The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, October 8, 2012 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, October 8, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Industrial plant to be remodeled into learning center Republican Gov. Rick Snyder launched the rebuilding of a more than century-old neglected manu- facturing site near the Detroit River into an adventure and edu- cation center. On Saturday, Snyder kicked off the planned $12.8 million trans- formation of Detroit's Globe * Trading Company complex. He punctuated the news conference by bicycling the Dequindre Cut, a pedestrian and bike pathway built on an abandoned rail line running alongside the Globe, the Detroit Free Press reporte. Construction is expected to start late this year or early next year and the complex could open by late 2013. Expected features include a climbing wall, kayak- ing simulator and demonstra- tions on Michigan's historic lumber industry. ATLANTA Fungal meningitis outbreak linked to recalled steroid The pharmacy that distributed a steroid linked to an outbreak of fungal meningitis has issued avol- untary recall of all of its products, calling the move a precautionary measure. The New England Compound- ing Center announced the recall Saturday. The company said in a news release that the move was taken out of an abundance of caution because of the risk of contamination. It says there is no indication that any other products have been contaminated. The Food and Drug Admin- istration had previously told health professionals not to use any products distributed by the center. LONDON American artist's mural vandalized A vandal scrawled graffiti on a mural by modern American mas- ter Mark Rothko at London's Tate Modern on Sunday. The mural, one of Rothko's Seagram series, was defaced when a visitor to the Tate applied "a small area of black paint with a brush to the painting," the gal- lery said. A photograph posted on Twit- ter by a gallery visitor showed words, including the name Vladi- mir, scrawled in the corner of the painting. The gallery, which attracts 5 million visitors a year, was briefly closed Sunday after the incident. The graffiti on the painting also appears to read "a potential piece of yellowism." According to an online manifesto, Yellowism is an artistic movement run by two people named Vladimir Umanets and Marcin Lodyga. MOSCOW Putin comments on Russia's issues in documentary Russian President Vladi- mir Putin said in a first-person documentary aired on his 60th birthday Sunday that the current generation of opposition lead- ers needs to be cast aside and he brushed aside concerns the two- year jail sentence for punk bank Pussy Riot was too severe. The documentary that aired Sunday portrays Putin as a tireless and no-nonsense leader contemp- tuous of domestic and internation- al criticism. Putin says in the program that he welcomes opposing views, but that they should come from people willing to take responsibility for running the country. Celebrations took place Sunday all over Russia to celebrate Putin's birthday, although the Kremlin has said the president opted for low-key celebrations with friends and family. -Compiled from Daily wire reports France ups security at Jewish religious sites Cmdr. Jeffrey Self, of U.S. customs and Border Protection, flanked to his left by Acting Chief Patrol Agent Manuel Padilla, releases a statement on Friday at the Tucson Sector Headquarters in Tucson, Ariz. Agent who died last week was killed from friendly fire Ivie thought two other agents were drug smugglers PHOENIX (AP) - The U.S. Border Patrol agent killed last week in a shooting in southern Arizona apparently opened fire on two fellow agents thinking they were armed smugglers and was killed when they returned fire, the head of the Border Patrol agents' union said Sun- day. The two sets of agents approached an area where a sensor had been activated early Tuesday from different directions early Tuesday and encountered each other in an area of heavy brush, National Border Patrol Council president George McCubbin said. Agent Nicholas Ivie appar- ently opened fire first and wounded one of the other agents but was killed in the return fire. "I don't know what it was he saw or heard that triggered this whole event," McCubbin said. "Unfortunately it resulted in his death and another agent injured." Acting Cochise County Sher- iff Rod Rothrock confirmed the scenario but would not say if Ivie was the first to shoot, say- ing that was up to the federal agencies involved. The new details add to a FBI statement Friday that the shoot- ing appeared to be a friendly fire incident that involved no one but the agents. Sensors are set up in differ- ent areas along the U.S.-Mexico border to detect smugglers or illegal immigrants, with Bor- der Patrol agents responding when they're set off. The shoot- ing occurred in a rugged hilly area about five miles north of the border near Bisbee, Ariz., an area known for illegal traf- ficking. McCubbin and Rothrock both said the two sets of agents knew the others were heading to the area on foot but appar- ently didn't know they were so close. McCubbin said he'd been briefed by the agency, while Rothrock's agency has been involved with the investigation. "It was dark, very, very rug- ged terrain, and what they could see of each other was fur- ther obscured by the fact that there was brush and cacti and stuff like that between them," Rothrock said. "I have no doubt that these agents were in as heightened a state of alert as you can get due to the proxim- ity to the border and the history of trafficking in that area." Rothrock said that when the agents spotted each other in the dark, "they apparently took defensive postures, which was probably interpreted as aggres- sive postures. Like readying your weapons, for example." Ivie, 30, died at the scene, and one of the other agents was wounded but has since been released from the hospital. Tensions high between country's Jewish and Muslim commnuities PARIS (AP) - France is boost- ing security at Jewish and other religious sites after blanks were fired at a synagogue and police accused a suspected cell of radi- cal Islamists of ties to a grenade attack on a kosher grocery. President Francois Hollande sought Sunday to allay tensions between Jews and Muslims aggravated by a recent series of violent incidents in the country. Hollande singled out hate- ful extremists for criticism and urged respect for all religions ina country that is officially secular, but which has Western Europe's largest Jewish and Muslim com- munities. He said that authorities "in the coming days, in the coming hours" would increase security at religious sites so they won't be subject to the kind of attack that targeted a synagogue in the Paris suburb of Argenteuil on Saturday night. A synagogue representa- tive said witnesses heard what sounded like a weapon being fired and that police said blanks had been fired and empty bul- let casings found. Local police would not comment on the inci- dent to the AP. Services were canceled at the synagogue Sat- urday night because of the inci- dent, the representative said on condition of anonymity because a police investigation is under way. No one was injured, though the rabbi and about a dozen others were inside the syna- gogue at the time, according to the Jewish Community Protec- tion Service, a group set up to monitor anti-Semitic incidents in France. The incident came hours after police killed one man and arrest- ed 11 in raids across France tar- geting a suspected cell accused of links to a grenade attack on a kosher grocery store last month. DNA on the grenade led them to a member of the cell, who was killed by police after he opened fire on them. The suspected cell members are young Frenchmen recently converted to Islam. Officials said the man who was killed had been under surveil- lance since last spring - around the time a French Islamist radi- cal went on a shooting rampage against a Jewish school in Tou- louse and French soldiers, killing seven people. Hollande said authorities expected the jihadist cell was ready to strike again in the com- ing weeks. He met Sunday with leaders of the country's Jewish commu- nity and pledged to fight extrem- ism and anti-Semitism "with the greatest firmness." Richard Prasquier, the presi- dent of France's leading Jewish group, CRIF, warned French authorities against compla- cency before what he called the "monstrous ideology" of radi- cal Islamists, comparing it to Nazism. He said he has been worried about the security of France's Jewish community since the killings in Toulouse. TheToulouseattacksinMarch shook the country and prompted heightened security at Jewish schools and synagogues around France. Theyalso inspired a new counter-terrorism law currently in the works. Hollande said authorities should show "intransigence" toward racism and anti-Semi- tism. "Nothing will be tolerated, nothing should happen. Any act, any remark will be prosecuted with the greatest firmness." Hollande also spoke Sunday with Mohammed Moussaoui, head of an umbrella group of Muslim organizations called CFCM, and assured him that French officialdom would not stigmatize all Muslims for the acts committed by a radical fringe. Private capsule sent to Int'l Space Station Syrians carry a rebel injured duringfighting with the Syrian army in the Syrian town of Tel Abyad to the Turkish city of Akcakale on the Turkey-Syria border, Friday. Turkey, Syria exchange artillery mortars for fifh consecutive day Damascus gives unusual apology, fighting continues AKCAKALE, Turkey (AP) - Turkey and Syria fired artil- lery and mortars across their volatile border for a fifth con- secutive day on Sunday, in one of the most serious and prolonged flare-ups of violence along the frontier. The exchange of fire stoked fears that Syria's civil war will escalate into a regional con- flagration drawing in NATO member Turkey, once an ally of President Bashar Assad but now a key supporter of the rebels fighting to topple him. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu warned on Saturday that Ankara would respond forcefully to each errant Syrian shell that lands on Turkish soil. Ankara's warning was cou- pled by an apparent diplomatic push by the Turkish leadership to promote Syrian Vice Presi- dent Farouk al-Sharaa as a possible figure to head a transi- tional administration to end the conflict in the country. In an interview with Turkish state television TRT Saturday, Davutoglu said that al-Sharaa was a figure "whose hands are not contaminated in blood" and therefore acceptable to Syrian opposition groups. Al-Sharaa, 73, a close associ- ate and longtime loyalist to the Assad family, has been a contro- versial figure since the start of the uprising. He appeared in public in late August for the first time in weeks, ending repeated rumors that he had defected. The regime has suffered a string of prominent defections in recent months, though Assad's inner circle and military have large- ly kept their cohesive stance behind him. Early on in the uprising, the Syrian president delegated to al-Sharaa, a skilled diplomat, responsibility for holding a dia- logue with the opposition. A Sunni from the southern town of Daraa, birthplace of the Syr- ian uprising, al-Sharaa's silence since the start of the uprising made him a prime candidate for rumors that he broke with the regime. Meanwhile, there was little sign that the exchange of fire near the border, although still at a fairly low level, was ebbing. It began five days ago when a Syrian shell killed five civilians in a Turkish border town. Tur- key's parliament subsequently approved a bill that would allow cross border military operations there. Damascus offered a rare apology, but shells and mortar rounds continue to fly into Tur- key. On Sunday, an Associated Press journalist witnessed a round landing some 200 meters (yards) inside Turkey, near the border town of Akcakale. A short time later, eight artillery shells could be heard fired from Turkey. In the Turkish town of Akcakale, mayor Abdulhakim Ayhan said shrapnel from the Syrian mortar round caused some damage to a grain depot, but no one was hurt. He con- firmed that Turkish artillery immediately returned fire. Inside Syria, forces loyal to Assad clashed with rebels across the country, from the northern city of Aleppo to the southern border with Jordan, killing according to activist groups at least 90 people across the coun- try. Activists said opposition fighters were strengthening their hold over the village off Khirbet al-Jouz, in the northern province of Idlib, which borders Turkey and where violent clash- es broke out a day earlier. SpaceX sends supplies, ice cream to astronauts CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - A commercial cargo ship rock- eted into orbit Sunday in pursuit of the International Space Sta- tion, the first of a dozen supply runs under a mega-contract with NASA. It was the second launch of a Dragon capsule to the orbit- ing lab by the California-based SpaceX company. The first was last spring. This time was no test flight, however, and the spacecraft car- ried 1,000 pounds of key science experiments and other precious gear. There was also a personal touch: chocolate-vanilla swirl ice cream tucked in a freezer for the three station residents. The company's unmanned Falcon rocket roared into the night sky right on time, putting SpaceX on track to reach the space station Wednesday. The complex was soaring southwest of Tasmania when the Falcon took flight. Officials declared the launch a success. In more good news, a piece of space junk was no longer threat- ening the station, and NASA could focus entirely on the deliv- ery mission. NASA is counting on private business to restock the space sta- tion, now that the shuttles have retired to museums. The space agency has a $1.6 billion contract with SpaceX for 12 resupply mis- sions. Especially exciting for NASA is the fact that the Dragon will return twice as much cargo as it took up, including a stockpile of astronauts' blood and urine sam- ples. The samples - nearly 500 of them - have been stashed in freezers since Atlantis made the last shuttle flight in July 2011. The Dragon will spend close to three weeks at the space station before being released and para- chuting into the Pacific at the end of October. By then, the space station should be back up to a full crew of six. None of the Russian, Euro- pean or Japanese cargo ships can bring anything back; they're destroyed during re-entry. The Russian Soyuz crew capsules have limited room for anything besides people. Space Exploration Technolo- gies Corp., or SpaceX - owned by PayPal co-founder Elon Musk - is working to convert its unmanned Dragon capsules into vessels that could carry astronauts to the space station in three years. Other U.S. companies also are vying to carry crews. Americans must ride Russian rockets to orbit in the meantime, for a steep price. Musk, who monitored the launch from SpaceX Mission Control in Hawthorne, Calif., called the capsules Dragon after the magical Puff to get back at critics who, a decade ago, con- sidered his effort a fantasy. The name Falcon comes from the Millennium Falcon starship of "Star Wars" fame. An estimated 2,400 guests jammed the launching center to see the Falcon, with its Dragon, come to life for SpaceX'sfirst offi- cial, operational supply mission. It was no apparition. "Just over a year since shuttle retirement, to be able to do that is, I think, what people are very excited about," said NASA's dep- uty administrator, Lori Garver. Across the country at SpaceX headquarters, about 1,000 employees watched via TV and webcast. SpaceX is shooting for its next supply run in January. Another company looking to haul space station cargo, Vir- ginia's Orbital Sciences Corp., hopes to launch a solo test flight in December and a demo mis- sion to the station earlynext year. ruled that the men had no more grounds for appeal and could be sent to the U.S. immediately. ft