6 - Friday, February 22, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Panel discusses Detroit schools John Locher/AP Tow truck drivers clean up and tow away cars involved in a drive-by shooting on Las Vegas Boulevard in Las Vegas. Shootout on Las VegasStrip leaves three drivers dead, six injured con SC LAI lets w Range rati towar Vegas Ben police ran a Strip's and si exploc Thurs ple ins Thr ity tri crossr Caesa injuri; ple as, in the The prono The more pared violen franti pants contin marke sode Witnesses beginning of the year. Two people were critically npare dramatic wounded in a shooting at a parking garage Feb. 6, and a ene to a action tourist was stabbed Saturday in an elevator at The Hotel at movie Mandalay Bay. Clark County Sheriff Doug S VEGAS (AP) - Bul- Gillespie told reporters several 'ere flying from a black hours after Thursday's attack Rover at a gray Mase- that it was sparked by an argu- as the vehicles raced ment in the valet area of the d a red light on the Las nearby Aria hotel-casino, and Strip. that the violence at the inter- eath the neon lights, section of Las Vegas Boulevard say, the Maserati and Flamingo Road did not red light at one of the reflect the values of Las Vegas busiest intersections residents or visitors. mashed into a taxi that "What happened will not be ded into flames early tolerated," Gillespie said. He day, killing the two peo- promised the shooters would side. be "found and prosecuted to -ee more cars and a util- the full extent of the law." uck also collided at the On the Strip - closed and 'oads home to Bellagio, snarling traffic throughout the rs Palace and Bally's, day until reopening late Thurs- ng at least six more peo- day night - the fiery rampage the Range Rover sped off shocked tourists. pre-dawn darkness. "We get stabbings, and gang Maserati driver was violence," said Mark Thomp- unced dead at a hospital. son, who was visiting from dramatic scene that Manchester, England, with than one tourist com- his wife, "but this is like some- to something out of a thing out of a movie. Like 'Die t action movie set off a Hard' or something" csearch for the occu- Police said they were con- of the Range Rover that tacting authorities in three sued into the night, and neighboring states about the d the latest violent epi- Range Rover Sport with dark on the Strip since the tinted windows and distinctive black custom rims and plates that fled the scene about 4:20 a.m. It had a car dealer's adver- tisement in place of a license plate. In Southern California, the California Highway Patrol alerted officers in at least three counties to be on the lookout for the SUV. Las Vegas police Sgt. John Sheahan said the Range Rover was last seen near the Vene- tian resort as it headed north from the shooting scene on Las Vegas Boulevard. Witnesses also told police the SUV and Maserati had come from the nearby City- Center area, the home of Aria, just south of the site of the attack. "We have numerous wit- nesses to this," Sheahan said. "But what is the genesis of this? We don't know yet." Predawn jogger Eric Lackey was on his way back to the New York-New York hotel when he snapped a cellphone photo of the blazing scene moments after the crash. Black smoke billowed from the flaming taxi, amid pop- pingsounds from the fire. Lackey, of Forest Hill, Md., said a security officer in a yel- low shirt performed CPR on a person on the sidewalk while police officers canvassed a small crowd of perhaps 15 onlookers gathering at the scene. "Police were asking if any- one was still in the vehicles and if they heard gunfire," Lackey told The Associated Press. "That's when I realized it wasn't just a regular accident." Sheahan said police have video from traffic cameras at the intersection and were checking hotel surveillance systems. The video will not be made public, he said. Police did not release the names of the people who were killed, citing the ongoing investigation. The crumpled, gray Masera- ti, which had no license plate, came to rest several feet away from the incinerated taxi. "The people I feel sorry for are the people in the taxi," said Elvina Joyce, a tourist from Regina, Saskatchewan. "Sec- onds made all the difference in the world for them. Wrong place, wrong time." The area near the scene has been the site of high-profile violence in the past. Rapper Tupac Shakur was killed in a drive-by shooting in 1996 about a block away under similar circumstances, as assailants opened fire on his luxury sedan from a vehicle on Flamingo Road. The killing has never been solved. CEOs of non-profits gather to talk about challenges By MICHAEL MAAS Daily StaffReporter At the Nonprofit and Public Management Center's second annual Education Leaders Forum on Thursday, participants dis- cussed ways to attract education leaders to Detroit. About 30 students attended the event, which included a discussion panel of four leaders with expertise in education in Detroit. Panelists included Scott Morgan, the found- er and CEO of Education Pioneers, an education recruitment firm; Dan Varner, the CEO of Excellent Schools Detroit, a non-profit group working to improve education in Detroit; Kendra Hearn, a Clinical Assistant Professor at the School of Education; and Lesley Redwine, the CEO and Superintendent of New Urban Learning, a non-profit charter management organization. The forum followed the NPM's Social Impact Challenge, a contest forgraduatestudents' educationideas that took place earlier in the day. "The point of the Social Impact Challenge is to allow students at Michigan the chance to work on a real-life problem for an organiza- tion that focuses on social impact. So in this case, Education Pioneers is tackling a real important issue for our nation, which is how to cre- ate a better pipeline of leaders into the space," said Rishi Moudgil, the managing director of NPM. Morgan said he agreed to speak in the panel and act as a judge for the social impact challenge because he wanted to hear the students' insights, which he could possibly implement in his organization. "The caliber of thought and analysis in the short time frame with which they had to analyze all the data and make recommenda- tions was incredibly impressive," Morgan said. "We have a number of ideas that we are going to be able to run with in a high-quality way." Hearn, an assistant professor at the School of Education and University coordinator forthe Teach for America- Detroit Program,was also amember of the panel. Born and raised in Detroit, she said she believes city residents are keytoeducationreforminthecity. "My greatest aspiration was to go back to Detroit and educate her chil- dren so they can have the opportuni- ties that I was afforded because I had an excellent education,"Hearnsaid. The discussion panel was followed by an announcement ofthe winners of the Social Impact Challenge Awards. The winning team, Focus Education, consisted of graduate students Vinita Vishwanarayan, Stefana Vutova, Lau- ren Sheram, Nellie Tsai. They were awarded $2,500for their presentation. "It feels really good because ina short span we came together from all these differentschools and came up with ideas that not only had implications in terms of a finan- cial perspective, but also a social impact," Vishwanarayan said. Morgan gave the keynote speech afterthe announcementofthewin- ner. He highlighted the importance of leadership in education. "First, leadership matters and it matters at all levels," Morgan said. "Secondly, leaders can have tremen- dous leverage. They get leverage by developing other leaders and they have leverage in the terms of the way theyspenddollars.Andthenthethird thingis thatleadershipis thekeylever intransformingurbaneducation.' Business senior Lilliane Webb came to the discussion panel to learn more about why students at the Uni- versity should consider working in education in Detroit. "The hope that they had for the city, as someone from the state of Michigan, that they're not encourag- ing leaders to go elsewhere to make a difference was really inspiring," Webbsaid. Education graduate student Raul Cruz said he is considering a career in education and came to learn more about working in an urban environ- ment. "I'm from New York City so I know about education in the inner-city, but while I'm in the Midwest,the place I need to focus my attention is the place where it's needed the most," Cruz said. "I've taught before and I hope to possibly lead in Detroit." 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