The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, February 3, 2011- 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, February 3, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS MARQUETTE, Mich. Northern Michigan University closes after online threat Authorities have closed North- ern Michigan University and the city of Marquette's public schools because of a threat to the univer- sity. University spokeswoman Kris- ti Evans said yesterday an online W threat was made to harm stu- dents, faculty, staff and adminis- trators at the school in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Evans had no further details about the nature of the threat, which was discovered shortlybefore 8 a.m. Evans said an emergency notice was transmitted on the laptop computers provided to all 9,400 students. Textmessages were also sent on cell phones. It is uncertain if the closure will last beyond yesterday. Interim Marquette schools superintendent Deborah Veiht said the district's schools were closed as a precaution. PLACERVILLE, Calif. Janitor arrested in school shooting A janitor was arrested yester- day after an administrator was shot in the office of a Northern California elementary school, authorities said. John Leubbers was suspected of shooting the administrator at Louisiana Schnell School in Pla- cerville, about 50 miles east of Sacramento, police said. Leubbers was arrested at his home about an hour after authori- ties launched a manhunt, Placer- ville police Capt. Mike Scott told KCRA. No children were injured, and the school was locked down, El Dorado County Sheriff's Sgt. Jim Byers said. The motive for the shooting was not clear, he said. The unidentified administrator was transported to Marshall Med- ical Center. El Dorado County Fire Battalion Chief Larry Marinas told The Associated Press the victim was in "very serious condition." CLEVELAND, Ohio Coast Guard saves snowmobiler stuck on Lake Erie ice The U.S. Coast Guard says it has rescued a snowmobiler who floated into Lake Erie from Cana- da after falling into the water and climbing onto a loose piece of ice about the size of a football field. Jim Turton of Colchester, Ontario, floated for about nine hours before being rescued at about 8:30 a.m. yesterday - his 45th birthday - by the crew of an ice-breaking tug temporarily assigned to the Great Lakes from New London, Conn. Officials say Turton was one of four snowmobilers who fell through ice near Colchester around 11:25 p.m. Tuesday. The others climbed onto ice connected to shore. Following the rescue, Turton was transferred to a Canadian coast guard ship. PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti Haitians await election results Banks and stores closed early and people rushed to get home in the capital yesterday as Haitians feared unrest with the expected announcement of final results from the disputed presidential election. The provisional electoral commission was scheduled to announce which two of the three front-running candidates from the November ballot would get spots in a March runoff. Preliminary results showing government-backed candidate Jude Celestin edging out popu- lar singer Michel "Sweet Micky" Martelly set off often violent pro- tests in December. Those figures were released late in the evening in a failed effort to head offunrest. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Chicago halted by massive snowstorm Tuesday's blizzard deemed worst in city history CHICAGO (AP) - Lindsey Wilson was on Lake Shore Drive, but she couldn't tell where. It was dark, and the snow swirling around the stranded bus made it impossible to see anything but the closest cars. There was talk among her fel- low commuters of 25-foot waves washing up from Lake Michigan and about when the bus might get going, but nobody knew any- thing - not the driver, not the emergency operators passengers were calling, and not the shiver- ing motorists climbing aboard to keep warm after firefighters pulled them from their cars. When a group of passengers decided enough was enough and started to walk, she joined them. "I got 100 feet, everything was an orange hue, there was snow in my face, I couldn't see anything, I turned around and couldn't see the bus and I thought I was going to die," she said yesterday morn- ing. Wilson, 26, was among hun- dreds of people in at least 1,500 vehicles who found themselves trappedonChicago'smostfamous stretch of road for as long as 12 hours Tuesday night and yester- day morning during one of the worst snow storms in the city's history. The situation was among the worst impacts from the win- ter stormthat carved a frigidpath along a 2,000-mile stretch across the eastern U.S. In the morning light, the roadway looked like rush hour had been stopped in time. Three lanes of cars cluttered the road with snow reaching as high as the windshields. Some cars were almost completely buried. Bull- dozers worked to clear the snow from around the cars, then tow trucks plucked them out of snow drifts one by one. The stranded vehicleswere the worst breakdown in Chicago's handling of the storm. Some motorists came away angry, frustrated and puzzled at why the city didn't close the cru- cial thoroughfare earlier, or why officials didn't anticipate that a bus accident could clog itup like a cork in a bottle. "In 31 years with the city, I haven't experienced anything like we did at Lake Shore Drive," said Raymond Orozco, Mayor Richard M. Daley's chief of staff. Orozco said more than 130 fire- fighters, some on snowmobiles, and 100 police officers were sent to the road. As they sat and waited, the stranded motorists gratefully gobbled down granola bars and drank coffee and Gatorade, brought to them by Good Samari- tans who climbed fences and rail- ings to deliverthem. Marouf al-Bakhit delivers a speech in Amman, Jordan on July 13, 2010. Jordan's King Abdullah sacked his government Feb. 1, 2011 in the wake of street protests and nominated ex-army general Marouf al-Bakhit as his prime minister-designate. Jordan Islamists call for new leader to step down Egyptian protests spark civil unrest in neighbor country AMMAN, Jordan (AP) - Jor- dan's powerful Muslim oppo- sition on yesterday urged the country's newly appointed prime minister to step down, calling him the wrong person to intro- duce democratic reforms and tackle deepening poverty and unemployment. Also, Jordan's King Abdul- lah II made a surprise visit to an impoverished northern village. It was his first such trip since the unrest broke out in neigh- boring Egypt, and appeared to be an attempt to defuse popular anger over the country's troubles and portray himself as a caring leader. On Tuesday, Abdullah named Marouf al-Bakhit prime minis- ter, bowing to public pressure from protests inspired by those in Egypt against President Hosni Mubarak. Hamza Mansour, a leader of the opposition Muslim Brother- hood's political wing, rejected al-Bakhit's nomination, saying he "is not the right person for the job." "Al-Bakhit is a security man, a former army general and ex- intelligence official. He doesn't believe in democracy," Man- sour told The Associated Press. Instead, he said the country needs "a national figure who can tackle Jordan's serious economic and political crisis." Jordan is grappling with a soaring foreign debt estimated at $15 billion, an inflation rate which has swelled by 1.5 percent to 6.1 percent in December and high unemployment and poverty rates - set at 12 and 25 percent respectively. Mansour also criticized al- Bakhit for signing off on Jordan's first casino, which the Brother- hood strongly opposed on the grounds that it violated Islamic principles and encouraged vice. The project was later canceled. On Tuesday, King Abdullah, facing public pressure inspired by the revolt in Tunisia and Egypt, sacked his government and named al-Bakhit as prime minister, ordering him to move quickly to boosteconomic oppor- tunities and give Jordanians a greater say in politics. Al-Bakhit, 63, is a former ambassador to Israel who sup- ports strong ties with the U.S. and Jordan's peace treaty with Israel-policieswhichtheBroth- erhood and the leftists oppose. The fundamentalist Brother- hood advocates the introduction of strict Islamic sharia law, close relations with Muslim nations and Israel's destruction. Many Jordanians see al-Bakh- it as a tough enforcer of security, which goes against their calls for greater democratic freedoms. Al-Bakhit is an ex-army major general who also served as the chief of Jordan's National Secu- rity Agency in the last decade. He is credited with maintaining Jordan's stability following the 2005 triple attacks on hotels in Amman, claimed by al-Qaida in Iraq. At a small protest Wednes- day near al-Bakhit's office, left- ist activist Hadi Khitan said al-Bakhit was. to different from deposed Prime Minister Samir Rifai. "We want to change govern- ment policies, not change prime ministers," he said. "We want a real political change and this message should reach the king." 1,500 year-old Byzantine church discovered in Israel Archaeologists find Israel inrecentyears." "It is unique in its craftsman- tunnels beneath ship and level of preservation," he CAd ancient structure HIRBET MADRAS, Israel (AP) - Israeli archaeologists present- ed a newly uncovered 1,500-year- old church in the Judean hills on yesterday, including an unusually- well-preserved mosaic floor with images of lions, foxes, fish and peacocks. The Byzantine church located southwest of Jerusalem, exca- vated over the last two months, will be visible only for another week before archaeologists cover it again with soil for its own pro- tection. The small basilica with an exquisitely decorated floor was active between the fifth and sev- enth centuries A.D., said the dig's leader, Amir Ganor of the Israel Antiquities Authority. He said the floor was "one of the most beau- tiful mosaics to be uncovered in saia. Archaeologists began dig- ging at the site, known as Hirbet Madras, in December. The Antiq- uities Authority discovered sever- al months earlier that antiquities thieves had begun plundering the ruins,which sit on an uninhabited hill not far from an Israeli farm- ing community. Though an initial survey sug- gested the building was a syna- gogue, the excavation revealed stones carved with crosses, iden- tifying it as a church. The build- ing had been built atop another structure around 500 years older, dating to Roman times, when scholars believe 'the settlement was inhabitedby Jews. Hewn into the rock underneath that structure is a network of tun- nels that archaeologists believe were used by Jewish rebels fight- ing Roman armies in the second century A.D. Dutch Jews seek more immediate punishment for Holocaust deniers Rise in racist remarks brings about request for stricter justice AMSTERDAM (AP) - Jew- ish groups in the Netherlands called yesterday for swifter pun- ishment for Holocaust deniers as parliament debated how to com- bat rising anti-Semitism. Among other measures, a Jewish umbrella organization said it wants Holocaust deniers punished under rules usually reserved for drunk drivers, shop- lifters, and football hooligans. Under the "snelrecht," or "fast justice" policy, police and pros- ecutors offer offenders a choice immediately after their arrest between a fine or a court appear- ance within two months. "I don't understand why it should be difficult for policeman to give a fine directly to perpe- trators of these remarks," said Ronny Naftaniel of The Center for Information and Documenta- tion on Israel, or CIDI, in a tele- phone interview. He added that he would sup- port the same measure for anti- Moroccan discrimination, which is also on the rise in the Nether- lands. Anti-Semitism has become a hot-button issue as many native Dutch blame anti-Semitism on the country's Muslim minority, while Muslims say there is a dou- ble standard and discrimination against those of Moroccan and Turkish ancestry goes unpun- ished. A national police report in September found a 48 percent rise in anti-Semitic incidents to 209 in 2009. The same report found that anti-Moroccan inci- dents rose 17 percentto 103. After a wave of immigration in the 1990s Muslims make up around 1 million of the coun- try's 16 million population. After being decimated during World War II, the Dutch Jewish popu- lation is estimated at 40,000- 50,000. Rising anti-Semitism "can be attributed to the rise of influence of Islam inthe Netherlands," said Freedom party member of par- liament Joram van Klaveren dur- ing the debate. "The more Islam, the more anti-Semitism." Cora van Nieuwenhuizen, whose VVD party leads the country's ruling conservative coalition, was among several MPs who rejected those remarks. "It's not your belief that counts, but your behavior," she said. The exchange reflects the state of politics in the Nether- lands. A popular backlash against Muslim immigrants intensified in 2004 when filmmaker Theo van Gogh was murdered by an Islamic radical of Moroccan descent, over perceived religious insults. The 2008 European Commis- sion against Racism and Intoler- ance found that there has been a "dramatic increase in 'Islamo- phobia' in the Netherlands" since 2001. In national elections last year, the explicitly anti-Islam Freedom Party finished in third place. It is not part of the coun- try's minority government, but props up the administration by supporting it on key votes in par- liament. Naftaniel of CIDI said his research showed Moroccan youth are disproportionately involved in anti-Semitic inci- dents targeting "visible" Ortho- dox Jews. However, he said anti-Jewish remarks on the Internet or in the workplace were usually made by Dutch Christians. "We have the idea the taboo on anti-Semitism is diminishing," he said. In one recent high-profile case a Moroccan minor was inter- viewed by a shock news website saying he thought Jews should be "exterminated." The Utrecht District Court sentenced him to 40 hours of community service, including 16 at the Anne Frank House. Last April the same court acquitted Abdoulmouthalib Bouzerda, chairman of the Arab European League, of hate speech charges for publishing a cartoon on its website questioning the reality of the Holocaust. The group had intended to spur a public discussion about a perceived double standard: that European media are will- ing to publish cartoons mocking Islam's prophet Muhammad, while cartoons about the Holo- caust are taboo. Van Klaveren of the Free- dom party was skeptical about the proposal of "fast justice" for anti-Semitic remarks: His party's leader Geert Wilders is on trial for alleged discrimina- tory remarks - including some equating Islam with fascism and calling for a ban on the Quran. --U.0