Graft Scandal Is Approaching Turkey Premier
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Graft Scandal Is Approaching Turkey Premier
CMYK Nxxx,2013-12-26,A,001,Bs-BK,E2 Late Edition Today, clouds and some sun, a flurry, not as cold, high 40. Tonight, clearing skies, low 30. Tomorrow, mostly sunny and chilly, high 38. Weather map appears on Page B8. VOL. CLXIII . . . No. 56,362 © 2013 The New York Times $2.50 NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2013 Graft Scandal U.S. SENDS ARMS Is Approaching TO AID IRAQ FIGHT Turkey Premier WITH EXTREMISTS Leader Faces Pressure as 3 Ministers Quit 75 HELLFIRE MISSILES By TIM ARANGO SEDAT SUNA/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY Turkish protesters in Istanbul on Wednesday shouted slogans as they held signs calling for the government’s resignation. E.R. Costs for Mentally Ill Soar, Getting Out of Discount Game, And Hospitals Seek Better Way Small Colleges Lower the Price By JULIE CRESWELL RALEIGH, N.C. — As darkness fell on a Friday evening over downtown Raleigh, N.C., Michael Lyons, a paramedic supervisor for Wake County Emergency Medical Services, slowly approached the tall, lanky man who was swaying back and forth in a gentle rhythm. In answer to Mr. Lyons’s questions, the man, wearing a red shirt that dwarfed his thin frame, said he was bipolar, schizophrenic and homeless. He was looking for help because he did not think his prescribed medication was working. In the past, paramedics would have taken the man to the closest hospital emergency room — most likely the nearby WakeMed Health and Hospitals, one of the largest centers in the region. But instead, under a pilot program, paramedics ushered him through the doors of Holly Hill Hospital, a commercial psychiatric facility. “He doesn’t have a medical By TAMAR LEWIN complaint, he’s just a mental health patient living on the street who is looking for some help,” said Mr. Lyons, pulling his van back into traffic. “The good news is that he’s not going to an E.R. That’s saving the hospital money and getting the patient to the most appropriate place for him,” he added. The experiment in Raleigh is being closely watched by other cities desperate to find a way to help mentally ill patients without admitting them to emergency rooms, where the cost of treatment is high — and unnecessary. While there is evidence that other types of health care costs might be declining slightly, the cost of emergency room care for the mentally ill shows no sign of ebbing. Nationally, more than 6.4 million visits to emergency rooms in 2010, or about 5 percent of total visits, involved patients whose Continued on Page B4 SPARTANBURG, S.C. — A higher education riddle: When can a college slash tuition by almost half, without losing revenues? Answer: When nobody much pays full tuition anyway. When Converse College, a tiny women’s college here, announced that it was “resetting” next year’s tuition at $16,500, down 43 percent from the current year’s published price of $29,000, the talk was about affordability, transparency and a better deal for struggling families. But of Converse’s 700 undergraduates, only a small number — in the single digits, its president said, paid the full sticker price in recent years. Almost everyone received a tuition discount from the college, along with, in many cases, financial aid from the state and federal governments. Now, like some other small private colleges, Converse is cutting tuition and reducing discounts. Betsy Fleming, Converse’s president, said the tuition discount rate would drop to 25 percent, well below the national average, from the current 56 percent. The college will still offer aid to talented students, but only to the extent covered by its $39 million endowed scholarship funds. While Converse’s reset was the most drastic, others including Concordia University in Oregon, Ashland University in Ohio, Ave Maria University in Florida, Belmont Abbey College in North Carolina and Alaska Pacific University in Anchorage, have also recently announced tuition cuts. For decades, most private college pricing has reflected the Chivas Regal effect — the notion that whether in a Scotch or a school, a higher price indicates higher quality. “Schools wanted a high tuition on the assumption that families would say that if they’re chargContinued on Page A18 ISTANBUL — A corruption investigation that has encircled the Turkish government moved an ominous step closer to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday, as three top ministers whose sons have been implicated abruptly resigned — and one of them, on his way out the door, said Mr. Erdogan should step down as well. The resignations, coming only hours after the ministers welcomed Mr. Erdogan at the Ankara airport as he returned from Pakistan late on Tuesday, were enough to inspire new talk of a deepening crisis, which Mr. Erdogan has repeatedly denounced as a foreign plot. But the words from one of the departing ministers were considered stunning, coming from a political party known for silencing dissent. That instantly raised the significance of the entire inquiry and left members of the Turkish public wondering if they were witnessing the collapse of their Islamist-rooted government of the last decade. “Now it seems the situation has changed completely,” said Kerem Oktem, a Turkey expert and research fellow at the European Studies Center at the University of Oxford. “It seems the ring around Erdogan has gotten tighter.” Later, as a dramatic day came to a close, Mr. Erdogan emerged from a meeting with President Abdullah Gul in Ankara, the Turkish capital, and announced that seven other ministers would leave his cabinet, some of whom are departing as part of a longplanned shuffle so that they can run for mayors in coming elections. One of the late-night departures included the European Union minister, who has been implicated in the corruption investigation. The investigation became public a week ago with dawn police raids on the offices of businessmen and others close to the prime minister. But Wednesday was the first time that someone who had been in Mr. Erdogan’s hierarchy — a confidant, no less Continued on Page A10 Responding to Appeal for Help as Insurgent Violence Rises By MICHAEL R. GORDON and ERIC SCHMITT WASHINGTON — The United States is quietly rushing dozens of Hellfire missiles and low-tech surveillance drones to Iraq to help government forces combat an explosion of violence by a Qaeda-backed insurgency that is gaining territory in both western Iraq and neighboring Syria. The move follows an appeal for help in battling the extremist group by the Iraqi prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, who met with President Obama in Washington last month. But some military experts question whether the patchwork response will be sufficient to reverse the sharp downturn in security that already led to the deaths of more than 8,000 Iraqis this year, 952 of them Iraqi security force members, according to the United Nations, the highest level of violence since 2008. Al Qaeda’s regional affiliate, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, has become a potent force in northern and western Iraq. Riding in armed convoys, the group has intimidated towns, assassinated local officials, and in an episode last week, used suicide bombers and hidden explosives to kill the commander of the Iraqi Army’s Seventh Division and more than a dozen of his officers and soldiers as they raided a Qaeda training camp near Rutbah. Bombings on Christmas in Christian areas of Baghdad, which killed more than two dozen people, bore the hallmarks of a Qaeda operation. The surge in violence stands in sharp contrast to earlier assurances from senior Obama administration officials that Iraq was on the right path, despite the failure of American and Iraqi officials in 2011 to negotiate an agreement for a limited number of United States forces to remain in Iraq. In a March 2012 speech, AnContinued on Page A14 New Tests for Brain Trauma In a Car-Culture Clash, It’s the Los Angeles Police vs. Pedestrians Create Hope, and Skepticism By ADAM NAGOURNEY By KEN BELSON Revelations in recent years that thousands of former football players might have severe brain trauma from injuries sustained on the field have set off a rush in the medical community to seize the potentially lucrative market for assessing brain damage. But experts say claims regarding the validity of these assessments are premature and perhaps unfounded. Most researchers believe that C.T.E., or chronic traumatic encephalopathy, the degenerative brain disease found in dozens of former N.F.L. players, can be diagnosed only posthumously by analyzing brain tissue. Researchers at U.C.L.A. have developed a test they assert might identify the condition in a living person by injecting a compound that clings to proteins in the brain and later appears in a PET scan. But some are skeptical. “There has really been so much hype surrounding C.T.E., so there is a real need for making sure the public knows that this type of science moves slowly and must move very carefully,” said Robert Stern, a professor of neu- rology and neurosurgery at Boston University School of Medicine and a founder of the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy. He is part of a group that is developing a different biomarker to identify tau, the protein that is a hallmark of C.T.E. “My fear is the people out there who are so much in need, scared for their lives and desperate for information, it might give Continued on Page B12 KEITH SRAKOCIC/ASSOCIATED PRESS The ex-N.F.L. star Tony Dorsett says he has brain trauma. LOS ANGELES — In a city of seemingly endless highways — with its daily parade of car accidents, frustrating traffic jams and aggressive drivers — the Los Angeles Police Department these days is training its sights on a different road menace: jaywalkers. It is not quite “Dragnet,” but the Police Department in recent weeks has issued dozens of tickets to workers, shoppers and tourists for illegally crossing the street in downtown Los Angeles. And the crackdown is raising questions about whether the authorities are taking sides with the long-dominant automobile here at the very time when a pedestrian culture is taking off, fueled by the burst of new offices, condominiums, hotels and restaurants rising in downtown Los Angeles. “We have to encourage this, not discourage this,” said Brigham Yen, who writes a blog on downtown development, as he stood at a bustling corner in the city’s financial district at lunchtime the other day, casting an eye around for a police officer in the shadows. “We should let pedestrians in L.A. flourish. We shouldn’t penalize it.” The police say they are simply trying to maintain order at a time J. EMILIO FLORES FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES A police crackdown on jaywalking in Los Angeles carries with it a $197 fine for offenders. when downtown Los Angeles, once a place of urban tumbleweeds and the homeless, is teeming with people competing for pavement with automobiles. “There’s a huge influx of folks that come into the downtown area,” said Sgt. Larry Delgado of the Central Traffic Division. “If you go out there, you are going to see enforcement.” Still, the enforcement has struck many of the pedestrians — the new kids on the block — as more than a little one-sided and strikingly strict. When Adam Bialik, a bartender, stepped off the curb on his way to work at the Ritz-Carlton a few blinks after the crossing signal began its red Continued on Page A3 INTERNATIONAL A4-15 BUSINESS DAY B1-6 NATIONAL A16-18 THURSDAY STYLES E1-8 SPORTSTHURSDAY B7-12 Egypt Outlaws Islamist Group Shariah Law and Investing Doubts About Knee Procedure Breaking the Ice No Gifts for New York Fans Egypt’s government designated the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization, outlawing the country’s most successful political movement. PAGE A4 Middle Eastern banks, to diversify investments, are seeking companies abroad that can do business in ways PAGE B1 compliant with Islamic law. Simulated meniscal operations worked as well as real ones in one study, adding to research suggesting that a narrower group should have the surgery. PAGE A16 A writer decided to fight a terror of public speaking by stepping into terror’s PAGE E1 path, joining Toastmasters. Japan Premier Visits Shrine I Promise, It’s in the Mail An Invisible Killer Strikes Already struggling, the Knicks could not overcome the absence of Carmelo Anthony in a 29-point loss to Kevin Durant and the Thunder at Madison Square Garden. The Nets fell to the depleted Bulls, 95-78, in their fourth straight defeat, drawing a chorus of boos and jeers PAGE B7 at Barclays Center. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe visited a Tokyo war shrine that has long strained relations with Asian neighbors. PAGE A8 NEW YORK A22-25 A Hoarded Clock, Unhidden A mysterious clock has a place in history, once belonging to the Collyer brothers, the legendary hoarders. PAGE A22 Carriers across the country failed to meet delivery deadlines this holiday season because of bad weather and a surge in demand. PAGE B1 Carbon monoxide from generators was responsible for several deaths after ice storms crippled power lines. PAGE A16 ARTS C1-10 A Singer’s Joyful Moment For Pharrell Williams, a hit 24-hour video of his song “Happy,” Grammy nominations and a shot at an Oscar. PAGE C1 HOME D1-8 From Table To Farm Kurt Timmermeister transformed himself from restaurateur to self-taught dairy farmer on an island near SePAGE D1 attle. EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27 Gail Collins PAGE A27 U(D54G1D)y+\!$!&!#!@
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