The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, January 13, 2014 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, January13, 2014 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS GREEN OAK TOWNSHIP, Mich. Woman allows her child to drive, receives probation A southeastern Michigan woman has received probation for letting her 9-year-old son drive around their neighbor- hood. Thirty-three-year-old Leah Jaglowski pleaded guilty Nov. 19 to allowing an unlicensed minor to drive. In exchange, a charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor is being dismissed. Lenawee County District Judge L. Suzanne Geddes on Thursday sentenced Jaglowski on one year's probation, telling her the action was "quite neg- ligent" and more than just bad judgment. DRY BRANCH, W. VA. Water tainted by coal companies in West Virginia For Bonnie Wireman, the white plastic bag covering her kitchen faucet is a reminder that she can't drink the water. The 81-year-oldwomanplaced it there after forgetting several times the tap water was tainted after a coal processing chemical leaked into the area's water sup- ply. Every time she turned on the water, she quickly stopped and cleaned her hands with peroxide - just to make sure she was safe. The widow of a coal miner, Wireman was angered about the chemical spill that's deprived 300,000 West Virginians of clean tap water for four days, but doesn't blame the coal or chemi- cal industries. TRENTON, NJ. Christie believes controversy won't affect future goals Prominent Republicans leapt to GOP Gov. Chris Christie's defense on Sunday, insisting that an ongoing traffic scandal wouldn't ruin any presidential ambitions, while Democrats say it's difficult to believe such a hands-on manager knew noth- ing about a plan by a top aide to close lanes at a bridge into New York City. Politicians from both sides of the aisle took to the Sunday talk shows to debate the fallout from the traffic jams near the George Washington Bridge in September and any role Chris- tie may have played. Documents show Christie's aides appeared to engineer lane closures at the heavily traveled bridge for polit- ical retribution. Republican National Com- mittee Chairman Reince Prie- bus told NBC's "Meet the Press" Christie could move past the scandal and still win support from primary voters in the 2016 presidential race. TEHRAN, Iran Nuclear program to be open to daily inspection in Iran Iran has agreed to limit ura- nium enrichment and to open its nuclear program to daily inspection by international experts starting Jan. 20, set- ting the clock running on a six-month deadline for a final nuclear agreement, officials said Sunday. In exchange, the Islamic Republic will get a relaxation of the financial sanctions that have been crippling its econo- my. The announcement that Iran and six world powers had agreed on the plan for implementing an interim agreement came first from Iranian officials and was later confirmed elsewhere. Some U.S. lawmakers have been leery of the agreement, calling for tougher sanctions against Iran, rather than any loosening of controls. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Court to rule on abortion clinics as a protest-free zone Members of the Knesset guard carry the coffin of former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon at the Knesset plaza, in Jerusalem on Sunday. " "e Israelis pay final tribute to former Prime M in ise Sharon guided Israel through 1982 war with Lebanon JERUSALEM (AP) - Israelis from all walks of life flocked to parliament Sunday to catch a glimpse of Ariel Sharon's coffin and pay their final respects to the iconic former prime minis- ter and general. A stream of visitors rang- ing from former army com- rades to political allies - to citizens who only knew him from afar remembered Sharon as a decisive leader, for better or for worse, and one of the final heroes of Israel's founding gen- eration. "Words escape me. He was just a man who was larger than life," said a choked-up Shlomo Mann, 68, who served under Sharon's command in the 1973 Mideast war. "Those who didn't know him from up close can't truly understand what a legend he was. There will never be any- one else like him." The 85-year-old Sharon died Saturday eight years after a devastating stroke left him in a coma. In a career that stretched across much of Israel's 65-year existence, his life was closely intertwined with the country's history. He was a leader known for his exploits on the battle- field, masterminding Israel's invasion of Lebanon, building Jewish settlements on war- won land and then, late in life, destroyingsome thathe deemed no longer useful when he with- drew from the Gaza Strip. As one of Israel's most famous generals, the man known as "Arik" was renowned forbold tactics and an occasion- al refusal to obey orders. To his supporters, he was a war hero; to his critics, a war criminal. As prime minister late in life, he was embraced by the public as a grandfatherly figure who provided stability in times of turmoil. "Arik was, first and foremost, a warrior and a commander, among the Jewish people's greatest generals in the cur- rent era and throughout its his- tory," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a fierce political rival of Sharon, in the Likud Party, said Sunday. "I think he represents the generation of Jewish warriors that arose for our people upon the resumption of our independence." President Shimon Peres - a lifelong friend and rival - and former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who succeeded Sharon after the 2006 stroke, were among those who paused before the closed flag-draped coffin displayed in a plaza in front of the Knesset and sur- rounded by an honor guard. But the event was mostly an occasion for everyday Israelis to honor him. With tears streaking behind dark sunglasses, 44-year-old Anat Amir said she felt com- pelled to bid farewell. "These are tears of pain and parting but also joy in a way for him since now he can finally rest," she said. "He was a leader you could count on, someone you could trust. He looked into the future, relied on the expe- rience of the past and had the courage to make tough deci- sions and carry them out." Norman Zysblat, 64, called Sharon a "hero of Israel," whose death left the 90-year-old Peres as perhaps the last remnant of Israel's greatest generation. He recalled crossing the Suez Canal in 1973 under Sharon's command, a move widely seen as turning a war against Egypt and Syria in Israel's favor. "I saw and felt firsthand the strength he gave the soldiers. He was the one who pushed ahead and provided the spirit," Zysblat said. "He was one of the greats. When the history of Israel is written, he will be in the first row." News of Sharon dominated Israeli newspapers. Israel's three main television stations all broadcast the memorial live. Similar case upheld in 2000 Supreme Court decision BOSTON (AP) - Eleanor McCullen clutches a baby's hat knit in pink and blue as she patrols a yellow semicircle painted on the sidewalk outside a Planned Parenthood health clinic on a frigid December morning with snow in the fore- cast. The painted line marks 35 feet from the clinic's entrance and that's where the 77-year-old McCullen and all other abortion protesters and supporters must stay under a Massachusetts law that is being challenged at the U.S. Supreme Court as an uncon- stitutional infringement on free speech. Arguments are set for Wednesday. Outside the line, McCullen and others are free to approach anyone with any message they wish. They risk arrest if they get closer to the door. With her pleasant demean- or and grandmotherly mien, McCullen has become the new face of a decades-old fight between abortion opponents asserting their right to try to change the minds of women seeking abortions and abortion providers claiming that patients should be able to enter their facilities without being impeded or harassed. In 2000, the Supreme Court upheld a different buffer zone in Colorado in a decision that some free speech advocates, who also support abortion rights, heavily criticized. Noted First Amend- ment lawyer Floyd Abrams recently called the decision in Hill v. Colorado "what may well be the most indefensible First Amendment ruling so far this century." The three dissenters in that case - Justices Anthony Kenne- dy, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas - remain on the court. They have been joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito, who may be will- ing to provide the two additional votes in support of the protest- ers. McCullen and other abortion opponents sued over the limits on their activities at Planned Parenthood health centers in Boston, Springfield and Worcester. At the latter two sites, the protesters say they have little chance of reaching patients arrivingby car because they must stay 35 feet from the entrance to those buildings' parking lots. Planned Parenthood pro- vides health exams for women, cancer screenings, tests for sexually transmitted diseases, birth control and abortions at the clinic, although on this day Boston clinic employees said no abortions were performed. McCullen doesn't know which services arriving patients are seeking, but she said that women arriving with someone else usu- ally are about to have an abortion because they need a ride home. Sometimes McCullen is able to start a conversation before a woman reaches the yellow line. Protesters can usually be close by when people emerge from taxicabs. But when a couple approached from the opposite way, McCul- len could only call out to them. "There's so much help available. Can we just talk for five min- utes?" she said. The man and woman showed no reaction and entered the clinic unimpeded. "This is what we have to deal with," McCullen said, on the first of two days in mid-Decem- ber on which she spoke with an Associated Press reporter out- side the Planned Parenthood facility. Planned Parenthood work- ers and state officials said that the buffer zone has reduced significantly the harassment of patients and clinic employ- ees. Before the 35-foot zone went into effect in 2007, pro- testers could stand next to the entrance and force patients to squeeze by, said Marty Walz, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood League of Mas- sachusetts. While in the state House, Walz was the lead spon- sor of the law. Walz said safety is para- mountforpatients and her staff. Other than Walz, people at the clinic refused to have their faces photographed because they fear anti-abortion activists would post the pictures online. Clinic director Cheryl Sacks said she is granted a special registration status for her car to keep the information private. The concern about safety is not theoretical. In 1994, a gun- man killed two receptionists and wounded five employees and vol- unteers at a Planned Parenthood facility and another abortion clinic in nearby Brookline. The most recent killing was in 2009, when Dr. George Til- ler, who performed abortions, was shot in a church in Wichita, Kan. "We're concerned for patient and staff safety if the current law is overturned," Walz said. Mark Rienzi, the Catholic University law professor who represents the protesters, said there has not been a document- ed case of violence at a Massa- chusetts clinic since the 1994 killings. "The idea that someone like that will be deterred by a painted line on the ground is nonsensical," he said. "In the meantime, you shouldn't be able to use that to stop women from being offered these other options. As a practical matter, that's what happens." Other state and federal laws already protect health center workers and patients, as well as access to clinics, Rienzi said. 'Sister Wives' reality TV stars react to cohabitation decision Federal judge ruled in Dec. that family could cohabitate SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - There was no fist-pumping or wild celebrations by the polyga- mous family that stars in the TLC reality TV show "Sister Wives" when a federal judge in Utah struck down key parts of the state's polygamy laws. In an interview with The Associated Press, Kody Brown and his four wives said they felt humbled and cried when they heard in mid-December the judge ruled in their favor in a lawsuit they brought against Utah in July 2011 after they fled the state for Las Vegas under the threat of prosecution. "The first thing I thought about was all those families that for 100 years had lived and loved in obscurity, just in secre- cy," said Kody Brown in a phone interview from Las Vegas. "Not being able to claim their family or openly love one another." Kody and his wives - Meri, Janelle, Christine and Robyn - said they hope the landmark ruling stands and enables other polygamous families in Utah to live open and free without fear- ing prosecution. "It's been incredible not hav- ing to live in fear anymore and being able to fully claim who we are," said Christine Brown, Kody's third wife. "We wish that for every plural family out there." The Utah attorney general's office has not yet decided if they will appeal the ruling, said spokesman Ryan Bruckman. The state's new attorney gen- eral, Sean Reyes, has been in office for less than two weeks. Jonathan Turley, the Browns' Washington, D.C.- based attorney, said he's been told Utah will appeal. He said he's eager to defend the rul- ing before the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. U.S. District Judge Clark Waddoups said in the decision handed down on Dec. 13 that a provision in Utah's bigamy law forbidding cohabitation with another person violated the First Amendment, which guar- antees the freedom of religion. The ruling decriminalizes polygamy, but bigamy - hold- ing marriage licenses with multiple partners - is still illegal. Utah's law was consid- ered stricter than the laws in 49 other states because of the cohabitation clause. If the rul- ing stands, Utah's law would be identical to most other states that prohibit people from hav- ing multiple marriage licenses. In most polygamous families in Utah, the man is legally married to one woman but only "spiritu- ally married" to the others. There are an estimated 38,000 fundamentalist Mor- mons who practice or believe in polygamy, most living in Utah and other Western states. Polygamy is a legacy of the early teachings of the Mormon church but has no place in mod- ern Mormonism, church offi- cials said in a statement. The Salt Lake City-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints abandoned polygamy in 1890 and it strictly prohibits the practice today for its 15 million members worldwide. Though some have correlat- ed the Browns fight to decrimi- nalize polygamy with efforts to legalize gay marriage, the Browns don't see the two as being the same. "Though we support the choices of other people orga- nizing their families however they choose, our argument has always been very different," Kody Brown said. "What we've been looking for is simply to live free and to be able to live our religion without the threat of prosecution." The family says they never intended to challenge Utah's polygamy law in court when they decided to do the show. Janelle Brown, Kody's second wife, said they wanted to dis- pel the negative stereotype of polygamous families. "We were tired of Warren Jeffs being the only image peo- ple had of polygamy," she said. One of the most infamous polygamists, Warren Jeffs, is serving a life sentence in Texas for sexually assaulting two underage girls he considered his brides. Jeffs still rules a sect of fundamentalist Mormons on the Utah-Arizona border from jail. The Browns are now liv- ing in four new houses in a Las Vegas cul-de-sac. That's where TLC films episodes of the show, which debuted in 2010 with footage of the family at their house in northern Utah. But despite an arrangement that looks comfortable, Kody Brown said they miss living in the large house they called home in Utah. In fact, they miss Utah dearly. They said leaving the state has left many scars for them and their children. They fled in January 2011 after local pros- ecutors opened a criminal big- amy investigation after the first episodes aired. THE BIGGEST & NEWEST BACK TO SCHOOL POSTER SAL 100 S -ie % Most Images Only $7, $8 and $9