The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 27, 2013 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS ALPENA, Michi. Michigan woman faces four years in animal cruelty case A northern Michigan woman faces up to four years in prison when she's sentenced in an animal cruelty case involving dogs and miniature horses. The Alpena News reports 35-year-old Jennifer Elen Tucker-' Richard pleaded guilty Monday to charges including animal cruelty or abandonment. Sentencing is set for April 22 in 26th Circuit Court. She also could be ordered to per- form 500 hours of communityser- a vice and pay fines. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. Governor Beebe vetoes abortion ban Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe on Tuesday vetoed a ban on most abortions in Arkansas at 20 weeks into a pregnancy, setting up an override fight with a Republican- controlled Legislature that has beenpushingfor morerestrictions on the procedure. Beebe said he vetoed the ban, which is based on the disputed belief that a fetus can feel pain at 20 weeks, because it runs afoul of the U.S. Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that legalized abortion until the point where fetuses can survive outside the * womb, usually at 22 to 24 weeks. The Republican sponsor of the measure said he'll seek to override Beebe's veto. "Because it would impose a ban on a woman's right to choose an elective, nontherapeutic abortion before viability, House Bill 1037, if it became law, would squarely contradict Supreme Court prece- dent," Beebe said in his veto letter. "When I was sworn in as governor I took an oath to preserve, protect and defend both the Arkansas Constitution and the Constitution of the United States. I take that oath seriously." " CARDON, Ohio Ohio teenager charged in school shooting pleads guilty A teenager charged with kill- ing three students at an Ohio high school pleaded guilty to aggravat- ed murder charges on Tuesday. Eighteen-year-old T.J. Lane entered the plea in a deal with prosecutors. Lane pleaded guilty to three counts of aggravated murder, among other charges. As partofthe agreement, prosecutors removed the death penalty speci- fications. Lane's appearance in the Geau- ga County courtroom came one day before the anniversary of the deadly shootings at Chardon High ' School, east of Cleveland. JERUSALEM, Israel Rockets launched from Gaza into Israel break three month ceasefire Gaza militants on Tuesday fired a rocket into Israel for the first time in three months, rat- tling a cross-border truce that has held since Israel's military offensive against the Hamas-run territory. Israel closed Gaza's main cargo crossing until further notice, an apparent warning to Gaza's Hamas rulers to clamp down on rocket squads. "Quiet will be met with quiet, missiles will be met with a response," said Israeli President Shimon Peres, adding that he believes both sides "have a deep interest in lowering the flames." Militants claiming affilia- tion with the Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, a violent offshoot of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah, movement took responsibility.. -Compiled from Daily wire reports SEMESTER. From Page 1A "transformative opportunity" for entrepreneurial students. "We want to empower stu- dents with a new space that will allow them to collaborate," Strauss said. "They can create something incredible that would be difficult to do while enrolled in full-time courses." Strauss said he expects the program to be a reality by fall 2013 or winter 2014. Business junior Mathias Arkayin, another member of the commission, hopes that students would use the Flipped Semester to undertake "risky" projects, such as starting a company, recording an album or filming a movie. Students would be able to appropriate time to these endeavors if a curriculum were designed to provide credit hours for them, he said. "The idea is that we want to let students take a calculated risk under an environment that is risk-averse," Arkayin said. "At the core, we are trying to free up student time so they can devote more of their time towards their passion." Although specific details regarding the admission pro- cess to the program haven't been decided, Engineering sopho- more Dan Rodak said Flipped Semester would be highly selec- tive. Though past entrepreneur- ial experience would not be a necessary prerequisite, it would signal a strong candidate. Different from existing inde- pendent study curriculum, the Flipped Semester would facilitate cross-communication among its members. Multiple students would be able to work together on the same entrepre- neurial initiative and gain help from one another. "There is going to be a com- munity formed, and they will be able to rely on one another and collaborate with one another in smaller space," Rodak said. Strauss believes the long- term entrepreneurial projects in which students would partake during the program would allow students to showcase their cre- ations to employers and demon- strate their capabilities outside of the classroom setting. The Flipped Semester orga- nizers are currently in meetings with University administrators to talk ahout credit- collahora- tion with other programs such as the Program in Entrepreneur- ship. To be a part of the "larger ecosystem" of the University, organizers said accreditation is important. ' CSG President Manish Parikh did not doubt the plausibility of the Flipped Semester, provided that administrators and stu- dents alike would back it. "(The Flipped Semester) is a bit of a crazy idea," Parikh said. "But I genuinely believe that those are the only ideas worth pursuing -crazy, ambitious, inspiring ideas." -- Daily Staff Reporter Giacomo Bologna contributed reporting. Blizzard slams Midwest, holds traffic and halts many flights 10( KA For t a maj parts Tues( of he still c previ trave homa Lakes Th strain elects home three the b Th of T rare ' ing p excep gency that ditch even "It snow every scecu ton, Wal-r las. H Mon tion, of Ka: "Tl parki that t said. soon.' Up and a the ti befor decla Foi schoc work break build tals and u Alt was i ruary it st on, grid. resto move In town son v of sr Power cut to of a roof. The storm was also blamed for the deaths of two ),000 homes and people who were killed in roll- over crashes Monday on Inter- businesses state 70 in Kansas. Heavy snow pulled down kNSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - large trees and caused roofs to he second time in a week, cave in at businesses in Belton or winter storm paralyzed and Warrensburg, Mo., where of the nation's midsection 13 inches of snow piled up. In day, dumping a fresh layer Columbia, a canopy over gas avy, wet snow atop cities pumps collapsed at a conve- hoked with piles from the nience store. ous system and making By noon, the storm had I perilous from the Okla- arrived in the Great Lakes with panhandle to the Great a mixture of blowing snow, sleet s. and frigid rain that disrupted e weight of the snow most forms of travel. Airlines ned power lines and cut canceled almost 500 flights at ricity to more than 100,000 Chicago's O'Hare and Midway s and businesses. At least airports alone. deaths were blamed on Elsewhere in Chicago, the lizzard. heavy weather threatened to .e Missouri Department hold down voter turnout in a transportation issued a special election to choose the "no travel" advisory, urg- likely replacement for former eople to stay off highways Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. The city t in case of a dire emer- deployed extra resources to y. Conditions were so bad keep polls accessible. Its full some snowplows slid into fleet of 284 snowplows was out es, underlining the danger clearing pavement. to well-equipped travelers. The wintry mix also blew 's straight hell. It's through Iowa, which had been ing, blowing, drifting, expected to escape any seri- 'thing," said Robert Bran- ous snowfall. Parts of the state im, a trucker from Camp- could now get as much as a foot. Ill., who was hauling Fueled by a strong low pres- Mart merchandise to Dal- sure system, the crescent- le had been stranded since shaped storm began Sunday day evening at Beto Junc- in Texas, then headed north. about 80 miles southwest It was expected to drop up to nsas City. 6 inches of snow on Chicago he cars are stuck in the before crawling east across ng lot. Some of the trucks Michigan toward northern New tried to leave got stuck," he England. "I'm not leaving anytime Schools and major high- ways in the Texas Panhandle to 10 inches had fallen in remained closed for a second round Kansas City, Mo., by day Tuesday. Interstate 27 ime the snow tapered off reopened between Amarillo and e midday. Mayor Sly James Lubbock, about 120 miles to the red a state of emergency. south, but the Texas National r a second straight week, Guard was still working to clear slchildren, government much of Interstate 40 from the ers and others caught a Oklahoma border to the New as most schools and office Mexico state line. lings were closed. Hospi- Some other roads reopened closed outpatient centers as sunny conditions began to rgent-care clinics. thaw ice and snow-packed sur- though the amount of snow faces. not unusual for late Feb- Just a day earlier, whiteout , the snow was so heavy conditions had made virtually ressed everything it fell all Panhandle roads impass- especially the electrical able. A hurricane-force gust of Power was slowly being 75 mph was recorded in Ama- red as the thick clouds rillo, which got 17 inches. The d on. heaviest snowfall was in Follett, the northwest Oklahoma Texas, with 21 inches. of Woodward, a per- In Oklahoma, 600 snow- was killed after 15 inches plows and trucks worked to now brought down part reopen roads. Free Syrian Army fighters, sing revolutionary songs as they gather at one of their caves, in Jabal al-Zaweya, in Idlib Province, Syria on Monday. Brutal clash between Syrian rebels and gov. forces United Nations reports 70,000 dead since conflict began in 2011 BEIRUT (AP) - Syrian reb- els battled government troops near a landmark 12th century mosque in the northern city of Aleppo on Tuesday, while fierce clashes raged around a police academy west of the city, activ- ists said. The fighting near the Umayyad Mosque in the walled Old City threatened to further damage the historic structure, part of which was burned dur- ing clashes last year. Since July 2012, government forces and rebels seeking to topple President Bashar Assad have been battling over Alep- po, the country's largest city and a major prize in the civil war. While rebels have gradu- ally expanded the amount of turf under their control, seven months of street fighting, air- strikes and shelling have left much of the city, considered one of Syria's most beautiful, in ruins. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported intense clashes with heavy gunfire and explosions near the mosque. Syria's state news agency said "terrorists" had detonated explosives near the building's south wall, caus- ing "material damages." Assad's regime refers to the opposition as "terrorists." The mosque, also known as the Great Mosque of Aleppo, sits near a medieval covered market in the Old City, which is a UNESCO World Heritage site. The mosque was heavily damaged in October, 2012, just weeks after a fire gutted the market. Syria's nearly 2-year-old civil war has left its mark on other gems of the country's rich archaeological and cultural heritage. At least five of Syria's six World Heritage sites have been damaged in the fight- ing, according to UNESCO, the U.N.'s cultural agency. Loot- ers have broken into one of the world's best-preserved Crusad- er castles, Crac des Chevaliers, and ruins in the ancient city of Palmyra have been damaged. Both rebels and regime forc- es have turned some of Syria's significant historic sites into bases, including citadels and Turkish bath houses, while thieves have stolen artifacts from archaeological excava- tions and, to a lesser extent, museums. To the west of Aleppo, activ- ists reported fresh fighting Tuesday near the police acad- emy that has become a key gov- ernment military installation. The observatory said the two sides were shelling each other's positions while the gov- ernment launched airstrikes in the area. Online gambling legal in NJ Online gambling will raise $235 million in revenue TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Get ready for betting in your jam- mies, at work, from the kitchen table, or at the beach: New Jer- seyans - and possibly manyoth- ers - will soon be able to gamble over the Internet. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie signed a bill Tuesday legalizing Internet gambling, hours after the state legislature passed a revised bill that made the changes he wanted. They included setting a 10-year trial period for online betting, and raising the taxes on the Atlantic City casinos' online winnings from 10 to15 percent. New Jersey became the third state in the nation to legalize gambling over the Internet. The lawmakers' votes and Christie's signature marked the largest expansion of legalized gambling in New Jersey since the first casino began operating in Atlan- tic City in 1978. Nevada and Delaware have passed laws legalizing Internet betting, which also is going on offshore, untaxed and unregu- lated. "This was a critical decision, and one that I did not make lightly," Christie said. "But with the proper regulatory frame- work and safeguards that I insisted on including in the bill, I am confident that we are offer- ing a responsible yet exciting option that will make Atlantic City more competitive while also bringing financial benefits to New Jersey as a whole." The idea is to help the strug- gling casinos by attracting new gamblers who are not now visit- ing the casinos. The comps, like free hotel rooms, show tickets, meals or other freebies, would be accrued from online play, but would have to be redeemed in person at a casino, presumably enticing a player to spend more money while there. Tony Rodio, president of the Casino Association of New Jer- sey, welcomed the new opportu- nities for his industry. "The objectives for the con- tinued stabilization, develop- ment and success of Atlantic City that Gov. Christie and our legislature has facilitated over the past couple of years have taken a significant step forward today with the passage of Inter- net gaming," he said. The advent of Internet gam- bling is particularly good news for one of Atlantic City's most struggling casinos, The Atlantic Club Casino Hotel. It is in the process of being bought by the parent company of PokerStars, the world's largestpoker web site. "Our state leaders have stepped up, worked together and seized this moment," said Michael Frawley, the casino's chief operating officer. "New Jersey will be better for it as the benefits of I-gaming for our state are only beginning to be fully appreciated. We strongly believe that the economic development and reinvestment in Atlantic City, driven through I-gaming, will be remembered as a criti- cal turning point for this proud town. We look forward to the renewed success this new law will surely bring." I