The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 7, 2011 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, November 7, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS WARREN, Mich. Obama campaign to open two offices in Michigan Michigan campaign workers for President Barack Obama are openingtwo offices this weekend. Campaign officials said in a statement that yesterday marks the openings of the Macomb County headquarters in Warren and the Washtenaw County head- quarters in Ann Arbor. They join offices in Detroit, Pontiac, Flint, Lansing and Kalamazoo. State campaign spokesman Clark Pettig says a Grand Rapids headquarters is expected to open by the end of the month. MEDFORD, Ore. Man indicted for alleged sniper attack on school A federal grand jury has indict- ed an Oregon man who authori- ties fear may have been plotting a sniper attack on a high school football game. The indictment filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Medford charges 26-year-old Raphael Enrique Amoroso, of Grants Pass, with two firearms counts. One alleges he took a loaded .45-cali- ber pistol onto the grounds of Grants Pass High School. The other alleges he is an illegal mari- juana user in possession of fire- arms. He is scheduled to be arraigned today. A judge ordered Amoroso held without bail after the prosecution argued that the case raised red flags suggesting he posed a dan- ker to the community. SEATTLE Professors host classes at Occupy Seattle site University and college instruc- tors are leading free classes and lectures at Occupy Wall Street protests in different cities. In Seattle, the teachers union for community colleges orga- nized an overnight set of lectures when Occupy Seattle moved into the campus of Seattle Central Community College. Instructor Karen Strickland says the teachers wanted to show support through lessons. The teachers were also worried about clashes between police and the occupiers. Strickland says les- sons included how to photograph human rights abuses, the history of labor movements and writing a "position statement." "Teach-ins" as the classes are called have also been held in San Diego and Albuquerque, N.M. LAGOS, Nigeria U.S. warns of sect * bomb attacks in Nigeria capital After a weekend of violence and fear, U.S. officials warned yesterday that luxury hotels fre- quented by foreigners and Nige- ria's elite may be bombed by a radical Muslim sect as the death toll from attacks in the country's northeast rose to more than 100. The warning by the U.S. Embassy shows how seriously diplomats take the threat posed by the outlawed Islamist group known locally as Boko Haram, which previously bombed the Pnited Nations headquarters in the capital, Abuja, killing 24. The unusually specific warn- ing from the U.S. Embassy iden- tified possible targets in Abuja ks the Hilton, Nicon Luxury and Sheraton hotels. With popular restaurants and bars, the hotels draw diplomats, politicians and S even reformed oil delta mili- tants. Theembassysaid anattackmay tome as Muslims in the oil-rich nation celebrate the Eid al-Adha holiday and that its diplomats and staff had been instructed to avoid those hotels. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Pot possession constitutes most crimes in NYC A pe IVAN SEKRETAREV/AP Muslims pray yesterday on a street outside a mosque during celebrations of Eid al-Adha, a feast celebrated by Muslims worldwide, which Muslims in Russia call Kurban-Bairam. ."." 80,000 Muslims pray in celebrat ion of Eid al-Adha On religious holiday, Russians call for more mosques MOSCOW (AP) - Tens of thousands of Muslim men knelt shoulder-to-shoulder in prayer on the freezing streets of Mos- cow yesterday to celebrate the religious holiday of Eid al-Adha. Estimates of the number of Muslims living or working in the Russian capital run from 2 mil- lion to as high as 5 million, but the city only has a few mosques. Police said 170,000 people celebrated the holiday in Mos- cow, including80,000 who gath- ered on the street outside what was once the main mosque. The 100-year-old pastel green Cathedral Mosque was torn down in September and a new mosque being built next to it is still under construction. Many of those who braved temperatures of minus 8 degrees Celsius (18 degrees Fahrenheit) to pray on Sunday morning were migrant workers from countries in Central Asia that were once part of the Soviet Union. "Of course new mosques are needed," said Maruv, a shop worker from Tajikistan who gave only his first name. "Look at how many people are in the street and it's cold. They have been standing here waiting for the beginning of prayers since 6 a.m. and there are no facilities." Police cordoned off the area and set up metal detectors to screen worshippers. The mosque is located next to the Olympic Stadium, where this weekend women tennis play- ers from Russia and the Czech Republic played the Fed Cup final. Muslim prayers also were held at three other mosques and in three city parks. Eid al-Adha, a feast celebrat- ed by Muslims worldwide, is known as Kurban-Bairam in Russia. Russia's Council of Muftis said that for the first time this year the ritual slaughter of sheep was performed at 10 slaughterhouses on the outskirts of Moscow. In past years, Muscovites have com- plained angrily about the kill- ing of sheep in the courtyards of apartment buildings in the city center. NEW nation's threatsc of violen bit of ma There level po City - a any oth about on turn up: It's a persiste toward i loosene laws mo Critic driven i Police I stopping whom p pects' d half a m and His last yea ics say.. result in Thed strategy guns of crime, a savingt looking: often fin law says be in o arrest - anyway. In re sioner I reminde arrests1 in peopl can't tri ing peo empty t bout 50,000 "No one has showed me any evi- dence that this is how alarge num- ople arrested ber of arrests are being made," he said. "But the allegation was each year made. So, in order to clear up any confusion that may exist, we put YORK (AP) - As the that order out to make certain that biggest city deals with officers know that they cannot be of terrorism and a variety the reason for someone displaying it crimes, carrying a little (marijuana) publicly." trijuana is still a big deal. Kelly said the vast majority of are more arrests for low- pot arrests come from undercover t possession in New York officers who witness hand-to- bout 50,000 a year - than hand drug transactions or people er crime, accounting for smoking pot in public. And, the ie of every seven cases that department says, as low-level in criminal courts. arrests have risen, violent crime phenomenon that has has decreased dramatically. d despite more leniency But many New Yorkers, most- marijuana use - the state ly black and Hispanic men, say d its marijuana-possession they're being targeted in the name re than 30 years ago. of keeping the city safe. s say the deluge has been Bronx community organizer n part by the New York Alfredo Carrasquillo, 27, estimat- Department's strategy of ed he's been arrested on marijua- people and frisking those na possession charges more than olice say meet crime sus- 20 times, starting when he was 14 escriptions. More than a and police ordered him to empty illion people, mostly black out his pockets outside his high panic men, were stopped school. He says he was arrested, r - unfair targets, crit- but was never found smoking the About 10 percent of stops drug or holding it out in the open arrests. - though a 1977-state law says department says that the those with25grams of the drugor 's main goal is to take less in their pockets or bags should T the street and prevent onlybe ticketed. Legally, it'savio- nd that the tactic is a life- lation that doesn't result in a crim- ool. But critics say officers inal record. for guns in pockets more "We weren't stupid enough to id pot and - though state smoke it in the middle of the day," s the drug is supposed to he said. pen view to warrant an Gabriel Sayegh, the New York - lock up the possessor director of the Drug Policy Alli- ance, a group critical of the sponse, Police Commis- national war on drugs, said the Raymond Kelly recently department benefits from the d officers they can't make arrests. for small amounts of pot "Every year, they're bringing e's pockets or bags - and 50,000 people into their system," gger an arrest by search- he said. "A significant portion ple or telling them to of whom have not been arrested heir pockets. before. ---I Oklahoma rattled by largest earthquake in state's history State has Kansas State. Fans were still leaving the game. experienced spike "That shook up the place, in ehad a lot of people nervous," Oklahoma State wide receiver since 2009 Justin Blackmon said. The temblor sent Jesse Richards' wife running out- SPARKS, Okla. (AP) - side because she thought their Clouds of dust belched from home was going to collapse. the corners of almost every The earthquake centered near room in Joe Reneau's house their home in Sparks, 44 miles as the biggest earthquake in northeast of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma history rocked the could be felt throughout the two-story building. state and in Arkansas, Kansas, A roar that sounded like a Missouri, northern Texas and jumbo jet filled the air, and some parts of Illinois and Wis- Reneau's red-brick chimney consin. collapsed and fell into the roof Richards estimated it lasted above the living room. By the for as much as a minute. One time the shaking stopped, a of his wife's cookie jars fell on pantry worth of food had been the floor and shattered, and strewn across the kitchen and pictures hanging in their liv- shards of glass and pottery ing room were knocked askew. covered the floor. "We've been here 18 years, "It was like WHAM!" said and it's getting to be a regular Reneau, 75, gesturing with occurrence," said Richards, swipes of his arms. "I thought 50. But, he added, "I hope I in my mind the house would never get used to them." stand, but then again, maybe Geologists now believe a not." magnitude 4.7 earthquake The magnitude 5.6 earth- Saturday morning was a fore- quake and its aftershocks still shock to the bigger one that had residents rattled yester- followed that night. They day. No injuries were reported, recorded 10 aftershocks by and aside from a buckled high- midmorning yesterday and way and the collapse of a tower expected more. Two of the on the St. Gregory's University aftershocks, at 4 a.m. and 9 administration building, nei- a.m., were big, magnitude 4.0. ther was any major damage. "We will definitely continue But the weekend earthquakes to see aftershocks, as we've were among the strongest yet already seen aftershocks from in a state that has seen a dra- this one," said Paul Earle, a matic, unexplained increase in seismologist with the U.S. seismic activity. Geological Survey in Golden, Oklahoma typically had Colo. "We will see aftershocks about 50 earthquakes a year in the days and weeks to come, until 2009. Then the number possibly even months." spiked, and 1,047 quakes shook Brad Collins, the spokesman the state last year, prompting for St. Gregory's University in researchers to install seismo- Shawnee, said one of the four graphs in the area. Still, most towers on its "castle-looking" of the earthquakes have been administration building col- small. lapsed in the big earthquake Saturday night's big one and the other three towers jolted Oklahoma State Univer- were damaged. 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