2A - Wednesday, January 8, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 2A - Wednesday, January 8, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom (Pie MOdP= DnaIlm 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com PETER SHAHIN KIRBY VOIGTMAN Editor in Chief Besiness Manager 734-41a-4115 ext. 1251 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 pjshahin@michigandaily.com kvoigtman@michigandailycom FREEZE FRAME Yale assistant professor overdoses Medical examiners revealed Monday that 34-year-old Samuel See, an assistant professor of Eng- lish and American Studies at Yale University, died of a heart attack induced by an accidental over- dose of acute methamphetamine and amphetamine, Yale Daily News reported. See was found dead in jail last November after a domestic dis- pute with his husband, Sunder Ganglani. The two men reported- ly had protective orders against one another, and both were sent to jail when police discov- ered Ganglani at See's home on November 23rd. The New Haven Police Department stated that See resisted arrest, fell and was cut above his left eye. See received treatment for the injury at Yale-New Haven Hospi- tal and was detained immediately after. He was found unresponsive in his cell at 6 a.m. the next day. Students and faculty members interviewed were unaware of See's drug use, though two sourc- es knew of his ill health. Katie Trumpener, an English professor, said See once told her he was HIV positive. Lindsey Uniat, a student and advisee of See's, said See had referenced having health issues before, though he described them as non-life-threatening. Man discovered living in Duke University's Bryan Center Duke University police arrest- ed a man Monday after a faculty member found him living in the Bryan Center, a central student affairs building on campus, The Chronicle reported. The man was found sleeping in the Religious Life office locat- ed in the building's basement. Chief of Police John Dailey said the college-aged male was arrested for breaking and enter- ing and theft. He reportedly stole several items, including an iPad and a laptop. Duke faculty also suspects the man is linked to the theft of numerous previously sto- len items. -KAITLYNBYRNE Newsroom 734-418-4115 opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales dailydisplay@gmail.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaly.com News Tips news@michigandaily.com Letters to the Editor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classifed@michigandaily.com Finance fnance@michigandaily.com NICHOLASWILLIAMS/Daily Icicles collect on a house after a storm covered Ann Arbor in ice and snow Sunday. CRIME NOTES CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Plowin' down No card, no car Bullet catch MWireless WHERE: 1137 Block of Ann Street WHEN: Tuesday at around 6:50 a.m. WHAT: A snow plow struck a Blue Bus on the roadway, University Police reported. The crash resulted in dam- age to the side mirror and had no major injuries to passengers. WHERE: Washtenaw Road WHEN: Sunday at about 9:40 p.m. WHAT: A driver was arrested during a traffic stop for having a suspended driver's license, University Police reported. The subject was processed and released, with warrant authorization pending. WHAT: Writer and per- former Rob Drummond will perform a theatrical magic show where he explores the infamous stunt the Bullet Catch WHO: Rob Drummond, Arches Prouction WHEN: Today at 7:30 p.m. WHERE: Walgreen Drama Center, Arthur Miller The- atre Lock up the Crash and dash C drugs WHERE: East Medical C Center parking lot demonstration sorkshop WHAT: Sessions will help University students get connected better to the campus-wide WiFi network. WHO: Michigan Adminis- trative Information Services WHEN: Today from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. WHERE: Shapiro Harold & Vivian Library Final strums WHAT: This will be the Final round in the SMTD Concerto Competition. WHO: School of Music, Theatre & Dance WHEN: 4:00 p.m. WHERE: Hill Auditorium CORRECTIONS " Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michi- gandaily.com. As he was playing hide- and-seek, a mangot stuck in a washing machine last monday, the Huffington Post reported. Paramedics had to lube the man, naked at the scene, with olive oil to get him out. This was the second time this week he got stuck. As a rising number of student startups shift the entrepreneurial scene in Ann Arbor, onlook- ers are nicknaming our area the new 'Silicon' Mitten. >> FOR MORE, SEE THE STATEMENT Anana, Chicago's Lin- coln Park Zoo polar bear, was kept inside last Monday as tempratures were too cold, reported the AP. Though the record-low Chicago temps are compara- ble to what polar bears expe- rience in the wild EDITORIAL STAFF KatieBurke ManagingEditor kgburke@michigandaily.com lenniertalfas Manaig Nes Editor jealfas@michigandaily.com SENIOR NEWSEDIOS Iang iing hamEoSam Gringlas, Wl renberg, Rce remack and StephanieShenouda ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS: Allana Akhtar, Yardain Amron, Hillary Crawford, Amia Davis, Shoham Geva, Amabel Karoub, Thomas McBrien, Emilie Plesset, Max Radwin and Michael Sugerman Megan McDonald and Daniel Wang Editorial Page Editors opinioneditors@michigandaily.com SENIOR EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Aarica Marsh and Victoria Noble ASSISTANT EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Michael Schramm and Nivedita Karki Greg Garno and AlejandroZihiga ManagingsportsEditors sportseditors@michigndailycom ENI TS EDITORS: Max Cohen, AlexaDettelbach, RajatKhare, JeremySummitt ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS: Lev Facher, Daniel Feldman, Simon Kaufman, Erin Lennon, Jake Lourim and Jason Rubinstein John lynchand jlynech@ochigadaiy.com Akshay Seth Managing Arts Editors akse@michigandaily.com SENIORARTSEDITORS: GiancarloBuonomo,NatalieGadbois,Erika Harwoodand ASSTNT ARTS EDITORS: JamieBircoll, Jackson Howard,Gillian Jakab and Maddie Thomas Teresa Mathew and Paul Sherman Managing Photo Editors photo@michigandaily.com ASSSoTANTOTOEDTORS lisonFarsrandTryKoTerraMolengraff and Nicholas Williamis Carolyn Gearig and Gabriela Vasquez ManagingDesignEditors design@michigandaily.com SENIOR DESIGN EDITORS: Amy Mackensand Alicia Kovalcheck tarlina Duan Magazine Editor statement@michigandaily.com DEPUTY MAGAZINE EDITORS: Max Radwin and Amrutha Sivakumar STATEMENT PHOTO EDITOR: Ruby Wallau STATEMENT LEAD DESIGNER: Nicholas Cruz Mark Ossolinski and Meaghan Thompson Maaging Cpy Editorso copydesk@michigandaily.com SENIORCOPYEDITORS:MariamSheikhandHollisWyatt Austen Hufford online Editor ahufford@michigandaily.com BUSINESS STAFF Amal Muzaffar Digital Accounts Manager Doug Solomon University Accounts Manager Leah Louis-Prescott classified Manager Lexi Derasmo Local Accounts Manager Hillary Wang National Accounts Manager Ellen Wolbert and Sophie Greenbaum Production Managers Nolan Loh Special Projectscoordinator Nana Kikuchi Finance Manager Olivia Jones Layout Manager The Michigan Daly ,ssN 0745t967) is published Monday through Friday duing the fall and winter terms by sde"tsattheUniv"e s"tohi" O pry'" " saalabef'e'f' argeo'allr s.'t' o naopiesmay be picked up at the Dailys office for $2. Subscriptions for fall termstarting inS eptem sva U. s.malare$110. Winter term(January th ough Apri:) is $5i yearong (septem s through April is $19s.University afiiates a'es'bj"ttoarduesu "ptio'te O0-camps"u"sri't'onsforfalltermnare $35Ssbscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. WHERE: Von Voigtlander Women's Hospital WHEN: Monday at about 2:30 p.m. WHAT: Initial reports were filled for a possible larceny of medications between Dec.17 and 25. There is a possible suspect, Iniversitv Polie renartel WHEN: Saturday at about 12:00 p.m. WHAT: A vehicle was struck while parked in the structure between 2 and 11:30 p.m., University Police reported. There was damage to the fender and bumper. No suspects were reorted. WHAT: A workshop on how to clean and prepare native seeds for propagation will take place today. Participants will make their seed packets ready to plant. WHO: Matthaei Botanical Gardens & Nichols Arbo- retum WHEN: Today from 6:45 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. WHERE: Matthaei Botani- cal Gardens Israeli militants captured - and held by Palestinians Settlers captive for away by soldiers. a Palestinian boy in the he: Human rights groups have clash ensued, farmers calle two hours before reported an increase in attacks reinforcements and about by militant settlers on Pales- youths arrived from the vil tinians and their property in Odeh said. the West Bank in recent years. The settlers ran away an KARYOUT, West Bank (AP) However, Tuesday's incident villagers gave chase, said C - Palestinians on Tuesday appeared to mark the first time and another witness, vi chased and grabbed more than settlers were captured and held resident Abdel Hakim Wad a dozen Israeli settlers who wit- by Palestinians. They said several of nesses said had attacked Pales- The Israeli military said it settlers sought cover in tinian farmers near a West Bank had received word of a stone- building under construc village. throwingclash between settlers located on the edge of the The settlers were held for and Palestinian farmers and lage of Karyout, about four1 about two hours at a house that it later evacuated 11 settlers meters (2.5 miles) from Qus under construction before being with light and moderate injuries Villagers grabbed them . handed over to the Israeli mill- from the building. ever and turned the buil tary. During the standoff, the The incident began at about into a holding area where settlers huddled near a wall 10:30 a.m. near the West Bank also put other settlers of the house, several bleeding village of Qusra, southeast of chased down in the area, C from the head, and one was the city of Nablus, said Ziad said. lying on the ground. Odeh, the Muslim prayer leader Some of the settlers were By the time Israeli soldiers in Qusra and a member of the up, and most had signs of 1 arrived, the crowd surrounding village council. ing injuries, according to a: the settlers had grown to about He said about 25 to 30 settlers, photographer at the scene. 200 people, an AP photographer many of them masked, attacked Odeh said the beal said. People kicked and spit at Qusra farmers in an olive grove stopped after the settlers' the settlers as they were led with sticks and stones, injuring seized. ad. A d for 100 lage, d the Odeh illage ith the ithe tion, vil- kilo- sra. how- ding they they Odeh etied beat- n AP tings were Ann Arbor is covered in ice and snow following a storm that hit campus Sunday afternoon, making it difficult for many students to return for Wednesday classes. Record-breaking frigid S - "When they were caught, they were beaten, but after we brought them to the build- ing, we did not let anyone beat them," said Odeh, adding that the captives were given water and bandages for their wounds. Odeh said the settlers involved in the attack on the Qusra farmers were in their late teens and 20s. The military said the chain of events apparently began after Israeli authorities removed an illegally built structure in Esh Kodesh, a rogue settlement in the area. In recent years, militant set- tlers have often responded to any attempts by the Israeli mili- tary to remove parts of dozens of rogue settlements, or out- posts, by attacking Palestinians and their property. The tactic, begun in 2008, is known as "price tag." Villages in the area have repeatedly come under attack by militant settlers, said Odeh, adding that assailants also set fire to four area mosques in the last three years. weather Extreme winter conditions bring dire consequences ATLANTA (AP) - Fountains froze over, a 200-foot Ferris wheel in Atlanta shut down, and Southerners had to dig out win- ter coats, hats and gloves they almost never have to use. The brutal polar air that has made the Midwest shiver over the past few days spread to the East and the Deep South on Tuesday, shattering records that in some cases had stood for more than a century. The mercury plunged into the single digits and teens from Boston and New York to Atlanta, Birmingham, Nashville. and Little Rock - places where many people don't know the first thing about extreme cold. "I didn't think the South got this cold," said Marty Williams, a homeless man, originally from Chicago, who took shelter at a church in Atlanta, where it hit a record low of 6 degrees. "That was the main reason for me to come down from up North, from the cold, to get away from spans the nation all that stuff." fingers freeze off after t The morning weather map minutes, your cheeks feel for the eastern half of the U.S. you're going to get wind looked like an algebra work- and you work as quick a: sheet: lots of small, negative can." numbers. In fact, the Midwest Farther south, Birming and the East were colder than Ala., dipped to a low of 7, much of Antarctica. degrees colder than the In a phenomenon that fore- mark, set in 1970. Hunts casters said is actually not allthat Ala., dropped to 5, Nash unusual, all 50 states saw freez- Tenn., got down to 2, andI ing temperatures at some point Rock, Ark., fell to 9. Char Tuesday. That included Hawaii, N.C., reached 6 degrees, b where it was 18 degrees atop ing the 12-degree record Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano. had stood since 1884. The big chill started in the The deep freeze dragg Midwest over the weekend, in the Midwest as well, wit caused by a kink in the "polar thermometer reaching mit vortex," the strong winds that overnight in the Chicago circulate around the North and 14 below in suburba Pole. By Tuesday, the icy air Louis. More than 500 An covered about half the country, passengers were stranded and records were shattered like night on three Chicago-b icicles up and down the Eastern trains that were stoppe Seaboard. blowing and drifting sno It was 1 degree in Read- Illinois. Food ran low, bu ing, Pa., and 2 in Trenton, N.J. heat stayed on. New York City plummeted to 4 The worst should be degrees; the old record for the in the next day or two, date was6, set in 1896. the polar vortex is expect "It's brutal out here," said straighten itself out. Wa Spunkiy Jon, who took a break weather - that is, near or from her sanitation job in New freezing - is in the foreca York to smoke a cigarette in the much of the stricken partt cab of a garbage truck. "Your country. three as if burn, s you ham, four e old ville, ville, Little rlotte, -reak- that ed on th the nus12 area an St. mtrak over- sound ed by ow in ut the over when ted to armer above ast for of the I I 0