The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, September 14, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Tape of Granholm in 1978 'Dating Game' surfaces Ex-Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm is getting some laughs from a newly posted YouTube video of her 1978 appearance on "The Dating Game." Marty Nislick of Bayside, N.Y., says he spotted a video of the TV show on the Facebook page of a friend who was one of the three male contestants vying for a date with the 19-year-old aspiring actress from British Columbia. Nislick tells the Detroit Free Press he recognized Granholm and posted an edited video on YouTube last week. Granholm now hosts a talk show. Ex-gubernatorial spokes- woman Liz Boyd says she emailed Granholm a link to the video and spoke with her about it Thursday. PHILADELPHIA Mohammed Ali wins civic award Retired boxing great Muham- mad Ali has been awarded the Liberty Medal in Philadelphia. The award was presented in a ceremony at the National Con- stitution Center on Thursday. It recognizes his longtime role as a fighter outside the ring for humanitarian causes, civil rights and religious freedom. A frail Ali did not speak, but stood with assistance to receive the medal from his daughter, Laila. His wife Lonnie said Ali was honored and humbled to be a bea- con of liberty. Since hanging up his gloves in 1981, Ali has traveled extensively on international charitable mis- sions and devoted his time to social causes. DALLAS Anonymous hacker arrested in Texas A Texas man linkedto the worldwide hacking group Anony- moushasbeendetainedbythe FBI over accusations that he threat- ened a federal agent, his attorney said Thursday. Barrett Brown, 31, of Dallas was arrested Wednesday night and booked into the Dallas County jail, according to jail records. Brown was then transferred into FBI custody, Dallas County sheriff's spokeswoman Carmen Castro said. Brown's attorney, Jay Leider- man, told The Associated Press that he expected Brown to be charged with making threats to a federal agent. Leiderman said the accusations are connected to YouTube videos Brown posted in recent days. The mostrecentvideo postedto Brown's account is entitled in part, "Why I'm Going to Destroy FBI Agent Robert Smith." In it, Brown rails against federal authorities for what he describes as an unfair investigationofhim and his moth- er, who he said was not involved in any of Anonymous' activities. AZAZ, Syria Syrian rebels offer to release hostages A Syrian rebel commander holding 10 Lebanese Shiites hos- tage said Thursday he is willing to release the men but fears doing so could set off a wave of reprisal attacks by Sunni extremists. What began as an effort to force Lebanon's Shiite militant group Hezbollah to stop supporting the Syrian regime has become the latest flashpoint in a conflict with growing sectarian overtones. The rebel leader behind the kidnappings, Ammar al-Dadikh- li, is a burly former cross-border trader who goes by the nom de guerre Abu Ibrahim. His 1,200-strong Northern Storm Brigade controls the vital cross- ing from Syria's Aleppo province into neighboring Turkey, and in May he ordered the seizure of the Lebanese Shiites, who had been on a bus tour of religious sites in the area, on the grounds they belonged to Hezbollah. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Coleman meets, greets at annual open house Leukemia survivor to research disease he beat as a teen Hundreds of students flock to president's home By PAIGE PEARCY Daily NewsEditor The white house nestled between the Clement's Library and Tappan Hall on South Uni- versity Avenue may seem out of place to newer students, but it's not long before they discover it as the University President Mary Sue Coleman's home. On Thursday, students of all ages and from all disciplines flocked to Coleman's annual open house for the chance to mingle with the president. Before meeting Coleman, E. Royster Harper, the Univer- sity's vice president for student affairs, greeted students enter- ing Coleman's home. "I love the fact that our presi- dent says this is my house, this is your house, come meet me, come see me, and that she will stay here the entire time in heels," Harper said. Coleman stood at the back of the house where hundreds of students waited to talk with her individually and take pictures. "I think it's important for students who would like to see the house to come in and see it," Coleman said. "There are two groups that I really enjoy: the new students coming either for their undergraduates or gradu- ate studies - their first time in Ann Arbor - and then 1 love for the seniors to come because it's the last year." Coleman said she looks for- ward to the open house every year as a way to get to know the students. "People always tell me great things, and I'm excited to hear about what people are studying and where they're from, so I get a lot of enjoyment out of this," Coleman said. Harper added that having the open house serves as a way to unite campus. "I think that it's real easy for this to just be a place, rather than a community, and so I think that anytime we can open up our home and our hearts to each other that it makes us a different kind of community," Harper said. Inside the President's House, students could roam the rooms on the main floor, sign Cole- man's guest book and munch on cookies and fruit while sipping apple cider. CSG President Manish Parikh, a Business senior, said it was his first time visiting Cole- man's house. "I think this event is really important because it sends out a strong signal to every student on campus that their president, Mary Sue Coleman, is there for them and an extremely warm and kind lady," Parikh said. "I think she'd win a poll for the coolest university president." In the house's library, sisters Amber and Brianna Campbell pointed to the wood floor and laughed together, saying it was the same as their grandmother's. Amber, an LSA freshman, said she came to the event after hearing about it at new student convocation and asked her older sister to come with her. "It reminds me of the White House," Brianna, an LSA sopho- more, said. "It's really cozy and neat and clean and just pretty." Location of Chinese vice president still unknown 12 days after incident $250,000 grant from Hyundai will aid in research efforts By MOLLY BLOCK Daily News Editor Instead of cramming for exams and heading to parties with his classmates, Andrew Harris, then a 19-year-old stu- dent at Bowling Green State University, was in the hospital receiving a bone marrow trans- plant for acute myeloid leuke- mia. Harris survived the trans- plant despite suffering a graft- versus-host disease, the most dangerous complication associ- ated with bone marrow trans- plants. Now, 10 years later, Harris is working to develop a method to diagnose GVHD in children before symptoms develop, with the help of a $250,000 grant from Hyundai Hope on Wheels, a non-profit organization sponsored by Hyundai Motor America and Hyundai dealerships. "I was the big kid on the chil- dren's floor back in college," Harris said. "I promised the doctors here that I would come back and work with them if I survived my whole ordeal and it took me 10 years to get back here." At a Thursday morning press conference, Harris was award- ed the $250,000 check and a new lab coat in the presence of colleagues and pediatric bone marrow transplant patients. Harris said the funding will makea significant difference in his career and childhood can- cer research. "This study is going to lay the groundwork for making bone marrow transplants a safer treatment option for kids around the world," he said. According to Valerie Castle, pediatrics and communicable diseases chair at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital, less than 3 percent of the National Insti- tutes of Health's budget goes toward research for childhood cancer, even though it is one of the leading causes of childhood death in the country. Brian O'Malley, regional general manager at Hyun- dai Motor America, said the mission of Hyundai Hope on Wheels is to eliminate child- hood cancer and emphasize the importance of supporting related research. The organization originally started as a grassroots effort but grew with support from contributions from the auto- maker. Since the program was started 14 years ago, Hyundai has donated more than $57 million to pediatric cancer research. O'Malley added that a con- tribution is made to the orga- nization for every Hyundai vehicle sold. Harris's work is one of the 41 projects chosen from 300 applicants to receive a grant ranging from $100,000 to $250,000. Harris began his project by developing a panel of blood tests to predict whether a child will be affected by GVFD before symptoms are present. This project is set to become a national study at Mott Chil- dren's Hospital and the Chil- dren's Oncology Group, the world's largest children's can- cer treatment research consor- tium, beginning in January. "We've got the preliminary groundwork, but now we need all the samples and data from children all around the country so we can make this predictive test," Harris said. Daniel Lee, a 23-year-old inpatient and a former LSA student who was six credits short of graduation before his diagnosis, took part in a cer- emony at the event yesterday in which pediatric bone marrow transplant patients decorated a Hyundai SUV that will be sold at the Ann Arbor Hyundai dealership on Jackson Road with their handprints. "You can never have enough money for advances in medical science," Lee said. "Even right now with all of the advance- ment in technology, it's real- ly tough for children going through chemo, nausea is hard on the body." Mitchell Dybalski, a 4-year- old neuroblastoma patient, got to put his handprint on the car. Dybalski was diagnosed in July and is one of many children that could benefit from this grant. "Every penny counts," Dybalski's mother, Tracy Dybalski, said. "It's nice to see big companies coming together and providingthe needed fund- ing for childhood cancers." Xi is expected to take over as head of Communist Party this year BEIJING (AP) - New rumors about health problems facing China's leader-in-waiting Xi Jinping swirled Thursday as the government continued to stone- wall on commenting on his con- dition or whereabouts 12 days after he dropped from sight. Official media mentioned Xi for the first time since his last appearance on Sept. 1, but the brief, obscure report failed to explain the extended absence that has sparked the rumors. The reports said Xi, Presi- dent Hu Jintao and other top officials had expressed their condolences "through vari- ous means" for the death of 102-year-old former general Huang Rong last week. The Guangxi Daily newspaper reported no other details. Iden- tical reports were carried on the websites of the Communist Party and the official Xinhua News Agency. China's vice president, Xi is due to take over as Communist Party head later this year and as president next year as the coun- try transitions to a new genera- tion of leaders. His prolonged and unexplained disappear- ance has sparked rumors and raised questions about the sta- bility of the succession process. For a fourth consecutive day, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei refused to offer any information on Xi. Early rumors said Xi, 59, threw his back out swimming or pulled a muscle playing foot- ball. As the days passed, the speculation escalated to more serious conditions, including a heart attack, stroke, or emer- gency surgery. And on Thursday, Hong Kong's Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy said a small cancerous growth had been discovered on Xi's liver on Sept. 2 and that he had undergone surgery to remove it this week at the elite military 301 Hospital in Beijing. The center said he was expected to reappear in public next week. A man who answered the phone at the hospital's admin- istrative office said he did not know whether Xi was being treated there. But he dismissed reports on Xi's condition as guesswork. United Nations nuclear monitoring body condemns Iranian enrichment Agency fears Iranian pursuit of . nuclear weapons VIENNA (AP) - The 35-nation board of the U.N. nuclear agency overwhelmingly rebuked Iran on Thursday for refusing to heed demands that it take actions to diminish fears that it might be seeking atomic arms, a move hailed by the United States as demonstratinginternational pres- sure on Tehran to compromise. Only one country - Cuba - voted against a resolutionbrought before the International Atomic Energy Agency board and drawn up by the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Ger- many. Ecuador, Tunisia and Egypt abstained, while the 31 other nations supported the resolution. Iran denies any interest in nuclear arms. But it has refused to comply with U.N. and IAEA demands to stop activities that could be used to make such weapons and to allow a probe of suspicions it worked on an arms program. Robert Wood, the chief U.S delegate to the IAEA, said he hoped he board's near-solid back- ing for the resolution would serve as a wake-up call for the Islamic Republic to heed international demands to replace its words with actions that prove it has no interest in nuclear weapons. "What we are hoping is that this resolution will keep ... dip- lomatic pressure up and con- vince Iran that it has really no other option than to comply with its international obliga- tions," he told reporters. But the resolution has its limi- tations, despite the broad support it received. As 11 others before it, the document cannot be enforced by the IAEA board, and as such, may be shrugged off by Tehran, which already is ignoring U.N. Security Council sanctions and other increasingly harsh inter- national penalties meant to force it to compromise. Iran appeared unimpressed Thursday. The country's chief IAEA delegate, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, said pressure on his country came from "a few West- ern countries, especially the United States (which) are try- ing to change the IAEA into a mere U.N watchdog" trying to penetrate countries' national security. Because it is largely symbolic, the document is also unlikely to persuade Israel that diplo- macy is working. Israel views a nuclear-armed Iran as a mortal threat, citing Iran's persistent calls for the destruction of the Jewish state, its development of missiles capable of striking Israel, and Iranian support for Arab militant groups. Israeli government leaders have become increasingly stri- dent in suggesting that only mil- itary action will stop Iran from getting nuclear arms. FOLLOW DAILY NEWS ON TWITTER @MICH DAI LYN EWS -H-, FROM THE DIRECTORS OF THE ACADEMY AWARD" NOMINATED "JESUS CAMP" Editlng Prize-SUNDANCE F1m F estlvat (Grand Jury Prize-1NDEPENCENT Fum Fest*va, Boston www.detropiathefilm.com 101 STARTS MICHIGAN THEATER OAY 603 E. LibertSt.n Anbor "'(734) 668-TIMEwww.mictheater.org TODAY MONtTUE: 4:45,7:00 & 9:15PM*WED:7:00 & 9:45PMTHU: 7:15 & 9:50PM