The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, September 13, 2013 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, September13, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Power restored in Southeast Michigan Power has been restored to about 33,000 southeastern Michi- gan homes and business that had electricity knocked out after storms and strong winds toppled trees and branches onto hundreds of overhead lines. DTE Energy Co. says that as of 5 p.m. Thursday, 45,000 of its cus- tomers still were without electrici- ty, but nearly all should have power restored in the coming hours. Crews from elsewhere in Michi- gan and Ohio are helping DTE workers in the restoration. Powerful thunderstorms rolled Wednesday across southern and southeast Michigan with up to 70 mph winds. LOS ANGELES Authorities say TSA agent acted alone in threats Federal authorities said Thurs- day they believe a former Los Angeles airport security screener acted alone and there wasn't a larger plot when he made threats that closed some airport terminals on the eve of the anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Investigators haven't found any explosives or weapons belonging to screener Nna Alpha Onuoha, 29, who was charged Wednesday, the day after quitting his job with the Transportation Security Adminis- tration at Los Angeles Internation- alAirport. Authorities said there is no evi- dence atthis pointto showOnuoha was aided in his efforts or there was a bigger terror plot brewing. MOGADISH U, Somalia American turned Islamist rebel kill l An American who became one of Somalia's most visible Islamic rebels and was on the FBI's Most WantedTerroristlistwitha$5 mil- lion bounty on his head was killed Thursday by rivals in the al-Qaida- linked extremist group al-Shabab, militants said. The killing of Omar Hammami, an Alabama native known for his rap-filled propaganda videos, may discourage other would-be jihadis from the U.S. and elsewhere from traveling to Somalia, terrorism experts said. Hammami, whose nom de guerre was Abu Mansoor Al-Amri- ki, or "the American," was killed in an ambush in southern Somalia following months on the run after falling out with al-Shabab's top leader, the militants said. Reports of Hammami's death have cropped up every few months in Somalia, only for him to resur- face. But J.M. Berger, a U.S. terror- ism expert who closely follows the inner workings of al-Shabab, said he thinks the current reports are accurate. MILAN * Former CIA agent asks for pardon from Italy A former CIA base chief has asked Italy's president for a pardon of his conviction in absentia of kid- napping a terror suspect as part of the CIA's extraordinary rendition program, apologizingforthe strain the case has put on U.S.-Italy rela- tions and citing Italy's pardon of another American convicted in the case. "I never intended to disrespect Italy's sovereignty - quite to the contrary," Robert Seldon Lady, a former U.S. consular officer based in Milan, wrote in the four-page letter obtained Thursday by The Associated Press. President Giorgio Napolitano's office confirmed receipt of the let- ter, and said the request had been forwarded to the office for justice affairs. -Compiled from Daily wire reports PRESIDENT From Page 1A to engage with individual stu- dents. The University randomly selects a diverse group of under- graduates and graduates each month for an informal question- and-answer period with the two administrators. Although students did not line up to meet her specifically, Harp- er made her way down the queue for Coleman, tray in hand, offer- ing cookies to those waiting. The 30-minute wait to greet Cole- man gave her ample time to talk with students about their experi- ences at the University. Harper is responsible for overseeing a host of units, ranging from Housing to coordinating with the University Health Service and managing the Unions and recreational centers. Harper said Coleman will strive to spend as much time with students as possible before the end of her tenure. With a target of $1 billion for financial aid initiatives in the upcom- ing capital campaign, and more than $1 billion spent on student life facilities during her presi- dency, Harper said Coleman has demonstrated an immense com- mitment to the quality of stu- dent life at the University. "She's really been a president that has a heart for students, and I think that's what we're seeing," Harper said. "She loves them, and they love her." Business senior Lindsey Levinson and LSA senior Pamela Safirstein waited in the unchar- acteristic September heat to meet Coleman for the first and prob- ably last time, since, as Levinson put it, she "will be graduating with us." "She's done great things for this school and has been very supportive of all different types of activities, from Ross and the Athletics Department, to making the school more environmentally friendly," Safirstein said. While Levinson and Safirst- ein spent their college careers under Coleman's leadership, Rackham student Jenny Shay said she hoped to introduce her- self to Coleman as a first-year graduate student. Although Shay is new to campus, she researched Coleman's work and was impressed - especially with how Coleman handled the 2003 affirmative action cases before the Supreme Court. "I think opening her home to everybody is great," Shay said. "She seems to be really con- cerned about the students and ensuring that Michigan is a pro- gressive leader in how it treats its students." Chaotic Egypt's interim pres. prolongs state of emergency CHARITY From Page 1A "I had always wanted to pres- ent light to the broken-down school system and do whatever we can to provide more avenues for young people to get involved in things that bring light to the city," Meritt said. LSA sophomore Julie Sarne mentors high-school students through the organization and also supports the clothing line. She said in just the past year the brand name has become more popular on campus. "I think it's starting to become something recogniz- able on campus, which is really exciting," Sarne said. "It's good fashion for a really great cause." Merritt said he is looking for- ward to creating a larger pres- ence at the University as a result of the the South University Ave- nue store. "We have the opportunity to take it a step further and have ourveryown storefrontthatwill not only put our product in front of students, but also put forth the message and the impact that the product purchases are mak- ing," Merritt said. Egyptian official warns of further terror attacks CAIRO (AP) - Egypt's interim president on Thursday extended a nationwide state of emergency for two more months, citing continued secu- rity concerns, as a senior Egyp- tian official warned of more terrorist attacks in the wake of a failed assassination attempt against the interior minister and suicide bombings in the Sinai Peninsula. The nearly month-old state of emergency, which is due to expire within days, preserves greater powers for security forces amid a crackdown on supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi and increas- ing violence by Islamic mili- tants. It was first declared in mid-August after authorities cleared two protest encamp- ments held by Morsi support- ers, unleashing violence that claimed the lives of nearly 1,000 in subsequent days. Ever since, a nighttime cur- few has also been in effect in much of the country. The interim government will decide separately on whether to continue the curfew. Interim Prime Minister Hazem el-Beb- lawi has said the curfew, now lasting for 7 hours most nights, would likely be eased. The government Thurs- day announced new measures aimed at easing an economic crunch, in a sign it aims to show that it is tackling the nation's problems even amid the excep- tional security conditions. The measures included tion costs. They also included an injection of $ 3.1 billion budget support to be spent on infrastructure projects and employment generation, which the government says it hopes will increase economic growth from the current 2 percent to 3.5 percent. The spending will largely be financed from money pledged by Gulf countries to Egypt after Morsi's July 3 ouster, the gov- ernment said. Egypt's continued politi- cal instability has badly hit the country's economy, deci- mating tourism and direct foreign investment. In recent rallies, Morsi supporters have increasingly sought to find public backing by evoking the hard economic conditions and authorities' failure to improve people's daily lives. The extension of the state of emergency, which allows police wider powers of arrest, had been expected. The decree cited continued security con- cerns. Under the interim constitution, the state of emer- gency can only be imposed for three months, then must be put to a public referendum. For most of the 30-year rule of Morsi's predecessor, Hosni Mubarak, Egypt was under emergency law, lifted only after Mubarak's ouster. The extension came days after the Egyptian military launched a major offensive in northern region of Sinai, with troops backed by helicopter gunships raiding suspected hideouts al-Qaida inspired mil- itants in a dozen villages. The three-day offensive left 29 mil- itants dead, demolished houses and led to the seizure of weap- ons and explosives, includ- ing 10 anti-aircraft missiles, according to military officials. START-UP From Page lA preneurship on campus," Parikh said in the question-and-answer post. MHacks, the University-host- ed hackathon, was also featured in the blog, and, like Beyonce's video greeting, will also take over the Big House next week. The second annual event is the largest of its kind and will draw more than 1,200 computer pro- grammers and innovators to Michigan Stadium's luxury suites on Sept. 20 as the largest college hackathon in the country. In an e-mail interview with The Michigan Daily, Parikh said he and his colleagues working on the Month of Entrepreneurship reached out to the White House Office of Science and Technol- ogy Policy about five months ago to share the initiatives they had been piloting. Two weeks ago, the White House contacted Parikh for an interview and said they would be interested in fea- turing the University's campus- wide entrepreneurial efforts. The Office of Science and Technology Policy was created in 1976 to advise the Executive Office of the President on the impacts of science and technolo- gy on domestic and international affairs. Parikh noted that the Uni- versity's Month of Entrepre- neurship directly aligns with Obama's core missions related to innovation. "Michigan has among the most diverse, robust and inter- disciplinary entrepreneurial programs in the nation," Parikh said. "Over the past year, stu- dent-driven entrepreneurship has grown to unprecedented levels. The Obama administra- tion has really inspired today's youth to be the torchbearers of a more entrepreneurial and inno- vative America." BORDERS Borders "are not just the From Page 1A juridical lines of jurisdiction that define on r i tion, of a nation sfate fr ..but student after the event. rather in a global world they are "So here's the problem: I a flow of goods, people, ideas," understand that the Snowden Bersin said. disclosures have created a real Citingthe case ofUmarFarouk issue in terms of, not just in Abdulmutallab - the Nigerian terms of big data, though I hope man who attempted to detonate I've at least started the debate in a bomb in his underwear during your minds if you've had ques a Christmas Day flight to Detroit tion about how big data operates in 2009 - Bersin explained the in the security realm ... but this DHS has learned to reconsider idea of spying on one another, the flow of goods, by securing espionage against countries, is them before they cross the U.S. actually more the rule than the border. exception," Bersin said. "And "Big data," Bersin said, was we're not the only ones who the solution, with the United have done that, or who do that. States now tracking flight board- Hypocrisy is the homage that ing and reservation information vice pays to virtue." each time an individual gets on To protect the United States an airplane coming to the coun- in this age of information, Ber- try, information which is main- sin said DHLS must embrace big tained in databases at DHLS. data. Bersin's second proposal illus- "Big data is not only neces- trated how expediting "law- sary, but it's desirable in order to ful trade and travel" can occur resolve these contradictions in even with increased security, managing global border flows," referring to an incident in Sep- Bersin said. "We actually are at tember 2010 - where packages a point where we cannot look containing explosives that were at the old methods of resolving addressed to Chicago syna- problems in quite the same way." gogues were discovered on UPS During the talk, Bersin and FedEx planes originating in emphasized three paradigm Yemen - as a defining moment shifts, pairing each with an for DHS. example of an attempted attack High-risk items and people on United States soil. First, Ber- are "needles in haystacks," Ber- sin challenged the traditional sin explained, and instead of notion of borders. checking each piece of straw, the United States needs to "make the relief for haystack smaller," by separating from sch low-risk traffic from high-risk reductior goods or people. Finally, Bersin posited that security and privacy are part of MARKE the same conversation. He cited From P how DHLS was able to identify and locate Faisal Shahzad - a naturalized American citizen and a tea from Pakistan who attempted to ingthatt detonate a bombin an abandoned was abou car in Times Square in May 2010 "Since - by tracing his cell phone num- cutting i ber. we all ha Bersin wrapped up his where -i remarks by stating that the data to learn collected maybe big, but the data said Rac reviewed is minimal. Green. " "The way in which we mine about en data now is based on algorithms and grow and search devices that are very Dale I targeted," Bersin said. "So, in and OrcI fact, we can say that very few market I of the actual data points are his farm touched by the scanning of big because: data, and the only matters that "I like are examined are those in which student b there is an alert or a hit." foods is Bersin's lecture was part of it's been the Josh Rosenthal Education The St Fund, which was created by the tion pre family of University alum Josh of bever Rosenthal, who graduated from addition: the Public Policy school in 1979 for stude and died in the terrorist attack Nursir on Sept. 11, 2011. Rosenthal lace fror pursued work in international students finance after graduating, lead- ing him to the position of senior vice president at Fiduciary Trust r low-income families hool expenditures and a in public transporta- ET ge 1A ching opportunity, add- he total cost of the event ut $8,000. food is such a cross- ssue - we all eat food; ave to get it from some- it's a good starting point about sustainability," ckham student Allyson It gets people thinking ergy and transportation wing practices." Lesser, of Lesser Farms hards, said at last year's he had to run back to in Dexter to restock sales were going so well. the interaction with the ody, and rightnow local kind of hot anyway, so workinggood," he said. tudent Nursing Associa- sented representations age sugar content and al health information nts. ng junior Leontine Wal- m the SNA said many she spoke with were surprised to learn the benefits of local food to overall health, say- ing many health providers focus too muchonthe "basics" without encouraging extra health habits. "You can wash your hands and get immunized a million times, and you can still end up sick because you're out of bal- ance in these other realms," Wallace said. "I think that a lot of students and people in gen- eral don't really get all that kind of information from their health provider." "We know what's in it, we know what's going in it, we know where it'sgrown, how it's grown, and our bodies are going to be happy about that," Art & Design sophomore, Carly Fishman said. While several students said they would likely frequent the market if it were held weekly, Soraya said logistics and busy farmers make it hard to hold the market consistently. There will be two more mar- kets this fall on North Campus, and the U-go's at the Union will continue selling limited produce from Goetz Farms on Wednesdays. U-,, COME TO OUR MASS MEETINGS! Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30 p.m., in our newsroom at 420 Maynard. CAN'T MAKE THIS MEETING? CHECK OUT OUR FACEBOOK FOR OTHER MEETING DATES. FACEBOOK.COM/M ICH IGAN DAILY LIKE US ON SOCIAL MEDIA: FACEBOOK.COM/MICHIGANDAILY TWITTER.COM/MICHIGANDAILY a 1