2A - Friday, October 21, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com
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CRIME NOTES
CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES
Roll out
WHERE: 900 North
University Ave.
WHEN: Wednesday at
about 7 a.m.
WHAT: A vehicle rolled
out of a parking space and
struck another vehicle,
University Police reported.
There were no injuries and
no damage.
Keyboard caper
WHERE: 1009 Greene Rd.
WHEN: Tuesday at about
12:30 p.m.
WHAT: An employee
reported that a computer
keyboard was taken
between Oct. 13 and Oct.
18 from Administrative
Services, University Police
reported. While the officer
was writing up the report
the keyboard was found.
Card denied Ecclectic music Haunted Union
WHERE: Argus II Building
WHEN: Wednesday at2:10
p.m.
WHAT: An exterior card
reader was damaged
between 9:30 a.m. and 1:30
p.m., University Police
reported. There are no
suspects.
Water water
everywhere
WHERE: Baits I Residence
Hall
WHEN: Yesterday at about
2 a.m.
WHAT: A student said
water was leaking in their
room, University Police
reported. Plant Operations
were contacted to repair the
leak and cleanup the spill.
workshop
WHAT: School of Music,
Theatre & Dance Prof.
Mark Kirschenmann will
host a workshop for stu-
dents to learn to make
instruments out of any
noise-making object.
WHO: Living Arts
Programming Board
WHEN: Saturday
from Ip.m. to 5 p.m.
WHERE: Bursley Hall
Living Arts Studio
Indian classical
performance
WHAT: Internationally
acclaimed musician
Bada Ha Das will
performIndian classical
music ac a free concert.
WHO: Bhakti Yoga Center
WHEN: Today from 5 p.m.
to 9 p.m.
WHERE: Michigan Union
Pond Room
WHAT: The Michigan
Union will be turned into
a haunted house as part
of the University's UMix.
Activities include zombie
makeovers, a "Thriller"
dance-off, pumpkin carving
and a free buffet.
WHO: University Unions
Arts & Programs
WHEN: Tonight from 10
p.m. to 2 p.m.
WHERE: Michigan Union
CORRECTIONS
* An Oct. 20 article in
the Daily (c.s. fMott
Children's hospital open-
ing delayed until Dec. 4
")incorrectly implied
that the fire alarms in the
hospital were inadequate.
* Please report any
error in the Daily to
corrections@michi-
gandaily.com.
"Sexting" is the most
annoying new tech word
according to an online
poll conducted by YouGov
for Computeractive maga-
zine, MSNBC.com reported.
"Intextricated" came in sec-
ond place. The poll surveyed
2,054 adults in the U.K.
A 5-foot-6 walk-on
goalie is on his way to
becoming a legend for
the Michigan hockey team.
Read the improbable story of
the man between the pipes,
Shawn Hunwick.
FOR MORE, SEE SPORTS, PAGE 7A
There are 112 different
ways to spell the name
of former Libyan
dictator Moammar Gadhafi
who was killed yesterday,
ABC News reported. Qaddafi,
Khadaffy, Gadafi, Ghaddafy
and El Kazzafi are all
acceptable spellings of the
former dictator's name.
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4
4
Minnesota women suspected
of giving money to terrorists
4
Two women
allegedly funneled
more than $8,600
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Two
Minnesota women who claimed
they were helping the poor in
Somalia were convicted yesterday
of conspiring to funnel money to
a terrorist group as part of what
prosecutors called a "deadly pipe-
line"sendingfunds and fighters to
al-Shabab.
After the verdicts, one of the
women, Amina Farah Ali, told the
judge through an interpreter that
she was happy because she was
"going to heaven no matter what,"
and condemned those in author-
ity, saying: "You will go to hell."
She was ordered into custody
pending her sentencing.
Ali, 35, and Hawo Mohamed
Hassan, 64, were each charged
with conspiracy to provide mate-
rial support to a foreign terrorist
organization. Ali also faced 12
counts of providing such support,
for allegedly sending more than
$8,600 to al-Shabab from Sep-
tember 2008 through July 2009,
while Hassan faced two counts of
lying to the FBI.
Both were found guilty on all
counts. The terrorism-related
counts each carry up to 15 years
in prison, while lying to the FBI
carries up to eight years. No sen-
tencing date was set, and prosecu-
tors said it was too early to predict
what sentence they'd recommend.
The women, both U.S. citizens
of Somali descent, were among
20 people charged in Minnesota's
long-running federal investiga-
tions into recruiting and financ-
ing for al-Shabab, which the U.S.
considers a terrorist group with
ties to al-Qaida.
4
KEVIN LAMARQUE/AP
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton during her visit to Islamabad, Pakistan yesterday.
U.S. warns Pakistan and Afghanistan
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Secretary of State
talks with leaders
about militants
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
(AP) - The Obama administra-
tion delivered a blunt warn-
ing yesterday that the United
States will do what it must to go
after militants in Pakistan and
Afghanistan, whether Pakistan
helps or not.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton led an unusu-
ally large U.S. delegation for two
days of talks with civilian and
military leaders who have resist-
ed previous U.S. demands to take
a harder tack against militants
who attack American soldiers
and interests in Afghanistan.
The large U.S. contingent was
meant to display unity among
the various U.S. agencies, includ-
ing the CIA, Pentagon and State
Department, with an interest
in Pakistan. CIA chief David
Petraeus and Joint Chiefs of Staff
Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey
joined Clinton, who said the
team would "push Pakistan very
hard."
There were cordial hand-
shakes and greetings among
the large U.S. and Pakistani del-
egation gathered at the office
of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza
Gilani as the first of two evening
meetings began. Pakistan's for-
eign minister, Army chief and
intelligence head were expected
to see their U.S. counterparts
yesterday.
Clinton arrived in Islamabad
from Afghanistan, where she
told Pakistan it must be part of
the solution to the Afghan con-
flict. She said the U.S. expects
the Pakistani government, mili-
tary and intelligence services to
take the lead in fighting Paki-
stan-based militants and also in
encouraging Afghan militants to
reconcile.
"Our message is very clear,"
Clinton said. "We're going to
be fighting, we are going to be
talking and we are going to be
building ... and they can either be
helping or hindering, but we are
not going to stop."
The meetings focused on the
recurrent U.S. demand that Paki-
stan launch its own offensive
against a lethal Taliban affiliate
known as the Haqqani network.
It operates on both sides of the
Afghanistan-Pakistan border;
U.S. officials claim Pakistan
either tolerates or supports the
group's activities.
A senior U.S. official said
Thursday's four hours of meet-
ings were "extremely frank" and
"very detailed" but declined to
offer details.
In a statement, Gilani's office
said the discussion was "cordial
and frank." But it also suggested
Pakistan was unhappy with the
message push by recalling state-
ments denying U.S. allegations
of links between Pakistan and
militants.
"Disagreements between the
coalition partners in the war on
terror should not undermine
strategic relationship which is so
vital for the promotion of mutual
interests of the two countries,"
the statement quoted Gilani as
saying.
U.S. military leaders have told
the Pakistanis that if Islamabad
does not act against the Haqqa-
nis, the U.S. will.
"We must send a clear,
unequivocal message to the gov-
ernment and people of Pakistan
that they must be part of the
solution, and that means rid-
ding their own country of ter-
rorists who kill their own people
and who cross the border to kill
people in Afghanistan," Clinton
said.
Pakistan has deployed 170,000
soldiers to its eastern border
with Afghanistan and more than
3,000 soldiers have died in bat-
tles with militants. So Pakistani
leaders bristle at U.S. criticism
that they have not done enough
or that they play a double game -
fighting militants in some areas,
supporting them in others where
they might be useful proxies in a
future conflict with India.
www.NSA.gov/Careers
- P :4
" tryptanalysis
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