The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, January 10, 2012- NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT New cardiology complex to break ground next week The Detroit Medical Center plans to break ground next week on a $78-million cardiology com- plex. DMC president and chief exec- utive Michael Duggan and Car- * diovascular Institute President Theodore Schreiber are sched- uled to attend the Jan. 17 ceremo- nies north of downtown Detroit. The five-story DMC Heart Hospital will provide state-of- the-art facilities for cardiac treat- ment, research and heart disease prevention. Officials say the proj- * ect will transform cardiac care across the state and the Midwest. DMC operates a number of facilities, including Children's Hospital of Michigan, Detroit Receiving Hospital, Harper Uni- versity Hospital and Sinai-Grace Hospital. The system has more than 2,000 licensed beds and 3,000 affiliated physicians. DES MOINES, Iowa Vilsack: USDA to close 259 offices, * labs and facilities The U.S. Department of Agri- culture will close 259 domestic offices, labs and other facilities as part of an effort to save $150 million per year, U.S. Agricul- ture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced yesterday. While the closures and other cost-cutting steps will affect the USDA headquarters in Washing- ton and operations in 46 states, the savings will be relatively small in the context of the agen- cy's $145 billion budget. The closures follow a review of USDA operations done as part of the Obama administration's efforts to cut waste, Vilsack said. Congress, he said, has reduced the U$DAapetingbudgetrexat- ing the challenge of finding ways to maintain services with ewer employees. CARACAS, Venezuela Chavez expresses support of Iranian president President Hugo Chavez defend- ed his close ally Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Mon- day as tensions rose with the U.S. over Tehran's nuclear program and a death sentence against an American man convicted of work- ing for the CIA. The two leaders met in Caracas on the first leg of a four-nation tour that will also take Ahma- dinejad to Nicaragua, Cuba and Ecuador. "They present us as aggres- sors," Chavez said of U.S. officials as he received the Iranian leader at the presidential palace. "Iran hasn't invaded anyone," Chavez said. "Who has dropped thousands and thousands of bombs ... including atomic bombs?" CANBERRA, Australia Japan frees anti- * whaling activists in Antarctic Ocean An Australian customs ship was steaming toward a Japanese whaling vessel to pick up three activists after Tokyo decided today to release them with- out charges over their surprise boarding off southwest Australia. Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard said the customs ship would likely take several days of traveling at full speed to rendez- vous with the security ship the Shonan Maru No. 2 to pick up the three Australians - Geof- frey Owen Tuxworth, 47, Simon Peterffy, 44, and Glen Pendlebury, 27 - in the Antarctic Ocean. All are from WesternAustralia state. The three anti-whaling activ- ists boarded the Shonan Maru No. 2 on Sunday as it tailed the Sea Shepherd Conservation Soci- ety's flagship, the Steve Irwin. -Compiled from Daily wire reports -mI m 0 0 (ns m ELISE AMENDULA/AP Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, speaks as New Jersey Gov. Chris Chris- tie listens at left during a campaign rally in Exeter, N.H. on Sunday. GOP contenders take aim at Romney's record on jobs Rivals hope to looted the companies, left peo- tion to the Bain jobs history ple unemployed and walked off was spiking. halt frontrunner's with millions of dollars," for- Speaking of insurance mer House Speaker Newt Gin- options before a New Hamp- momentum grich said on NBC's "Today" shire audience, Romney said, show. A group friendly to "I like being able to fire people Nashua, N.H. (AP) - Mitt Gingrich is airing TV ads of who provide services to me." Romney's Republican rivals laid-off workers denouncing He remained favored to accused him yesterday of exag- Romney, who interrupted his win today's New Hampshire gerating his successes and time at Bain to serve as Mas- primary. But his rivals might coldly laying off thousands of sachusetts governor. improve their hopes of halt- workers while heading a prof- Texas Gov. Rick Perry ing his momentum in South itable venture capital firm, an joined in. He cited South Carolina's Jan. 21 primary if effort to turn the presidential Carolina companies that Bain they can persuade voters that front-runner's biggest asset bought and downsized, and he his jobs legacy is not what he into a liability. practically dared Romney to claims. The heightened focus on the ask for voters' support there in Thanks to millions of dollars firm Bain Capital threatens to the name of easing economic from a Las Vegas casino owner slow Romney's cruise-control pain. "He caused it," Perry said who supports Gingrich, TV campaign because it goes to in Anderson, S.C. ads in South Carolina are try- the heart of his No. 1 appeal to Romney points to thou- ing to do just that. Like many voters: the claim that he knows sands of jobs created at com- attack ads they are emotional, far more than President Barack panies that Bain bought, one-sided and not subtle. They Obama about creating jobs. invested in or restructured. show angry victims of layoffs Romney's takeover-and- But he struck a discordant from Bain-controlled compa- restructuring firm "apparently note yesterday, just as atten- nies. Mudslides kill eight in Rio de Janeiro, up to 20 stillr missin Torrential rain leads to evacuation of thousands President Heavy rains caused mudslides that killed at least eight people in Rio de Janeiro state yesterday, rais- ing the number of dead in Rio and neighboring Minas Gerais state to 23 so far this year, civil defense officials said. Mud loosened by the rain swallowed about 10 houses in the town of Sapucaia yesterday morning. Seven residents were confirmed dead by rescue crews that are still searching for sur- vivors. The eighth victim died when a house collapsed nearby. Up to20 other people are still missing, accordingto Rio state's civil defense department. Local authorities are still compiling a list of the disappeared. Among the missing is a fam- ily whose car was caught in the mudslide as they tried to escape, said municipal spokes- man Sergio Campante. Last week, torrential rain burst a dam, leading to the evacuation of 4,000 residents of the town of Tres Vendas. Elsewhere in the state, another 4,000 people were forced from their houses and three people were killed by heavy rains and mudslides. In the neighboring state of Minas Gerais, more than 10,000 people have left their homes, and 12 have died in floodwa- ters or mudslides, according to the state's civil defense depart- ment. The southern hemisphere summer, which starts in late December, is Brazil's rainy season. It frequently brings devastation and death to com- munities perched on hillsides or near river banks. Nearly 1,000 people died last year around this time when torrential rain unleashed avalanches of mud in Rio's mountains. In the capital, Brasilia, presi- dent Dilma Rousseff cut short her vacations and met yester- day with cabinet members to discuss the relocation of resi- dents of areas hit hardest by the storms. "Avoiding deaths is our num- ber one priority," said Rousseff's chief of staff, Gleisi Hoffmann. The federal government announced the creation of a working group of 35 geolo- gists and 15 hydrologists who will evaluate at-risk areas in Brazil's southeastern states of Rio, Minas Gerais and Espirito Santo. "We're going to map out the locations to identify the most vulnerable areas and help relo- cate the families," said the min- ister of Science and Technology, Aloizio Mercadante, in a press conference held after meeting with the president. Meanwhile, a severe drought in Brazil's southern state of Rio Grande do Sul led the governor, Beto Grill, to declare a state of emergency yesterday. UN confirms Iranians enriching uranium at an increased level IAEA says new uranium easier to use in nuclear weapons The U.N. nuclear agency on yesterday confirmed that Iran has begun enriching uranium at an underground bunker to a level that can be upgraded more quickly for use in a nucle- ar weapon than the nation's main enriched stockpile. Comment from the Interna- tional Atomic Energy Agency came after diplomats said that centrifuges at the Fordo site near Iran's holy city of Qom are churning out uranium enriched to 20 percent. That level is higher than the 3.5 per- cent being made at Iran's main enrichment plant and can be turned into fissile warhead material faster and with less work. "The IAEA can confirm that Iran has started the produc- tion of uranium enriched up to 20 percent ... in the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant," said an agency statement, which used the alternate spelling for the site. The move was expected, with Tehran announcing months ago that it would use the Fordo facility for 20 percent production. Iran beg'an to fur- ther enrich a small part of its uranium stockpile to nearly 20 percent as of February 2010 at a less-protected experimental site, saying it needs the higher grade material to produce fuel for a Tehran reactor that makes medical radioisotopes for can- cer patients. But with the time and effort reduced between making weapons-grade uranium from the 20-percent level, the start of the Fordo operation increas- es international fears that Iran is determined to move closer to the ability to make nuclear warheads - despite insistence by the Islamic Republic that it is enriching only to make reac- tor fuel. Its dismissal of findings by the International Atomic Ener- gy Agency of secret experimen- tal work on a nuclear weapons program also worries the inter- national community. British Foreign Secretary William Hague called the move "a provocative act which fur- ther undermines Iran's claims that its program is entirely civilian in nature." Tehran's "claim to be enrich- ing for the Tehran Research Reactor does not stand up to serious scrutiny," he said in a statement. Hague said that Iran "already has sufficient enriched uranium to power the reactor for more than five years and has not even installed the equipment necessary to manu- facture fuel elements" out of the enriched material. b~ncoIlege' facebook.cerm/bnco lece LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEE WHEN BUYING NEW O R USED* *Does not apply to online retailers. See bookseller for details. 4 ,I