. ': Thursday, September 5, 2013 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom W S Thursday, September 5, 2013 - 5A Ross' donation to the 'U' raises concerns in Florida A pair of women react after a stabbing during a fight involving multiple students inside Spring High School in Spring, Texas on Wednesday. A 16-year-old boy has been airlifted from the high school in suburban Houston with stab wounds. School stabbng fight leaves one dead and three injured Police remain mum on what precipitated the confrontation SPRING, Texas (AP) - A fight inside a Houston-area high school escalated into a series of stabbings Wednesday that left a 17-year-old student dead and three others wound- ed, sheriff's officials said. The stabbings happened during a fight between several students in a school corridor. The Harris County Sheriff's Office said 17-year-old stu- dent Luis Alonzo Alfaro pulled a knife during the fight and fatally stabbed one student and wounded three others. Alfaro admitted to the stab- bing under questioning by sheriff's homicide detectives and was charged with murder, the Sheriff's Office said in a statement released Wednesday evening. Sheriff's spokesman Alan Bernstein referred queries about whether Alfaro had an attorney to the district clerk's website, which had not been updated as of Wednesday night. Alfaro also was not yet listed in the jail's booking sys- tem. Authorities provided few details on what may have led to the fight, and no other infor- mation was available on the teenager who was killed. "We believe a confrontation of some sort occurred ... that ultimately led into a physical confrontation that produced weapons," Sheriff Adrian Gar- cia said. "There has been some information that this may have been gang related." School district officials can- celed classes at the high school for the rest of the week. Some parents said the fight was the continuation of a dis- turbance that broke out Tues- day. Officials at the school, which has about 3,500 stu- dents, would not confirm their comments. "Every parent sends their child to school believing school should be one of those safe haven places," Spring Independent School District Superintendent Ralph Draper said. "This is what we spend our nights and days working toward and what I lose sleep over. "In my nearly 30-year career, this is the one thing you pray never to experience." Parent Tara Campbell said she received text messages from her daughter about the fight and that her daughter said students who witnessed the episode snapped cellphone photos of the victims as they lay on the ground. Campbell said she intended to have her daughter home- schooled, saying she's grown tired of fights at the school. "Last year there were gang fights consistently," she said. "This is ridiculous. This is an ongoing situation." Lakesia Brent said her son, a sophomore at the school, sent her multiple text messages asking her to come pick him up. "He's just afraid," she said, adding that fights at the school were a problem in the last aca- demic year. The school was placed on lockdown following the stab- bings, which occurred about 7 a.m., and students were released to the care of their parents later Wednesday. Many parents were upset that the school district did not provide them information in a timely manner. Draper defended the dis- trict's actions, saying they focused on two goals - secur- ing the school and making sure no action was taken to compromise the investiga- tion - before communicating information to parents about what had happened. He said students were not immediately released because some of them were potential witnesses who needed to be interviewed by investigators. "When street violence pours into the school, it compromises the safety of all our students," Draper said. Billionaire insisted that taxpayers help pay for Dolphins stadium renovation DETROIT (AP) - Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross is donating $200 million to the University of Michigan, his alma mater announced Wednesday, making it the biggest single gift in the school's history but rais- ing questions about Ross' insis- tence on taxpayer funding to make improvements to his NFL team's stadium. Ross' donation is among the largest ever given to a U.S. col- lege or university. It will be split evenly between the Stephen M. Ross School of Business and the university's athletics depart- ment, which will rename its campus the Stephen M. Ross Athletic Campus, the school said in a statement. It brings the total amount Ross has given the school to more than $313 mil- lion. Although the donation is a huge boon to his alma mater, it will make it more difficult for Ross to seek taxpayer help for the $350 million improvements he wants to make to the Dol- phins' stadium, said Andrew Zimbalist, a sports economist at Smith College in Northampton, Mass. "It strikes me as peculiar timing that Mr. Ross decided to have this made known as this time," Zimbalist said. "If I were in Miami, then I would have additional questions about why he needed public funding for his stadium." House Speaker Will Weath- erford, who killed Ross' plan by not putting it up for a vote, declined to comment on the Michigan donation. But Miami documentary filmmaker Billy Corben, a critic of Ross' stadi- um plan, tweeted: "Props on @ MiamiDolphins owner's gener- ous donation. He can do what- ever he wants with his money. He can't do whatever he wants with ours." Ross has said an upgrade of the 26-year-old stadium is needed if Miami is to host future Super Bowls and college championship games. He says the Dolphins are already heav- ily in debt and one of the NFL's most leveraged teams, making upgrades impossible without taxpayer help. Last spring, Ross sought up to $289 million from an increase in the Miami-Dade County hotel tax and up to $90 million in state sales tax rebates, but the Florida Legislature turned down his plan. In a statement, Ross said the donation and stadium issue are different subjects. "I think it is important to be committed to both," Ross said. "As I've often said, I've prom- ised to pay a large portion of the stadium upgrade costs, but the community who would sub- stantially benefit also needs to be involved. I also think it's extremely important to be a good citizen from a philan- thropic standpoint, and to set an example for others to do the same. Both commitments are important to me and both have the potential to leave a lasting legacy that will benefit so many. people." A New York real estate devel- oper, Ross has a net worth esti- mated at more than $4 billion. He graduated from Michigan in 1962, and completed his pur- chase of the Dolphins and their stadium in early 2009. The athletics campus in Ann Arbor is expected to be named the Stephen M. Ross Athletic Campus. "Stephen Ross' vision has always been about the abil- ity of facilities to transform the human experience," Michi- gan President Mary Sue Cole- man said in the statement. "He understands the power of well- conceived spaces, and his gener- osity will benefit generations of Michigan students, faculty and coaches." According to lists from The Chronicle of Higher Education and The Chronicle of Philan- thropy, Ross' gift is the third biggest to a higher education facility in 2013. Earlier this year, it was announced that New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg would donate $350 million to Johns Hopkins University, and in July the A. Eugene Brockman Charitable Trust gave a $250 million donation to Centre Col- lege in Kentucky. Ross' $200 million donation is among the 30 single largest donations to a U.S. college or university, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education. In Michigan, specific proj- ects will be announced in the coming months, the school said. In addition, scholarships will be available to Ross stu- dents. The Ross School of Business proposes to create new spaces for students to study, collaborate and connect with each other, faculty and potential employ- ers. Classrooms will include advanced technology to support in-person and virtual collabora- tion. With the additional funding, University of Michigan Athlet- ics plans to improve its campus to help athletes succeed on the playing field and in the class- room, improve its facilities and build sites to be a destination for local, state, national and inter- national competitions. Afghan woman sought in inside $1.1 million bank theft Police suspect mafia involvement after woman flees to India KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - The young woman worked for three years at the Afghan bank, officials say. Then one day she vanished. As did $1.1 million. Afghan authorities have been scrambling to track down the suspected thief and sev- eral alleged accomplices, and an international arrest war- rant has been issued. Still, the revelations are another embar- rassment for the banking sector in this country, which has seen corruption already unravel one major institution amid ongoing security threats from militants and criminals. Shokofa Salehi, 22, worked in the money transfer division at the headquarters of Azizi Bank, a major Afghan lender in Kabul, officials said. She dis- appeared around two months ago, according to Azizi chief executive Inayatullah Fazli. Investigators say she is sus- pected of transferring some $1.1 million out of the bank's 0 coffers to accounts of relatives. Besides Salehi, at least nine people are believed involved in the case. "They are a mafia group," Fazli alleged. An Interpol red notice - the equivalent of an international arrest warrant - describes authorities as seeking Salehi on charges of fraud and misusing her authority. Afghan officials believe Salehi used fake docu- ments under the name Samira to reach India after transfer- ring the money; her current whereabouts are unknown. Two suspects in the case have been detained in Dubai, senior Afghan police official Gen. Aminullah Amarkhail said, adding that he's in touch with counterparts in Dubai and India for help tracking down Salehi and other suspects. He said one suspect is alleged to have spent some $850,000 of the money to invest in a tire business and possibly other ventures in Dubai. Amarkhail said Salehi's parents were among the sus- pects, and are believed to have returned to Kabul after going with her to India. Another top police official, Mohammad Zahir, said investigators were still seeking the parents. Azizi Bank's website says it began operating in 2006, and that it now has "a 1,500- plus strong team of employees and with a 20 percent female workforce is playing a quiet but effective role in women(s) emancipation and empower- ment." It also calls itself "the bank you can trust." As striking as it is, Salehi's alleged pilfering pales in com- parison to some other examples of corruption in Afghanistan's banking sector. In 2010, regulators seized Kabul Bank, Afghanistan's largest lender, amid allega- tions of severe levels of graft. Its near-collapse and subse- quent bailout represented more than 5 percent of Afghanistan's gross domestic product, mak- ing it one of the largest banking failures in the world in relative terms. An independent report described Kabul Bank as being run like a Ponzi scheme. Inves- tigators said some $861 million in fraudulent loans had disap- peared into the pockets of asso- ciates of the men behind the bank. Earlier this year, an Afghan tribunal sentenced two top Kabul Bank executives to five years in prison for misappro- priating funds. Critics said the punishments were far too light and raised questions about President Hamid Karzai's com- mitment to rooting out corrup- tion. On Tuesday, Afghanistan announced it was trying once again to privatize what it had salvaged of the bank, which is now called New Kabul Bank. Banks in Afghanistan have also been targeted by Taliban militants and criminal gangs. Not only are they prime tar- gets for people seeking to steal money, they also are gather- ing places for many govern- ment employees seeking to make deposits or cash their paychecks, thus making them attractive to suicide bombers. JOIN THE DAILY! ALL SECTIONS TAKING NEW HIRES MASS MEETINGS ON SEPT. 12,15,17 AND 19 7:30 P.M. AT 420 MAYNARD STREET