The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, January 30, 2013 - 3A The Michigan Daily michigandailycom Wednesday, January 30, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Senate committee aproves blue cross legistation A legislative committee has approved bills, to overhaul Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan that don't include abortion pro- visions that led Republican Gov. Rick Snyder to veto the measure in December. Legislation passed quickly on Tuesday would transform the state's largest health insurer from a charitable trust into a customer-owned nonprofit. The bills aren't expected to run into much resistance in the Republi- can-led Senate. Less clear is how they'll fare in the GOP-controlled House, where newly elected members know less about the issue. Snyder opposed the last-min- ute addition of language that would have barred insurers and businesses from providing elec- tive abortion coverage. SAN FRANCISCO Federal court upholds San Fran. 0 nudity ban A federal judge cleared the way Tuesday for the city of San Francisco to ban most displays of public nudity, ruling that an ordi- nance set to take effect on Feb. 1 does not violate the free speech rights of residents and visitors who like going out in the buff. U.S. District Court Judge Edward Chen refused to block the ban temporarily or to allow a lawsuit challenging it to proceed. "In spite of what plaintiffs argue, nudity in and of itself is not inherently expressive," Chen wrote. NEW ORLEANS BP investigation closed by Justice Department BP PLC closed the book on the Justice Department's crimi- nal probe of its role in the Deep- water Horizon disaster and Gulf oil spill Tuesday, when a federal * judge agreed to let the London- based oil giant plead guilty to manslaughter charges for the deaths of 11 rig workers and pay a record $4 billion in penalties. What the plea deal approved by U.S. District Judge Sarah Vance doesn't resolve, though, is the federal government's civil claims against BP. The company could pay billions more for envi- ronmental damage from its 2010 spill. Vance noted that the compa- ny already has racked up more than $24 billion in spill-related expenses and has estimated it will pay a total of $42 billion to fully resolve its liability for the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. MOZAMBIQUE Flood kills 23, displaces thousands A U.N. official in flood-hit Mozambique says at least $15 million in aid is needed to help after flood waters have killed 38 people and displaced hundreds of thousands. The U.N. says more than 150,000 have been displaced by flooding in the southern African nation of Mozambique over the last several days. Marie Con- selee Mukangendo, of the U.N. children's agency UNICEF, said Tuesday the overall death toll stands at 38. Mukangendo said the Chika- halani camp alone is holding an estimated 65,000 people but has only 28 latrines. She called the situation dire. The U.N. said it estimates at least $15 million would initially be needed in relief aid. Mozambique suffered record floods in 2000 that killed more than 700 people. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Syrian Envoy warns U.N. of destruction Shannon Warnock, far right, a salvage hand with Big River Ship Builders & Salvage, secures his flotation device after load- ing a boat with MDEQ employees at Le Tourneau Landingto work on the damaged barge stalled on the west bank of the Mississippi )River near Vicksburg, Miss. Tanker splls oilntoMiss 7,000 gallons of crude oil leaked into river VICKSBURG, Miss. (AP) - The Coast Guard said Tues- day that about 7,000 gallons of crude oil were unaccounted for aboard a leaking barge that had rammed a railroad bridge near Vicksburg on the Mississippi River, which remained closed for a third day as crews slowly pumped out oil. Petty Officer 3rd Class Jona- than Lally said it's not clear that all of the 7,000 gallons leaked into the river since the colli- sion early Sunday. Some of it, he said, could have seeped into void spaces inside the barge. Lally said a plan to pump oil from the stricken barge onto another barge - a process knodwn as lightering - had been approved but it was unclear how long that would take or when the river might reopen to vessels..He said the other barge was in route. Environmental impact, Lally said, has been minimal because a boom is containing the leak around the bargwe and the leak is slow. On Tuesday, tugs were pin- ning the ruptured barge to the bank on the Louisiana side of the river, across from Vicks- burg's Riverwalk and Lady Luck casinos. Their engines churned the muddy water for which the Mississippi is so famous. A few workers could be seen walking on top of the stricken barge. An orange boom bobbed in the water just downstream and another boom was set up as a second line of defense to keep the oil from spreading. The economic impact is another matter. At least 54 vessels, includ- ing towboats and barges, were idled Tuesday on the closed 16-mile stretch of one of the nation's vital commerce routes. Vessel traffic tends to be less in January than during peak harvest season, when grain from the U.S. heartland is shipped south to be loaded onto massive ships near New Orleans. "The Coast Guard advised our hazardous materials unit that the river would be closed indefinitely to all traffic," Lt. Julie Lewis of the Louisiana State Police said. About 168.4 million tons of cargo a year moves along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge, La., and the mouth of the Ohio River, car- ried by nearly 22,300 cargo ships and 162,700 barges, according to the Army Corps of Engineers. About 3.6 million tons of cargo is handled annu- ally by the port of Vicksburg. When low water threatened to close the river earlier this month, the tow industry trade group American Waterways Operators estimated that 7.2 million tons of commodities worth $2.8 billion might be sidelined over the last three weeks of January. Urges end to Security Council overcome divisions UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The international envoy to Syria told the Security Council on Tuesday that "Syria is being destroyed bit by bit" and his mediation effort cannot go for- ward unless the council unites to push the Syrian government and opposition forces toward some compromise. The Security Council has been divided over Syria for months, with the United States, Britain, France and other West- ern powers backing the armed opposition and pushing for res- olutions that raised the threat of sanctions. Three times, Rus- sia and China have cast vetoes to block those resolutions. "I'm embarrassed to be repeating the same thing: Syria is being destroyed," Lakhdar Brahimi, the joint U.N-Arab League envoy to Syria, said after closed-door consultations with the Security Council. Brahimi blamed both Syr- ian President Bashar Assad's government and the Western- backed opposition forces. "Objectively, they are coop- erating to destroy Syria. Syria is being destroyed bit by bit. And in destroying Syria, the region is being pushed into a situa- tion that is extremely bad, and extremely important for the entire world," Brahimi said. He said that is why the Secu- rity Council has a duty to over- come its divisions. Brahimi suggested that the Security Council revisit the Geneva Communique of June 2012, a broad but ambiguous proposal endorsed by the West- ern powers and Russia to pro- vide a basis for negotiations. Assad's role in any transi- tion government was a red line during the negotiations of the Geneva Communique, and was left vague. The United States and Russia continue to dis- agree on Assad's role, though both signed off on the commu- nique. Brahimi says the Secu- rity Council should now look toward the provisions of the Geneva Communique as a solu- tion. "A very critical element is the creation of this governing body, which is really a transition gov- ernment, with full executive powers," Brahimi said. "I think there was a very clever creative ambiguityinthis creation, but I told them that ambiguity has to be lifted now. Now you have to say what those full executive powers would be. All the powers of state have got to go to that government," he told reporters outside the coun- cil.government-funded Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources. Without a council push on the Assad government and opposition, the Geneva Com- munique and his mediation "cannot be implemented as it is. Brahimi addressed wide- spread rumors that he was about to quit, as his predeces- sor, former U.N. secretary- general Kofi Annan, did last year when he ran into a similar impasse. Washington works to keep weed legal State plans But law enforcement officials say marijuana from Colorado's ahead on coming dispensaries often makes its way to the black market, and implementation even the head of the Colorado agency charged with tracking SEATTLE (AP) - So far, no the medical pot industry sug- one is suggesting checkpoints gests no one should copy its or fences to keep Washington measures. state's legal pot within its bor- The agency has been beset ders. by money woes and had to cut But Gov. Jay Inslee insists many of its investigators. Even if there are ways to prevent the the agency had all the money it bulk smuggling of the state's wanted, the state's medical pot newest cash crop into the black rules are "a model of regulatory market, including digitally overreach," too cumbersome tracking weed to ensure that it and expensive to enforce, Laura goes from where ittis grown to Harris said ina statement. the stores where it is sold. Last fall, voters made Wash- With sales set to begin later ington and Colorado the first this year, he hopes to be a good states to pass laws legalizing the neighbor and keep vanloads of recreational use of marijuana premium, legal bud from cruis- and setting up systems of state- ing into Idaho, Oregon and licensed growers, processors other states that don't want peo- and retail stores where adults ple getting stoned for fun. over 21 can walk in and buy up It's not just about generating to an ounce of heavily taxed goodwill with fellow gover- cannabis. nors. Inslee is trying to per- Both states are working to suade U.S. Attorney General develop rules for the emerging Eric Holder not to sue to block pot industry. Washington from licensing pot The Obama administration growers, processors and sell- could sue to block the legal ers. Marijuana remains illegal markets from operating, on the under federal law. grounds that actively regulat- "I am going to be person- ing an illegal substance conflicts ally committed to have a well with federal drug law. The DOJ regulated, well disciplined, is reviewing the laws but has well tracked, well inventory- given no signals about its plans. controlled, well law-enforce- It has never sued states like ment-coordinated approach," Colorado that have regulated said Inslee, who expects to give medical marijuana, even though Holder more details by next it could under the same legal week. principles. Keeping a lid on the weed Part of the DOJ's political is just one of the numerous calculus in deciding whether to challenges Washington state sue is likely to be how well the authorities and their counter- department believes the two parts in Colorado - where vot- states can keep the legal weed ers also legalized pot use - will within their borders. During a face in the coming months. meeting with Inslee last week, The potential of regula- Holder asked a lot of questions tory schemes to keep pot from about diversion, Inslee said. being diverted isn't clear. Colo- Alison Holcomb, who led rado already has intensive rules Washington's legal pot cam- aimed at keeping its medi- paign, said it's important to cal marijuana market in line, respect states that haven't legal- including the digital tracking ized weed by not flooding their of cannabis, bar codes on every black markets. The first step, plant, surveillance video and she said, is for the state to fig- manifests of all legal pot ship- ure out how much pot should ments. be produced, and then grant U.N. plans response to N. Korea Threat of atomic device could worsen nation's isolation SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - With North Korea appearing set to detonate an atomic device, the U.N. agency that detected two previous tests says itis preparedto confirm anexplosion when it takes place. But experts say it might be difficult to establish whether the blast is nuclear in nature. The best indication of a test will be seismic tremors and gases released into the air, phenom- ena that the Preparatory Com- mission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty identi- fied from previous testing. The Vienna-based organiza- tion's most potent detection tools are more than 150 seismic sta- tions across the globe. Although very small in yield, North Korea's first test in 2006 was picked upby the CTBTO, as was a second test in 2009. Last week, North Korea warned that it plans a third nuclear test to protest tough- ened international sanctions meant to punish it for firing a long-range rocket in December. The world sees the launch as a ballistic missile test banned by the U.N., while Pyongyang says it launched a satellite into orbit as part of a peaceful space devel- opment program. The U.S., South Korea and their allies have pressed the North to scrap its nuclear test plans, saying it will only worsen the country's decades-old inter- national isolation. The threats have placed scien- tists and experts in South Korea -on high alert as any test is likely to aggravate tensions on the Korean Peninsula. South Korea's Defense Minis- try said Tuesday it believes North Korea has nearly completed its nuclear test preparations, con- firming satellite analysis last week by the U.S.-Korea Institute, a research group at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. Its satellite images' of the Punggye-ri site - where the pre- vious two tests were conducted - show that the North Koreans may have been sealing a tunnel into a mountain where a nuclear device would be detonated. In the event of such an under- ground nuclear test, both the CTBTO facilities and earthquake monitoring stations in South Koreacan detectseismic tremors. But although this is a strong indication of a test, it is not an absolute confirmation. An earthquake expert at the state-run Korea Meteorological Administration said his office aims to find out the magnitude of the tremor, the time it started and the exact location on the map within 10 minutes of the explo- sion. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak to the media. Affordable Student Health Plan by R.R.J Consulting Accicent, Sickness, & Health with Dental Insurance Full time, part time, or non-college student! My Student Health Plans was created to ensure that students without health and dental insurance could purchase coverage for themselves on a student's budget. Plan cost $3.03 per day. 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