The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, September 17, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Aquarium reopens after 7-year hiatus Thousands of people have turned out for the opening of Detroit's Belle Isle Aquarium, closed in a budge tightening move seven years ago. The aquarium now is a volun- teer project, open each Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The Detroit Free Press says people from around the region ' lined up for the 108-year-old aquarium's first day of public operations since 2005. Then-Mayor Kwame Kilpat- rick shuttered the aquarium, which once cost $500,000 a year to operate. Mayor Dave Bing rededicated it Friday. HILLSIDE, III. Teen arrested for terrorist attempt Undercover FBI agents arrest- ed an 18-year-old American man who tried to detonate what he believed was a car bomb outside a downtown Chicago bar, federal prosecutors said Saturday. Adel Daoud, a U.S. citizen from the Chicago suburb of Hillside, was arrested Friday night in an undercover operation in which an agent pretending to be a terrorist provided him with a phony car bomb and watched him press the trigger, prosecutors said. The U.S. Attorney's Office in Chicago, which announced the arrest Saturday, said the device was harmless and the public was never at risk. Daoud is charged with attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and attempting to damage and destroy a building with an explosive. He remains in custody pending a detention and preliminary hearing set for Mon- day in federal court. SAN ANTONIO Woman to lead scandal-ridden Air Force group The Air Force chose a woman Saturday to lead its basic training unit at a Texas base where dozens of female recruits have alleged they were sexually assaulted or harassed by male instructors within the past year. Col. Deborah Liddick is tak- ing command of the 737th Train- ing Group, bringing a distinctly new face of authority to Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio. Six male instructors have been charged with crimes ranging from rape to adultery, and there are oth- ers still under investigation. The Air Force announced Lid- dick's appointment in a statement that didn't mention the sex scan- dal or highlight choosing a woman to lead a unit where the number of women identified by military investigators as potential victims is approaching40. GALKAYO, Somalia Somalia appoints new leader Somalia's new leader was inaugurated Sunday amid tight security in the capital, Moga- dishu, four days after President Hassan Skeikh Mohamud sur- vived an assassination attempt. Mohamud, a teacher and activist, won the election last week against outgoing President Sheik Sharif Sheikh Ahmed by the legislative vote of 190 to 79. The inauguration ceremony was attended by some regional leaders, including the prime minister of Ethiopia and the president of Djibouti. The attempt on Mohamud's life on his second day in office high- lighted the serious security chal- lenges he faces as he takes the helm of a volatile country that has not had a stable government for more than two decades. Mohamud him- self acknowledged this fact, saying in his inauguration remarks that security was the paramount issue. He promised to be a democrat and to create "an effective justice sys- tem" that serves all Somalis. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Chicago teachers continue strike Fareed Khan/AP Supporters of Pakistani religious party Jamaat-e-Islami cahnt slogans during a demonstration, in Karachi, Pakistan on Friday as part of widespread anger across the Muslim world about a film ridiculing Islam's Prophet Muhammad. Hezbollah urges protests against U.S., clashes over prophet film Demonstrations held against U.S. in light of anti-Islam movie KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) - Hundreds of Pakistanis pro- testing an anti-Islam film broke through a barricade near the U.S. Consulate in the southern city of Karachi on Sunday, spark- ing clashes with police in which one demonstrator was killed and more than a dozen injured. In a move that could escalate tensions around the Arab world, the leader of the Hezbollah mil- itant group called for protests against the movie, saying pro- testers should not only 'express our anger' at U.S. embassies but urge leaders to act. The film, which denigrates Islam's Prophet Muhammad, has sparked violent protests in many Muslim countries in recent days, including one in Libya in which the U.S. ambas- sador was killed. The U.S. has responded by deploying addi- tional military forces to increase security in certain hotspots. In a televised speech, Hez- bollah leader Sheik Hassan Nas- rallah said the U.S. must be held accountable for the film, which was produced in the United States. The U.S. government has condemned the film. "The ones who should be held accountable and boycotted are those who support and protect the producers, namely the U.S. administration," Nasrallah said. He called for protests on Mon- day, Wednesday, Friday, Satur- day and Sunday. He urged protesters to call on their leaders to express their anger too. "We should not only express our anger at an American embassy here or there. We should tell our rulers in the Arab and Muslim world that it is 'your responsibility in the first place' and since you offi- cially represent the govern- ments and states of the Muslim world you should impose on the United States, Europe and the whole world that our prophet, our Quran and our holy places and honor of our Prophet be respected," he told his followers in a televised speech. Nasrallah said he waited to speak out about the film until Sunday, when Pope Benedict XVI ended his three-day trip to Lebanon. In Pakistan, police fired tear gas and water cannons at the protesters in Karachi after they broke through the barricade and reached the outer wall of the U.S. Consulate, police offi- cer Mohammad Ranjha said. The protesters threw stones and bricks, prompting the police to beat back the crowd with their batons. The police and private security guards outside the con- sulate also fired in the air to dis- perse the crowd. One protester was killed dur- ing the clash, said Ali Ahmar, spokesman for the Shiite Mus- lim group that organized the rally. Th S CH cago Sundt strike ous sl Eman tions centr futur the U Un forma tract: the w the n distrii close( Un said t nity t offeri "O Lewi if the can g Sh( Sh( will the s resun Th cago cance stude sumn of th( alteri inclu( borht gang, Th a maj six y atten high union politi by a ment again schoc tird largest U.S. nies to help with failing schools and link teacher evaluations to chool district student test scores. The strike carried political closed again implications, too, raising the risk of a protracted labor battle IICAGO (AP) - The Chi- in President Barack Obama's teachers union decided hometown at the height of the ay to continue its weeklong fall campaign, with a prominent , extending an acrimoni- Democratic mayor and Obama's tandoff with Mayor Rahm former chief of staff squarely in iuel over teacher evalua- the middle. Emanuel's forceful and job security provisions demands for reform had angered al to the debate over the the teachers last year as the cash- e of public education across strapped city began bargaining nited States. with a number of unions. ion delegates declined to The teachers walked out ally vote on a proposed con- Sept. 10 after months of tense settlement worked out over contract talks that for a time veekend with officials from appeared to be headed toward a ration's third largest school peaceful resolution. it Schools will remain Emanuel and the union d Monday. agreed in July on a deal to ion president Karen Lewis implement a longer school day eachers want the opportu- with a plan to hire back 477 to continue to discuss the teachers who had been laid off that is on the table. rather than pay regular teach- or members are not happy," ers more to work longer hours. s said. "They want to know That raised hopes the contract rre is anything more they would be settled before the et." start of fall classes, but bargain- e added: "They feel rushed." ing stalled on other issues. e said the union's delegates Emanuel decried the teach- meet again Tuesday, and ers' decision to leave class- oonest classes are likely to rooms, calling the walkout me is Wednesday. unnecessary and a "strike of e walkout, the first in Chi- choice." in 25 years, had instantly Almost from the beginning, led classes for 350,000 the two sides couldn't even !nts who just returned from agree on whether they were aer vacation and forced tens close to a deal. Emanuel said ousands of parents to find an agreement was within easy natives for idle children, reach and could be sealed with ding many whose neigh- school in session. The union nods have been wracked by insisted that dozens of issues violence in recent months. remained unresolved. e walkout was the first for Chicago's long history as a or American city in at least union stronghold seemed to ears. And it drew national work to the teachers' advan- tion because it posed a tage. As they walked the picket profile test for teachers lines, they were joined by many is, which have seen their of the very people who were cal influence threatened most inconvenienced by the i growing reform move- work stoppage: parents who . Unions have pushed back had to scramble to find babysit- st efforts to expand charter ters or a supervised place for Dls, bring in private compa- children to pass the time. Japanese economy targeted in protests Chinese protestors islands, called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China. China's seek leverage in National Tourism Adminis- tration ordered travel compa- Island dispute nies last week to cancel tours to Japan over the weeklong BEIJING (AP) - Chinese are National Day holiday in early trying to hurt Japan economi- October and promised to com- cally for leverage in a bitter pensate any businesses for costs dispute over contested islands, they could not recover, said a turning to angry protests and lawyer who saw the written calls for boycotts of Japanese order and asked not to be iden- businesses, abetted in part by tified because the document is China's government. not for public use. Sporadic protests in China The scale and violence are over the past week became the worst in recurring waves larger and at times violent and of anti-Japanese protests since spread to at least two dozen cit- 2005, when lingering griev- ies over the weekend. Protesters ances over Japan's occupation torched a Panasonic factory and of parts of China in the 1930s Toyota dealership in the east- through World War II brought ern port of Qingdao, looted a Chinese into the streets. Since Heiwado Co. department store then, China's economy has sup- in the southern city of Chang- planted Japan's as the world's sha and ransacked Japanese second largest and its diplomat- supermarkets in several cit- ic clout and military firepower ies. Though larger numbers of have soared. State broadcaster police imposed more order on China Central Television on demonstrations Sunday, they Sunday showed Chinese naval fired tear gas to subdue rowdy forces conducting firing drills protesters in the southern city in the East China Sea, though it of Shenzhen. In nearby Guang- did not give a date for the exer- zhou city, protesters broke into cises. a hotel that was next to the Jap- Tensions have been growing anese Consulate and damaged a for months over the East China Japanese restaurant inside. Sea islands, since a right-wing Japan has demanded that nationalist Japanese politician China ensure the safety of Japa- vowed to buy them from their nese citizens and businesses. private owners to better protect "Unfortunately, this is an issue them from Chinese encroach- that is impacting the safety of ment. When the Japanese gov- our citizens and causing dam- ernment purchased the islands age to the property of Japanese this week to keep them out of businesses," Japanese Prime the politician's hands, China Minister Yoshihiko Noda told reacted angrily, sending marine NHK, Japan's public broadcast- patrol ships inside Japanese- er, on Sunday. claimed waters around the U.S. Defense Secretary Leon islands. Panetta said Sunday he is con- State media, which answer cerned that island disputes in to the ruling Communist Party, the Asia-Pacific region could joined ordinary Chinese in call- spark provocations and result ing for boycotts of Japanese in violence that could involve goods. One regional newspaper other nations, such as the Unit- ran a list of well-known Japa- ed States. nese brands along with calls for While it urged protesters not a boycott. China Central Televi- to resort to violence, China's sion halted advertisements for government has also encour- Japanese products on two of its aged the use of economic pres- main channels over the week- sure in the dispute over Japan's end, according to China Nation- control over the East China Sea al Radio. FIND TE BEST