The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, January 7, 2013 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, January 7, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS HOUGHTON, Mich Ice sculptures are centerpeice of carnival Students in Michigan's frozen far north are laughing in the face of the frigid weather and tak- ing to the outdoors for Michigan Technological University's annual Winter Carnival. The Houghton school officially kicked off the party on Wednes- day, but students have been hard at work since early January on the snow and ice sculptures that are the centerpiece of the carnival. An all-night push to finish the sculptures began at 4 p.m. Wednesday and ends at 8 a.m. Thursday, when judging starts. HOUSTON Texas prison escapee caught after 16 years A Texas prison escapee on the run for almost 16 years has been captured by authorities in Mex- ico and awaits extradition to the U.S. to finish serving his sentence on charges of attempted capital murder of a police officer, state Department of Criminal Justice officials said Wednesday. Juan Salaz was apprehended last week. The 37-year-old Ameri- can citizen had been sought for years by authorities on both sides of the border. Salaz escaped the night of March 22, 1997, from the Garza East prison in Beeville in South Texas by climbing over three 16-foot fences all topped with razor wire. SYDNEY Villages destroyed, six dead in Solomons tsunami Six bodies, including a child's, have been found in the sodden wreckage left by a tsunami that smashed into villages in the Solo- mon Islands, flattening dozens of homes in the South Pacific island chain. The 1.5-meter (4 foot, 11-inch) waves that roared inland on Santa Cruz Island, in the eastern Solo- mops, on Wednesdaywere too fast to outrun for five elderly villag- ers and one child, who died after being sucked under the rushing water, George Herming, a spokes- man for the prime minister, said Thursday. Several other people were still missing and dozens of strong aftershocks were keeping frightened villagers from return- ing to the coast, Herming said. DUBLIN Ireland readies deal to ease costs of bank bailout The Irish government put law- makers on standby to pass emer- gency legislation Wednesday as a deal neared with the European Central Bank to reform the repay- ment terms of Ireland's colossal bank-bailout bill, a move designed to reduce Ireland's deficits and ease its return to normal borrow- ing. Aides to Finance Minister Michael Noonan said he hoped to unveil terms of the agreement with eurozone banking chiefs in Ireland's parliament Wednesday night. But government officials later said negotiations with ECB partners might continue over- night and delay the bill's passage to Thursday. The bill would authorize the immediate liquidation of one of Ireland's two government-owned "bad banks," the Irish Bank Reso- lution Corp. or IBRC, which for the past two years has managed the toxic property-based loans of two collapsed banks, Anglo Irish and Irish Nationwide. The IBRC chairman, Alan Dukes, said its board has already been dis- solved as of Wednesday night and responsibility handed over to a consulting firm that will manage the liquidation. - Complied from Daily wire reports SIT BACK, RELAX PAULSHERMAN/Daily North Carolina State University student Deva Madhava Das and PhD student Sidharth Chhabra of the Bhakti Yoga Society practice harinama, which is a form of meditation that helps both practitioners and onlookers in Mason Hall on Wednesday. . . Boy Scouts delay decision on gay exclusion policy Stori als IRVI Caught firethe putting on whe excludi organiz it's like stituen within The< attribut of this Wednes deliberr nationa Under c posal t ban on sors of I themse of gay S As th days at became al wou large n Scoutin cy grou right. ed organization The iconic youth organiza- on by the 1,400 voting members tion is now deeply entangled in of the BSA national council at o bans atheist the broader cultural and politi- a meeting during the week of cal conflicts over such issues May 20 in Grapevine, Texas. members as same-sex marriage and reli- The organization had gious freedom. Tilting toward announced last week that it NG, Texas (AP) - either side will probably alien- was considering allowing Scout in an ideological cross- ate the other, and a midway bal- troops to decide whether to BoyScoutsofAmericais ancing act will be difficult. allow gay membership, ensur- off until May a decision Gay-rights supporters con- ing that the executive board ther to ease its policy of tend that rio Scout units any- meeting would be in the nation- ng gays. Whatever the where should exclude gays, and al spotlight. ation eventually does, vowed to maintain pressure on Learning that a decision ly to anger major con- the fSA's corporate donors to would be deferred, gay-rights ties and worsen schisms achieve that goal. Some con- leaders assailed the BSA. Scouting. servatives, including religious "Every day. that the Boy delay, which the Scouts leaders whose churches spon- Scouts of America delay action ed to "the complexity sor troops, warned of mass is another day that discrimina- issue," was announced defections if the ban were even tion prevails," said Chad Grif- sday after closed-door partially eased. They urged fin, president of the Human ations by the BSA's supporters to flood headquar- Rights Campaign. "Young 1 executive board. ters with phone calls. Americans, gay and straight, onsideration was a pro- "In the past two weeks, are hurt by the inaction associ- o ease the longstanding Scouting has received an out- ated with today's news." gays by allowing spon- pouring of feedback from the "A Scout is supposed to be ocal troops to decide for American public," said the brave, and the Boy Scouts failed lves on the membership BSA's national spokesman, to be brave today," said Jennifer couts and adult leaders. Deron Smith. "It reinforces how Tyrrell, an Ohio mother ousted he board met over three deeply people care about Scout- as a den leader of her son's Cub a hotel near Dallas, it ing and how passionate they are Scout pack because she's a les- clear that the propos- about the organization." bian. ld be unacceptable to The BSA "needs time for a "They failed us yet again," umbers of impassioned more deliberate review of its she told The Associated Press. g families and advoca- membership policy," Smith "Putting this off until May only ps on both the left and added. He said the board would ensures other gay kids and gay prepare a resolution to be voted parents are discarded." Hezbollah linked to 2012 bombing of Israeli tourists Bulgaria implicates the bomber never intended to die. He said a Europol expert militant group in who analyzed a fragment of a .ohitk circuitboard determined that sophisticated attack the bomb was detonated remote- ly. SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) - Hez- The investigators found no bollah was behind a bus attack links to Iran, which Israel had that killed five Israeli tourists accused of playing a role in the in Bulgaria last year, investiga- attack. tors said Tuesday, describing The findings increased pres- a sophisticated bombing car- sure on Europe to declare ried out by a terrorist cell that Hezbollah to be a terrorist orga- included Canadian and Austra- nization, as the United States lian citizens. and Canada do. The first major announce- "The attack in Burgas was an ment in the investigation attack on European land against carried broad diplomatic impli- a member of the European cations, as countries that con- Union," Israeli Prime Minister sider the Shiite militant group Benjamin Netanyahu said. "We to be a terrorist organization hope the Europeans learn the called on Europe - which has proper conclusions from this resisted such a move - to crack about the true character of Hez- down on the group. bollah." Interior Minister Tsvetan U.S. counterterrorism adviser Tsvetanov said two of the sus- John Brennan, who is President pects had been living in Leba- Barack Obama's nominee to run non for years - one with a the Central Intelligence Agen- Canadian passport and the cy, said Europe should seek to other with an Australian one. uncover Hezbollah's infrastruc- Ie said investigators had ture and disrupt the group's traced their activities back to finances and operational net- their home countries, work. "We have well-grounded Canadian Foreign Affairs reasons to suggest that the two Minister John Baird went fur- were members of the militant ther. wing of Hezbollah," Tsvetanov "We urge the European Union said after a meeting of Bulgar- and all partners who have not ia's National Security Council. already done so to list Hezbol- A third suspect entered Bul- lah as a terrorist entity and pros- garia with them on June 28, he ecute terrorist acts committed said, without giving details. by this inhumane organization Within hours, Lebanese to the fullest possible extent," he Prime Minister Najib Mikati said. condemned the attack and said Catherine Ashton, the Euro- his country would cooperate pean Union's top foreign and fully. security official, said the EU Hezbollah, a Shiite militant needs to assess the implications group and political party in Leb- of the investigation seriously but anon that emerged in response stressed any decision on add- to Israel's 1982 invasion, has ing Hezbollah to the EU list of been linked to attacks and kid- terrorist organizations would nappings on Israeli and Jewish require a unanimous decision by interests around the world. the foreign ministers of the 27 The group has denied EU countries. Their next sched- involvement in the Bulgaria uled meeting is Feb. 18. bombing, and Hezbollah offi- France and Germany, wary cials in Beirut declined further of coming under pressure to comment Tuesday. They cus- condemn the group, had urged tomarily defer to Hezbollah investigators not to publicly leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah name Hezbollah in the bomb- to comment on security issues. ing, according to a U.S. offi- The bomb exploded as the cial who spoke on condition of Israeli tourists made their way anonymity because he was not from the airport to their hotel in authorized to speak to the news the Black Sea resort of Burgas. media. The blast also killed the Bulgar- Wainwright - whose orga- ian driver and the suspected nization helps coordinate bomber, a tall and lanky pale- national police across the EU, skinned man wearing a baseball which includes Bulgaria - said cap and dressed like a tourist. in an interview that counterfeit Although it was initially U.S. driver's licenses that were believed to be a suicide bomb- found near the bombing scene ing, Europol Director Rob Wain- were made in Lebanon. Tsveta- wright told The Associated Press nov said the fake licenses were that investigators now believe from Michigan. THE NEW LINE CHINESE CUISINE SPECIALIZING IN HONG KONG, TAIWANESE, SZECHUAN & HUNAN STYLES 734-995-1786 116 S. MAIN STREET EEENW.HURONANDWASHINGTONST.) ANN ARBOR WWW.KAIGARDEN.COM -II.U- Acapulco rape case hurts tourism in peak season Gang members raped women in beachfront home ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) - The tourism world turned its eyes on Mexico after six Spanish women were raped by masked gunmen during a vaca- tion in the long-troubled Pacific coast resort of Acapulco. While there has been talk of reviving the golden era of the '40s and '54s, international tourists have long steered away from Acapulco, even before the drug violence of recent years, as the city fell into disrepair and glitzier Cancun and Los Cabos gained favor. The question now is wheth- er the attack will affect other resorts as Mexico prepares for its annual spring break onslaught and peak season. The hours-long assault was carried out by a gang of masked gunmen who burst into the beachfront home before dawn on Monday and tied up the six men inside, then raped the women. A seventh Mexican woman was unharmed. "We are really sorry about what happened with the Span- ish tourists because ... it is something that affects Mexi- co's image," said Juan Carlos Gonzalez, tourism secretary of Quintana Roo, the Caribbean coast state where Cancun is located and which hosted about 17 million tourists last year. But, he added, "we are defi- nitely not as contaminated with the crime issue as other states in Mexico." Acapulco barely registers on U.S. tourists' radar anymore, said Kathy Gerhardt, a spokes- woman for Travel Leaders, a network of independently owned and operated travel agencies in the U.S. "Those individuals trying to lump Acapulco into the list of top Mexico destinations for U.S. travelers are simply misin- formed," she said. In a recent survey of over 1,000 travel agency owners, managers and agents, "not a single individual chose Aca- pulco as a top international destination they are booking fortheir clients," Gerhardtsaid. "We do not see any spillover effect," she added, for areas like Cancun, which Travel Leaders lists as the No. 2 foreign desti- nation for U.S. travelers, after Caribbean island cruises. From a 2009 shootout that killed 18 near Acapulco's fabled Flamingo Hotel to this week's attack, the resort once celebrat- ed in Frank Sinatra songs and Elvis Presley movies has been the scene of body dumpings, beheadings and taxi-driver killings as gangs vie for drug transport routes once con- trolled by the now-decimated Beltran Leyva cartel. Oceania and Regent Seven Seas Cruises - some of the last lines making port calls in Acapulco - canceled those in December, before the latest attack. An estimated 50,000 Span- iards travel to Mexico each year, but mostly to the Carib- bean coast, not Acapulco. Mexicans and Spaniards liv- ing in Mexico like the victims, however, flock to Acapulco during Easter week and other long holiday weekends, such as Monday, when the country cel- ebrated its Constitution Day. Local tourists believe they can distinguish unsafe areas of the city, and even foreign travel warnings say it's safe for those who don't wander far from the beach. "For us, this is an incredibly safe zone," said Rafael Gallego Nadal, president of the Span- ish Confederation of Travel Agencies. "This was a terrible attack, but it's not the first time that something bad has hap- pened in that part of Mexico." He said there has been no talk of travel agencies reducing package tour prices. Some press reports Wednes- day suggested a drug purchase could have played a role in Monday's rapes, but Marcos Juarez, the chief investigator for Guerrero state prosecutors, said there was no evidence of that. Still, the attack exposed a dangerous security situation in areas that had been consid- ered safe, such as the laid-back stretch of beach dotted with restaurants, small hotels and homes southeast of the city's center, where the Spaniards had rented a villa. The five attackers held the group at gunpoint, tying up the six men with phone cords and bathing suit straps, then raping the six women over a three- hour period, authorities said. The manager of a hotel near the house said he heard shout- ing just after midnight Mon- day, but did nothing because he felt it would be too dangerous. The man did not want to give his name for safety reasons. 4