2A — Monday, January 12, 2015
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

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THREE THINGS YOU 
SHOULD KNOW TODAY

To protest the 13th 
anniversary 
of 
the 

opening of Guantanamo 

Bay prison, protesters walked 
onto former Vice President 
Dick Cheney’s property on 
Saturday, Reuters reported. 
Some of the 20 protestors were 
dressed in orange jumpsuits.

3

CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

Jell-O 

WHAT: Dr. Nicole Taru-
levicz of the University of 
Tasmania will use materi-
als from the University 
Library archives to explore 
the Jell-O company’s use of 
advertising in the early 20th 
century. 
WHO: University Library
WHEN: Today from 4:30 
p.m. to 6 p.m.
WHERE: Hatcher Graduate 
Library- Gallery (Room 100)

MUG Mondays

WHAT: The Michigan 
Union Underground will 
offer food, crafts and games 
every week in the Michigan 
MUG. There will be free 
takeaways, coupons, food 
and prizes.
WHO: Center for Campus 
Involvement
WHEN: Today from 5 p.m. 
to 6:30 p.m.
WHERE: Michigan Union 
Ground Floor

Exercise event

WHAT: Porshia Thomas 
will lead a free group car-
dio kickboxing session. 
WHO: Trotter Mul-
ticultural Center 
WHEN: Today from 
5:00 p.m. to 6 p.m.
WHERE: Trotter Multicul-
tural Center

CORRECTIONS:
Please report any error in 
the Daily to corrections@
michigandaily.com.

The black box of the 
missing AirAsia flight 
is believed to have been 

found, Voice of America 
reported. Divers were sent to 
search for the black box and 
two days ago; the tail section 
of the plane was lifted out of 
the Java Sea.

1

Sidewalk Kal

BY ADAM DEPOLLO

Gymnastics

BY CINDY YU

ON THE WEB... 

THE FILTER

SPORTS

Zach Hyman is quietly 
putting togeher a stellar 
season on the ice. The 

Wolverines’ senior forward 
does all the little things to 
make big plays happen while 
no one is watching. Maybe he 
deserves more attention.
>> FOR MORE, SEE SPORTS PG. 1B

2

DePollo interviews Kalonji 
Davis, better known as 
Sidewalk Kal. Davis dis-
cusses his musical back-
ground, the production of 
his new EP titled On My 
Soul, and being part of the 
Chicago hip-hop scene. 
Davis says he will continue 
to release singles to see 
where his artistic direction 
will go next.

Michigan recorded its 
highest-scoring season 
opener in program history. 
More than half of the No. 8 
women’s gymnastics team 
is comprised of under-
classmen. But one of the 
youngest squads in the na-
tion could have easily been 
mistaken for veterans on 
Saturday.

Immigration 
lecture

WHAT: Luke Mogelson, 
2013 Livingston Award 
winner, will be featured in 
a panel discussion about 
his New York Times article 
“The Dream Boat.”
WHO: Gerald R. Ford 
School of Public Policy
WHEN: Today from 4 to 
5:30 p.m.
WHERE: Weill Hall, 
Annenberg Auditorium

TUESDAY:

Professor Profiles

THURSDAY:
Alumni Profiles

FRIDAY:

Photos of the Week

WEDNESDAY:

In Other Ivory Towers

MONDAY:

This Week in History

69 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (JAN. 16, 1946)

WWII depletes graduate schools

ROBERT DUNNE/Daily

Hellen Weingarten, University of Michigan Museum of 
Art docent, gives a tour as part of a program focused 
on engagement with art.

TALKING HE ADS

At the conference of the Asso-

ciation of American Colleges in 
Cleveland, university represen-
tatives from around the coun-
try discussed problems finding 
suitable teaching staffs, which 
had proved challenging with 
increasing enrollment.

University 
representative 

Hayward Keniston, at the time 
the LSA dean, said World War II 
had reduced the ability of grad-
uate students to teach.

“Because of wartime deple-

tion of graduate schools, there 
is no backlog of graduate stu-
dents who would be eligible 
as instructors,” he said. The 
conference recommended the 
establishment of an agency 
to advise veterans of existing 

vacancies in universities across 
the country.

49 years ago this week 

(Jan. 13, 1966)

The Ann Arbor City Council 

passed its first significant leg-
islation 
concerning 
high-rise 

buildings. This vote came after 
the construction of 
University Towers 
and more than a 
year of discussion.

The code did not 

include a height 
limitation 
on 

high-rises, but set 
standards includ-
ing floor area, lot 
size and the dis-

tance walls must sit back from 
the street. At the time, the code 
applied to the area west of State 
Street and between Kingsley 
Street and Madison Street. 

For the full story, read online 

at michigandaily.com.

— NEALA BERKOWSKI

AP PHOTO/Michel Euler

Charlie Hebdo newspaper staff, with editorialist Patrick Pelloux, right, cartoonist Renald Luzier, known as Luz, left, react 
during a march in Paris, France, Sunday, Jan. 11. 
Millions protest in France 
following terrorist attacks

Rally is described 
as the largest in 
French history

PARIS (AP) — More than a 

million people surged through 
the boulevards of Paris behind 
dozens of world leaders walking 
arm-in-arm Sunday in a rally for 
unity described as the largest 
demonstration in French history. 
Millions more marched around 
the country and the world to 
repudiate three days of terror 
that killed 17 people and changed 
France.

Amid intense security and 

with throngs rivaling those that 
followed the liberation of Paris 
from the Nazis, the city became 
“the capital of the world” for a 
day, on a planet increasingly vul-
nerable to such cruelty.

More than 40 world leaders 

headed the somber procession — 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu and Palestinian Pres-
ident Mahmoud Abbas; Ukrai-
nian President Petro Poroshenko 
and Russian Foreign Minister 
Sergey Lavrov — setting aside 
their differences with a common 
rallying cry: We stand together 

against barbarity, and we are all 
Charlie.

At least 1.2 million to 1.6 mil-

lion people streamed slowly 
through the streets behind them 
and across France to mourn the 
victims of deadly attacks on 
the satirical newspaper Charlie 
Hebdo, a kosher supermarket 
and police officers — violence 
that tore deep into the nation’s 
sense of security in a way some 
compared to Sept. 11 in the Unit-
ed States.

“Our entire country will rise 

up toward something better,” 
Hollande said.

Details of the attacks contin-

ued to emerge, with new video 
showing one of the gunmen 
pledging allegiance to the Islam-
ic State group and detailing how 
the attacks were going to unfold. 
That gunman, Amedy Coulibaly, 
was also linked to a new shoot-
ing, two days after he and the 
brothers behind the Charlie 
Hebdo massacre were killed in 
nearly simultaneous police raids.

The attacks tested France’s 

proud commitment to its liber-
ties, which authorities may now 
curtail to ensure greater secu-
rity. Marchers recognized this as 
a watershed moment.

“It’s a different world today,” 

said Michel Thiebault, 70.

Illustrating his point, there 

were cheers Sunday for police 
vans that wove through the 
crowds — a rare sight at the many 
demonstrations that the French 
have staged throughout their 
rebellious history, when protest-
ers and police are often at odds.

Many shed the aloof attitude 

Parisians are famous for, helping 
strangers with directions, cheer-
ing and crying together. Sad and 
angry but fiercely defending 
their freedom of expression, the 
marchers honored the dead and 
brandished pens or flags of other 
nations.

Giant 
rallies 
were 
held 

throughout France and major 
cities around the world, includ-
ing London, Madrid and New 
York — all attacked by al-Qaida-
linked extremists — as well as 
Cairo, Sydney, Stockholm, Tokyo 
and elsewhere.

In Paris, the Interior Minis-

try said “the size of this unprec-
edented demonstration makes it 
impossible to provide a specific 
count,” noting that the crowds 
were too big to fit on the official 
march route and spread to other 
streets.

Shooting leaves 

three dead and one 
critically wounded

(AP) — Investigators found 

five guns and a laptop computer 
in the vehicle of a man suspect-
ed of killing three people in a 
shooting spree, a police chief 
said Sunday, but they hadn’t yet 
uncovered any motive for the 
rampage.

John Lee, 29, was arrested 

following a high-speed chase in 
nearby Washington state after 
the shootings Saturday. Police 
believe he opened fire at three 
locations in the western Idaho 
city of Moscow, killing his land-
lord, his adoptive mother and a 
manager at a restaurant his par-
ents frequented. A Seattle man 
was also critically injured.

Investigators searched Lee’s 

car and apartment late Satur-
day night, Moscow Police Chief 

David Duke said. They found 
two semi-automatic pistols, a 
revolver, a shotgun and a rifle 
in the vehicle, along with a lap-
top, he said. Ballistics tests were 
expected 
to 
help 
determine 

which weapons might have been 
used in the shootings.

Authorities were seeking a 

warrant to search the computer, 
he said.

“There’s still nothing to iden-

tify a specific motive as to why 
Mr. Lee took these actions,” 
Duke said.

The first death was that of Lee’s 

adoptive mother, Terri Grzebiel-
ski, 61, at her home. Police said 
Lee then headed to Northwest 
Mutual life insurance, where he 
shot his landlord, David Trail, 
76, who was a local businessman 
and the brother of a former state 
representative, as well as Michael 
Chin, 39, of Seattle.

Duke said Chin had no link to 

Lee, but he was discussing busi-
ness with Trail when the gun-

man arrived. Duke said Chin was 
shot in the arm and leg. Authori-
ties initially said he was being 
flown to a hospital in Seattle in 
critical condition, but Duke said 
Sunday he was flown to one in 
Spokane. It wasn’t immediately 
clear which hospital he was in; a 
supervisor at Providence Sacred 
Heart Medical Center said Sun-
day the hospital would not con-
firm whether he was a patient 
there.

There were “some issues” 

regarding Lee’s apartment, Duke 
said, but no eviction proceedings 
that police were aware of.

Upon leaving the insurance 

office, the shooter drove to an 
Arby’s restaurant and asked 
for the manager. When she 
appeared, he pulled out a gun 
and opened fire. The manager, 
Belinda Niebuhr, 47, died at the 
Moscow hospital.

Duke told The Associated 

Press that Lee’s parents ate at 
the restaurant and knew the 
manager well, but it’s not clear 
whether Lee did as well. He did 
not work at the restaurant as far 
as police knew, and workers who 
witnessed the attack didn’t rec-
ognize him, Duke said.

Kelsey Stemrich said she was 

working at a cafe near Arby’s 
when she and a customer heard 
three gunshots and then saw 
people running from the restau-
rant. She says they took down 
the license-plate number of a 
car seen pulling away from the 
Arby’s and called it into police.

Police in Washington spot-

ted the suspect’s black Honda, 
and a chase involving multiple 
agencies ensued. Pullman Police 
Chief Gary Jenkins said the pur-
suit lasted nearly 25 miles, and 
Lee’s vehicle at times topped 100 
mph before crashing off High-
way 195 north of Colfax and roll-
ing to a stop.

Few details were available on 

Lee’s background. Duke said he 
had been adopted at birth, and 
he recently returned to Moscow 
after living for a few years in the 
Midwest.

Five guns found in car of 
Idaho shooting suspect

Track

BY CHRIS CROWDER

Swimming

BY TED JANES

SPORTS

SPORTS

Inclement weather prevent-
ed the men’s cross country 
team from attending the 
Bob Eubanks Invitational 
in Grand Rapids over the 
weekend. Fortunately, they 
were able to gather enough 
runners to compete at the 
EMU Triangular instead. 
Graduate student John 
Spooney made it a memo-
rable meet.

Anders Lie Nielsen is 
one of the best 500-yard 
freestylers in the Big Ten. 
Still, he didn’t compete in 
the event against North-
western to conserve energy 
for a heated matchup with 
his rival in the 1.650-yard 
freestyle. While Nielsen fell 
short, he hasn’t seen the last 
of his Wildcat rival.

