The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, October 22, 2012 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, October 22, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS WIXOM, Mich. Police release sketch of shooting spree suspect Authorities have released a drawing of a man suspected in a series of shootings in the past week over a three-county area of southeastern Michigan. Wixom police say in a release that the sketch was obtained from a witness to a shooting Thursday in Ingham County. That witness also described the suspect's vehicle as resembling a dark 1998 Oldsmobile Alero or a 1998 Toyota Camry. A task force of local and state police agencies was formed Fri- day to investigate the 16 or more shootings in Livingston, Oakland, and Ingham counties. Most of the shootings involved cars on busy roads Tuesday through Thursday. YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. Great Gray Owls to be studied less disruptively Scientists working in Yosemite National Park are eavesdropping on forest creatures, hoping to gain a greater understanding of a rare subspecies of Great Gray Owls. The raptors number fewer than 200 in and around the park, and even the slightest human inter- vention can disrupt their breeding and feeding cycles. Scientists are using data-com- pression digital audio recorders to capture forests sounds. They developed software to discern the low-frequency owl calls from other noises in an effort to deter- mine their numbers and rates of reproduction. The raptors were cut off from their plentiful Canadian counter- parts during the ice age 30,000 years ago. Since then scientists have been looking for ways to pro- tect them and better understand their habitat-specific evolution. KINSHASA, Congo Three Catholic priests abducted from monastery Congolese civic leaders say that three Roman Catholic priests were kidnapped in eastern Congo. The three priests were taken captive from their monastery by about 10 gunmen Saturday night. Omar Kavota, the Vice Presi- dent of the North Kivu civil soci- ety, said the abductions took place in Beni, north of Goma, in North Kivu province. The three, indentified as Wasu- kudi Anselm, 41, Jean Ndulani, 52, and Edmond Kisughu, 53, were tied up and taken away by the armed men, who witnesses say spoke Swahili. More than a year ago, in the same area, Dr. Paluku Mukongo- ma, medical director of the Gener- al Hospital Oicha, was kidnapped and nothing has been heard of him or of his abductors. . BISSAU, Guinea-Bissau Six killed after attempted military mutiny attack Military sources said six people were killed when a group of Guin- ean soldiers attempted to seize control of a military airbase near the capital, Bissau. The fighting went on for about two hours early Sunday before the mutineers were defeated by mili- tary loyal to the Chief of General Staff of the Armed Forces, Antonio Indjai, said an army officer who spoke at the military headquarters on condition of anonymity. There is no indication if any senior offi- cers were involved in the uprising. The apparent attempted coup was against the military junta that itself seized power in April. No leader in nearly 40 years of independence has finished his time in office in Guinea-Bissau, a former Portuguese colony on Afri- ca's western coast that has long been plagued by coups. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Wisc. man shoots seven, kills three Syrian men hose down damaged cars at the site after a car bomb attack in Bab Touma neighborhood, a popular shopping district largely inhabited by Syria's Christian minority in Damascus, Syria, Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012. Bomb-riged taxi leaves 13 dead, 29 wounded in Syria Shooter terrorized mall spa after slashing wife's tires BROOKFIELD, Wis. (AP) - A Wisconsin man who had been accused of domestic violence and slashing his wife's tires took a gun into the spa where she worked Sunday and shot seven women, three fatally, before kill- ing himself, a police chief said. The shootings set off a con- fusing, six-hour search for the gunman that locked down a nearby mall, a country club adjacent to the spa and the hos- pital where the survivors were taken. The search froze activity in a commercial area in Brook- field, a middle-to-upper class community west of Milwaukee, for much of the day. Ultimately, he was found dead in the spa. Authorities said it would take time to sort out exactly what happened, and emphasized they were still interviewing witness- es and rescuers and did not have a firm timeline of events. At a news conference Sunday night, Mayor Steve Ponto called the shootings "a senseless act on the part of one person." The chaos started around 11 a.m. at the Azana Day Spa, a two-story, 9,000-square-foot building across from a major shopping mall. The first officers on the scene found the build- ing filled with smoke from a fire authorities believe was set by the suspect, Radcliffe Franklin Haughton, 45, of Brown Deer, Brookfield Police Chief Dan Tushaus said. They also found a 1-pound propane tank they initially thought might be an improvised explosive device, Tushhaus said. That slowed the search of the building as law enforcement agents waited for a bomb squad to clear the scene. Tushaus said later that police didn't know whether the gun- man broughtthe propane tank to the spa or it was leftby a contrac- tor. The search also was com- plicated by the layout of the building, with numerous small treatment rooms and several locked areas, Tushaus said. While officers initially thought the gunman had fled the build- ing, they later found his body in one of the locked areas, he said. The bodies of the victims were also found in the spa. Tushaus said investigators were still working to identify them. He said the four survivors were between the ages of 22 and 40. He didn't know if they were employees at the spa or custom- ers, and it wasn't clear if the man's wife was among the vic- tims. Haughton had recently been arrested after witnesses iden- tified him as the person who slashed his wife's tires, police said. Le dis AM taxi p up nee ian ca ple as endin pushe in tal Assad Th ed 29 pingc oversl Syria Leban Hu protes govern capita the F] Leban accusi far tot For m Leban banese violence military and political domina- tion. stracts from car In Syria, two government offi- cials speaking from the scene of bomb attack the blast said the taxi exploded 50 meters (yards) from the main OMAN, Jordan (AP) - A police station in Bab Touma, a acked with explosives blew neighborhood in Damascus' Old ar a police station in the Syr- City. They insisted on anonymity pital Sunday, killing13 peo- because they were not allowed to the U.N. envoy tasked with brief the media. g the country's civil war An Associated Press reporter d his call for a cease-fire at the site said blood stained the ks with President Bashar street and sidewalks, shards of 1. glass littered the pavement from e blast, which also wound- shattered shop windows, and the people in the popular shop- charred hulks of at least four cars district of Bab Touma, was littered the street. hadowed however by anti- State news agency SANA put violence in neighboring the death toll at 13, while the non. anti-regime Syrian Observatory ndreds of angry Lebanese for Human Rights said at least 10 sters tried to storm the people were killed. nment headquarters in the Bab Touma is mainly inhabited l, Beirut, blaming Syria for by Syria's Christian minority. riday assassination of a top Damascus has been a frequent tese intelligence official and target of bombings in recent ing the government of being months, although it was once o close to the Assad regime. largely immune to the violence such of the past 30 years, spreading across the country on has lived under Syrian since the anti-Assad revolt began in March 2011. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Sunday's blast, but Islamist groups fight- ing alongside the rebels have in the past said they target security installations in the capital. In another part of the city, U.N. and Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi met with Assad to push for a cease-fire between rebels and government forces for the four-day Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, which begins Oct. 26. Brahimi said that he met earli- er with Syrian opposition groups inside and outside the country to discuss his truce plan. He said he received "promises" but "not a commitment" from them to honor the cease-fire. Syrian authorities blame the anti-government uprising on a foreign conspiracy and accuse Saudi Arabia and Qatar, along with the U.S, other Western countries and Turkey, of funding, training and arming the rebels, whom they describe as "terror- ists." Uruguayan govt legalizes abortion, plans to sell pot George McGovern dead at 90; lost 1972 presidential election Two dead, three with Eagleton in 2005. Noting that Nixon and his runningmate, injured after fatal Spiro Agnew, would both ulti- mately resign, he joked, "If we rampage had run in '74 instead of '72, it would have been a piece of cake." SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) - A proud liberal who had George McGovern once joked argued fervently against the that he had wanted to run for Vietnam War as a Democratic president inthe worst way - and senator from South Dakota and that he had done so. three-time candidate for presi- It was a campaign in 1972 dis- dent, McGovern died at 5:15 a.m. honored by Watergate, a scan- Sunday at a Sioux Falls hospice, dal that fully unfurled too late family spokesman Steve Hildeb- to knock Republican President rand told The Associated Press. Richard M. Nixon from his place McGovern was 90. as a commanding favorite for re- McGovern's family had said election. The South Dakota sena- late last week that McGovern nor tried to make an issue out of had become unresponsive while the bungled attempt to wiretap in hospice care, and Hildebrand the offices of the Democratic said he was surrounded by fam- National Committee, calling ily and lifelong friends when he Nixon the most corrupt presi- died. dent in history. "We are blessed to know that But the Democrat could not our father lived a long, successful escape the embarrassing mis- and productive life advocating for steps of his own campaign. The the hungry, being a progressive most torturous was the selec- tion of Missouri Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton as the vice presidential nominee and, 18 days later, fol- lowingthe disclosure that Eagle- ton had undergone electroshock therapy for depression, the deci- sion to drop him from the ticket despite having pledged to back him "1,000 percent." It was at once the most memo- rable and the most damaging line of his campaign, and called "possibly the most single dam- aging faux pas ever made by a presidential candidate" by the late political writer Theodore H. White. After a hard day's campaign- ing - Nixon did virtually none - McGovern would complain to those around him that nobody was paying attention. With R. Sargent Shriver as his running RKinance mate, he went on to carry only Massachusetts and the Dis- trict of Columbia, winning just 38 percent of the popular vote in one of the biggest losses in American presidential history. "Tom and I ran into a little snag back in 1972 that in the light of my much advanced wisdom i n M ated," Z001/6%Annual Percenage Rate(AR applie today, I think was vastly exagger- ated," McGovern said at an event voice for millions and fighting for peace. He continued giving speeches, writing and advising all the way up to and past his 90th birthday, which he celebrated this summer," the family said in the statement. A public viewing is planned Thursday at First United Meth- odist Church in Sioux Falls. Funeral services will be Friday at Mary Sommervold Hall at the Washington Pavilion of Arts and Science in Sioux Falls. A decorated World War II bomber pilot, McGovern said he learned to hate war by waging it. In his disastrous race against Nixon, he promised to end the Vietnam War and cut defense spending by billions of dollars. He helped create the Food for Peace program and spent much of his career believing the Unit- ed States should be more accom- modating to the former Soviet Union. Citizens act out against far-left government's plans MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) - Uruguayans used to call their country the Switzerland of Latin America, but its faded grey capital seems a bit more like Amsterdam now that its congress has legalized abortion and is drawing up plans to sell government-grown marijuana. Both measures would be unthinkable in many other countries. Cuba is the only other nation in the region that makes first-trimester abortions accessible to all women, and no country in the world produces and sells pot for drug users to enjoy. But President Jose "Pepe" Mujica, a flower-farming for- mer leftist guerrilla, vowed to sign whatever bill congress could settle on that can mini- mize the 30,000 illegal abor- tions his government says Uruguayan women suffer annu- ally. And while lawmakers have yet to debate pot sales, Mujica's ruling Broad Front coalition staked its ground in August by openly declaring that the drug war has failed. Smoking pot - if not growing and selling it - is already legal in Uruguay, and supplyingthe weed is a $30 mil- lion business, the government said. This is democracy "a la Uru- guaya" - the Uruguayan way - a phrase that reflects both the pride and the unmet promises of a society where finding com- mon ground is a highly shared value, in stark contrast to many other countries where voters are divided by us-and-them politics. Such outsized respect for the democratic process has enabled the country of 3.4 mil- lion people wedged between Argentina and Brazil to reach consensus on many issues that have stymied bigger and richer nations, from reforming health care to providing free univer- sity educations, to setting ambi- tious renewable energy goals. By embracing compromises, Uruguay has managed to hold onto its middle class through repeated economic crises, and pass laws that have consistently improved its citizens' quality of life. lower your interest rate by 2% AJI yam. 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