The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cor NEWS BRIEFS ANN ARBOR University sells out ticket allotment to Alabama game Michigan has sold out its allot- ment of tickets to the Cowboys Classic game against Alabama. The school announced yester- day that it has sold nearly 25,000 tickets to the game against the national champions on Sept. 1 in Arlington, Texas. Michigan chief marketing officer Hunter Lochman says the ticket demand was at least as strong as it has been for any event in the athletic depart- ment's history. Alabama spokesman Doug Walker says the school also expects to sell its allotment to Pa old the game. LOS ANGELES Elementary school teacher will face lewd act charges Prosecutors have filed a lewd- acts complaint against the sec- ond of two teachers removed from a Los Angeles-area elemen- tary school, and the Board of Education has voted to fire him. Forty-nine-year-old Martin Sa Springer is charged with com- st mitting the acts upon one girl in ye 2009 and is due in court Tuesday co afternoon. un Meanwhile, Los Angeles Uni- no fled School District spokesman th Tom Waldman says the board ga voted unanimously to terminate Springer and he has 30 days to U. appeal. ga Springer has spent his entire tic career at Miramonte Elementary be School, the same campus where sa veteran third-grade teacher Mark Berndt is alleged to have wi committed lewd acts with 23 ma children between 2005 and 2010. st Berndt was removed from wc the school in January 2011 and ou charged last week after months do of investigation. Springer was ing arrested Friday. pa LAGOS, Nigeria fiv $4 million needed fe to clean up lead er, from deadly mine be an An international watchdog said yesterday it will cost about 8 $4 million to clean up toxic lead wi and secure mines in northern co Nigeria, where activists say "the al worst outbreak of lead poison- ity, ing in modern history" has taken for place. At least 400 children have the died since March 2010, and tha thousands more continue to be ria exposed to dangerously high lev- els of lead, said Human Rights Watch researcher Jane Cohen. The children are being exposed while processing ore in these informal mines not owned by any company, or when their miner relatives return home covered with lead dust. The chil- dren's food and surroundings also have been contaminated . when people crush and grind rocks at home to extract the ore. SALVADOR, Brazil Standoff between Brazilian troops, police continues About 300 striking police offi- cers and their relatives held out yesterday as soldiers blockaded a state legislature building in northeastern Brazil, and pub- lic worker, leaders threatened a strike in Rio de Janeiro that could threaten the world's larg- est Carnival celebration. About 1,000 soldiers and offi- cers from an elite federal police unit ringed the legislature in the Bahia state capital of Salvador, Brazil's third-largest city with 2.7 million people and a sched- uled host for matches during the 2014 World Cup. Negotiations failed to end the strike in Salvador, officials said, and authorities in Rio de Janeiro also were preparing for police discontent there. a-Compiled from L Daily mire reports m Wednesday, February 8, 2012 - 3A Santorum regains momentum with three-state sweep rtners Elen Pontac, left, and Shelly Bailes, right, of Davis, who have been married since June 16, 2008, hug Tina Reyn- Ids, center as they watch the ruling of Proposition 8 at Cornerstone Restaurant at Headhunters in Sacramento, Calif.. Federal appeals court rules Prop. 8 unnstitutional Former senator romps in Minn., Col, .and Mo. WASHINGTON (AP) - A resurgent Rick Santorum won Republican presidential caucuses in Minnesota and Colorado on yesterday night, a stunning sweep that raised fresh questions about front- runner Mitt Romney's appeal among the ardent conservatives at the core of the party's politi- cal base. Santorum triumphed, as well, in a nonbinding Missouri pri- mary that was worth bragging rights but no national conven- tion delegates. "Conservatism is alive and well in Missouri and Minne- sota," the jubilant former Penn- sylvania senator told cheering supporters in St. Charles, Mo. Challenging both his GOP rival and the Democratic president, he declared that on issues rang- ing from health care to "Wall Street bailouts, Mitt Rom- ney has the same positions as Barack Obama." Returns from 83 percent of Minnesota's precincts showed Santorum with 45 percent sup- port,:.Texas Rep. Ron Paul with 27 percent and Romney - who won the state in his first try for the nomination four years ago - with 17 percent. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich trailed with 11 percent. It was closer in Colorado, where returns from all the pre- cincts showed Santorum with 40 percent of the vote to 35 for Romney. Gingrich had 13, and Paul claimed 12 percent. Romney showed no sign of disappointment in remarks to supporters. "This was a good night for Rick Santorum. I want to con- gratulate Sen. Santorum, but I expect to become the nominee with your help," he told sup- porters in Denver. If the night was good for San- torum, it was grim for Gin- grich, who made scant2 I effortin anyof the states that s voted during the day. He ran far off the pace in both caucus states, forced to watch from the sidelines while Santorum boasted of being the candidate with conservative appeal. There were 37 Republican National Convention delegates at stake in Minnesota and 33 more in Colorado, and together, they accounted for the largest one-day combined total so far in the raceforthe GOP nomination. The victories were the first for Santorum since he eked out a 34-vote win in the lead-off Iowa caucuses a month ago, and he reveled in the moment. "I don't stand here to be the conserva- tive alternative to Mitt Romney. I stand here to be the conser- vative alternative to Barack Obama," he told his supporters. He had faded far fromthe lead in the primaries and caucuses since, and Gingrich seemed to eclipse him as the leading con- servative rival to Romney when he won the South Carolina pri- mary late last month. While Romney throttled back after victories in Florida and Nevada in the past several days, Santorum campaigned aggressively in all three states on the ballot, seeking a break- through to revitalize his cam- paign. Case likely to be appealed to Supreme Court SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- me-sex marriage moved one ep closer to the Supreme Court sterday when a federal appeals urt ruled California's ban iconstitutional, saying it serves opurpose other than to "lessen e status and human dignity" of ys. A three-judge panel of the 9th S. Circuit Court of Appeals ve gay marriage opponents me to appeal the 2-1 decision fore orderingthe state to allow me-sex weddings to resume. "I'm ecstatic. I recognize that e have a ways to go yet. We ay have one or two more legal eps," said Jane Leyland, who as gathered with a small crowd tside the federal courthouse in wntown San Francisco, cheer- g as they learned of the ruling. Leyland married her longtime rtner, Terry Gilb, during the e-month window when same- x marriage was legal in Cali- rnia. "But when we first got togeth- I would have never dreamed a million years that we would allowed to be legally married, d here we are." The ban known as Proposition was approved by voters in 2008 th 52 percent of the vote. The urt said it was unconstitution- because it singled out a minor- 'group for disparate treatment r no compelling reason. The justices concluded that e law had no purpose other an to deny gay couples mar- ge, since California already grants them all the rights and benefits of marriage if they regis- ter as domestic partners. "Had Marilyn Monroe's film been called 'How to Register a Domestic Partnership with a Millionaire,' it would not have conveyed the same meaning as did her famous movie, even though the underlying drama for same-sex couples is no differ- ent," the court said. The lone dissenting judge insisted that the ban could help ensure that children are raised by married, opposite-sex par- ents. The appeals court focused its decision exclusively on Califor- nia's ban, not the bigger debate, even though the court has juris- diction in nine Western states. Whether same-sex couples may ever be denied the right to marry "is an important and highly controversial question," the court said. "We need not and do not answer the broader question in this case." Six states allow gay couples to wed - Connecticut, New Hampshire, Iowa, Massachu- setts, New York and Vermont - as well as the District of Columbia. California, as the nation's most populous state and home to more than 98,000 same-sex couples, would be the gay rights movement's big- gest prize of them all. The 9th Circuit concluded that a trial court judge had correctly interpreted the Con- stitution and Supreme Court precedents when he threw out Proposition 8. The measure "serves no purpose,, and has no effect, other than to lessen the sta- tus and human dignity of gays and lesbians in California, and to officially reclassify their rela- tionships and families as inferior to those of opposite-sex couples," Judge Stephen Reinhardt, one of the court's most liberal judges, wrote in the 2-1 opinion. Opponents of gay marriage planned to ask the Supreme Court to overturn the ruling, which came more than a year after the appeals court panel heard arguments in the case. "We are not surprised that this Hollywood-orchestrated attack on marriage - tried in San Francisco - turned out this way. But we are confident that the expressed will of the American people in favor of marriage will be upheld at the Supreme Court," said Brian Raum, senior counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund, a Christian legal aid group based in Arizona that helped defend Proposition 8. 'Sc ... c w o s- $.o' Deadline: Thrs dy, eb.9th by 2:30 Cost: Only $S Publication Date: Tuesday, Feb.l4th Rge pien email add _ _ _ _ Text IJJLI L u u U 0 Plesestp nto The Mlhia Daily *ffiCe at 420 Maynard ( eh nd the LSA Bull ,t 9) with this forrand $5. CASH ONLY P es. You may al ofilOUtEthiform EnThe h0 an ily$ .sbite ad pay with a credIt cad' EaCh Cupid G am p rChased gives you h chance to win one of two dinners o two at js Mo hanggjg Bareque ft A