o The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, April 6, 2009 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, April 6, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Mich. inaugurates medical marijuana program today The first wave of what could be tens of thousands of people signing up for Michigan's medical-marijua- na program is expected in Lansing on Monday. For Greg Francisco of Paw Paw, who is organizing the mass submis- sion in the state capital, it will be a sweetmoment after a decade of work- ing to legalize medical marijuana. "In a year, we're going to look back and say, 'What was the fuss all about?' said Francisco, execu- tive director of the Michigan Medi- cal Marijuana Association. "People have been using medical marijuana in this state all along. All this does is give them some legal protection." Rules for Michigan's medical- marijuana program went into effect Saturday, and the state begins taking applications Monday. The first cards will be issued to patients later this month. But questions linger about how the program will work in prac- tice, and resolving all the confusion may require additional legislation or intervention by the courts. DETROIT Winter storm warning issued for southeast Michigan A winter storm warning has been issued for much of southeast- ern lower Michigan, where upward of 10 inches of early spring snow is expected. Meteorologist Matt Mosteiko, of the National Weather Service in White Lake Township, says Sunday afternoon rain will change over to snow around midnight. The warn- ing will be in effect from 11 p.m. Sunday until 8 p.m. Monday. MosteikosaidOakland,Macomb, Livingston, Genesee, Sanilac, Ing- ham and St. Clair counties are expecting six to 10 inches of snow. Wayne and Washtenaw Counties are expecting four to eight inches, while the Grand Rapids area is expecting two to four inches. Mosteiko said the heaviest snow will end about 1 p.m. Monday. Temperatures are expected to risegJsto the SQs by Wedoesday and into the 60s by Saturday. WHEELER, Texas Wildfires blaze throughout Texas Firefighters from the Texas- Oklahoma border to the Gulf Coast struggled yesterday to contain wild- fires that have destroyed homes, killed cattle and charred thousands of acres. The largest of those fires, an 15,000-acre blaze near the Panhan- die town of Wheeler, destroyed eight homes and 26 outbuildings, includ- ing barns and garages. An unknown number of cattle were killed, accord- ing to the Texas Forest Service. Forest Service spokeswoman Jeanne Eastham said yesterday that the fire was about 25 percent contained. Strong winds continued to hamper firefighting efforts there and elsewhere. Four houses, two businesses and six outbuildings were destroyed in a fire in Aransas County on the Gulf Coast late yesterday afternoon. The } fire, which covered about 70 acres, threatened at least 100 homes. PITTSBURGH Fight over urinating dog lured two police into ambush A 911 call that brought two police officers to a home where they were ambushed, and where a third was also later killed during a four-hour siege, was precipitated by a fight between the gunman and his moth- er over a dog urinating in the house. The Saturday argument between Margaret and Richard Poplawski escalated to the point that she threatened to kick him out and she called police to do it, according to a 12-page criminal complaint and affidavit filed late Saturday. When officers Paul Sciullo II and Stephen Mayhle arrived, Mar- garet Poplawski opened the door and told them to come in and take her 23-year-old son, apparently unaware he was standing behind her with a rifle, the affidavit said. Hearing gunshots, she spun around to see her son with the gun and ran to the basement. "What the hell have you done?" she shouted. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Ban lifted on coverage of war dead Media able to cover war deaths after lift of 18-year ban DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. (AP) - Media witnessed a ceremony yesterday night for the arrival of a Virginia airman killed in Afghanistan, marking the end of an 18-year ban on news cover- age of returning U.S. war dead. After receiving permission from family members, the mili- tary opened Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to the press. An eight-member team wear- ing white gloves and camou- flage fatigues carried the body of 30-year-old Air Force Staff Sgt. Phillip Myers of Hopewell, Va., off a jet in a solemn ceremony on a cool, clear night. Myers was killed April 4 near Helmand province, Afghani- stan, when he was hit with an improvised explosive device, the Department of Defense said. The ceremony under the yel- lowish haze of airport flood- lights took about 20 minutes with Myers' wife and other family members in attendance. Myers was a member of the 48th Civil Engineer Squadron with the Royal Air Force in Lak- enheath, England, one of the bases the U.S. Air Force uses in the country. He was awarded a Bronze Star for bravery last year in recognition of his efforts in support of Operation Endur- ing Freedom, the Department of Defense said. The new Pentagon policy gives families a choice of whether to admit the press to ceremonies at Dover, home to the nation's larg- est military mortuary and the entry point to the U.S. for service personnel killed overseas. Critics of the previous policy had said the government was try- ing to hide the human cost of war. President Barack Obama had asked for a review of the ban, and Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said that the blanket restric- tion made him uncomfortable. The administration will let fami- lies decide whether to allow pho- tographs. For example, if several caskets arrive on the same flight, news coverage will be allowed only for those whose families have given permission. The ban was put in place by President George H.W. Bush in 1991, at the time of the Persian Gulf War. From the start, it was cast as a way to shield grieving families. South Korean protesters scuffle with police officers during a rally against North Korea's missiles near the U.S. Embassy in Seoul, South Korea yesterday. North- Korea msil launch tests Oba-ma Officials defend the response to shooting in Binghamton, NY President responds with call to U.N. to condemn launch SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - The U.S. and its allies sought to punish North Korea's defiant launch of a rocket that apparently fizzled into the Pacific, holding an emergency U.N. meeting to respond to an act that some believe was a long-range missile test. President Barack Obama, faced with his first global security crisis, called foraninternationalresponse and condemned North Korea for threatening the peace and stability of nations "near and far." Minutes after liftoff, Japan requested the emergency Security Council ses- sion in New York. South Korean President Lee Myung-bak told a nationwide radio broadcast Monday that "North Korea's reckless act of threatening regional and global security can- not have any justification." South Korea's National Assembly adopt-. ed a resolution condemning the rocket launch as a "serious provo- cation." U.S. and South Korean officials claim the entire rocket, includ- ing whatever payload it carried, ended up in the ocean after yester- day's launch, but many world lead- ers fear the launch indicates the capacity to fire a long-range mis- sile. Pyongyang claims it launched a communications satellite into orbit that is now transmitting data and patriotic songs. "North Korea broke the rules, once again, by testing a rocket that could be used for long-range mis- siles," Obama said in Prague. "It creates instability in their region, around the world. This provo- cation underscores the need for action, not just this afternoon in the U.N. Security Council, but in our determination to prevent the spread of these weapons." Council members met for three hours yesterday, seeking a unified response, but the meeting ended with a deadlock, breaking up for the night without issuing even a customary preliminary statement of condemnation. Diplomats privy to the closed- door talks say China, Russia, Libya and Vietnamwere concerned about further alienating and destabiliz- ing North Korea. "We're now in a very sensitive moment," Chinese Ambassador Zhang Yesui said after the talks. "Our position is that all countries concerned should show restraint and refrain from taking actions that might lead to increased ten- sions." The U.S. Britain, France and Japan drafted aproposal for areso- lution that could be adopted by the end of the week. It aims to toughen existing economic sanctions. Mexican Ambassador Claude Heller said the council would reconvene Monday. In Tokyo, Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone said Japan was pushing hard for a resolution and lobbying "respective nations" by telephone. South Korean Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwantold lawmakers in Seoul that "all countries acknowl- edge" the launch violates Security Council Resolution 1718, passed after North Korea's 2006 nuclear test. "I think discussions will move forward around that." Using a possible loophole inbU.N. sanctions that bar the North from ballistic missile activity, Pyong- yang claimed it was exercising its right to peaceful space develop- ment. Response time a factor in death of 13 people at immigration center BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (AP) - Even if police officers had imme- diately entered the immigrant center where a gunman had just shot down 13 people, the victims' injuries were so severe that none would have survived, a county prosecutor said Sunday. But police didn't enter the American Civic Association until nearly 45 minutes after the first 911 calls came in at 10:30 a.m. Friday. They began removing the wound- ed about 15 minutes after that. It took more than two hours to clear the building. Survivors reported huddling for hours in a basement, not knowing whether they were still in danger after the gunman, 41-year-old Jiverly Wong, killed 13 people. Medical examiners who con- ducted autopsies reported that the victims' injuries were so severe they would not have survived, Broome County District Attorney Gerald F. Mollen said. "We definitively can say nobody was shot after police arrival, and nobody who had been shot could have been saved even if the police had walked in the door within the first minute," Mollensaid. The prosecutor's comments came at a news conference Sunday, an hour before officials released a list of names and home countries of the victims. Four Chinese were amongthose killed, and a Chinese student was also shot in the arm and leg but survived, officials said. The other victims came from Haiti, Paki- stan, the Philippines, Iraq, Brazil, Vietnam and the United States. The first 911calls came in atl10:30 a.m., police Chief Joseph Zikuski said at a news conference. The call- ers spoke broken English, and it took dispatchers 2 minutes to sort out what was happening, he said. Patrol officers arrived at 10:33 a.m., five minutes before a wound- ed receptionist called police to report a gunman in the building, Zikuski said. 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