The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, March 14,2011 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, March14, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Jackson County judge leaves jobs to oversee courts A Jackson County judge has been hired to oversee the Michi- gan court system. Chad Schmucker is the new state court administrator after 20 years as a judge. Robert Young Jr., chief justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, Lays he's highly respected and an innovator in technology and how courts oper- ate. The state court administra- tor oversees the operations of Michigan's trial court system. Schmucker was made a judge in 1991 by Gov. John Engler and was Jackson County's chief judge for 10 of his 20 years on the bench. Schmucker is succeeding Carl Gromek, who is retired as state court administrator. REDONDO BEACH, Calif. Tons of dead sardines scooped from Calif. harbor Cleaning crews yesterday fin- ished removing millions of fish found floating dead in a Southern California marina, five days after the slimy, stinking mass of sar- dines was discovered. Crews from several coastal cit- ies and more than 700 volunteers removed about 140 tons of dead sardines from King Harbor in Redondo Beach, city officials said in a statement. The fish were taken to a com- posting center where they will be turned into fertilizer. The city said that while the fish were gone, local crews will continue cleaning up the after- math of the die-off in the harbor for another week. Biologists from the University of Southern California and the California Department of Fish and Game have said critically low oxygen levels in the water caused the sardines to suffocate. COVINGTON, K.Y. Crews recover restaurant floating along Ohio River Crews moved a floating res- taurant back to shore yesterday after it partially tore loose from its moorings and stranded more than 80 people on board for hours. By late in the afternoon, the crippled Waterfront restaurant was sitting in the river near a landing, waiting for crews to secure it. The restaurant broke loose on the Ohio River on Friday, requir- ing everyone on board to be res- cued using ladders and ropes for a makeshift gangplank. Authori- ties said Cris Collinsworth, a former NFL star long associated with Ruby, was among those taken from the boat during the hours-long rescue. It remained unclear yesterday why the restaurant pulled away from its moorings. LONDON Queen Elizabeth II celebrates role of women in address Queen Elizabeth II celebrat- ed the role of women in private and public life across the world in a message marking Common- wealth Day on Monday. The queen focused her annual address on the importance of women as "agents of change," highlighting their contribution in every walk of life and calling on people to think of ways to pro- vide support to girls and women so they could lead fuller lives. "This year, the Common- wealth reflects on what more could be achieved if women were able to play an even larger role," the monarch, who heads the loose association of 54 countries, said in a prerecorded address. -Compiled from Daily wire reports BRIDGES From Page1A set to begin in October, which is later than some city officials were expecting. "I think we all expected con- struction to begin this spring," Ann Arbor City Council mem- ber Sabra Briere (D-Ward 1) said. She added that the pros- pect of construction not begin- ning until October is "very disappointing." The bridges were built in 1917 and 1928 and have received a Federal Sufficiency Rating of only two out of a 100-pointscale. According to Briere, both bridg- es are monitored "constantly" by city engineers to ensure the public's continued safety. The construction activ- ity will necessitate closure of a section of East Stadium Boule- vard from Nov. 28 through the duration of the project, accord- ing to Senior Project Manager Michael Nearing. South State Street will also be closed for about two weeks this December to allow for the demolition of one bridge. Nearing said he is not expect- ing "any major difficulties" regarding road closures. He added that officials will moni- tor the detour and will make "modifications as needed" dur- ing the construction process. Officials are working on final- izing construction plans and expect to have them completed by early June. Bids will then be solicited through the Michigan Department of Transportation during September. In addition to the $13.9 mil- lion supplied by the TIGER II grant, MDOT's Local Bridge Program will provide $1.67 *. _ , :<< :_ ..-_. ' ' \ , JAPAN From Page 1A to make sure they were in a safe place," he said. About 1,400 people were killed in the natural disaster and thousands more are missing or thought to be dead. In addition, four nuclear power plants in northeastern Japan were dam- aged in the earthquake. The U.S. State Department issued a travel alert yesterday recommending that all U.S. citi- zens avoid non-emergency travel to Japan, but no travel warning has been issued. The University has a policy that prohibits Uni- versity-sanctioned study abroad programs in countries with State Department travel warnings. John Greisberger, director of the University's International Center, offered his condolences to about 100 international stu- dents from Japan studying at the University through an e-mail sent on Friday. "The International Center was reaching out to all of the stu- dents ... to express our concerns for them and their families and also to see if any of them needed any assistance," Fitzgerald said. Yoshiki Masada, president of the Japan Student Association on campus, wrote in an e-mail interview last night that the organization raised money at their annual Japan Culture Fes- tival on Saturday to help those affected by the earthquake and tsunami. "When we heard of (the earth- quake), we knew we had to help Japan through this event," he wrote. With the United Asian Ameri- can Organization, Masada wrote that the group raised more than $600 and is planning to set up more support efforts. The Japan Business Association at the Uni- versity is also planning to raise funds to aid Japan, according to Masada. One of the most perilous situa- tions was at the Fukushima Dai- ichi nuclear complex where one explosion occurred Saturday. Because the earthquake elimi- nated the plant's power supply and the tsunami flooded backup generators, Japanese govern- ment officials were concerned that another explosion was imminent. Residents who lived within 12 miles of the Dai-ichi plant had been preemptively evacuated. Officials said that 1,500 people have been examined for radia- tion poisoning and at least 160 people may have been exposed to radiation. The incidents at the plants have resulted in a power short- age throughout Japan, with about 2 million homes out of power yesterday. Today, rolling blackouts will be used in Tokyo and other cities to preserve elec- tricity. - The Associated Press contributed to this report. One of the bridges on East Stadium Boulevard that passes over South State Street on Friday, March 11. million for the construction, and the state's Transportation Enhancement Funding pro- gram will provide an additional $1.2 million. According to Nearing, the city's portion of the bill is about $6.2 million and will be covered by a variety of sources includ- ing road repair millages. However, recently proposed cuts to the 2011 federal budget in the U.S. House of Represen- tatives have called into question the TIGER II funding. Accord- ing to Briere, council members have not been told that the Sta- dium bridges' specific funds are in jeopardy. According to Ann Arbor Council member Christopher Taylor (D-Ward 3), even if federal funding for the project were compromised, the city would move forward with its plans. "Building the bridges is imperative, and it will be done," Taylor said. According to the city's TIGER II grant application, the entire cost to repair the bridges will be made up in less than a year since the city will save money from fewer car crashes and delays, and more people will travel to Ann Arbor. The construction will also provide an opportunity to add bike lanes, a wider sidewalk, energy-efficient LED bulbs for streetlights on each of the bridges and will eliminate vehi- cle weight restrictions. In the project planning stag- es, Nearing said the bridges pose no threat to motorists and pedestrians. "They don't look very nice," he said. "They're kind of run down, but they're not hazard- ous at all." NYC plans $3 billion a In waterfront repairs Top Iraqi lawmakers, ministers investigated for forged documents About 20,000 employees may have false credentials BAGHDAD (AP) - Iraq's par- liament is investigating some 20,000 government employees who appear to have used fake diplomas and other forged edu- cation certificates to get their jobs, a lawmaker said yesterday. Layla Hassan, a lawmaker and member of an investigatory panel, said employees with fake credentials may include minis- ters, deputy ministers and other top lawmakers. "Some of those who have fake education certificates are senior officials in the current and for- mer government," Hassan said in an interview, declining to name any until the investigation is complete. "These people should not be pardoned. Otherwise, others will do the same in the future," she said. Officials from Iraq's higher education ministry could not be reached for comment. The revelation could further anger many Iraqis, as frustration with shoddy government ser- vices, corruption and high unem- ployment have prompted dozens of protests across the country in recent weeks. The use of fake diplomas has become widespread the last sev- eral years, creating a thriving black market in a country with 15 percentunemployment. The use of such documents "has a devastating effect on the country, because it means that it is being run by inefficient and even illiterate people," saidBagh- dad political analyst Hadi Jalo. Jalo blamed the surge in forg- eries on the lack of law enforce- ment that followed the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. During Saddam Hussein's government, when life-threatening penalties were imposed against criminals, the use of fake documents was mostly limited to passports to leave Iraq, Jalo said. The costs range from $1,500 for a high school diploma to $7,000 for Ph.D. credentials, according to a forger interviewed yesterday in Baghdad's poor Sadr City neighborhood. The man, who would iden- tify himself only as Abu Haidar, claimed that the forgers are pro- tected by police and some gov- ernment officials. Parliament may not require offenders to return their pay- checks if they voluntarily acknowledge getting their government jobs with fake credentials, said Hassan, the lawmaker. But they will face jail time if convicted, she said. Iraq is struggling with solidi- fying its fragile democracy, while insurgents seek to under- mine it with attacks. Project aims to reverse years of disconnect NEW YORK (AP) - For decades, development in New York was about concrete, sky- scrapers and roads - highways that often ringed the city and kept people from the hundreds of miles of waterfront shoreline that help define the city. Now, the city's first waterfront plan in two decades will spend billions of dol- lars to reunite New Yorkers with their water. The $3 billion-plus plan, to be announced by the Bloomberg administration today, would add SO new acres of parks, expand dozens more, overhaul the city's sewage system to reduce waste pushed into the rivers and dredge waterways to make room for giants ships that are rarely seen on the East Coast. The blueprint is New York City's attempt to reverse more than a century of planning that left much of the city's 520 miles of shoreline inaccessible to resi- dents and instead directed them inland for their recreation and relaxation. "New York City has more miles of waterfront than Seat- tle, San Francisco, Chicago, and Portland combined - but for decades, too many neigh- borhoods have been blocked off from it," Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a statement. our-waterfront-and water- ways - what we are calling New York City's sixth borough - are invaluable assets, and when our work is complete, New York City will again be known as one of the world's premier waterfront cities." For much of the city's history, the waterfront was viewed more as dumping ground than desti- nation. The Erie Canal's opening in the early 1800s made the city America's main port, and indus- trial toxins and human waste turned much of New York Har- bor to muck. The harbor's oys- ters died, methane gas bubbled to the surface, and the horrific smell wafted inland and kept the city's upper class far from the water. After violence, new settlement housing approved in West Bank Mourners shocked by details of deaths and bloody assault JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel responded defiantly yesterday to a bloody Palestinian assault against West Bank settlers by approving construction of new settlement housing, retaliat- ing for the stabbing deaths of a father, mother and three small children with a measure that infuriated Palestinians and, together with the attack, threw already shaky peace efforts into a new tailspin. Even in a country long accus- tomed to violence, the grisly details of the killings late Friday stunned Israel. Among the vic- tims were a 4-year-old boy and his baby sister. Their pictures leaped from Israel's front pages, pushing news of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami disas- ter aside. As Israel's military searched for the Palestinian suspects in a broad sweep in the WestBank, thousandsofmourn- ers thronged a Jerusalem ceme- tery for the funeral. "There is not a Jewish heart that is not shedding a tear," Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger said in a eulogy, his voice cracking in anguish. "After such horrific pictures, with whom do we have to sit and talk peace?" Mourners screamed and wailed as the bodies of the three male victims were brought in wrapped in white and black prayer shawls, the two females in blue shrouds. The pouch con- taining the infant was no larger than a potato sack. Many rocked back and forth in prayer as speakers addressed the audience, and family mem- bers collapsed in grief. Some mourners bore signs in Hebrew reading, "The government demolishes homes, Arabs mur- der Jews." The bloodshed, which shat- tered a lengthy lull in the West Bank, threatened to drive Israe- li-Palestinian peacemaking even further out of reach. Peace talks have been stalled since Sep- tember, and the combination of deadly violence against Israelis and new settlement construc- tion was likely to deepen the mutual distrust. Officials said assailants cut through a fence surrounding the settlement of Itamar, entered the home of the Fogel family and killed the parents - Udi, 36, and Ruth, 35, - and three of their children, Yoav, 11, Elad, 4 and 3-month-old Hadas. An older daughter who was out with friends came home and discovered the carnage. The attack took place shortly after the family finished the weekly dinner celebrating the Jewish Sabbath. Footage of the gory scene broadcast on Israeli media showed children's toys in pools of blood and tipped over furni- ture. A settler group released photos of the dead lying on the floor with bloody wounds. One of the pictures showed the body of a baby and an adult laying on blood soaked sheets, further shocking already traumatized Israelis. Israel indirectly blamed the Palestinian government for the carnage. Israel has long con- tended that Palestinian text- books and official media are full of hatred toward the Jewish state, and that killers of Israelis are often glorified. Yesterday, a group of activ- ists from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah move- ment dedicated a square in the West Bank city of Ramallah after Dalal Mughrabi, a female militant who carried out a 1978 bus attack that killed 37 Israelis. U-M Computer Showcase Michigan Union " Pierpont Commons http://showcase.itcs.umich.edu -"www.apple.com/education H,.-,