6 - Tuesday, September 11, 201,- 2 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 6 - Tuesday, September 11, 201 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Chicago teachers strike in bitter contract dispute Visitors to the National September 11 Memorial and Museum look at one of two reflecting pools at the World Trade Center, on Thursday. Debate surrounds annual cost of Sept.11-memorial Union in nation's third largest district strike for 1st time in 25 years CHICAGO (AP) - For the first time in a quarter century, Chicago teachers walked out of the classroom .Monday,. taking a bitter contract dispute over evaluations and job security to the streets of the nation's third- largest city - and to a national audience - less than a week after most schools opened for fall. The walkout forced hun- dreds of thousands of parents to scramble for a place to send idle children and created an unwel- come political distraction for Mayor Rahm Emanuel. In a year when labor unions have been losing ground nationwide, the implications were sure to extend{ far beyond Chicago, particularly for districts engaged in similar debates. The two sides resumed negoti- ations Mondaybut failed to reach a settlement, meaning the strike will extend into at least a second day. Chicago School Board Presi- dent David Vitale told reporters that board and union negotia- tors did not even get around to bargaining on the two biggest issues. "This is a long-termbattle that everyone's going to watch," said Eric Hanuskek, a senior fellow in education at the Hoover Insti- tution of Stanford University. "Other teachers unions in the United States are wondering if they should follow suit." The union had vowed to strike Monday Ifiere was.no agree- ment on a new contract, even though the district had offered a 16 percent raise over four years and the two sides had essentially agreedon a longer school day. With an average annual salary of $76,000, Chicago teachers are among the highest-paid in the nation, according to the National Council on Teacher Quality. But negotiators were still divided on job security mea- sures and a system for evaluat- ing teachers that hinged in part on students' standardized test scores. The strike in a district where the vast majority of students are poor and minority put Chicago at the epicenter of a struggle between big cities and teachers unionsforcontrol of schools. Emanuel,whohassoughtmajor reforms while also confronting the district's $700 million budget shortfall, acknowledged his own fight with the union, even as he urged a quick resolution. "Don't take it out on the kids of Chicago if you have a problem with me," he told reporters Mon- day. As negotiators resumed talks, thousands of teachers and their supporters took over several downtown streets during the Monday evening rush. Police secured several blocks around district headquarters as the crowds marched and chanted. The protesters planned to rally through the evening at an event that resembled a family street fair. Balloons, American flags and homemade signs hung above the crowd. Teacher Kimberly Crawford- said she was most concerned about issues such as class size and the lack of air conditioning. "It's not just about the raise," she said. "I've worked without a raise for two years." The strike quickly became part of the presidential cam- paign. Republican candidate Mitt Romney said teachers were turn- ing their backs on students and Obama was siding with the strik- ing teachers in his hometown. Obama's top spokesman said the president has not taken sides but is urging both the sides to settle quickly. Emanuel, who just agreed to take a larger role in fundrais- ing for Obama's re-election, dis- missed Romney's comments as "lip service." But one labor expert said that a major strike unfolding in the shadow of the November elec- tion could only hurt a president who desperately needs the votes of workers, includingteachers, in battleground states. Projec total a year NEW Y( over balanc the memor enormous a memori ground ze ened on th 11th anni' faced que the projecr lion-a-year and an ag way for th tion was re The nur the $7001 cost of th ber 11 Met report Sun ed Press n a year wou rity, more ating bud National M monument USS Arizo Harbor. Mayorl who leads1 profit four the museu t expected to Monday called the memorial's ,~. operating cost a necessity for $60 mil o security and other costs unique to hosting millions of visitors a in operating year on the reborn site of two costs terror attacks, in 1993 and 2001. Some congressional Demo- crats underscored their efforts ORK (AP) - A debate to help get federal money to cing the need to honor cover some of the operat- y of Sept.11 with the ing cost, while a Republican costs of running senator reiterated his opposi- al and museum at tion. Even some victims' fam- ro has been reawak- ily members are divided over 1e eve of the attacks' whether the annual price tag versary, as officials represents the price of paying stions Monday over tribute to the nearly 3,000 lives t's expected $60 mil- lost or the cost of unnecessary r operating budget grandeur. reement paving the At ground zero, several visi- .e mnuseum's corrple- tsars Monday to the menrorial ached. plada were surprised but not nber comes on top of put off by the $60 million-a- million construction year figure. e National Septem- "Really?" said Pat Lee, a morial & Museum. A Walmart manager from Atlan- day by The Associat- ta. But, she said, "I don't think oted that $12 million the money is too much. Because rld be spent on secu- it's important to keep alive the than the entire oper- memory of what happened." gets of Gettysburg The memorial, the center- dilitary Park and the piece of the rebuilt World Trade that includes the Center site, includes a serene, na Memorial at Pearl solemn memorial plaza, where waterfalls fill the fallen towers' Michael Bloomberg, footprints, and a mostly under- the board of the non- ground museum that is to house adation that controls such artifacts as the staircase m and memorial, on workers used to escape the attacks. The plaza opened last year and has drawn 4.5 million visi- tors. The museum was to have been finished by Tuesday, but progress stopped amid a con- struction costs fight between the memorial foundation and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the agency that owns the trade center site. The Port Authority claimed the memorial foundation owed it $300 million for infrastruc- ture and revised project costs; the foundation argued it was owed money because of project delays. The parties involved in the dispute said Monday they had reached ran agreement. Their memorandum of understand- ing addresses issues including coordination of the site and gen- eral financial terms but doesn't go into detail on specific levels of financing. The agreement outlines that the memorial will have six months' operating expenses on hand as net work- ing capital and that it will give the Port Authority a security; deposit equal to six months' util- ity expenses, but it doesn't say what those figures are. Even so, it remains unclear how the foundation will cover the costs of running the muse- um, once it does open. Al- Qaeda's No. 2leader killed by missile in airstrike inYemen Death of al-Shirhri breakthrough in U.S. efforts to halt terror network SANAA, Yemen (AP) - An airstrike killed al-Qaeda's No. 2 leader in Yemen along with six others traveling with him in one car on Monday, U.S. and Yemeni officials said,-7'maoaj breakthrough for U.S.-backed efforts to cripple the group in Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com RELEASE DATE-Tuesday, September 11, 2012 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS DOWN 32 Chopped side 51 Look of derision 1Favorite texting t Blessing dish 52 Rivers at partner, for short 2 Muh ado 33 High-end comedy 4 In a crooked about 34 Welk's upbeat 53 "Just doing my position something 38 Frills, ribbons, job" S Form 3 Bilbo Baggins's 3 ratles, and such 54 Foerof the 14 Lord's Prayer nephewO 30 Birt arena Farce opener 4 Postulate support 55 Over, in Hanover 15 Deli counter unit sHabnk 4 2 In olden days 56 Wet blanket, so 16 What actors 6 Garment tor Rob dd Skipper's area to speak have to learn Roy 46 Morally base 57 Luggage 17 Barcelona gold 7 Quito's nation: 47 Wine and dine attachments 18 Kin of "Skoall" Abbr. 50 Measured (out) 58 Sgt., e.g. 19 Like much pub 8 Place to grab a ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: ale screwdriver at 20 "Yes, indeed" hoe? 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Saeed al-Shihri, a Saudi national who fought in Afghan- istan and spent six years in the U.S. military prison at Guanta- namo Bay, was killed by a mis- sile after leaving a house in the southern province of Hadra- mawt, according to Yemeni military officials. They said the missile was believed to have been fired by a U.S.-operated, unmanned drone aircraft. ~~Two"seOr' U.S. officials confirmed al-Shihri's death but could not confirm any U.S. involvement in the airstrike. The U.S. doesn't usually com- menfon such-attacks although it has used drones in the past to go after al-Qaida members in Yemen, which is considered a crucial battleground with the terror network. Yemeni military officials said that a local forensics team had identified al-Shihri's body with the help .of U.S. forensics experts on the ground. The U.S. and Yemeni military officials spoke on condition of anonym- ity because they weren't autho- rized to release the information to the media. Late Monday, after specula- -tion surfaced that the attack was carried by a U.S. drone, Yemen's Defense Ministry issued a statement saying al- Shihri and six companions were -killed during an opera- tion by Yemeni armed forces in Wadi Hadramawt, but it did not elaborate on how they were killed. Yemeni military officials said they had believed the United States was behind the operation because their own army does not the capacity to carry out pre- cise aerial attacks and because Yemeni intelligence gathering capabilities on al-Shihri's move- ments were limited. A brief Defense Minis- try statement sent to Yeme- ni reporters on their mobile phones earlier in the day only said that an attack had targeted the militants. It did not specify who carried out the attack or when ittook place. Al-Shihri's death is a major blow to al-Qaida's Yemen branch, which is seen as the world's most active, plan- ning and carrying out attacks against targets on and outside U.S. territory. The nation sits --on"the-southern-tip of-the Ara- bian Peninsula and is on the doorstep of Saudi Arabia and fellow oil-producing nations of the Gulf and lies on strategic searoutes leading to the Suez Canal. The group formally known as Al-Qaida in the Arabian Pen- insula took advantage of the political vacuum during unrest inspired by the Arab Spring last year to take control of large swaths of land in the south. But the Yemeni military has launched a broad U.S-hacked offensive and driven the mili- tants from several towns. After leaving Guantanamo in 2007, al-Shihri, who is believed -to be in his late 30s, went through Saudi Arabia's famous "rehabilitation" institutes, an indoctrination program that is designed to replace what -authorities in Saudi Arabia see as militant ideology with reli- gious moderation. But he headed south to Yemen upon release and became deputy to Nasser al- Wahishi, the leader of Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula. Al- Wahishi is a Yemeni who once served as Osama bin Laden's personal aide in Afghanistan. Al-Qaida in Yemen has been linked to several attempted attacks on U.S. targets, includ- ing the foiled Christmas Day 2009 bombing of an airliner over Detroit and explosives- laden parcels intercepted aboard cargo flights last year. Last year, a high-profile U.S. drone strike killed U.S.-born Anwar al-Awlaki, who had been linked to the planning and exe- cution of several attacks target- ing U.S. and Western interests, including the attempt to down a Detroit-bound airliner in 2009 and the plot to bomb cargo planes in 2010. Unlike other al-Qaida branches, the network's mili- tants in Yemen have gone beyond the concept of plant- ing sleeper cells and actively sought to gain a territorial foot- hold in lawless areas, mainly in the south of Yemen, before they were pushed back by U.S.- backed Yemeni government forces after months of inter- mittent battles. 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