The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 18, 2012 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, September 18,2012-3 NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Detroit police start 12-hour shifts Police officers in Detroit are beginning new, 12-hour shifts as part of the department's efforts to cut overtime and save cash. The shifts start Monday and will see officers work two weeks and have the next 14 days off. A judge ruled last month that Mayor Dave Bing could institute the new shifts and a 10-percent pay cut to police. The $75 million in police pay cuts is designed to help the city cut into abudget def- icit that once stood at more than $300 million. Other city workers also have taken pay cuts. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Space shuttle Endeavour stuck at home in Florida Space shuttle Endeavour apparently doesn't want to leave home. NASA's youngest shuttle was supposed to depart Florida's Ken- nedy Space Center on Monday for its permanent museum home in Los Angeles. But stormy weather along the Gulf of Mexico nixed the travel plans until Wednesday morning. The shuttle will be bolted to the top of a modified jumbo jet when it leaves Florida. Endeavour will stop off in Houston, home to Mission Con- trol, and fly low over NASA facilities en route. After a stop at Edwards Air Force Base in California, it will arrive at Los Angeles International Airport on Friday, a day later than planned. NANTERRE, France French court to rule Tuesday on topless photos Lawyers for Prince William and wife Kate asked a French court on Monday to block further publication of topless photos of the Duchess of Cambridge, say- ing the two were sharing a deeply intimate moment caught by the snap of an intruding photogra- pher - images that ended up last week in a popular French gossip magazine, then in publications in two other countries. The court in Nanterre, outside Paris, said it would announce its ruling at noon Tuesday on the request to stop Closer from repro- ducing the images. The magazine published 14 of the images of a partially clad Kate in its pages on Friday. On Monday, an Italian magazine, Chi, Chi published a 26-page spread of the photos of Kate.. Chi, like Closer, is part of the Italian publishing house Mon- dadori, owned by former Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi. BEIRUT, Lebanon Hezbollah leads massive anti-U.S. protest in Lebanon In a rare public appearance, the leader of the militant Hezbol- lah group exhorted hundreds of thousands of supporters Monday to keep up the campaign against an anti-Islam video that has unleashed deadly violence and anger at the United States across the Muslim world. Although the massive, well- organized rally in Beirut was peaceful, protesters in Afghani- stan set fires near a U.S. mili- tary base, clashed with police in Pakistan, where one demonstra- tor was killed, and battled with officers outside the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim country. The turmoil surrounding the low-budget video that mocks the Prophet Muhammad showed no sign of ebbing in the week after protesters first swarmed the walls of the U.S. Embassy in Cairo. Four Americans, includ- ing the U.S. ambassador to Libya, died amid a demonstration in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Libyans rushed to save Stevens Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney speaks to reporters about a leaked video from a campaign event. Blunt Romney speech leaked in online video Group took ambassador to hospital after consulate attack CAIRO (AP) - Libyans tried to rescue Ambassador Chris Stevens, cheering "God is great" and rushing him to a hospital after they discovered him still clinging to life inside the U.S. Consulate, according to witnesses and a new video that emerged Monday from last week's attack in the city of Benghazi. The group of Libyans had stumbled across Stevens' seem- ingly lifeless form inside a dark room and didn't know who he was, only that he was a foreign- er, the man who shot the video and two other witnesses told The Associated Press. The account underlines the confusion that reigned dur- ing the assault by protesters and heavily armed gunmen that overwhelmed the consul- ate in Benghazi last Tuesday night, killing four Americans, including Stevens, who died from smoke inhalation soon after he was found. U.S. offi- cials are still trying to piece together how the top American diplomat in Libya got separat- ed from others as staffers were evacuated, suffocating in what is believed to be a consulate safe-room. The Libyans who found him expressed frustration that there was no ambulance and no first aid on hand, leaving him to be slung over a man's shoulder to be carried to a car. "There was not a single ambulance to carry him. Maybe he was handled the wrong way," said Fahd al-Bak- oush, a freelance videographer who shot the footage. "They took him to a private car." U.S. and Libyan officials are also trying to determine who was behind the attack. Still unclear was whether it had been planned beforehand or was sparked by an anti-Islam film made in the United States that, hours before the Beng- hazi assault, had sparked pro- tests at the American Embassy in Cairo. On Sunday, Libyan President Mohammed el-Megarif con- tended foreign militants had been plotting the attack for months and timed it for Tues- day's 9/11 anniversary. However, U.S. Ambassa- dor to the U.N. Susan Rice said it appeared spontaneous and unplanned, that extrem- ists with heavier weapons "hijacked" the protest and turned it into an outright attack. She noted Libya is. awash with weapons. A CIA memo sent to U.S. lawmakers this weekend, and obtained by The Associated Press, says current intelligence still suggests the demonstra- tions in Benghazi "were spon- taneously inspired by the protests at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo" and "evolved into a direct assault" on the diplo- matic posts by "extremists." Soon after the attack, Libyan civilians roamed freely around the trashed consulate, its walls blacked and furniture burned. Among them were the videog- rapher al-Bakoush, and a pho- tographer and art student he often works with. They heard a panicked shout, "I stepped over a dead man," and rushed to see what was going on, al-Bakoush said. The body hadbeen found inside a dark room with a locked door accessible only by a window. A group of men pulled him out and realized he was a foreigner and still alive. He was breathing and his eyelids flickered, al-Bakoush said. "He was alive," he said. "No doubt. His face was black- ened and he was like a para- lyzed person." GOP candidate claims 47 percent of Americans aren't his problem WASHINGTON (AP) - Already scrambling to steady a struggling campaign, Repub- lican Mitt Romney confronted a new headache Monday after a video surfaced showing him telling wealthy donors that almost half of all Americans "believe they are victims" enti- tled to extensive government support. He added that as a candidate for the White House, "my job is not to worry about those people." At a hastily called news con- ference late in the day, Rom- ney conceded the comments weren't "elegantly stated" and that they were spoken "off the cuff." President Barack Obama's campaign quickly seized on the video, obtained by the maga- zine Mother Jones and made public on a day that Romney's campaign said it needed a change in campaign strategy to gain momentum in the presi- dential race. Romney aides were already working behind the scenes to calm dissension in the GOP ranks and reassure nervous donors and consultants about the state of a race some Republicans worry may be get- ting away from their nominee. "There are 47 percent of the people who will vote for the president -no matter what," Romney is shown saying in a video posted online by the magazine. "There are 47 per- cent who are with him, who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are vic- tims, who believe that govern- ment has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you name it." "Forty-seven percent of Americans pay no income tax," Romney said. Romney said in the video that his role "is not to worry about those people. I'll never convince them they should take personal responsibility and care for their lives." In his remarks to reporters before a fundraiser Monday night in Costa Mesa, Calif., Romney did not dispute the authenticity of the hidden- camera footage, but he called for the release of the full video, instead of the clips posted online. He sought to clarify his remarks but did not apologize. "It's not elegantly stated, let me put it that way. I was speak- ing off the cuff in response' to a question. And I'm sure I could state it more clearly in a more effective way than I did in a setting like that," Romney said. "Of course I want to help all Americans. All Americans have a bright and prosperous future." About 46 percent of Ameri- cans owed no federal income tax in 2011, although many of them paid other forms of taxes. More than 16 million elderly Americans avoid federal income taxes solely because of tax breaks that apply only to seniors, according to the non- partisan Tax Policy Center. Obama's campaign called the video "shocking" "It's hard to serve as presi- dent for all Americans when you've disdainfully written off half the nation," Obama cam- paign manager Jim Messina said in a statement. An Obama adviser said the Democratic campaign might use Romney's comments from the fundraising video in tele- vision advertisements. The official wasn't authorized to discuss campaign strategy pub- licly and requested anonymity. Romney's 2010 federal tax returns show he paid a tax rate of about 14 percent on an annual income of $21 million. The vast majority of his income came from investments, which are taxed at a lower rate than wages. His wealth has been estimated as high as $250 mil- lion. Democrats have tried to make an issue of what Rom- ney pays in taxes and what he is willing to divulge about his taxes and investments. While he has released his 2010 tax returns and a summary of his 2011 returns, he has rejected calls for releasing as many as 10 years of tax returns. His cam- paign has pledged to release his complete 2011 returns before the election Nov. 6. The private remarks are the latest in a string of comments from the multimillionaire Republican businessman whom Democrats have criticized as out of touch. During the prima- ry campaign, Romney insisted that he was "not concerned" about the very poor, said he knew what it felt like to worry about being "pink-slipped," and said that his wife drove a "couple of Cadillacs." Aides to Obama's campaign said the latest video would help them continue to make the case that Romney doesn't understand the concerns of average Americans. 180 protesters incarcerated on Occupy Wall Street anniversary Occupiers take i to the streets in NYC's financial district NEW YORK (AP) - Occupy Wall Street protesters celebrat- ed the movement's anniversary on Monday by clogging inter- sections in the city's financial district, marching to the beat of drums that were a familiar refrain last year. Protesters roamed around the lower Manhattan financial district all morning in groups of a few dozen each, from one intersection to another and back again, chanting loudly about the ills of Wall Street. In total, there were a few hundred protesters scattered through- out the city. More than 180 of them were arrested by early Monday evening, mostly on dis- orderly conduct charges. The day's events lacked the heft of Occupy protests last year, when protesters gath- ered by the thousands. But Occupiers were upbeat as they spread out in their old stomping grounds, giddy at the prospect of being together again. They brushed off any suggestions that the movement had petered out. "This is a movement. It's only been a year," said protester Justin Stone Diaz, of Brooklyn. "It's going to take many years for it to develop and figure out exactly who we are." But the movement is now a shadow of its mighty infancy, when a group of young people harnessed the power of a disil- lusioned nation and took to the streets chanting about corpo- rate greed and inequality. A familiar Statue of Liberty puppet was back, bobbing in the crowd above protesters' heads. Protesters in wheel- chairs blocked a road and chanted "All day, all week, occupy Wall Street!" before they were steered off the road by police. Zuccotti Park, the former home of the encampment, was encircled by metal police barri- cades lined with police officers standing watch. Hamza Sinanaj, a 30-year- old airplane mechanic who works in upstate New York as a security guard, said he was among the first Occupy pro- testers last September. "I felt that protest was long overdue, and I'm back today," he said, holding up a sign that read, "America Rise Up." He was staying at his sister's home in the Bronx but wasn't sure he'd be there Monday night because he was "ready to be arrested, to sit on the street and be arrested." Events were planned in more than 30 cities worldwide. In San Francisco, local Occu- py groups planned to occupy 10 banks across the city and then hold an evening rally honor- ing foreclosure fighters, people who've been helping residents stave off foreclosures by squat- ting or holding sit-ins, outside the Bank of America building in the Financial District, the site of previous protests. They then planned to march. Last year, hundreds of pro- testers camped out for weeks at Justin Herman Plaza across from the city's Ferry Building, a magnet for tourists and in the heart of the Financial District, where nearby businesses were affected. LSU evacuates dorms after bomb threat Scare is the fourth and roads were closed, though some people and cars were still at universities moving around. Police officers with dogs combed through across the country buildings, including the com- puter services center. in a week State police bomb techni- cians were on the scene, said BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) Louisiana State Police Capt. - The thousands of students Doug Cain. He said authorities who live on the Louisiana were talking to their counter- State University campus have parts in Texas, North Dakota begun returning to their dor- and Ohio, where similar threats mitories after bomb-sniffing were received Friday, but offi- dogs and police methodically cials say they're not sure if the swept residential halls Mon- phone call made Monday was day following a threat that connected to those threats. sparked a campus-wide evacu- Police found no explosives on stion, those campuses. LSU spokesman Herb Vin- "It's kind of been an epidem- cent said officials hope to ic. This has been the fourth in a reopen the Baton Rouge cam- week. But it's better to be safe pus by Monday night, but they than sorry," said Joseph Vera, aren't certain if a building-by- a communications disorders building sweep will be com- graduate student. plete before Tuesday. Vera and a fellow gradu- "Residential Life buildings ate student were working in have now been deemed ready a language clinic with seven to return to normal opera- children near the edge of cam- tions," Vincent said Monday pus when they received the evening. text message about the bomb Evangeline Hall, a residen- threat. The pair walked the tial building on campus, was children across the street to reopened first and officials an off-campus restaurant and began directing some of the they called the children's par- 6,000 on-campus residents ents. into the building as the investi- The university sent a follow- gation continued, Vincent said. up message to students at 1:36 He said residential halls were p.m. telling them not to return. searched first and buses to and Col. Mike Edmonson, Loui- from the campus have been siana State Police superinten- running normally. dent, said despite some initial Thousands of students, pro- traffic congestion, the campus fessors and workers were told was evacuated in under an to leave campus Monday morn- hour. ing after a threat was phoned The university put out into 911 about 10:32 a.m., uni- a statement on its website versity spokeswoman Kristine announcing the evacuation an Calongne said. But the threat hour after the phone call was did not indicate a specific part received, then distributed of campus, so police and bomb- the information through text sniffing dogs have been metic- messages, emails and social ulously sweeping each of the media. 250 buildings on campus. There are 30,000 students, LSU Police Capt. Corey professors and university Lalonde said no explosives employees located on the Baton have been found. Rouge campus, but it was not By mid-afternoon, the LSU clear how many were there at campus was largely deserted the time of the threat. t I