TheMichigan Daily - michigandaily.cam Friday, January 14, 2011 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, January14, 2011 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Jury clears ex- Delphi official of fraud charges A jury in Detroit has cleared the former head of Delphi Corp. of the most serious charges in a civil trial tied to allegations of financial fraud at the auto-parts maker in 2000. J.T. Battenberg III was found lia- ble yesterday on three of the seven charges relating to how Delphi accounted for a $237 million trans- action involving warranty costs with its former parent, General Motors Corp. The case was filed by the Securities and Exchange Com- mission. The jury cleared Battenberg of fraud but found him responsible for bookkeeping errors and mis- representations to accountants. Separately, former Delphi accoun- tant Paul Free was found liable on many charges regarding precious metal and battery transactions and a $20 million payment from EDS. WASHINGTON New school lunch plan proposes more fruits and veggies School cafeterias would have to hold the fries - and serve kids more whole grains, fruits and vegetables - under the government's plans for the first major nutritional overhaul of students' meals in 15 years. The Agriculture Department proposal announced yesterday applies to lunches subsidized by the federal government. The guide- lines would require schools to cut sodium in those meals by more than half, use more whole grains and serve low-fat milk. They also would limit kids to only one cup of starchy vegetables a week, so schools couldn't offer french fries every day. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vil- sack said the new standards could affect more than 32 million chil- dren and are crucial because kids can consume as much as half of their daily calories in school. OAXACA, Mexico Mayor shot to death in southern Mexico The mayor of a remote mountain town in southern.Qaxaca state was shot to death yesterday, the third municipal leader to be slain in Mex- ico in a week. Oaxaca state prosecutor Manuel de Jesus Lopez said authorities were investigating possible motives in the latest killing, which occurred when Mayor Luis Jimenez Mata was visiting the state capital. His largely Indian town of San- tiago Amoltepec has been locked in a decade-long land dispute with a neighboring town that has resulted in about a dozen deaths. More than a dozen of Mexican mayors were killed in 2010. The country has about 2,440 mayors. BAGHDAD VP Biden: U. S. to continue Iraqi training past 2011 Vice President Joe Biden said yesterday that the U.S. should make sure Iraq's stability and democ- racy are strong enough to make it "a country that was worthy of the * sacrifices" the American military suffered during eight years of war. Biden, speaking to some 400 soldiers in Baghdad, also said the U.S. would continue to train and equip Iraqi forces beyond 2011. His remarks highlighted continu- * ing uncertainty about whether all American troops will head home by the end of the year as required by a security agreement between the two nations. "The Iraqi people for the first time, I suspect, I would argue, in their history are on the verge of lit- erally creating a country that will be democratic, sustainable and, God willing, prosperous," Biden told the troops at the military's headquar- ters on the outskirts of Baghdad. "It could have a dramatic impact on this entire region, and God knows the Iraqi people deserve it." The White House has promised to end the war responsibly. "By that we meant we were going to end this by bringing you all home within a time certain, but leaving behind a country that was worthy of all the sacrifices that so many of your brothers and sisters have made," Biden told the troops. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Former Florida Gov.Jeb Bush speaks toa Republican group as it kicksoff its efforts to improve the party's outreach to Hispanic voters yesterday in Miami. The new Hispanic Action Network began a two-day policy conference that started last night. Former Gov. Bush facilitates Republican outreach to Latinos Jeb Bush commits to improving rapport with Hispanic voters MIAMI (AP) - A Republican group that includes former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush last night kicked off its efforts to improve the party's out- reach to Hispanic voters, many of whom have criticized Republicans for using harsh rhetoric to attack illegal immigration. The new Hispanic Action Net- work is holding a policy confer- ence featuring several well-known Republican speakers. It will focus on issues such as trade, immigra- tion, media outreach and educa- tion. Bush, who met his Mexican-born wife Columba when he taught Eng- lish in her homeland, said the party needs to become more engaged in the Hispanic community - and not just duringelectionyears. "Typically what happens in poli- tics is you're working hard and you say, 'Oh gosh, we better start work- ing at campaigning in the Hispanic community,' and it's like Sept. 15," he told the crowd last night. "This is not about politics. This is about the conservative cause. If you look over the horizon over the next 10 or 20 years...without an active involve- ment of Hispanics, we will not be the governing philosophy." The group is among a growing number of Republican organizations reaching out to Hispanicsin advance of next year's presidential election. It is backed by former Minnesota Sen. Norm Coleman, whose American Action Network funneled more than $30 million in campaign funds to Republicans in about 30 congressio- nal races last year. With the Latino population grow- ing in swing states such as Nevada, Colorado and Florida, Republicans need, to chip away at Hispanics' overall 2-1 preference forDemocrats to have any hope of capturing the presidency. Democrats are confident their party's efforts on health care, educa- tion and the economy will appeal to Hispanic voters, whom they believe have been turned off by some of the GOP tactics. But Bush and other Republicans have long maintained their party is a natural fit for Hispanics, par- ticularly recent immigrants. They cite the party's social conservatism, anti-abortion stance and support for private school vouchers and lower taxes. Voters last year elected Lati- no Republicans to prominent posts, including Florida Republican U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio and New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a possible 2010 presidential can- didate, announced a similar effort in Washington, D.C., last month with his Americanos group. The conservative Heritage Foundation also now has a Spanish Web site, Libertad.org. Meanwhile, Alfonso Aguilar, former President George W. Bush's first citizenship and immigration czar, runs the Lati- no Partnership for Conservative Principles. Brazil mudslides kill almost 500 Mud sweeps turned inside out, their plumb- ing and electrical wires exposed. through country, Children's clothes littered the earth, cars were tossed upside entire villages down into thickets. An eerie quiet prevailed as people searched for destroyed life. The sounds of digging, with sticks and hands, were occasion- TERESOPOLIS, Brazil (AP) - ally punctuated by shouts as The power was out, but lightning another corpse was located. flashes illuminated the horror Conceicao Salomao, a doctor as villagers watched neighbors' coordinating relief efforts at a homes vanish under a wall of mud makeshift refuge inside a gymna- and water, turning neighborhoods sium in central Teresopolis, said into graveyards. Survivors dug at about 750 people were staying the earth barehanded yesterday, there yesterday and about 1,000 but all they found were bodies. people had sought treatment in It was a scene of muddy the past day. One danger she wor- destruction in mountain towns ried about was leptospirosis, a north of Rio, where at least 464 waterborne bacterial disease. people were killed when torren- "The hospitals around here are tial rains unleashed mudslides in overflowing. The army and navy the pre-dawn hours Wednesday, are setting up field hospitals to burying people alive as they slept. help," she said. Officials would not venture guess- "The worst is the feeling of es onhowmany people were miss- impotence. We do what we can, ing - but fears were high that the but there are so many people." death toll could sharply rise. Rio state's Civil Defense In the remote Campo Grande department said on its website neighborhood of Teresopolis, that 210 people were killed in now accessible only by a peril- Teresopolis, 214 in nearby Nova ous five-mile (eight-kilometer) Friburgo and 40 in neighboring hike through mud-slicked jungle, Petropolis. It said about 14,000 family members pulled the life- people had been driven from their less bodies of loved ones from homes. the muck. They carefully laid the Another 37 people have died in corpses on dry ground, covering floods and mudslides since Christ- them with blankets. mas in other parts of southeastern A young boy cried out as his Brazil - 16 in Minas Gerais state father's body was found: "I want north of Rio and 21 in Sao Paulo to see my dad! I want to see my state. dad!" Nineteen-year-old Geisa Carv- Flooding and mudslides are alho and her mother were awak- common in Brazil when the sum- ened at 3 a.m. Wednesday by a mer rains come, but this week's tremendous rumble as tons of slides were among the worst in muck slid down a sheer granite recent memory. The disasters rock face onto their Teresopolis unduly punish the poor, who often neighborhood of Caleme. live in rickety shacks perched per- The power was out, but by ilously on steep hillsides with lit- lightning flashes they could see tle or no foundations. But even the the torrent of mud and water rich did not escape the damage in rushing just a few feet (meters) Teresopolis, where large homes from their home - and the rem- were washed away. nants of their neighbors' houses "I have friends still lost in all that were swept far down a hill. of this mud," said Carols Eurico, "We were like zombies, covered a resident of the city's Campo in mud, in the dark, digging and Grande neighborhood, as he digging" Carvalho said. motioned to a sea of destruction "I don't even have the words to behind him. "It's all gone. It's all describe what I've seen," said the over now. We're putting ourselves teen's mother, Vania Ramos. "Ablot in the hands of God." of our friends are dead or missing. In the same area, Nilson Mar- There are people we may never tins, 35, carefully held the only find." thing pulled out alive since dawn: Carvalho and Ramos said they a pet rabbit that had somehow ran out of their home moments remained pristinely white despite after the mudslide and joined the mud. neighbors in digging for survivors "We're just digging around, with bare hands and sticks. They there is no way of knowing where quickly located a family of four to look," he said. "There are three who had died under the rubble more bodies under the rubble over of their home - and said another there. One seems to be a girl, no neighbor's 2-month-old baby was more than 16, dead, buried under washed away in his crib and has that mud." yet toube found. The hundreds of homes washed Nearly all the homes in their away in the neighborhood were neighborhood were swept to the bottom of a hill. Only a few rescuers had man- aged to hike to Caleme by yester- day and they only had shovels and machetes - not the heavier equip- ment needed to hunt for survivors. Residents said they had no food, water or medication, and many made the long walk for help to the center of Teresopolis, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) north of Rio. Morgues in the cities were full and bodies covered in blankets were laid out in streets. Officials said the area hit by slides had seen 10 inches (26 centimeters) of rain in less than 24 hours. More rain is forecast through the weekend. Survivors across the region were seen wading through waist- high water, carrying what belong- ings they could, trying to reach higher ground. Many tried des- perately to find relatives, though phone service was out in the region and many people were still missing hours after the rain stopped. The floods tore out most of the steep cobblestone road leading to the Campo Grande neighbor- hood, creating a ravine about 16 feet (5 meters) deep and 65 feet (20 meters) wide. In many areas, pedestrians were forced to walk through muddy, slippery jungle. President Dilma Rousseff flew by helicopter over the region yes- terday and the Health Ministry said it was sending seven tons of medications, enough to treat 45,000 people for a month. Rousseff said the destruction was an act of God - but she also said people died because homes were illegally built in areas prone to slides. "We saw areas in which moun- tains untouched by men dis- solved," she told reporters in Rio after the flyover. "But we also saw areas in which illegal occupation caused damage to the health and lives of people." Teresopolis Mayor Jorge Mario Sedlacek decreed a state of emer- gency, calling the calamity "the worst to hit the town." About 800 search-and-rescue workers from the state's civil defense depart- ment and firefighters were dig- ging for survivors, but hopes were dimming. The cost to rebuild the city of Teresopplis alone was estimated at $60 million, said the city's civil defense secretary, Flavio Luiz Castro in a report carried by the Terra news portal website. The federal government said it was making available more than $400 million to the states affect- ed by the rains, and officials said they would work closely with Rio de Janeiro state authorities to provide support.