The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFSF DETROIT Bond insurers reach deal inr Detroit bankruptcy Bond insurer Syncora Guaran- tee Inc. reached a comprehensive deal Monday with Detroit follow- ing marathon weekend negotia- tions on the sidelines of the city's bankruptcy case. And in a stark reversal, the bond insurer's legal team filed a four- page apology Monday to Chief U.S. District Judge Gerald Rosen, medi- ator Eugene Driker - mediators who had been accused of engineer- ing a "fraudulent" plan to rescue city pensioners and preserve city- owned art at the expense of other creditors - and Driker's wife. "We are deeply sorry for the mistake we made and for any unfounded aspersions it may have cast on Chief Judge Rosen and the Drikers," Syncora lawyer James Sprayregen wrote. TEXAS First U.S. Ebola patient in Dallas in critical condition In a press conference Tuesday evening, Centers for Disease Con- trol and Prevention (CDC) Direc- tor Thomas Frieden provided more information about a patient confirmed to be carrying Ebola- the first to be diagnosed in the United States. The patient, who has been iden- tified as a male, left Liberia on September 19 and arrived in the United States on September 20. Four days later, the man began showing symptoms. On Septem- ber 26, he reportedly "sought care," which Frieden declined to elaborate on. On the evening of September 28, the patient was placed in isolation. By 1:22 p.m. Tuesday, experts in Dallas had confirmed that the patient had Ebola. Frieden said the patient is now "critically ill" and that the CDC, i ylnoring "experimental Ebol treatments." WASHINGTON D.C. Secret Service asks for more funding * after White House intrusion incident A series of missteps by a top Secret Service official during a Congressional grilling has law- makers openly questioning the agency's leadership - especially their claim that the $1.5 billion- organization charged with pro- tecting the president didn't have enough money to do the job. Secret Service Director Julia Pierson told the Congressional Oversight committee Tuesday that the agency was hundreds of employees short of its "optimal level" due to the automatic budget cuts known as sequestration. "Across the organization, the Secret Service is down 550 per- sonnel," Pierson said, later adding, "I do see the difficulty in trying to operate a critical federal agency in times of fiscal constraint." HONG KONG Protesters spend a peaceful night in Hong Kong streets Protesters in Hong Kong launched another day of demon- strations Tuesday with every indi- cation they have lost little of their zeal for democracy-and every signal that China has no intention of caving to their demands for full universal suffrage. "The central government will not change its mind as a result of such tactics," Hong Kong's chief executive, Leung Chun-Ying, said Tuesday morning in his first public com- ments on the unrest. After flatly rejecting calls to resign, the chief executive, also known as CY Leung, laid down Beijing's hardline position, telling Occupy Central demonstrators to "stop this campaign immediately." -Compiled from Daily wire reports Wednesday, October 1, 2014 - 3A MICHIGAN ation in Israel and the actions From Page 1A of the Israeli government, but believes that the best way for- ward would begin with an apol- burg said, referring to the ogy. boycott, divest and sanction "I always thought, start movement on campus." from 'I'm sorry' andwe canfix Kashua closed by saying he it," he said. remains frustrated by the situ- hinas gov' shuts down protest news LUNA ANNA ARCHEY/Daily Albanian President Bujar Nishani at Aven PRESIDENT. From Page 1A sity students with experiences in Albania. Tickets for the event were $250, Camaj said. Klementina Sula, director of International Giving and Engage- ment at LSA, said Nishani's visit provided a good context for, establishing an endowment fund as a way of commemorating his visit. The fund was created three weeks ago and recently surpassed its goal of $100,000, Sula said. Nishani said he was impressed by the harmony among Albanian Americans and especially among different religious communities. tura Restaurant Tuesday. This tolerance, he added, is essen- tial to Albanian culture. "Above all, I asked them, the Albanian American community, to preserve their identity, to preserve their culture, evento make the cul- ture oftheir origin country a part of the culture of this country, which is already a rich one," Nishani said. Nishani said while reforms are still needed, Albania is progress- ing in terms of democratic and institutional development,; eco- nomic growth, and social men- tality. Among the many dramatic changes he believes the country has undergone, Nishani high- lighted that young Albanian peo- ple now travel and study abroad. He said he hopes these students return to Albania and help the country to further prosper. "He is pretty interested in Albanian students here and he obviously wants us all to go back and be involved with Albania," Egli Lika, Engineering freshman and a member of the AASO said. Nishani said he advocates cre- ating an education-driven envi- ronment in Albania. "I have supported the objec- tive and aims of the government to do a ranking of high schools and universities in Albania, but it must be transparent, it must be a real one and it must be considered by appropriate mechanisms and institutions." HOLOCAUST From Page IA The medal is annually awarded to someone who embodies Wal- lenberg's courage and dedica- tion to humanitarian values. Past recipients of the award include Ele Wiesel, Miep Gies and Ten- zin Gyatso, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama of Tibet. Instead of presenting a lec- ture on the podium, Heller broke with tradition and chose to havea conversation with Judaic Studies Chair Scott Spector, who is also profssor of history, German an'd Germanic Languages and Litera- ture. During much of the conversa- tion, Heller reflected on her expe- riences during the Holocaust and Hungary under Soviet control and how those periods influenced her work. She said philosophy is an expression of experiences. "I had the experiences of total- itarianism and the Holocaust," Heller said. "When I started to write, these two experiences inspired me to think about eth- ics." . Heller also discussed her thoughts on higher education. She criticized the high cost of the European and American univer- sity system and the persistent idea that a university education is the sole path in gaining knowledge and becoming successful. "Sometimes in the universi- ties people are not encouraged to think with their own mind," Hell- er said. "Whenithre are100 stu- dents in a class, you cannot teach them as individuals." John Godfrey, assistant dean for International Education in the Rackham School of Graduate Studies, said Heller is a remark- able speaker and a passionate individual. "She has always been dogged and fearless and persistent in her fundamental inquiry in morality of good and evil in the modern world," said John Godfrey, assis- tant dean for International Edu- cation in the Rackham School of Graduate Studies. "She has always spoken out against repression and efforts to distinguish free and open inquiry. She is a remark- able intellectual of extraordinary accomplishments and enormous personal resilience." When the floor was opened for questions, Heller wakr:2 rff stage to stand next to the students lined up at the microphone so she could answer them directly. "I thought it was a master class on teaching," Godfrey said. "Her absolute direct and hon- est engagement with the ques- tions and the students who asked questions was profoundly mov- ing. She's utterly fearless and she showed how important courage is in the classroom." Regime ensures no images of Hong Kong events are seen in mainland BEIJING (AP) - China's government has cut off news about Hong Kong's pro- democracy protests to the rest of the country, a clampdown so thorough that no image of the rallies has appeared in state- controlled media, and at least one man has been detained for reposting accounts of the events. By contrast, media in semi- autonomous Hong Kong have been broadcasting nonstop about the crowds, showing unarmed students fending off tear gas and pepper spray with umbrellas as they call for more representative democracy in the former British colony. The contrast highlights the differences in the "one coun- try, two systems" arrange- ment that China's Communist Party agreed to when it nego- tiated the 1997 return of Hong Kong. It also reflects Beijing's extreme sensitivity about any possible sparks of pro-democ- racy protest spreading to the mainland. "The authorities see this a a a'r of life and death," said Shanghai-based colum- nist and independent analyst Zhao Chu. "Thy don't see it as alocal affair but a fuse that can take downotheir world." In Hong Kong, broadcasters NOW and Cable TV.have car- ried wall-to-wall coverage of the unfolding events, includ- ing student leaders storming government headquarters Fri- day and the running clashes with police over the weekend. Hong -Kong's pro-democracy newspaper, the popular Apple Daily, has run its own live Internet feed that features aerial images of the crowds captured bya drone. Beijing clearly has not been pleased with the unfettered coverage and has appeared to lump the Hong Kong media outlets in with foreign ones. "Several Western media are making a big fuss, and some even have done live casts," said an editorial on the party-run news site of the People's Daily. While Hong Kong enjoys civil liberties unheard of on the mainland under the "one country, two systems" arrangement, the situation is vastly different in Beijing's official media, through which the authorities can largely control the narrative on any outbreaks of unrest in the mainland. The coveage of the Hong Kong protests has been con- fined in mainland China to TV anchors reading brief statements with no video and text reports with no photos. The reports have mostly men- tioned illegal gatherings in Hong Kong and the efforts of authorities to disperse them. The Hong Kong-based China Media Project counted only nine articles in Chinese newspapers Tuesday about the protests, six of them stemming from asnews release by the offi- cial Xinhua News Agency say- ing the protestsahad hurt Hong Kong's economy and misquot- ing a high-profile university administrator as saying stu- dents should disperse. The other three pieces appeared in the nationalis- tic newspaper Global Times, which called the gatherings illegal, disruptive of social order andharmfulto the econ- omy. Censorship of microblogs - including phrases such as "tear gas" - has kept online discussion muted. The image- sharing Instagramservice was shut down in China over the weekend. "The clampdown has been most thorough, covering all media - traditional or new, central or local, governmen- tal or market-oriented," Zhao said. Some images from Hong Kong's streets haveseeped into the mainland via cellphone messaging services. Many users have converted words into images to avoid having searchable text that can be easily caught by censors. Still, users are complaining of posts being deleted, including in pri- vate chatsawith friends. Activist Wang Long in the southern city of Shenzhen, who repost nes about the protests on the instant sies- saging service WeChat, was detained Monday by police on suspicion of causing trouble, his lawyer friend Fan Biaowen said. The controls have been largely effective. "The majority of the Chi- nese public does not know what's going on in Hong Kong. Only a handful know," said Beijing-based journalism pro- fessor Zhan Jiang. While Hong Kong is out- side China's "Great Fire Wall" that blocks mainland access to many foreign Internet news and social sites, authorities could conceivably shut down the Internet there - as they have done in the country's res- tive ethnic regions - because of their control of telecommu- nications companies. For now, that seems unlike- ly because the move would dent Hong Kong's image as an open financial center. Nevertheless, rumors of that possibility have fueled a rush to download Firechat, a messaging service that can send and receive messages without an Internet connec- tion. Instead, the handsets can message each other ina daisy- chain fashion that creates a cloud-like network. Beijing is on edge because it fears the social movement in Hong Kong and its appeal for democracy could galvanize members of the Chinese pub- lic, said Zhao, the analyst from Shanghai. "It must be tightly con- trolled so it will not infect the mainland," he said. Coalition aims to educate youth on health insurance Intiative to highlight how to enroll for universal healthcare By NABEEL CHOLLAMPAT For the Daily Get Covered America, a national health care enrollment coalition, launched the Michigan Youth Outreach Advisory Coun- cil last month in an effort to edu- cate young adults and encourage enrollment in the Affordable Care Act. The Youth Advisory Outreach Council will be led by GCA com- mittee members state Reps. Adam Zemke (D-Ann Arbor) and Phil Phelps (D-Flushing), Lansing-area philanthropist Lauren Aitch and Emily Tode- bush, State Public Affairs Chair of the Michigan State Council of Junior Leagues. "Health coverage outreach and education to young adults is critically important," Zemke said. "While young consumers stand to benefit greatly from the new options under the Afford- able Care Act, they are often new to health insurance and tend to lack health coverage literacy." The council is emphasizing the special enrollment period, which is eligible for those who have a "qualifying life event," such as loss of current coverage, marriage, birth, adoption or a change in immigration status. Otherwise, under the ACA, Americans can only enroll dur- ing specific periods. After the initial enrollment period ended March 31, the next opportunity will begin Nov. 15. The campaign-is also targeting college campuses due to the large number of people who will soon experience' a health insurance change. At the age of 26, citizens can no longer use their parents' healthcare plan. "This is an opportunity to reach a group of people who are not going to be on their par- ents' insurance for much longer, whether they're going into the Marketplace or they're lucky enough to find a job that offers them care," Todebush said. Erin Knott, state director of GCA, said the mission of the program is informing Michigan youth, improving the conditions for ACA overall as more young citizens are aware of its benefits. "Our goal is educating young adults about what it means to have health insurance, the dif- ference between co-pays and premiums," Knott said. "But stu- dents also become messengers. They go and talk to their friends about it and spread the word." In previous years, GCA used local areas to target the youth. According to the U.S. Depart- ment of Health and Human Ser- vices, more than 8 million people enrolled in the Health Insur- ance Marketplace over the first enrollment period. In the state of Michigan, a reported 272,539 people enrolled. "This year, our staff is dedi- cated to beingbigger and bolder," Knott said. "We're trying to go deeper into communities and find those folks who didn't sign up, and we're tryingto get people to enroll with no competing cir- cumstances." Todebush, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in early 2013, offers a unique perspective on the health care issue. "My condition is not easily diagnosed because it's a long pro- cess of tests and meetings with doctors that are all expensive," Todebush said. "If something like this could happen to me, it" can happen to anyone, no matter how young and healthy." The ACA, commonly referred to as "Obamacare," has been: a prominent and polarizing politi- cal issue on the national level. It also experienced multiple tech- nical issues and failures in its' initial launch. Sept. 30 marked a deadline for enrolled families to verify their incomes or else pay back subsidies they received under the ACA. The council stresses that this is now law, and politics are no longer an issue or a barrier to enrollment. "This isn't a left or right issue," Knott said. "What we're doing is cutting out the rhetoric and just giving people the facts." TWITTER @michigandaily MICH IGANDAI LY.COM 4