The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 25, 2012 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, October 25, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Detroit judge reprimanded for shirtless cell photo A Detroit judge who sent a shirtless photo of himself to a female court employee and bragged about his buff image on television "brought shame" to the judiciary, the Michigan Supreme Court said Wednesday. The court reprimanded Wayne County Circuit Judge Wade McCree, who accepted the public censure without a fight months after apologizing. McCree sent a cellphone photo of himself to a female sheriff's 4w officer in 2011. It shows a very fit judge from the waist up and was taken a year earlier after he had finished a half marathon. The officer kept it to motivate herself to improve her workouts, but her husband provided a copy to WJBK-TV reporter Charlie LeDuff, according to the Michi- gan Judicial, Tenure Commis- sion, which investigated. SEATTLE Seattle developer, wife arrested for bankruptcy fraud A Seattle real-estate developer who vanished with his wife after a judge demanded they hand over two huge diamonds was arrested Wednesday in a lake town in the .French Alps. Police arrested Michael Mas- tro, 87, and his wife, Linda, at the request of American authorities, said Kayla Celaya, a supervisory deputy with the U.S. Marshals Service. The arrests came in the town of Annecy, near the Swiss border in southeastern France. The Mastroswerechargedwith bankruptcy fraud in a six-count FBI complaint unsealed Wednes- day in federal court in Seattle. The complaint accuses them of con- cealing one of their bank accounts from creditors and using $285,000 from the account for personal expenses - including payments on their Bentley and Rolls Royce automobiles, credit card bills, and the purchase of $100,000 in gold. KINGSTON, Jamaica Hurricane Sandy pounds Jamaica en route to Cuba Hurricane Sandy's howling winds and pelting rains lashed precarious shantytowns, stranded travelers and downed power lines Wednesday as it roared across Jamaica on a course that would take it on to Cuba and then possi- bly threaten Florida and the Baha- mas. Sandy's death toll was at least two. An elderly man was killed in Jamaica when he was crushed by a boulder that rolled onto his clap- board house, police reported. Ear- lier Wednesday, a woman in Haiti was swept away by a rushing river she was trying to cross. MILAN Former premier Berlusconi says he won't run again Former Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi announced Wednes- day that he won't run for a fourth term in spring elections and said his center-right movement should hold a primary to choose its can- didate. "I won't run for premier," Ber- lusconi said in a statement posted on his movement's website, "but I will remain next to younger play- ers who need to play and score goals." Berlusconi, who stepped down in November after failing to come up with effective economic Sreforms to shield Italy from the debt crisis, has until now been coy about his intentions. But the soccer metaphor also indicates that the 76-year-old media mogul, and owner of the soccer club AC Milan, isn't ready to give up poli- tics entirely. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Security Council unanimously OKs Syrian ceasefire In this June 10, 2005 file photo, workers walk past a part of Qinshan No. 2 Nuclear Power Plant, China's first self-designed and self-built national commercial nuclear power plant. China is ready to approve new nuclear power plants as part of ambitious plans to reduce reliance on oil and coal. China approves proposal for new nuclear reactors Four-day truce planned for Muslim holiday BEIRUT (AP) - The U.N. Security Council gave unani- mous backing Wednesday to a four-day truce proposed by the international mediator for Syria to mark a major Muslim holiday after he warned that the failure of yet another cease-fire plan would only worsenthe fighting. Yet even this modest effort - the international community's only plan for scaling back the violence - appears doomed. Previous cease-fire missions have failed, in part because nei- ther Syrian President Bashar Assad nor rebels trying to top- ple him had an incentive to end their bloody war of attrition. Both sides believe they can still make gains on the battlefield even as they are locked in a stalemate, and neither has faith in negotiations on a political transition. Lakhdar Brahimi, the U.N.- Arab League envoy to Syria, has proposed that both sides lay down their arms during the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, which begins Friday. The Security Council is nor- mally divided on Syria, but Assad allies Russia and China joined other council members in endorsing the idea of a tempo- rary truce that is meant to pave the way for talks on ending Syr- ia's 19-month-old conflict. The response on the ground ranged from lukewarm to down- right rejection. Syrian govern- ment officials said they were still studying the idea, while Syria's political opposition said it was skeptical of the regime's prom- ises. A rebel commander dis- missed the plan as irrelevant and a radical Islamist group fighting alongside the rebels said it won't comply with any truce. As Brahimi briefed the Secu- rity Council, the death toll since the start of the conflict in March 2011 crossed the threshold of 35,000, activists said, and more violence was reported across the country. Two car bombs killed at least eight bus passengers in the cap- ital Damascus and 12 regime soldiers near a military check- point in the north, while regime airstrikes on villages near a besieged army base killed 12 civilians, activists said. They also posted a video showing at least 13 bodies laid out Wednes- day in a room in a Damascus suburb, some of them women and children. Each side blamed the other for the deaths. Decision aimed to decrease reliance on fossil fuels despite nuclear dangers BEIJING (AP) - China has decided to approve new nuclear power plants as part of plans to reduce reliance on oil and coal, ending the moratorium it imposed to review safety in the wake of Japan's Fukushima disaster last year. The government's decision Wednesday that nuclear power is safe for China takes the coun- try in the opposite direction from some developed nations such as Germany, which decid- ed in the wake of the Fuku- shima disaster to speed its complete phase-out of nuclear power. Japan is planning to phase it out by 2040. China is the world's biggest energy consumer, and build- ing new reactors is a key part of Beijing's plans to curb demand for fossil fuels. The communist govern- ment is aggressively promoting alternatives to coal and oil in order to reduce pollution and curb its reliance on imported petroleum, which it sees as a national security risk. Still, coal is forecast to remain the country's main energy source for decades. The government said Wednesday it hopes to gener- ate 30 percent of China's power from solar, wind and other renewable sources, as well as from nuclear energy, by the end of 2015. That's up from an ear- lier target of 15 percent from renewables plus 5 percent from nuclear by 2020. The Cabinet on Wednesday passed plans on nuclear power safety and development that said construction of nuclear power plants would resume "steadily." Only a small number of plants will be built, and only in coastal areas, according to a Cabinet announcement. The plants will meet the most strin- gent safety standards, it said. No date was given for resum- ing construction of nuclear plants. Despitewidespreadpub- lic concern over possible radia- tion contamination from the Fukushima disaster and calls for improved safety precau- tions and emergency prepared- ness, China remains committed to building up nuclear power to help reduce emissions from coal-fired plants and curb its reliance on costly oil imports. China suspended approvals of new nuclear plants after a tsunami triggered by the mas- sive March 11, 2011, earthquake crippled the Fukushima plant's cooling and backup power systems, causing partial melt- downs in the worst nuclear disaster since the 1986 Cher- nobyl catastrophe. China's leaders ordered safety checks for existing nuclear facilities, a review of projects under construction and improved safety stan- dards. "The inspection results show that nuclear security is guaran- teed in China," according to a government report on its ener- gy policy also released Wednes- day. "China implements the principle of 'safety first' in the whole process of nuclear power station planning." China currently has 15 nucle- ar reactors that provide about 12.5 gigawatts of generating capacity, and another 26 reac- tors are under construction that will add 30 gigawatts, the report said. Nuclear power accounts for only 1.8 percent of power in China, it said. The government report also said that China is now 90 per- cent energy self-sufficient, but acknowledged high demand will continue to put a strain on resources. It also warned of"grave chal- lenges" to its energy security in its growing dependence on imported petroleum. Imports accounted for a third of total petroleum consumption in the early 2000s and have jumped to nearly 60 percent now, the report said. China will also encourage private companies to partici- pate in exploration and devel- opment of energy resources, it said. Auto bailout key for Obama's pull in Ohio More than 850,000 Ohio jobs are tied to the car industry LORDSTOWN, Ohio (AP) - President Barack Obama's decision to help America's automakers could end up being what helps drive him back into the White House. Some 850,000 jobs in this critical battleground state are tied to autos and Obama's cam- paign constantly reminds vot- ers they'd be jobless if not for the decision to inject taxpayer dollars into General Motors and Chrysler. However, the move has not translated into automatic support for the presi- dent, even in areas that depend on the industry. Republican Mitt Romney also is pitching these voters hard with his mes- sage that Obama hasn't bal- anced Washington's checkbook the same way voters must. One in eight jobs in Ohio can be linked to the auto industry - whether it's working on a fac- tory floor or selling groceries to plant workers. The presiden- tial race's outcome could boil down to whether voters inter- pret Obama's move as saving Detroit or bailing it out. But like other flashpoints in this rough campaign, there is little middle ground between the versions of events and what it means for voters' neighbors. "I couldn't imagine what Lordstown would be," said Brian Axiotis, a 37-year-old Obama supporter who works in information technology and lives in nearby Newton Falls. "A lot of folks would lose their houses. Consider the mess that would have resulted. It'd be a ghost town all over the area." Since its restructuring, the General Motors plant in this town of 4,000 people southeast of Cleveland has added a third shift - and 1,200 new workers with it - to produce the popu- lar compact Chevy Cruze. GM has pledged $220 million in updates to the factory and to keep the 4,500 workers, sug- gesting this town in the former steel-heavy Mahoning Valley has some stability ahead. Romney volunteer Frank Perrotta still finds Obama's decision to loan automakers billions a misuse of public dol- lars. Between calls to voters at Romney's office in Stow, he shakes his head when talk- ing about the government's move to prevent the collapse of GM and Chrysler. The bailout began in 2008 under Repub- lican George W. Bush and Obama extended it. Many GOP candidates rebuke controversial rape comments Mourdock says 'God intended' pregnancies that result from rape WASHINGTON (AP) - Just as Mitt Romney and other Republicans had cut into the Democrats' advantage with female voters, a tea party- backed Senate candidate's awkward remark - that if rape leads to pregnancy it's "some- thing God intended" - has propelled the emotional issue of abortion back to the politi- cal forefront. It's put GOP can- didates in tight races, from the presidential candidate on down, on the defensive. Divisive social issues are hardly what most GOP candi- dates want to be discussing in the few days remaining until elections largely hinging on jobs and the economy. Almost immediately after Richard Mourdock's comment, Republi- can candidates distanced them- selves from the Indiana state treasurer - though by varying degrees. The Romney campaign said Wednesday that the presiden- tial nominee disagreed with Mourdock but stood by his endorsement of the Senate can- didate. There were no plans to drop a Romney testimonial ad for Mourdock that began airing in Indiana on Monday. Mourdock's comment in a Tuesday night debate came in answer to a question on when abortion should or should not be allowed. Said Romney spokes- woman Andrea Saul: "We dis- agree on the policy regarding exceptions for rape and incest but still support him." Reaction was quick, from Republican senators and can- didates rejecting Mourdock's statement. Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown, struggling to hold onto his seat against a challenge from Democrat Elizabeth War- ren, said he was "a pro-choice Republican and that's not what I believe and I disagree with what he said." Pressed on his support for Mourdock's candi- dacy, Brown said that was up to Indiana voters. Connecticut Republican Linda McMahon, bidding for the Senate seat there, called Mourdock's remarks "highly inappropriate and offensive. They do not reflect my beliefs as a woman or a pro-choice candi- date." New Hampshire Repub- lican Sen. Kelly Ayotte, who had planned to campaign with Mourdock in Indiana, canceled her appearance. In Wisconsin, former Repub- lican Gov. Tommy Thompson, who faces Democratic Rep.. Tammy Baldwin, called Mour- dock's comments "really sad." "I've got a wife and two daughters and six granddaugh- ters," he said in an interview. "Anything dealing with rape against women is uncalled for. Period. No tolerance whatso- ever." Sen. John McCain, the 2008 GOP presidential nominee, told CNN that his continued support of Mourdock "depends on what he does." The Arizona law- maker who was the GOP's 2008 presidential nominee, said he wants to see "if he apologizes and says he misspoke and he was wrong and asks people to forgive him. It's when you don't own up to it that people will not believe in you." Mourdock's debate comment recalled GOP Senate candidate Todd Akin's remark in August about rape and pregnancy. The Missouri congressman said women's bodies have ways of preventing pregnancy in cases of "legitimate rape." Repub- licans, led by Romney, called for Akin to abandon the race, but he refused and is pressing ahead against Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill. Romney and several Repub- licans have been moderat- - ing their positions in the campaign's closing days, mak- ing their final pitch to the independents, undecideds and female voters whose votes could tip both the presidential election and majority control of the Senate. Recent national polls have shown Obama's edge with female voters shrinking to single digits. Valery Gergiev. music director Denis Matsuev, piano Saturday, October 27, 8 pm Hill Auditorium Performing Strauss, Shostakovich, and Stravinsky. Supported by Renegade Ventures Fund Presented with support from Catherine S. Arcure Endowment Fund Media Partners WGTE 91.3 FM, WRCJ 90.9 FM, Detroit)ewish News, and WDET101.9 FM STUDENT RUSH TICKETS AVAILABLE! $10 day of, $20 at the door. Details at www.ums.org/students. t % U rM S For more information, visit www.ums.org or call 734.764.2538. BE PRESENT UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN I ANN ARBOR