civility Institute Tuesdays South 0 The Border Inst to be run Giffords D-Tucson was shot continual sort of outrage and C nsel sutsStoibeAlun in the head during a meet-and- how do you keep this going. 59 by former presidents greet Jan. 8 outside a local gro- Sort of, how do you keep a great $250 Tequila Sunrise & Vodka Drinks ery store A federal judge and democracy going when every- i F r All Wi No COViG Jeuge BUms Mr. anda Bill Clinton TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Two former presidents - one Republican, the other a Demo- crat - will chair a new national institute to promote civility in political discourse in the city where U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Gif- fords was severely wounded in a shooting rampage that left six dead, officials announced yes- terday. The National Institute for Civil Discourse will be run by the University of Arizona. For- mer presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton will serve as its honorary co-chair- men. "Our country needs a setting for political debate that is both frank and civil, and the Nation- al Institute for Civil Discourse can make a significant contri- bution toward reaching this goal," Bush said in a prepared statement. Clinton said the institute "can elevate the tone of dia- logue in our country, and in so doing, help us to keep moving toward 'a more perfect union."' five others were killed. Giffords was among 13 people injured. While it is widely suspected that Jared Loughner, 22, who faces charges in the shooting, suffers from mental illness, many have focused on the bitter political climate in which the assault occurred. Shortly before the ram- page, Giffords herself wrote an e-mail to Trey Grayson, direc- tor of Harvard University's Institute of Politics, complain- ing of the incendiary rhetoric in her last campaign, and asking if his group couldn't do some- thing. "Well, today the congress- woman's own hometown uni- versity has decided to do just that," said Fred DuVal, vice chairman of the Arizona Board of Regents. "And Trey Grayson ... has joined OUR board." The institute's goal is to develop programs, stage con- ferences, design curricula and encourage research intended to promote more civility in the political arena, said its director, Brint Milward. For instance, he said it could back research on such areas as "cognitive science and how the brain responds to one is always ready to man the barricades?" The institute - funded in part by a grant from Tucson- based health care provider Providence Service Corp. and to be housed in one of firm's downtown buildings - would cooperate with similar organi- zations and institutions across the country, Milward said, "to create an archipelago of organi- zations that want to promote a different style of politics." DuVal said the institute might even be able to influence "the dark arts of cable TV." Greta Van Susteren, host of the Fox News Channel's "On the Record," is among those named to the institute's board. Milward said the institute's first event will be an executive forum that will bring together "a very diverse and very well- known group of individuals, all of whom have thought deeply about the problems of our poli- tics and the benefits of a more civil discourse that would bring us help in governing the United States more effectively." He would not say when that would be or who would be participat- ing. Happy Hour $4.99 6 Wings & Pnt 33 J e7%y m g y q I 4