The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Judge asks city to keep mediating with their creditors A judge urged Detroit and its creditors to keep negotiating Thursday in a 150-page opinion that mimics his decision earlier this week that the city is eligible for a makeover in bankruptcy court. Judge Steven Rhodes didn't * break new ground since announcing the decision Tues- day during a 90-minute address to a packed courtroom. But a written opinion was necessary, especially for unions and pen- sion funds that 'are pursuing appeals. Rhodes said Detroit is eligible for Chapter 9 protection because the city is broke and any nego- tiations with thousands of credi- tors before the July filing would have been impossible. As part of his ruling, he found pensions are like any other contract and can be broken in bankruptcy, despite protections in the Michigan Constitution. * TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Charges dropped for Heisman front- runner Winston Florida State quarterback and Heisman hopeful Jameis Win- ston will not face any charges in a sexual assault case, mostly because there were too many gaps in his accuser's story, a prosecutor said Thursday. State Attorney Willie Meggs said the woman's memory lapses about the events last December were problematic and there was not enough evidence to win a conviction. "It's not inconsistencies, it's lack of memory most of the time," Meggs said. The woman told police she had been drinking at a bar with " friends and went home with a man she didn't know. She said she the alleged assault took place at an off-campus apartment, but she couldn't remember where it was. A month later, she identified her alleged attacker as the quar- terback. MINNEAPOLIS City archdiocese releases list of accused preists Amid mounting public pres- sure and under order from a court, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis on Thurs- day published a list of 34 priests who have been accused of sexu- ally abusing minors. The list includes the names of eight men who had not been pub- licly named previously as alleged abusers. It places the men in two cat- egories: 30 are believed to have molested children, while the remaining four have claims against them that could not be substantiated. For example, one of those four cases involved a sexual relationship with an adult. MANAMA, Bahrain Hagel to reassure U.S. allies in Gulf of treaty with Iran Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel faces a tough challenge as he looks to reassure nervous allies in the Gulf that the U.S. will continue its strong military support to the region, even as world powers move forward on the nuclear pact with Iran. Hagel, who arrived in Bahrain Thursday, is slated to speak to a gathering of Gulf leaders later this week at a security confer- ence. U.S. officials said that he will stress America's commit- ment to the region, including sales of military weapons and ongoing efforts to improve the region's ability to defend itself. -Compiled from Daily wire reports PROTEST according to a University of California Berkeley Labor Cen- From Page 1A ter and University of Illinois study. University's USAS to bring sim- Historically, teenagers have ilar protests to Ann Arbor. The been the majority of minimum movement began last Decem- wage employees, but 40 per- ber and has steadily gained cent of current minimum-wage momentum. workers are between the ages "This is a big day for Fight for of 25 and 54, according to the 15," Menhennick said. "There Bureau of Labor Statistics. was some action over the sum- LSA junior Max Lerner, who mer, but this is the first day participated in the protest, said that there has been a nation- he believes he minimum wage wide collective movement at all struggle is one of the defining once." issues in American politics as The letter given to Wendy's more people are working in and Taco Bell detailed the low-payingservice jobs due to a group's concerns about their sluggish economic recovery. employees' livelihood. The pre- "If they are forced to have vailing wages paid to fast food poverty wages then there is workers - a nationwide median really no future for the middle of $8.94 an hour - leaves over class in this country," Lerner half of employees relying on said. "That's why the minimum public assistance programs wage and raising it is such a key to cover their basic needs, issue." nation's devastation. When the PHILIPPINES clinic ran out of liquid vitamins From Page 1A that were needed to sustain the newborns, the group was forced to use adult vitamins as a sub- Roxas City on Panay Island for stitute. 11 days. On a typical day, Launius Hisfirst day workingon relief woke up at 7 a.m. in a hotel that efforts took place at a damaged used a generator for power and church powered by a generator. was without safe water. He Throughout the day, more than would then drive a van to an 300 patients sought assistance area prepared by an advanced with injuries that had festered team. for weeks without attention. Though he tended to patients Launius' lighter days of all ages, Launius said helping involved helping approximately childrenrwas the most memo- 150 patients. Many those receiv- rable part of his trip. On his ing treatment suffered from first day of work, children who infections because their make- were thought to be suffering shift housing was contaminated from trauma were brought in from the typhoon's storm surge and asked to draw pictures of and accumulated. their homes before and after the The team also confronted storm. Launius said the activity a shortage of medications, was heartbreaking to watch. meaning nurses had to request Launius is no stranger to pro- prescriptions for alternative viding relief effort, having sup- medications, including vitamin ported relief efforts in the wake supplements for malnourished of Hurricane Katrina at a Texas newborns. diabetic clinic. Launius said mothers' grief He added that having an prompted by their inability to impact on people in need is the provide for their children was most rewarding aspect of the the moststrikingexample of the nursing profession. States looking to impress Boeing for jobs and revenue COLLEGE From Page 1A House and No Thai are popular on both campuses. "You look at Menna's wher- ever else they are. They're on every college campus except TAMAKI From Page 1A and the portions are large," Chen said. FAMILIES From Page 1A Soubani, MSA's president, 235 students and faculty fasted this year. The end of fasting came at 4:30 p.m. Thursday. MSA and Fast- a-Thon participants gathered in the Rackham Amphitheater to celebrate. The event began with LSA freshman Aiman Almas- naah, who recied a verse from the Quran, followed by an English rendition of the same verse by LSA senior Zainab Masood. here," Cavender said. "When I announced that we did this deal, people are just thrilled about it. We're excited to see how well they do. I think they'll just crank." Michigan State University junior Michael Higer said Men- na's has a large present on his LSA freshman Jacob Wellner enjoyed the food on his visit to Tamaki, but noted the long wait compared to alternatives, such as Chipotle. "Sushi can't be prepared as fast Safi, the event's guest speak- er discussed the importance of fasting in the keynote address. The three stages of fasting, he explained, were staying away from food and water, staying away from moral vices and fastingfrom anything other than God. "There are people in this coun- try, not just outside of this coun- try, who are in need, and so the ancient religion of God in differ- ent manifestations encourages us to give to other people," Safi said. LSA sophomore Sarah Khan, MSA's on-site chair, said Fast-a- Thon is usually held during a day Friday, December 6, 2013 - 3 school's campus. "It's been one of the most popular restaurants on campus," Higer said. "Imagine your typi- cal burrito place, but with any- thing you want in it." as burritos, so there was a lot of backup," Wellner said. Despite the stiff competition, Cheng said he plans to open other Tamaki locations in the Ann Arbor area in the future. in Ramadan, but since that holi- day took place over summer this year, the Fast-a-Thon was held this month. At the end of the event, partici- pants broke their fast by eating a date, a nutritious fruit custom- arily eaten during Ramadan. Afterward, they ate a free dinner offered by MSA. Nursing sophomore Heather Raymond had planned for weeks to attend the Fast-a-Thon, she said after Safi's speech while other participants prayed. "I fasted for understanding," Raymond said. Yemen's Defense Ministry attacked by militant group U.S. military vows protection and voices support for political allies ADEN, Yemen (AP) - Mili- tants stormed the Defense Min- istry in the heart of Yemen's capital Thursday, killing 52 people, including at least seven foreigners, in a suicide car bomb- ing and assault by gunmen. The brazen, al-Qaida-style attack fol- lows a rise in U.S. drone strikes in this key American ally in the Middle East. The two-stage operation came as the defense minister was in Washington for talks. The U.S. military increased its regional alert status after the attack and is "fully prepared to support our Yemeni partners," a senior U.S. defense official said. At least 167 people were wounded, nine seriously, in the bombing and fierce firefight, which underscored the ability of insurgents to take advantage of Yemen's instability and tenuous security - even at the headquar- ters of its military. Amongthe dead atthe Defense Ministry complex, which also houses a military hospital, were soldiers and civilians, includ- ing seven foreigners - two aid workers from Germany, two doc- tors from Vietnam, two nurses from the Philippines and a nurse from India, accordingto Yemen's Supreme Security Commission, which issued the casualty fig- ures. Among the Yemeni civil- ians killed were a doctor and a senior judge, it said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, the deadliest in Sanaa since May 2012. Such suicide bombings and complex attacks are the hall- marks of al-Qaida. The U.S. considers Yemen's al- Qaida branch, known as al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, to be the most active in the world. In recent months, Washington has sharply escalated drone attacks against the militants in the impoverished nation. U.S. forces also have been training and arm- ing Yemeni special forces, and exchanging intelligence with the central government. The terrorist network gained a major foothold in the south, taking over several towns in the chaos that followed the 2011 uprising that ousted longtime President Ali Abdullah Saleh. The drone strikes and a series of U.S.-backed military offensives helped uproot several key mili- tant strongholds, but al-Qaida continues to fight back. Al-Qaida's Yemen branch is linked to the foiled plot on Christmas 2009 in which a pas- senger on a Detroit-bound plane allegedly tried to detonate explo- sives in his underwear, as well as explosives-laden parcels inter- cepted on cargo flights a year later. Defense Minister Mohammed Nasser Ahmed was in Washing- ton for consultations with U.S. officials, part of a "strategic dia- logue" to aid Yemen's political transition and security coopera- tion. Thursday's attacks "will not deter the security forces, the armed forces and the honorable sons of the nation from carry- ing out their religious and patri- otic duty in the face of terrorists wherever they may be," said the statement by the Supreme Secu- rity Commission. It is led by President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, who succeeded Saleh, and includes the country's top mili- tary and intelligence officials. The senior U.S. defense offi- cial said the U.S. military "has increased its regional alert status following the terrorist attack on the Yemeni Republic Ministry of Defense." "The United States military is fully prepared to support our Yemeni partners in the wake of this incident," added the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the matter and requested anonymity. The U.S. State Department condemned the attack. "We stand with Yemen against this violence and remain firmly committed to supporting the Yemeni people," said a statement from the State Department's deputy spokeswoman, Marie Harf. Sam Wilkin, a Dubai-based Middle East analyst for the Con- trol Risks consulting firm, said the attack displayed the ability of the militants to move explosives and armed fighters to a part of the capital that should be heavily protected. "It suggests al-Qaida's current strategy is to degrade the capa- bilities of the security forces and demoralize them to the extent they're no longer able to control certain areas of the country," he said. At that point, "al-Qaida will probably try to fill that vacuum and effectively take control of certain areas," Wilkin added. Although al-Qaida militants are concentered in the south- ern and eastern parts of Yemen, they occasionally strike in the capital. In May 2012, a suicide bombing near the presidential palace in Sanaa killed 93 army conscripts. Production location for the 777X jetliner tobe decided JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) - With Boeing the king of U.S. aircraft manufacturing, more than a dozen states are groveling before the throne for a share of the riches to be made from the next-generation 777 jetliner. From coast to coast, states are rushing to impress Boeing with lavish incentive pack- ages that offer property, labor deals and billions of dollars in tax breaks. All this in the hopes that the aerospace giant will select them to assemble the new 777X - or at least give them a wing to construct. The competition under- scores Boeing's commanding bargaining position in an econ- omy where top-notch manu- facturing jobs remain scarce and elected officials feel obli- gated to pursue every growth opportunity, no matter how improbable. "We have gotten a tremen- dous response, and it's obvi- ously created a lot of interest and alot of excitement," Boeing spokesman Doug Alder said. The contest unfolded in a mere matter of weeks after a machinists' union in Wash- ington state rejected Boeing's proposed contract for the 777X because it would have replaced their traditional pension with a defined-contribution savings plan. The Chicago-based compa- ny said it would look elsewhere and gave states until Tuesday to submit proposals. Winners will be announced early next year. The Boeing buzz has been loudest in Missouri, where Gov. Jay Nixon immediately convened a special legislative session to approve an incen- tive package valued at up to $1.7 billion over more than two decades. The plan passed the Senate with bipartisan sup- port Wednesday and could win final approval in the House on Friday. Boeing never even had to send a lobbyist to talk to a lawmaker. Missouri Sen. Eric Schmitt, a Republican hoping to entice Boeing to expand in his home- town of St. Louis, called the package "a transformational opportunity." Other states are keeping the details of their offers out of the public spotlight - and away from the inquisitive eyes of their rivals- by crafting them through administrative agen- cies shielded by non-disclosure laws. Last year, Alabama lured Boeing's biggest world- wide rival, Airbus, to build a $600 million assembly plant in Mobile by offering tax breaks and $158 million for bond expenses, site and road improvements, building costs and worker training. This time, Gov. Robert Bent- ley is stressing more than just financial incentives. He's tap- ping into Boeing's recent union frustrations by highlight- ing that Alabama is a "right- to-work" state, where union fees cannot be a condition of employment. Bentley said Boeing officials told him that Alabama was their first state to visit after the union deal fell through. But other states also have reason to hope. Utah Gov. Gary Herbert said Boeing leaders reached out to him, too. Utah officials are emphasizing that they have the youngest workforce in the U.S., as well as right-to-work rules. And it doesn't hurt that Boeing is already set to open an 850,000-square foot factory in a Salt Lake City suburb to make tail parts for a different model of plane. Other states in the hunt - including Kansas, North and South Carolina and Texas - are banking on right-to-work laws of their own. The Online Revolution: Learning, without Limits IDec p @4PM1l VArMiler) Teatre Wa green Drama Center FEATURING rr co-founder & co-CEO Daphne Koller We are at the cusp of a major transformation in higher education. In the past year, we have seen the advent of massive open online courses (MOOCs). In this interactive talk, Prof. Koller will discuss this far-reaching experiment in education, including examples & preliminary analytics. She will also discuss why this model can sunpport an improved learning experience for on-campus students, & provide access to education to students around the world. Register today engin.umich.edu/form/mellorlecture20l3 JAMES R. MELLOR LECTURE SERIES MICHIGANENGINEERING UMRnSMOFIJNr