The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, January 10, 2013.- 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, January 10, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Snyder signs law to help prevent child sexual abuse Gov. Rick Snyder has signed legislation into law that aims to increase education and training in schools to help prevent the sexual abuse of children. The Republican governor's office announced Wednesday that he signed the bipartisan leg- islation named "Erin's Law." It's named after a woman from Scha- umburg, Ill., who was sexually abused as a child and now cam- paigns nationally for increased education and protections. Snyder officials say the bills were among about 30 pieces of legislation getting his signature. One clarifies that the state's Family Independence pro- gram is temporary and not an entitlement. It prevents further cash assistance to families that receive it for at least five years. BOSTON In Boston, flu season declared a. health emergency Boston declared a public health emergency Wednesday as flu season struck in earnest and the state reported 18 flu-related deaths so far. The city is workingwith health care centers to offer free flu vac- cines and hopes to set up places where people can get vaccinated. The city said there have been four flu-related deaths, all elderly resi- dents, since the unofficial start of the flu season Oct. 1. "The best thing you can do to protect yourself and your family is to.get the flu shot," said Boston Mayor Thomas Menino. PRAGUE Tattooed artist runs for Czech 0 president He's tattooed from head to toe, a warrior-like mix of blue, green and red. He's also running in a sur- prising third place ahead of this week's Czech presidential elec- tions. Vladimir Franz, an opera composer and painter, seems the most unlikely of candidates for a prestigious post previously held by beloved playwright-dissident Vaclav Havel and Vaclav Klaus, a professor credited with plot- ting the economic transition from communism to a free market. Some have a nickname for Franz: 'Avatar.' And during a tele- vised debate a caller compared him to "an exotic creature from Papua New Guinea." TOKYO Giant squid captured on video in ocean depths After years of searching, sci- entists and broadcasters say they have captured video images of a giant squid in its natural habitat deep in the ocean for the first time. The three-meter (nine-foot) invertebrate was filmed from a manned submersible during one of 100 dives in the Pacific last summer in a joint expedition by Japanese public broadcaster NHK, Discovery Channel and Japan's National Museum of Nature and Science. NHK released photographs of the giant squid this week ahead of Sunday's show about the encounter. The Discovery Chan- nel will air its program on Jan. 27. The squid, which was inex- plicably missing its two longest tentacles, was spotted in waters east of Chichi Island about 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) south of Tokyo, NHK said. The crew fol- lowed it to a depth of 900 meters (2,950 feet). -Compiled from JDaily wire reports Blueprint reveals plans for Detroit A mangled crane lies at the construction site in the Queens borough of New York where it collapsed, Wednesday, lan. 9, 2013, behind a big neon "Pepsi Cola" sign, a local landmark. The Fire Department of New York says the 200-foot crane col- lapsed onto a building under construction, injuringseven people, three of them seriously. New York crane collapses on work site, hurting seven Leaders to address the city's 30,000 vacant homes DETROIT (AP) -.A 50-year blueprint for revitalizing Detroit, from leveling parts of nearly vacant neighborhoods for parks to relaxing rules for startup companies, was released Wednesday after two years of research and commu- nity input. The project was launched by Mayor Dave Bing, who joined dozens of community, busi- ness and philanthropic leaders in unveiling the plan for the shrinking and financially trou- bled city. The 349-page'strate- gic framework focuses on job growth, land use, improving neighborhoods and rebuilding infrastructure. It doesn't include financing plans, but at least $150 million in initial funding will come over the next five years from the Kresge Foundation. The private organization, which is based in nearby Troy, has long been active in Detroit-area projects. "It became clear to me that business as usual would not effectively transform our city, and a new framework for Detroit's future needed to be developed," Bing said Wednes- day. "As mayor of Detroit and a long-time member of this community, I've witnessed the steady decline of a city with so much promise," said Bing, a former NBA star and success- ful businessman in Detroit. "I'm convinced Detroit can be a world-class city again." A major focus is on Detroit's ramshackle neighborhoods. The city - which lost a quar- ter-million people in the last decade - currently has at least 30,000 empty homes and 20 square miles of vacant land. Among the report's sug- gestions are targeting vacant land and empty buildings for employment districts to stimu- late job growth in neighbor- hoods. It also recommends encouraging residents living in sparsely populated neigh- borhoods to move out, then converting the land into open space or community gardens. Officials said no residents would be left behind, though no mechanism is in place to pay people in those neighborhoods to move to more stable areas of the city. The report doesn't include specific timelines for projects. For example, it suggests that zoning, land use, and other policies and rules "must be realigned" within the next five years to help the city stabilize some neighborhoods. But organizers say the report is intended to be a guide for current and future city leaders. It's the culmination of coop- erative work by city residents, business owners and others. "The full potential of this framework will only be real- ized with the collective efforts and resources of everyone - public, private, philanthropic, nonprofit - all pulling togeth- er," Rip Rapson, Kresge's presi- dent and chief executive, said as he encouraged other foun- dations and businesses to get involved. But the future of the 139-square-mile city is cloud- ed. In the 1950s, about 1.8 mil- lion called Detroit home. But dramatic population and busi- ness losses over the last 50 years left Detroit with whis- pers of a tax base. And the city's current population of about 700,000 people is expected to continue falling. T NE poppin ping of onto al tion ne front seven needed undern ery. The around across and we up the residen York C behind sign, a ers put framev of the' "On was it, 32, of guys y The extrica the cr: injurie the m Chief N emerg didn'ti get the ries wa Pres ter froi hree trapped ing his first day at the site in the Long Island City neighbor- underneath hood. He had turned to speak to a friend when he heard a machinery poppingsound and turned back around. W YORK (AP) - With the At that moment, "I saw the g of cables and the snap- cable whipping toward the metal, a crane collapsed deck. ... You could just hear it building under construc- buckling," White said. ar the East River water- The impact shook the scaf- Wednesday, injuring folding he was on. people, three of whom The crane cut down the I to be extricated from framework of the building "like. teath the fallen machin- a hot knife in butter," White said, because there was no con- red crane toppled crete on it yet. 1 2:30 p.m., sprawling Roberson said the crane, the metal scaffolding which he estimated to be about od planking that made 200 feet high, had been up since first floor skeleton of a the weekend - and went down ntial building in the New really fast. ity borough of Queens City officials went up in a a big neon "Pepsi Cola" cherry picker while investigat-. * local landmark. Work- ing the accident. ting up the second floor Tony Sclafani, a spokesman work scrambled to get out for the city's Department of way. Building, said their engineers ce that snap came, that were investigating the cause of said Russell Roberson, the collapse. Brooklyn. "I just heard "This is a mobile crane, elling, 'Run, run!" whose boom collapsed onto the people who had to be building under construction," ted from underneath Sclafani said. ane suffered a range of He said the crash happened s, broken bones being at the site of a project for a ost severe, Deputy Fire 25-story apartment building Mark Ferran said. He said under contract by TF Cor- ency services personnel nerstone, a residential and need heavy machinery to commercial real estate devel- m out. None of the inju- oper and property management s life-threatening. company. The company said it ton White, 48, a carpen- was working with authorities m the Bronx, was work- to help determine what caused the crash. It said the crane had been leased by a subcontractor, from New York Crane and Equip- ment Corp., Construction cranes have been a source of safety worries in the city since two giant rigs collapsed within two months of each other in Manhattan in 2008, killing a total of nine people. New York Crane's equip- ment was involved in one of those collapses. Owner James Lomma was tried and acquitted on manslaughter charges. A call to their offices seeking comment Wednesday wasn't answered. Those accidents spurred the resignation of the city's btiild- ings commissioner and fueled new safety measures, including hiring more inswpectors and expanding training. reqpire- ments and inspection check- lists. Another crane fell and killed a worker in April at a construc- tion site for a new subway line. That rig was exempt from most city construction safety rules because it was working for a state-overseen agency that runs the subway system. During Superstorm Sandy in late October, a construction crane atop a $1.5 billion luxury high-rise in midtown Manhat- tan collapsed in high winds and danged precariously for several days until it could be tethered. Winter storm bafters Mideast, eight dead Woman who shot intruder inspires gun control foes. Ga. resident uses personal handgun to protect family against burglar LOGANVILLE, Ga. (AP) - A Georgia mother who shot an intruder at her home has become a small part of the roaring gun control debate, with some fire- arms enthusiasts touting her as a textbook example of responsible gun ownership. Melinda Herman grabbed a handgun and hid in a crawl space with her two children when a man broke in last week and approached the family at their home northeast of Atlanta, police said. Herman called her husband on the phone, and with him reminding her of the lessons she recently learned at a shoot- ing range, Herman opened fire, seriously wounding the burglary suspect. The National Rifle Association tweeted a link to a news story about the shooting, and support poured in from others online, hailing Herman as a hero. The local sheriff said he was proud of the way she handled the situ- ation. "This lady decided that she wasn't going to be a victim, and I think everyone else looks at this and hopes they have the cour- age to do what she done," Wal- ton County Sheriff Joe Chapman said Wednesday. Herman was working from home Friday when she saw a man walk up to the front door. She told police he rang the doorbell twice and then over and over again. He went back to his SUV, got something out and walked back toward the house, a police report said. Herman took her 9-year- old son and daughter into an upstairs bedroom and locked the door. They went into bath- room and she locked that door, too. She got her handgun from a safe, the report said, and hid with her children. At some point, she called her husband, who kept her on the line and called 911 on another line. In a 10-minute 911 recording released by the Walton County Sheriff's Office, Donnie Herman calmly explained what was hap- pening to a dispatcher. His part of the conversation with his wife was also recorded. "Is he in the house, Melinda? Are you sure? How do you know? You can hear him in the house?" Donnie Herman said. His wife told him the intruder was coming closer. "He's in the bedroom? Shh, shh, relax. Just remember every- thing that I showed you, every- thing that I taught you, all right?" Donnie Herman told his wife, explaining later to the dispatcher that he had recently taken her to a gun range. It wasn't clear from the recording exactly when they went to range and Donnie Her- man told The Associated Press on Wednesday the family didn't want to talk about the shooting. After Donnie Herman told his wife police were on the way, he started shouting: "She shot him. She's shootin' him. She's shootin' him. She's shootin' him. She's shootin' him." "OK," the dispatcher respond- ed. "Shoot him again! Shoot him!" Donnie Herman yelled. He told the dispatcher he heard a lot of screaming, but he seems to get increasingly worried when he doesn't hear anything from his wife. Melinda Herman told police she started shooting the man when he opened the door to the crawl space. The man pleaded with her to stop, but she kept firing until she had emptied her rounds, she told police. She then fled to a neighbor's house with her children. The man drove away in his SUV. Police found the SUV on another subdivision street and discovered a man bleeding from his face and body in a nearby wooded area. Police identified the suspect as 32-year-old Paul Slater of Atlanta. Chapman said the hospital asked him not to comment on Slater's condition, but he said he is not certain Slater will sur- vive. Authorities have a warrant but haven't formally arrested Slater yet. They plan to charge him with burglary, possession of tools for the commission of a crime and aggravated assault, Walton County sheriff's Capt. Greg Hall said. Unusual snow, rain and wind disrupt daily life AMMAN, Jordan (AP) - The fiercest winter storm to hit the Mideast in years brought a rare foot of snow to Jordan on Wednesday, caused fatal acci- dents in Lebanon and the West Bank, and disrupted traffic on the Suez Canal in Egypt. At least eight people died across the region. In Lebanon, the Red Cross said storm-related accidents killed six people over the past two days. Several drowned after slipping into rivers from flooded roads, one person froze to death and another died after his car went off a slippery road, accord- ing to George Kettaneh, Opera- tions Director for the Lebanese Red Cross. In the West Bank town of Ramallah, a Palestinian offi- cial said two West Bank women drowned after their car was caught in a flash flood on Tues- day. Nablus Deputy Governor Annan Atirah said the women abandoned their vehicle after it got stuck on a flooded road, and their bodies were apparently swept away by surging waters. Their driver was hospitalized in critical condition. In the Gaza Strip, civil defense spokesman Mohammed al-Haj Yousef said storms cut electric- ity to thousands of Palestinian homes and rescuers were sent to evacuate dozens of people. Parts of Israel were bracing for snow a day after the military was forced to send helicopters and rubber dinghies to rescue residents stranded by flood- waters. In Jerusalem,' streets were mostly empty as light snow began to stick Wednes- day night. School was canceled for the next day because of the weather, which Israeli meteo- rologists said was the stormiest in a decade. The unusual weather over the past few days hit vulnerable Syrian refugees living in tent camps very hard, particularly some 50,000 sheltering in the Zaatari camp in Jordan's north- ern desert. Torrential rains over four days have flooded some 200 tents and forced women and infants to evacuate in tempera- tures that dipped below freez- ing at night, whipping wind and lashingrain. "It's been freezing cold and constant rain for the past four days," lamented Ahmad Tobara, 44, who evacuated his tent when its shafts submerged in flood water in Zaatari. A camp spokes- man said that by Wednesday, some 1,500 refugees had been displaced within the camp and were now living in mobile homes normally used for schools. Weather officials said winds exceeded 45 miles (70 kilome- ters) per hour and the rain left two feet (70 centimeters) of water on the streets. The storm dumped at least a' foot of snow on many parts of Jordan and was accompa- nied by lashing wind, lightning and thunder. It shut schools, stranded motorists and delayed international flights, Jorda- nian weatherman Mohammed Samawi said. The unusually heavy snowfall blocked streets in the capital Amman and iso- lated remote villages, prompt- ing warnings from authorities for people to stay home as snow plows tried to reopen clogged roads. It forced atleast 400 fami- lies to evacuate their homes and move to government shelters overnight. Samawi called it the "fiercest storm to hit the Mideast in the month of January in at least 30 years." The snowstorm followed four days of torrential rain, which caused, flooding in many areas across the country. In Lebanon, several days of winds and heavy rain along the coast and record snow in the mountains caused power out- ages across the country, blocked traffic and shut down mountain passes. Y i