The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 9, 2012 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, February 9, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS EAST LANSING, Mich. Michigan State to require freshmen to be insured A new Michigan State Univer- sity policy requiring freshmen to either have health insurance or pay to join a plan through the school has drawn some opposition from state lawmakers. The East Lansing school is the first public university in Michi- gan to mandate coverage, the Lansing State Journal and the Detroit Free Press reported yes- terday. The school said that about 25 percent of public universi- ties nationwide have the same requirement. Republicans in the state Legis- lature have set a Feb. 15 hearing to discuss the policy from the state's second-largest public university. Michigan State University Pro- vost Kim Wilcox and Associate Provost June Youats are expected to testify at the hearing. "It's a one-size-fits-all plan," said state Rep. Kevin Cotter, R-Mount Pleasant. "The univer- sity is saying, 'You are going to have this.' This is mandated cov- erage." DETROIT 0 16 Detroit school buildings to close More than a dozen Detroit Pub- lic Schools buildings - including several high schools - will close before the start of fall classes as the district continues to slash I costs and consolidate programs to improve learning. In addition to the closures announced yesterday by state- appointed emergency man- ager Roy Roberts, four newly constructed schools will be opened. City, Kettering, Finney, South- western, Crocket and Mumford high schools are among the build- ings that will close. Finney and Crocket students will attend the new, EastEnglish Village Prepara- tory Academy. Mumford students will move from the old building into the new, $50.3 million Mum- ford High. NEW YORK Yemen killed 270 in revolt last year Yemen's president, who is in New York protected by diplomatic immunity while he receives medi- cal treatment, ordered a crack- down on Arab Spring protesters last year that killed at least 270 people nationwide, Human Rights Watch said in a new report yester- day. At least 120 protesters and bystanders were killed in just one city that was the focus of anti- government demonstrations, the group said. The report, based on inter- views with more than 170 Yemeni experts and witnesses, provides more detail than the sketchy accounts of deaths that trickled out of Yemen last year. LONDON News International settles nine more hacking lawsuits Rupert Murdoch's News International has settled nearly all the cases against the company in the first wave of lawsuits for phone hacking by its journalists, with a new round of apologies and payouts announced yester- day in a London court. But a potentially damaging claim lodged by British singer Charlotte Church is still headed, to trial later this month and a wave of new lawsuits - as many as 56 in all - is looming, lawyers told London's High Court. News International, a divi- sion of News Corp., has tried hard tA keep phone hack- ing cases from going to trial, launching its own compensation program overseen by a respect- ed former judge and paying out millions of pounds (dollars) in all in out-of-court settlements for about 60 cases. -Compiled from Daily wire reports AP An injured Syrian rebel fighter is carried into a local hospital following an exchange of fire with army troops, unseen in Idlib, Syria, yesterday. E.U.to sanction Syria as bloodshed continues Federal court halts deportation Verdict tests take into account such factors as U.S. military service, criminal administration s records, family ties and length immigration policy of stay in the country when deciding whether to start formal deportation proceedings against SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A undocumented immigrants. federal appeals court has put the He issued another in Novem- Obama administration's new ber explaining further how to immigration directive to the implement the guidelines. test by halting the deportation Since then, though, immigra- of seven immigrants alleged to tion advocates and lawyers have be in the country illegally. been complaining that prosecu- In a 2-1 ruling on Monday, tors have been too slow to call the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of off deportation prdceedings of Appeals demanded the Obama immigrants meeting the cri- administration explain wheth- teria. The advocates view the er the immigrants can avoid appeals court's rulings as a call deportation because of two to action. memos released last year by "There is a real concern that U.S. Immigration and Customs the (June) memo is not being Enforcement director John utilized to its full extent," said Morton urging prosecutors to Laura Lichter, the next presi- use "discretion" when deciding dent of the American Immigra- whether to pursue immigration tion Lawyers Association. "It cases. sounded great at the time, but Morton's initial memo in we are waiting for real prog- June said prosecutors should ress." Egypt rebues U.S. threats to ai After U.N. veto, Europe seeks to . weaken Assad BEIRUT (AP) - The Euro- pean Union will impose harsher sanctions on Syria, a senior EU official said yesterday, as Rus- sia tried to broker talks between the vice president and the oppo- sition to calm violence. Activists reported at least 50 killed in the regime's siege of the restive city of Homs. Russia, a close ally of Syria, and the West are pushing down starkly different paths in try- ing to deal with Syria's nearly 11 months of bloodshed. After blocking a Western and Arab attempt to bring U.N. pressure on President Bashar Assad to step down, Russia has launched a bid to show it can resolve the turmoil. Moscow is calling for a com- bination of reforms by the regime and negotiations, with- out calling for Assad to go. Its provisions are so far finding no traction with the opposition, which dismisses promises of reform as empty gestures, refus- es any negotiations while vio- lence continues and says Assad's removal is the only option in the crisis. , Russian Prime Minister Vlad- imir Putin said outside forces should let Syrians settle their conflict "independently." "We should not act like a bull in a china shop," Putin said, according to the ITAR-TASS news agency. "We have to give people a chance to make deci- sions about their destiny inde- pendently, to help, to give advice, to put limits some- where so that the opposing sides would not have a chance to use arms, but not to inter- fere." Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who met with Assad Tuesday in Damascus, told reporters in Moscow that the Syrian president del- egated to his vice president, Farouk al-Sharaa, responsi- bility for holding a dialogue with the opposition. Lavrov blamed both Assad's regime and opposi- tion forces for instigating the violence, which the U.N. says has killed well over 5,400 people. "On both sides, there are people that aim at an armed confrontation, not a dia- logue," Lavrov said. Rebel soldiers are playing a bigger role in Syria's Arab- Spring inspired uprising, turning it into a more mili- tarized conflict and hurtling the country ever more quick- ly toward a civil war. In their meeting Tuesday, Assad said the government was ready to talk to the oppo- sition and would cooperate with "any effort that boosts stability in Syria." The regime's crackdown on dissent has left it almost completely isolated interna- tionally and facing growing sanctions. The U.S. closed its embassy in Damascus on Monday and five European countries and six Arab Gulf nations have pulled their ambassadors out of Damas- cus over.the past three days. Germany, whose envoy left Syria this month, said he would not be replaced. In Brussels, a senior EU offi- cial said the 27-nation bloc will soon impose harsher sanctions against Syria as it seeks to weak- en Assad's regime. The official said the new measures may include bans on the import of Syrian phos- phates, on commercial flights between Syria and Europe, and on financial transactions with the country's central bank. The European Union imports 40 percent of Syria's phosphate exports. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in keep- ing with EU rules, said some measures would be adopted at the EU foreign ministers meet- ing on Feb. 27. But he stressed the nature of the measures to be adopted remained unclear since the ministers are concerned over the impact on the Syrian public. The U.N.'s top human rights official Navi Pillay called on nations to immediately act to stop the bloodshed, saying she was "appalled" by the Syrian regime's offensive against the central city of Homs, where activists say hundreds have been killed since Saturday. She said the killings show an "extreme urgency for the international community to cut through the politics and take effective action to protect the Syrian population." In New York, U.N. Secre- tary General Ban Ki-moon told reporters that the Arab League planned to send observers back to Syria and had asked the U.N. to consider a joint mission. The U.N. chief provided no specifics, but the idea appears aimed at giving the regional group a boost after the league's earlier mission was pulled out of the country because of security concerns. Ban called the continuing vio- lence "unacceptable" and added: "I fear that the appalling brutality we are witnessing in Homs, with heavy weapons firing into civilian neighborhoods, is a grim harbin- ger of worse to come." On the ground, Syrian forces persisted with their assault on Homs, the country's third largest city, trying to put down what has been an epicenter of the uprising. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 53 people were killed in Wednesday's shelling of the Homs neighborhoods of Bayadah, Baba Amr, Khaldi- yeh and Karm el-Zeytoun. The group also said that 23 homes were heavily damaged in Baba Amr alone. Omar Shaker, an activist in Baba Amr, said his neighbor- hood was under "very intense shelling" by tanks, mortars, artillery and heavy machine guns. Shaker added that he counted five bodies Wednesday in his district. The death tolls, which the groups say they gath- er from activists on the ground, could not be independently con- firmed. Syrian authorities keep tight control on the media. "The situation is dire. We are short of food, water and medi- cal aid. Doctors have collapsed after treating the wounded without rest for five days," Shaker said. "We want Lavrov to Mi Am CAIR to back a pute wit crackdo despite to cut a deploye streets a and prot Egypt agency deployin force th rity and move cc deadly that spi between testers.) killed in The d be a sho tary in criticism country racy an ruling g There a strike o gaining Egypt litary rulers also facing a deepening dis- pute with the United States prosecute over Cairo's campaign against foreign-funded pro-democracy erican NGO and rights groups, which began late last year with raid by secu- rity forces onthe organizations' offices. Authorities allege there O (AP) - Egypt refused is a foreign conspiracy against down yesterday in a dis- .Egypt to explain the widening h the U.S. over Cairo's protests against the military's wn on nonprofit groups performance. Washington's threats On Sunday, Egyptian investi- sid, while the military gative judges referred 16 Amer- d troops to the nation's icans and 27 others to trial on ifter a surge in violence accusations they illegally used ests against its rule. foreign funds to foment unrest t's official MENA news in the country. said the army was That immediately drew a ig more troops to rein- sharp rebuke from Washington, epolice,restore secu- with Secretary of State Hillary I state "prestige." The Rodham Clinton warning that smes in the wake of a failure to resolve the dispute soccer riot last week may lead to the loss of some $1.5 arked days of clashes billion in aid to Egypt. Some the police and pro- U.S. legislators even said every At least 89 people were aspect of the relationship with a week of violence. Egypt must be examined fol- eployment appeared to lowing the crackdown. .w of force by the mili- State Department spokes- response to a surge in woman Victoria Nuland called of its handling of the on Egypt to release the Ameri- 's transition to democ- cans, saying the 16 "have not d rising calls for the done anything wrong." Egyp- enerals to step down. tian authorities put the number re calls for a general of Americans referred to trial at n Feb. 11 that have been 19, but Nuland on Tuesday said traction. there are 16 Americans in the :'s military rulers are case. Michigan's graduate students develop creative ideas and push research in new directions to engage critical problems in every field of advanced study: The Symposium highlights the global impact.that graduate students make through their research, and displays the quality, breadth, and diversity of graduate education at Michigan. Presentations will be followed by a discussion with national foundation leaders about the challenges and opportunities for translafing research into solutions for real-world problems. Markj. Cardillo, C Executive Director, Pi The Camille and C Henry Dreyfus S Foundation Ft STUDENT PRESENTATIONS AND POSTERS 3 pm to 5 pm, 2nd and 4th floors, Rackham Building PANEL: FOUNDATION LEADERS 5 pm to 6 pm, Rackham Amphitheatre RECEPTION 6 pm, Rackham Assembly Hall arol Goss, resident and EO, The kilman oundation Edward Henry, President and CEO, The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation ONE HUNDRED YEARS RAC K H AM GRADUATE SCHOOL SPONSORED BY PROQUEST 0 A