2A - Thursday, January 13, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom MONDAY: TUESDAY: WEDNESDAY: .MONDAY: TUESDAY: WEDNESDAY: In Other Ivory Towers Questions on Campus Professor Profiles Teaching in Tanzania FRIDAY: Photos of the Week With the limited educational and career resources, many women living in Tanzania lack the oppor- tunities available to women in the United States. But a new student group on cam- pus, AfricAid, aims to address this issue by providing young women in Tanzania with the opportunity to receive an education. AfricAid is based on a larger organization started in Golden, Colo. in 2001. LSA sophomores Mia Kelly and Kelsey Hamrick said they came up with the idea to bring AfricAid to the University this past fall and were driven by their pas- sion for promoting education for young women. Hamrick said AfricAid's first goal as a club is to sponsor a couple of young women in Tanzania and send them to secondary school. In addition to working with its parent organization, AfricAid also coordinates with the Kisa Project - a training program for African women to equip them with skills to enter into the workforce. AfricAid aspires to offer .a stipend and two years of leadership training to the girls they sponsor, so they have the tools to be successful and imple- ment projects in their communities. Sponsoring one young woman for two months costs $2,000, so fund- raising is essential, Hamrick and Kelly said. In March, AfricAid is scheduled to host, a panel about gender and education in Africa that features keynote speaker Frances Vavrus, a professor at the University of Min- nesota's College of Education & Human Development. "We are also in the process of gathering a panel of University of Michigan professors in differ- ent areas like Education, Women's Studies, International Studies and Public Policy," Hamrick said. "The idea is to get a group of people that are interested in these topics and can give different viewpoints on this greater issue of education." Kelly added that after the event in March, there will be a question- and-answer session, with a possible raffle and silent auction as well. Once the club gains more rec- ognition and expands beyond its current 15 to 20 active members, Kelly and Hamrick said they plan to organize a variety of activities that will continue to work toward the group's goals. "We are really focused on fund- raising right now, but we'd like to shift that as we raise more money to promoting cultural awareness, and I'm hoping that in the long run that we can have trips to Tanzania to meet the girls that we sponsor," Kelly said. - SAMANTHA NORMAN COURTESY OF AFRICAID AfricAid leaders explain the club's mission to prospective members at Festifall this year. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com STEPHANIE STEINBERG BRAD WILEY Editor in Chief Bosiness Manager 734-418-4115 eat 1251 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 sreioberg@michigaodaily com nmdbuaiess@gmaiteom CONTACT INFORMATION Newsroom offieehours:Sun.-Thus.11a.m.- 2 am. 734-410-4115 opt.3 NewsTips news@michigandaily.com Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com letters tothe Editor dothedaily@michigandailyxcom Photography Department photo@mihigandaily.com Arts Section artspage@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com SportsSection sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales display@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classied@michigandaily.com Online Sales ontineads@michigandaily.com Finance finance@michigandaity.com EDITORIAL STAFF KyleSwanson ManagingEditor swanson@michigandaily.com Nicole Abe ManagingNewsEditor aber@ichigaydaity.am SENORsoNEWS EDITORBthaoyBiron, Dyan Cinti, Caitlonoausto,Joeph Lichterman, Vevon Thorsby AStSTANTEWS EDBrITOROacheBrao rae Goscicki,SuzanneJacobs,Mike Merr, MsicheleNarov,BienePruak, KaitlinoWilliams Michelle DeWitt and opinioneditors@mkhigandaily.com Emily Orley Editorial Page Editor SENIO EITORAGEDTOS AidaAitAhleshamorsoeahaeaondoon AStSTATEDTOIALeAGDIOS: oEagaDasHasaata,AndrewWeiner Tim Rohanand sportseditors@michigandaily.com Nick Spar Managing Sports Editor SENIORSPORTSEDITORS:MarkBurns,MichaelFlorek,ChanteJennings,RyanKartje, Stephen J. 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He is not affiliated car was engulfed in flames, but WHEN: Today at 11:31 with the University. there were no injuries. WHER:ai. san SELF, en of es of aith. 0 a.m. rs Union, MSA Chamber BWinter slip 'n Bedding burglar slide on the ice WHERE:East Quad Resi- s dence Hall WHERE: 1500 East medical WHEN: Wednesday at about Drive 2:50 a.m. WHEN: Tuesday at about 6:45 WHAT: A comforter and p.m. pillows were stolen from a WHAT: A vehicle slid on ice female student's room, Uni- and into the back of a Uni- versity Police reported. Police versity bus, University Police believe the suspect is a male reported. No one was injured in student. the accident. MORE ONLINE Love Crime Notes? Getlmore online atmichigandaily.com/blogs/The Wire LGBT bullying prevention class WHAT: A class to educate people on the issues sor- rounding harrassment of LGBT students. The class will also discuss how to preventbullying. Course registration is $60. WHO: Spectrum Center WHEN: Today at Ip.m. WHERE: School of Social Work CORRECTIONS * In yesterday's arti- cle titled "A Variety of Vegetation" mis- identified LSA senior Lindsay De Carolis. " Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michi- gandaily.com. Patients at a Southern Cali- fornia health clinic were exposed to hepatitis C from an IV line, the Chicago Tri- bune reported. The IV line is believed to have been contami- nated by a nurse who works at the clinic. Several students who graduated from the Musi- cTheatre program have made names for themselves on the Broadway stage. Some have even received nominations for Tony Awards. *FOR MORE,SEETHEB-SIDE. INSIDE A 17th Century Bible was found at a small Luther- an school and church in Bonduel, Wisc., Fox News reported. According to researchers, the 1,500-page Bible was printed in Germany in 1670. The book was discov- ered in a safe by a sixth grade teacher. Poetry Slam at the Union WHAT: A night of poetry with an open mic session, competition between seven poets and a performance from a featured poet. Cost is $5 per person. WHO: University Unions & Arts Programs WHEN: Tonight at 8:30 p.m. WHERE: Michigan Union 0 Highhopes for banks bring Dow, asdaqup Stocks shoot higher as worries ease about Europe's debt NEW YORK (AP) - Hopes that banks would start raising their dividends sent financial stocks sharply higher yesterday. Indexes closed at their highest levels in more than two years after a suc- cessful bond auction in Portugal eased worries about Europe's debt crisis.. Portugal borrowed $1.6 billion at a lower long-term interest rate than many expected. Investors have been concerned that Por- tugal will struggle with its debts and become the third European country to require a bailout after Greece and Ireland. Analysts cautioned that it's still possible Portugal could need a financial lifeline if its economy slips back into recession this year. "Things are not resolved com- pletely here," said Rob Lutts, pres- ident and chief investment officer of Cabot Money Management. Banks led the market higher after an analyst at Wells Fargo Securities issued a report saying their earnings should grow much faster than other companies this year. He also said banks were like- ly to distribute more of their earn- ings to shareholders as dividends. JPMorgan Chase & Co. rose 2.5 percent to $44.71 after the com- pany's CEO, Jamie Dimon, told CNBC late Tuesday that the bank hopes to raise its dividend in the second quarter. JPMorgan's stock led the 30 large companies that make up the Dow Jones indus- trial average, followed closely by Bank of America. Bank of America gained 2 percent to $14.99. The Dow rose 83.56 points, or 0.7 percent, to close at 11,755.44. That's the Dow's highest close since Aug.11, 2008. The Standard & Poor's 500 index also reached itshighest level since Aug. 28, 2008. The index gained 11.48, or 0.9 percent, to 1,285.96. The Nasdaq composite rose 20.50, or 0.8 percent, to 2,737.33. ITT Corp. jumped 16 percent to $61.50 after the defense. con- tractor said it would split itself into three publicly traded com- panies. ITT plans to separate its defense and information, water technology and industrial prod- ucts divisions. Thatshould make it easier for investors to understand the company's various businesses, said Robert Pavlik, chief market strategist with Banyan Partners. American International Group Inc. slipped 1 percent to $58.40 after the company agreed to sell its stake in Taiwan's third-largest insurer for $2.2 billion. The deal is part of AIG's plan to raise money to repay the $182 billion it received in government bailout funds. rneigi oa aa odsuscnen bu eao' oen etclapeysedyU.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, right, gestures as she talks to Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit during their meeting in Doha, Qatar to discuss concerns about Lebanon's government collapse yesterday. Hezbollah and allies topple Lebanese gov., Lebanon's worst political crisis since 2008 prompted by Hariri tribunal BEIRUT (AP) - Lebanon's gov- ernment collapsed yesterday after Hezbollah and its allies resigned from the Cabinet in a dispute with Western-backed factions over upcoming indictments in the 2005 assassination of former Prime Min- ister Rafik Hariri. A U.N.-backed tribunal inves- tigating the truck bombing that killed Hariri and 22 others is widely expected to name members of the Shiite militant group, which many fear could re-ignite sectarian vio- lence that has erupted repeatedly in the tiny nation. Hezbollah's walkout ushers in the country's worst political crisis since 2008 in one of the most vola- tile corners of the Middle East. Lebanon's 14-month-old govern- ment was an uneasy coalition link- ing bitter rivals: a Western-backed bloc led by Hariri's son Saad and Hezbollah, which is supported by Syria and Iran and maintains an arsenal that far outweighs that of the national army. Disputes over the tribunal have paralyzed the government for months, with Hezbollah denounc- ing the court as a conspiracy by the U.S. and Israel and urgingthe prime minister to reject any of its findings. But Hariri has refused to break cooperation with the Netherlands- based tribunal. Now, the chasm between the two sides is deepening with Hezbollah accusing Hariri's bloc of bowing to the West. Hezbollah's ministers timed their resignations to coincide with Hariri's meeting with Presi- dent Barack Obama in Washington, forcing him to meet the American president as a caretaker prime min- ister. Western governments have worked to strengthen the central government since Israel and Hez- bollah fought a devastating 34-day war in 2006, but they also have expressed concern about the bal- ance of power with the heavily armed militant group. The U.S. classifies Hezbollah asa terrorist organization. A White House statement said Obama commended Hariri for his "steadfast leadership and efforts to reach peace, stability and consensus in Lebanon under difficult circum- stances." U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Hezbollah's actions are "a transparent effort ... to subvertjustice and to undermine Lebanon's sovereignty and indepen- dence." "No country should be forced to choose between justice and stabil- ity," Clinton said while traveling in Doha, Qatar. "The Lebanese people deserve both." Hariri's office had no immedi- ate comment on the walkout that brought down his government, but they said he was heading to France to meet French President Sarkozy before heading back to Beirut. France, Lebanon's former colonial power, is a major player in Lebanese politics. The immediate trigger for the Hezbollah withdrawal was the fail- ure of talks between Syria and Saudi Arabia, a Hariri ally, to try to find a compromise over the tribunal. There had been few details about the direction of the Syrian-Saudi initiative, but the talks were lauded as a potential Arab breakthrough, rather than a solution offered by Western powers. Cuba calls immigration talks with U.S'. 'fruitful' Diplomats discuss Cubans' attempts to illegally enter America HAVANA (AP) - Senior U.S. and Cuban diplomats met yester- day to discuss immigration issues in an encounter described by the Cuban side as fruitful and carried out in a spirit of mutual respect. The two sides discussed ways to combat people-smuggling across the treacherous Straits of Florida, according to a statement released by the Cuban government. "It was a fruitful exchange aimed at ... the establishment of more effective mechanisms of cooperation to combat illegal migrant smuggling," said Deputy Cuban Foreign Minister Dagober- to Rodriguez, who led the Cuban delegation. The statement said both sides recognized that the number of Cubans attempting to get to the United States illegally, often in rickety rafts or inner tubes, had dropped significantly. There was no immediate com- ment from the American side, which was led by Roberta Jacob- sen, the United States' principal deputy assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs. The gathering focused on a 17-year-old agreement under which the United States issues 20,000 visas to Cubans a year. But diplomats from both countries also use the twice-yearly meetings to detail a long-standing list of com- plaints. Chief among them, as far as Washington is concerned, is the detention of Alan Gross, an Ameri- can subcontractor jailed by Cuba for more than a year without charge on suspicion of spying. U.S. diplomats were also likely to have raised what Washington considers Cuba's spotty human- rights record overall. The Cuban delegation never fails to voice its opposition to the 48-year-old U.S. trade embargo, which Havana says has put a stran- glehold on the island's economy. The Cuban statement said its officials also reiterated displeasure with a U.S. policy that allows any Cuban reaching American soil to remain, while sending back those intercepted at sea. The Cubans have said in the past they believe the policy encourages people- smuggling. Despite the many points of contention, the Cuban statement said the meeting "developed in an atmosphere of respect." 0