The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 25, 2012 - 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, September 25, 2012 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Viral disease kills 4,127 deer in 24 Michigan counties Authorities in Michigan say an insect-spread deer disease has spread to at least 24 counties. The Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Michigan State University announced new . figures Monday on confirmed cases of the illness. It's called epizootic hemor- rhagic disease and is untreatable. The virus causes extensive inter- nal bleeding and is transmitted by a type of biting fly called a midge. The disease is on the rise nationwide because of hot, dry weather. HOUSTON FBI investigating officer who shot double-amputee The FBI will help investigate what led a Houston police officer to shoot and kill a wheelchair- bound double amputee who was agitated and threatening police with what turned out to be a ball- point pen, the city's police chief said Monday.. Police Chief Charles McClel- land also asked the community to "reserve judgment" on the officer and his actions this weekend at the Healing Hands group home for the mentally ill, and sought to . reassure the public that all of the city's officers are trained to deal with people with mental prob- lems. Officer Matthew Marin shot 45-year-old Brian Claunch early Saturday after responding to a call that the one-armed, one-legged man was causing a disturbance inside the home. Police have said Claunch cornered and threatened Marin, who reportedly told inves- tigators he didn't know the object in Claunch's hand was a pen. TEHRAN, Iran Iran official says country will boycott Oscars An Iranian film won an Oscar in the foreign film category in Feb- ruary. But Mohammed Hosseini said the Islamic Republic would not field an entry for next year's awards due to the low-budget video he dubbed "an intolerable insult to the Prophet of Islam," the semiofficial ISNA news agency reported. Hosseini urged other Islamic countries to also boycott. He confirmed that the commit- tee in charge of selecting Iran's entry has already picked "Ye Hab- beh Ghand," or "A Cube of Sugar" - a film about a family wedding turning into a funeral when the groom's relative dies - to compete for best foreign film. Iranian director Asghar Far- hadi won the 2012 Oscar for best foreign film for his movie, "A Sep- aration" - the first such prize for Iran. TRIPOLI, Libya Libya appoints military officers to head militias Libya's military command appointed Monday a pair of army officers to head two powerful Islamist militias in the country's east, part of the government's push to rein in armed factions. The move reflects the pressure on the government to control or disband the country's militias, many of which it had relied upon for securing Libya in the turmoil following last year's ouster and killing of longtime leader Moam- mar Gadhafi. Col. Ali al-Sheikhi, the spokes- man for Libya's joint chiefs of staff, told the news agency LANA that the chiefs of the Rafallah Sahati Brigade and the Feb. 17 Brigade, two groups that authorities had allowed to man- age security in the eastern city of Benghazi, would be replaced with army commanders. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Scan dal continues to embroil China Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaks at a high level meeting at United Nations headquarters Sept. 24, 2012. Ahmadinej ad dismisses Israel at United.. Nations Bo Xilai's right- hand man gets 15 years in prison CHENGDU, China (AP) - China has nearly mopped up a murder scandal that has roiled the country for months, but the last step - dealing with a fallen political star who was once among the Communist Party's most popular figures - will be the most delicate of all. Bo Xilai's former right-hand man and police chief, Wang Lijun, was sentenced Monday to 15 years in prison for making a thwarted defection bid, and for helping Bo's wife cover up the murder of a British businessman. Bo's wife and other figures in the scandal were sentenced previ- ously, and Beijing is keen to settle the fate of Bo himself before a once-a-decade change in leader- ship expected nextmonth. Ever since Wang's thwarted defection bid at a U.S. consul- ate in February made the scan- dal public, the question of what to do about Bo, then a powerful party boss in Chongqing city, has bedeviled Chinese leaders. It strained relations among Com- munist Party power brokers just as they were cutting deals to transfer of power to younger leaders; deciding whether- ,to prosecute him or merely purge him from the party became part of the bargaining. Wang's trial and verdict bode ill for Bo. The official account of the trial implied that Bo ignored his wife's involvement in the murder after Wang told him about it. Though it referred to Bo by his position rather than his name, the account marked the first time in weeks of trials that Bo was mentioned in anyway. In sentencing Wang, the court emphasized his help in the murder investigation against Bos wife, who was convicted last month, and in exposing the crimes of unspecified others. "He apparently got credit for turning against" Bo andhis wife, said Dali Yang, director of the University of Chicago Center in Beijing. "The revelation against Bo Xilai provides ground for the central leadership to dismiss Bo formally and, if they choose to do so, presumably to bring crim- inal charges." Debating Bo's fate is one of the issues that has delayed announcement of a National Party Congress, a pivotal event in installing the new generation of leaders.'With verdicts in for Wang and Bo's wife out of the way, leaders are next expected to announce dates for the congress and for a preparatory meetingto deal with Bo. "The lack of a date for the congress appears to be evidence still of divisions over Bo and the final leadership lineup, as well as questions of political reform and other sensitive issues," said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, head of the department of government and international studies at Hong Kong Baptist University. Bo's case is extremely sen- sitive because of his political pedigree and his popularity. The son of one of the commu- nist state's founding fathers, Bo has deep connections across the party, government and mili- tary. He was one of 25 Polit- buro members and became popular nationwide through high-profile policies in Chongq- ing, including a crackdown on organized crime run with police chief Wang. Irai de prog NEV Preside dinejad threats against arguin ect to e peacef that Ira possibl Ahm a grou executi New Y Genera group t dialogu to resol But dinejad U.S. all the Mi cal ans region that Is the equ "Fun take s Zionist "We b themse they w ture to While defend these ti Ahm el has East, sa around while t has exi or so ye there i nian president White House press secre- tary Jay Carney responded to fends nuclear Ahmadinejad's remarks, tell- ing a midday news briefing, tram at General "Well, President Ahmadine- jad says foolish, offensive and Assembly sometimes unintelligible things with great regularity. What he W YORK (AP) - Iranian should focus on is the failure of tnt Mahmoud Ahma- his government of Iran to abide I on Monday dismissed by its international obligations, of military action to abide by United Nations Iran's nuclear program, Security Council resolutions." g that his country's proj- U.N. Secretary-General Ban nrich uranium is only for Ki-moon had met with Ahma- ul purposes and saying dinejad on Sunday and "urged an has no worries about a Iran to take the measures e Israeli attack. necessary to build interna- adinejad spoke before tional confidence in the exclu- p of editors and news sively peaceful nature of its ives after his arrival in nuclear program," U.N. spokes- ork for the annual U.N. man Martin Nesirky said. The i Assembly. He told the U.N. chief also raised the poten- hat it was not too late for tially harmful consequences of se with the United States inflammatory rhetoric ."from lve differences. various countries in the Middle in his remarks, Ahma- East," Nesirky said. I sought to delegitimize On other topics in his meet- ly Israel's historic ties to ing with editors, Ahmadinejad ddle East and its politi- said that Iran favors a negoti- d military power in the ated settlement to the civil war and the world, saying in Syria, and denied that Tehran raelis "do not even enter is providing weapons or training ration for Iran." to the government of President adamentally, we do not Bashar Assad, as Assad's oppo- eriously threats of the nents and others have alleged. s," Ahmadinejad said. "We like and love both sides, elieve the Zionists see and we see both sides as broth- lves at a dead end and ers," he said. He referred to the rant to find an adven- conflict in Syria as "tribal" fight- get out of this dead end. ing and said that international we are fully ready to "meddling from the outside has ourselves, we do not take made the situation even harder." hreats seriously." He refused to say whether Iran iadinejad declared Isra- would accept a government not no place in the Middle led by the Assad regime, which aying that Iran has been for years has been Iran's closest fqr thousands of years ally in the Middle East. he modern state of Israel Ahmadinejad met journalists sted only for the last 60 in the mid-town hotel where he ars. "They have no roots was saying. It was Ahmadine- n history," he said. jad's eighth visit to the U.N. gathering held each September, which he cited as proof that he is open to understanding other countries' views. In spite of his assertions on the importance of dialogue and respect for others, Ahmadinejad presented a hard line in many areas. He refused to speak of the state of Israel by name and instead referred only to the "Zionists," and when asked about author Salman Rushdie he made no attempt to distance himself from recent renewed threats on the author's life ema- nating from an Iranian semi- official religious foundation. "If he is in the U.S., you should not broadcast it for his own safety," Ahmadinejad said. He said this would be his last trip to New York as president of Iran, because his term is ending and he is barred from seeking a third consecutive term. But he did not rule out staying active in Iranian politics and said he might return as part of future Iranian delegations to New York. Ahmadinejad said the argu- ment over Iran's nuclear pro- gram was a political rather than a legal matter and needs to be resolved politically. "We are not expecting that a 33-year-old problem between America and Iran to be resolved in speedy discussions, but we do believe in dialogue." Later in the day, Ahma- dinejad took aim at both the United States and Israel while addressing a high-level U.N. meeting promoting the rule of law, accusing Washington of shielding what he called a nuclear-armed "fake regime." His remarks prompted a walk- out by Israel's U.N. Ambassador Ron Prosor. New SARS -like virus found in Middle East At least one person killed in Saudi Arabia LONDON (AP) - Global health officials are closely moni- toring a new respiratory virus related to SARS that is believed to have killed at least one person in Saudi Arabia and left a Qatari citizen in critical condition in London. The germ is a coronavirus, from a family of viruses that cause the common cold as well as SARS, the severe acute respi- ratory syndrome that killed some 800 people, mostly in Asia, in a 2003 epidemic. In the latest case, British offi- cials alerted the World Health Organization on Saturday of the new virus in a man who trans- ferred from Qatar to be treated in London. He had recently trav- eled to Saudi Arabia and is now being treated in an intensive care unit after suffering kidney failure. WHO said virus samples from the patient are almost identical to those of a 60-year-old Saudi national who died earlier this year. The agency isn't currently recommending travel restric- tions and said the source of infec- tion remains unknown. Still, the situation has raised concerns ahead of next month's annual Hajj pilgrimage, which brings millions of peopleto Saudi Arabia from around the world. Health officials don't know yet whether the virus could spread as rapidly as SARS did or if it might kill as many peo- ple. SARS, which first jumped to humans from civet cats in China, hit more than 30 coun- tries worldwide after spreading from Hong Kong. "It's still (in the) very early days," said Gregory Hartl, a, WHO spokesman. "At the moment, we have two sporadic cases and there are still a lot of holes to be filled in." He added it was unclear how the virus spreads. Coronavi- ruses are typically spread in the air but Hartl said scientists were considering the possibility that the patients were infected directly by animals. He said there was no evidence yet of any human-to-human transmission. New York City hospitals crack down on junk food in vending machines Bloomberg trying to eliminate unhealthy food NEW YORK (AP) - People nervously waiting around in New York City hospitals for loved ones to come out of sur- gery can't smoke. In a few months from now, they can't have a supersized fast-food soda. And soon, they won't even be able to get a candy bar out of the vending machine or a piece of fried chicken from the cafeteria. In one of his latest health campaigns, Mayor Michael Bloomberg is aiming to banish sugary and fatty foods from both public and private hospitals. In recent years, the city's 15 public hospitals have cut calories in patients' meals and restricted the sale of sugary drinks and unhealthy snacks at vending machines. But now the city is. tackling hospital cafeteria food, too. And the Healthy Hospital Food Initiative is expanding its reach: In the past year, 16 private hospitals have signed on. Earlier this month, the city moved to ban the sale of big sodas and other sugary drinks at fast-food restaurants and the- aters, beginning in March. Crit- ics say the hospital initiative is yet another sign that Bloomberg is running a "nanny state," even though the guidelines are volun- tary and other cities - including Boston - have undertaken simi- lar efforts. Hospitals say it would be hypocritical of them to serve unhealthy food to patients who are often suffering from obesity and other health problems. "If there's any place that should not allow smoking or try to make you eat healthy, you would think it'd be the hospi- talk," Bloomberg said Monday. "We're doing what we should do and you'll see, I think, most of the private hospitals go along with it." The cafeteria crackdown will ban deep fryers, make leafy green salads a mandatory option and allow only healthy snacks to be stocked near the cafeteria entrance and at cash registers. At least half of all sandwiches and salads must be made or served with whole grains. Half- size sandwich portions must be available for sale. "People sometimes right now don't have healthy options," said Christine Curtis, the city Health Department's director of nutri- tion strategy. "So you are there at 2 in the morning and maybe your only choice is soda and chips." Marcelle Scott brought her own chips and soda into the lobby of Manhattan's privately operated St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital - there was no vending machine in sight - as she waited for her daughter to give birth Monday. It wasn't the first time the unemployed security guard from the Bronx got the "munch- ies" for junk food to keep calm while awaiting the outcome of a loved one's medical procedure. "I like my Snickers and my Mars Bars - especially if I'm nervous for somebody who's inside," she said. Most hospitals have already overhauled their vending machines by allowing only two types of 12-ounce high-calo- rie beverages at each vending machine - and they must be fea- tured on the lowest rack. Hospi- tal vending machines have also swapped out most baked goods for snacks like granola bars and nuts. Mg-- I