The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, February 13, 2012 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, February 13, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Fisher Music Center damaged in gas explosion Authorities say the home of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra has been damaged in a methane gas explosion that sent at least three manhole covers flying into the air. No injuries were report- ed. It happened yesterday morn- ing at Orchestra Hall, part of " the Max Fisher Music Center in Detroit's cultural center just north of downtown. DTE Energy Co. spokesman Len Singer tells The Detroit News and the Detroit Free Press that an underground cable fail- ure apparently triggered the blast. WWJ-AM says officials believe gas builtup in sewer lines until it ignited. MILWAUKEE Sexual abuse lawsuit against 0 Pope withdrawn Lawyers for a man who was sexually abused decades ago by a priest at a Wisconsin school for the deaf have withdrawn their lawsuit naming Pope Benedict XVI and other top Vatican offi- cials as defendants. Attorney Jeff Anderson filed the lawsuit in 2010. He claimed former Cardinal Joseph Ratzing- er and his deputies knew about allegations of sexual abuse at the school and protected the priest from punishment. Anderson's firm withdrew the case Friday in Milwaukee. He explains the action by saying the main thing he was seeking was information and accountability, and he's already received 30,000 pages of revealing documents through bankruptcy proceed- ings of the Archdiocese of Mil- waukee. CAIRO United Nations consultant shot, killed in Egypt " An Egyptian woman who worked for the United Nations as a freelance consultant was fatal- ly shot in the head while driving through an upscale Cairo neigh- borhood on yesterday, security officials said. It was not immediately clear whether the woman, identified as 41 year-old Nermeen Gomaa Khalil, was targeted or killed in a random crime. Police said she was shot by unidentified gun- men passing in another car, but no one has been arrested. Khalil was shot in broad day- light while driving her SUV on one of Cairo's busiest streets in the neighborhood of Mohandi- seen, according to a security official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to report- ers. Khawla Mattar, director of the UN Information Center in Egypt, said Khalil was a consul- tant with a women's fund at the United Nations in Cairo and also worked at a medical lab. RESTELICA, Kosova Avalanche kills 9, one child saved Rescuers have pulled a 5-year- old girl alive from the rubble of a house flattened by a massive avalanche that killed both her parents and at least seven of her relatives in a remote mountain village in southern Kosovo. Col. Shemsi Syla, a spokesman for the Kosovo Security Force, said yesterday officers discov- ered the girlwhen they heard her voice and cell phone. Her home was buried under 10 meters (33 feet) of snow. Rescuers cheered and pumped their fists in the air late Saturday as the girl was pulled out alive. A video aired on Klan Kosova TV showed rescuers covering the girl with blankets, before she was rushed to hospital. -Compiled from SIlE INTEL GROUP/AP Al-Qaida's leader Ayman al-Zawahri in a still image from a web postng by al-Qaida's media arm, as-Sahab, yesterday. A-Qaida backs Syrian ,-revolt and bombingsQ: Violence increases potential for civil war, future uncertain BEIRUT (AP) - Al-Qaida's leader has called for the ouster of Syria's "pernicious, cancer- ous regime," raising fears that Islamic extremists will try to exploit an uprising against Pres- ident Bashar Assad that began with peaceful calls for demo- cratic change but is morphing into a bloody, armed insurgency. The regime has long blamed terrorists for the 11-month-old revolt, and al-Qaida's endorse- ment creates new difficulties for the U.S., its Western allies and Arab states trying to figure out a way to help force Assad from power. Yesterday, the 22-nation Arab League called for the U.N. Security Council to create a joint peacekeeping force for Syria, but Damascus rejected it immediately. In an eight-minute video message released late Satur- day, al-Qaida chief Ayman al- Zawahri called on Muslims to support Syrian rebels. "Wounded Syria is still bleeding day after day, and the butcher (Bashar Assad) isn't deterred and doesn't stop," said al-Zawahri, who took over al-Qaida after Osama bin Laden was killed by U.S. spe- cial forces last May. The United Nations esti- mates more than 5,400 people have been killed in Syria since the uprising began in March. But that figure is from Janu- ary, when the U.N. stopped counting because the chaos in the country has made it all but impossible to check the figures. While many of the anti- government protests sweeping the country remain peaceful, the uprising as a whole has become more violent in recent months as frustrated demon- strators and army defectors take up arms to protect them- selves from the steady military assault. An increasing num- ber of army defectors known as the Free Syrian Army have launched attacks, killing sol- diers and security forces. Syria now has become one of the deadliest conflicts of the Arab Spring, and many fear the country of 22 million at the heart of the Arab world is on the verge of a civil war that could engulf the region. In a grave escalation of the violence, a string of suicide attacks have killed dozens of people since late December. The latest, twin bombings in the major northern city of Aleppo, killed at least 28 peo- ple on Friday, the government said. Some 70 people were killed in earlier attacks in the capital, Damascus, on Dec. 23 and Jan. 6. All the blasts struck security targets. Nobody has taken respon- sibility for the attacks, but the regime said they have the hallmarks of al-Qaida and immediately blamed the global terror group. Saturday's statement by al-Zawahri appears to bol- ster Assad's accusations, but the Syrian opposition and the Free Syrian Army reject the government's claims entirely. They accuse forces loyal to the regime of setting off the blasts to smear the opposition, ter- rify people into submission and exploit fears of chaos and sectarian warfare. For many Syrians, the uncertainty over the future is cause for alarm in a country that has watched neighboring DATADRIVE From Page 1A tional Resources Network. Focus: HOPE is a non-profit organization based in Detroit that was created in 1968 to over- come racism, poverty and injus- tice in southeast Michigan. The problems and data Focus: HOPE presented to the a2DataDive par- ticipants concerned its HOPE Village Initiative, a program dedicated to creating a stable and safe neighborhood for families in Detroit and a section of Highland Park. Patrick Cooper, a represen- tative of Focus: HOPE, said the a2DataDive gave the organiza- tion a clearer picture of the people it helps by creating a map that organizes participants not only by where theylive, but also by income level and level of involvement. "Data scientists here have been able to look at (our data) and been abletodevelop anin-depthpicture of who's in the HOPE Village ver- sus the rest of the city of Detroit, and what kind of programs need to be developed to respond to their needs," Cooper said. Cooper added that apart from the demographic map, one group studied traffic and safety around Focus: HOPE's location, which will help make it easier for people to travel to the program locations. "Maybe some people are inhib- ited from getting involved simply because it's difficult to walk across the expressway," Cooper said. "We'll be able to use the informa- tion that came out of this event to help negotiate for improvement for pedestrian traffic." The other beneficiary of the a2DataDive was African Health OER Network, which is part of OER Africa, an initiative estab- lished by the South African Insti- tute for Distance Education. According to a handout at the a2DataDive, African Health OER Network aims to enhance health education throughout Africa by "creating and promoting free, openly licensed teaching materi- als created by Africans to share knowledge, address curriculum gaps, and support health educa- tion communities." Participants who worked with the African Health OER Network focused on two aspects of the organization- the people who are involved in the network and the content generated by the network. Kathleen Omollo, project man- ager for the African Health OER Network, said the information analyzed during the a2DataDive will help the organization see who is active within the Health OER Network. "What I think will be most valuable is seeing the people who haven't been connected as much and try to get them more involved in events and reach out to them more often," Omollo said. The second group that worked with the African OER Health Network analyzed educational YouTube videos that the network generates. Omollo said the analy- sis of the comments on the videos was particularly interesting. "Just that graphic they had showing the frequency of words 'thank' and 'thank you' and 'grate- ful' and 'very' being among the highest is amazing," Omollo said. ... I can already think of so many people who will be excited to see that particular graphic." Apart from collaborating to help Focus: HOPE and the African Health OER Network, participants took part in three information coding workshops and hear from keynote speaker David Burke, aprofessor of human genetics at the University Medical School. Inaninterviewafterhisspeech, Burke said he felt the a2DataDive is centered around showing par- ticipants how they can best utilize what they learn. "(The DataDive) is important and useful, and you can feel that when you talk to these people," Burke said. "They feel like they've spent their time on something that really has value and that is a good part of what you have to do at a university." The a2DataDive was inspired by the original DataDive created by Data without Borders. Nikki Roda, a first year masters student in the School of Informatics and one of the coordinators of a2Data- Dive, attended the original event in New York last October. Roda said she, along with the other coordinators of the event, is already planning next year's a2DataDive, and hopes this year's success will allow the event to expand. "There's enough excitement that maybe we can transition (the a2DataDive) in such a way that it will be easier for us to find non- profits and it will be easier for us to find participants," Roda said. Santorum, chasing Romney, expects to compete in Mich. Rc Plans to halt omney's Maine momentum PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - A day after Mitt Romney regained some momentum in the Republican presidential contest, his rival Rick Santo- rum went on the attack, calling the front-runner "desperate" while promising to compete aggressively to win the state where Romney grew up. Santorum said yesterday he could do "exceptionally well" in Michigan, where Romney's father served as governor. The Midwestern state and Arizona host Republican presidential nominating contests on Feb. 28. "We're going to spend a lot of time in Michigan and Arizona, and those are up next. And that's where we've really been focusing on," Santorum told ABC's "This Week." He suggested that a strong showing in those con- tests would make the presi- dential contest "a two-man race," dismissing current rivals Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul. Santorum shrugged off his third-place finish Saturday in caucuses in Maine, where he didn't actively compete, as well as his second-place finish in a straw poll of con- Read our tweets. @michigandaily servative activists. Romney has been paint- ing Santorum as a long-time Washington insider who pur- sued home-state projects. San- torum on Sunday described Romney's recent criticism as "desperate." "You reach a point where desperate people do desperate things," said Santorum, who represented Pennsylvania dur- ing his 16 years in Congress, first in the House and then in the Senate. Maine GOP officials declared Romney the winner of Saturday's caucuses. The results ended a three-state los- ing streak to Santorum, who swept contests in Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri on Tuesday. With the next primaries more than two weeks away, the break seems unusually long in the rapid-fire race that's fea- tured six contests in the last 14 days. Romney and his rivals now have 17 days to raise cash and bolster their organiza- tions for what's shaping up to be a slog to the Republican nomination and the right to face President Barack Obama in November. As Santorum eyes Michi- gan, Romney turns his atten- tion to extending his huge cash advantage over his rivals. The Massachusetts gover- nor left Maine before the cau- cus results were announced to attend a West Coast fundraiser Saturday night. He issued a written statement to mark his victory in the low-turnout con- test. FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @MICHIGANDAILY @MICHDAILYNEWS @MICHDAILYSPORTS @MICHDAILYOPED @MICHDAILYARTS @MICHDAILYPHOTO @MICHDAI LYDESIGN I Campus Mind Works FREE drop-in education and support groups for any U-M student with Depression, Bipolar, or Anxiety Strategies for Improving Relationships When: Tuesday, February 14 from 5:30-7:00 p.m. Where: Chrysler Center, Room 165, North Campus Visit www.campusmindworks.org for more information. Groups N' ti. K. University of Michigan Depressio" Ce"te' Presented by the U-M Depression Center in collaboration with the College of Engineering and Psychological Clinic. A