The Michigan Daily - michiganclaily.com Tuesday, February 7, 2012 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, Fefiruary 7, 2012 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Detroit squatters may be allowed to keep their homes Wayne County will send people door-to-door to offer thousands of foreclosed Detroit homes for as little as $500, a move that would keep a roof over the head of squat- ters and possibly get properties back on the tax rolls. More than 6,000 Detroit homes, foreclosed because taxes weren't paid, didn't sell at auction last fall. The county treasurer's office doesn't want to see them abandoned and is willing to nego- tiate with anyone living inside, including owners who no longer have a right to the property. "A vacant house is not going to help anybody," deputy treasur- er Eric Sabree told The Detroit News. KANEOHE BAY, Hawaii Marine hazing Anti-Syrian regime protesters play drums and wave a revolutionary flag during a demonstration in Idlib, Syria, yesterday The U.S. closed its Syrian embassy yesterday and Britain recalled its ambassador to Damascus. U.S. closes Syrian embassy in e ort to remove Assad WATER make sure that we wouldn't just run out and replace something From Page 1 every time it broke," Kenzie said. "We took ahard look at the currently lie beneath the center plant that startedback in the late of the city. 30s, and continued through the In order for the council to 60s and we said 'We've lost this definitively award the contract, capacity, what's the best way to the city's Wastewater Treat- replace it?"' ment Services must get a loan Kenize said he and his staff approved by the Michigan have met with council often over Department of Environmental the past few years to finalize Quality. The loan application is plans for the project. due to the MDEQ on Feb. 21. "We went through a lot of Earl J. Kenzie, Ann Arbor's regulatory reviews and approval wastewater treatment services so we've certainly kept coming unit manager, said the resolution back and providing informa- council approved yesterday is tion," Kenzie said. a necessary step for his depart- During the meeting, coun- ment to obtain the loan from the cilmember Mike Anglin (D- state. Ward 5) commended Kenzie for "This tentative award is involving Walsh in communica- part of what is needed in hand tions with the council. for that part of the applica- "It's kind of unusual for a tion," Kenzie said. "The resolu- company to come forward to us tion states that we recommend as council and say things to us, Walsh Construction as a quali- but I notice in your diligence fied and responsible bidder." you had a meeting to bring the In an interview after the reso- bidders in and we had our staff," lution passed, Kenzie said his Anglin said. staff worked hard to prepare the Councilmember Jane Lumm proposal for city council. (D-Ward 2) said she was "The process involved in this impressed by the report that was very long term, there was recommended Walsh that was a planning process that went in drafted by Kenzie and staff place," Kenzie said. "We actu- members from Malcolm Pirnie, ally had members of the commu- the engineering service firm nity on the project team during hired to oversee the project. the planning phase because this "Malcolm Pirnie did provide really is a very significant capital a very professional, in-depth investment." memo in their recommendation Kenzie said the process and their rationale seems sound, took six years and required an and I will congratulate you on exhaustive examination of the the fact that I think the bid and current facilities. evaluation process were quite "What we wanted to do was robust," Lumm said. FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @MICH IGAN DAILY @MICHDAILYNEWS @MICH DAILYSPORTS @MICHDAILYARTS @MICH DAILYOPED @MICH DAILYPHOTO trial delayed after Britain also recalls charges expanded The court martial for a Marine sergeant accused of hazing a fel- low Marine who committed sui- cide in Afghanistan was delayed Monday after the prosecution asked to expand the details of the charges.' Military judge Col. Michael Richardson told prosecutors to provide Sgt. Benjamin Johns' defense with specifics of the new charge details. Jury selection is expected to begin today. Johns has been charged with wrongfully humiliating and demeaning Lance Cpl. Harry Lew, who killed himself on April 3. ZURICH Swiss bank Julius Baer expects fine in U.S. tax case Swiss bank Julius Baer Group said yesterday that it might have to pay a fine to settle allegations it helped American clients cheat on their taxes, but cautioned inves- tors that the final outcome of the case was still uncertain. Zurich-based Julius Baer is one of at least 11 Swiss banks under pressure from the U.S. to give up tax-evading American customers " and the bankers who aided them. Last month, Switzerland's oldest bank, Wegelin & Co, announced it was selling most of its business after it was indicted in the U.S. with conspiring to help American clients hide more than $1.2 billion from the Internal Revenue Ser- vice. "We're in ongoing full coop- eration and dialogue with the U.S. authorities and we're confident and committed that we. will find a solution," Julius Baer's Chief Executive Boris Collardi said dur- ing the presentation of the bank's full-year results yesterday. SOFIA, Bulgaria Bulgarian dam bursts killing eight A dam in southern Bulgaria burst yesterday after days of . heavy rain, sending an eight-foot- high (2.5-meter) torrent surging through a village along the Greek border. The disaster brought the region's toll from floodingto eight dead, 10 missing. The dam on the Ivanovo Res- ervoir collapsed, flooding 700 houses inthe village of Bisser, civil defense chief Nikolai Nikolovsaid. Four bodies were found in the rag- ing waters, three of them elderly men, the Bisser mayor reported. A reporter at Bisser saw the muddy water crashing into homes, tossing cars, drowning animals and uprooting trees. Many homes were destroyed and some residents had to climb onto their roofs to escape. Many in Bisser had to be res- cued from their water-logged homes and were spending the night in emergency shelters. Officials were still assessing the damage late yesterday. -Compiled from Daily wire reports ambassador to Damascus BEIRUT (AP) - The U.S. closed its embassy in Syria and Britain recalled its ambassador to Damascus yesterday in a new Western push to get President Bashar Assad to leave power and halt the murderous grind in Syria - now among the deadliest conflicts of the Arab Spring. Although the diplomatic effort was stymied at the U.N. by vetoes fromRussiaand Chinathe moves by the U.S. and Britain were a clear message that Western pow- ers see no point in engaging with Assad and now will seek to bol- ster Syria's opposition. "This is a doomed regime as well as a murdering regime," British Foreign Secretary Wil- liam Hague told lawmakers as he recalled his country's ambas- sador from Syria. "There is no way it can recover its credibility internationally." President Barack Obama said the Syrian leader's departure is only a matter of time. "We have been relentless in sending a message that it is time for Assad to go," Obama said dur- ing an interview with NBC. "This is not going to be a matter of if, it's going to be a matter of when." The most serious violence Monday was reported in Homs, where Syrian government forces, using tanks and machine guns, shelled a makeshift medical clinic and residential areas on the third dayofarelentless assault, killinga reported 40 people, activists said. More than a dozen others were reported killed elsewhere. Those deaths followed a regime onslaught in Homs that began Saturday, the same day Syria's allies in Russia and China vetoed a Western- and Arab- backed resolution aimed at trying to end the crackdown on dissent. Some 200 people died, the high- est death toll reported for a single day in the uprising, according to several activistgroups. Even as the U.S. steps up pres- sure on Assad to halt the violence and relinquish power, Obama said a negotiated solution was possible, without recourse to outside military intervention. Later, however, White House spokesman Jay Carney said the administration was taking "no options off the table." In a signal thatthe window for diplomatic efforts may at some point close, Carney said: "We need to act to allow a peaceful political transition to go forward before the regime's escalating violence puts a political solution out of reach." U.S. Ambassador Robert Ford and 17 other U.S. officials left Syria on Monday, arriving in Amman, Jordan, several hours later. Ford was to travel on to Paris to spend time with his wife, the State Department said. As part of what was clearly a concerted Western effort, the Italian Foreign Ministry said it had also summoned Syria's ambassador in Rome to express "the strongest condemnation ... over the unacceptable acts of vio- lence perpetrated by the regime of Damascus against the civilian population." More than 5,400 people have been killed in Syria since the uprising began in March, the U.N. said early last month. Hun- dreds more are believe to have been killed since then, but the U.N. says the chaos itt the coun- try has made it impossible to cross-check the figures. Occupy movement faces second wave of forced evictions, Protesters in Washington, Miami, others forced to leave PORTLAND, Maine - A tent city that's among the longest- lived Occupy protest encamp- ments is coming down as part of a new wave of eviction orders against demonstrators aligned with the movement in communities including Miami, Washington and Pittsburgh. Occupy Maine demonstra- tots removed several large tents over the weekend, and the city yesterday gave them addi- tional time to remove the rest. Demonstrators who estab- lished the encampment just two weeks after the Occupy Wall Street encampment set up shop in New York City vowed to continue their work to call attention to corporate excess and economic inequality. 'rJust because the occupation is changing form doesn't mean it's going away," Heather Curtis, one of the campers, said yes- terday before she started haul- ing away her belongings from snow-covered Lincoln Park. The encampments that were the heart of the movement are becoming scarcer. Yesterday, a judge issued what appeared to be the final notice for Occupy Pittsburgh to leave. Over the past week, police began remov- ing demonstrators in Miami; Austin, Texas; and Washing- ton, D.C. The voices are still making themselves heard, though. Yesterday, about 20 dem- onstrators disrupted a legisla- tive budget hearing in Albany, N.Y., shouting that millionaires should be taxed more. Albany's camp was busted up in Decem- ber. Occupy Maine, which already has office space elsewhere in Portland, plans to continue get- ting its message out through other means, as well. "You can only fight for so long and you realize at the end that it's a new beginning," said Deese Hamilton, one of the four named plaintiffs in a law- suit aiming to keep protesters in Lincoln Park. Hamilton was homeless before joining with the Occupy protesters. The. campers were sup- posed to be out by yesterday morning, and they dismantled four to five communal tents over the weekend. But 16 tents remained yesterday morn- ing, and the city granted the group's request for more time, giving them until Friday to fin- ish the cleanup. There was little activity in the morning. But by the afternoon, several people were raking, and others were taking down tents. "They've asked for this amount of time in order to remove the remaining struc- tures, so we're taking them at their word," said Nicole Clegg, city spokeswoman. Occupy Maine started up Oct. 1 with a protest in Portland's Monument square and set up in Lincoln Park two days later. Throughout the frigid Maine winter, when temperatures have dropped below zero, protest- ers rotated in and out to keep a constant presence, with those in the park keeping the cold at bay by huddling in communal tents equipped with propane heaters. AP PHOTO/Obama Fasal Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, left, shakes hands with Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal, right, as the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, center, looks on, after signing an agreement in Doha, Qatar, yesterday. Fatah, Hamas sign agreement Qatar brokers agreement between Abbas and Mashaal RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) - Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas took a deci- sive step yesterday toward rec- onciliation with the Islamic militant Hamas, agreeing to head an interim unity govern- ment that would prepare for elections in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The announcement imme- diately threw Mideast peace efforts into turmoil. By mov- ing closer to Hamas, the Pal- estinian leader appeared to be closing the door, for now, to any possibility of peace talks with Israel - although all such efforts have failed to get off the ground during Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanya- hu's three years in office. Netanyahu condemned yes- terday's deal, saying it would be inpossible to reach peace with a government that includes Hamas, which Israel and the West consider a terrorist group. "It is either peace with Hamas or peace with Israel. You can't have them both," Netanyahu said. A new attempt to restart low- level talks last month ended without a breakthrough. With the reconciliation deal, Abbas appears to have concluded that he has a better chance of repair- ing the Palestinians' internal troubles than of reaching an agreement with the hardline Israeli leader. The Palestinians have been divided between rival govern- ments since Hamas ousted forces loyal to Abbas from Gaza in 2007. Yesterday's agreement, bro- kered by Qatar, seemed to bring reconciliation within reach for the first time. Previous deals have collapsed amid deep sus- picions and intervention by the sides' rival foreign patrons. Abbas is backed by the West while Hamas has been support- ed by Iran. Abbas and Hamas chief Khaled Mashaal said they would move forward without delay, though it appears unlike- ly elections can be held in May, as initially envisioned. The two Palestinian leaders had reached a reconciliation deal last year, but disagreement over who was to head an inter- im government had delayed implementation. Hamas strongly opposed Abbas' choice of Salam Fayyad, the head of his Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. It remains unclear whether an Abbas-led interim gov-. ernment that is supported by Hamas would be acceptable to the West, which gives hundreds of millions of dollars of aid to the Palestinians each year. The United States and Europe have said they would shun any gov- ernment that includes members of an unreformed Hamas. ;A