_ CWS The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com 5A - Friday, September 26, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com5A - Friday, September 26, 2014 NEWS BRIEFS OMAHA American recovers from Ebola After three weeks in isolation, an American doctor who con- tracted Ebola while working in West Africa says he's grateful for the specialized care that allowed him to recover and remains con- cerned about the people he was trying to help. Rick Sacra, 51, was released from the Nebraska Medical Center Thursday after the federal Cen- ters for Disease Control and Pre- vention cleared him. He returned home to Holden, Massachusetts Thursday evening. "The CDC has declared me safe and free of virus! Thank God! I love you all," Sacra said with a smile at a news conference as his wife and many of the people who cared for him since he arrived in Omaha on Sept. 5 watched. MOORE, Okla. No injuries reported in Alaska earthquake TU.S. AIR FORCC, STAFF SGT. SHAWN NICKEL/AP In this photo released by the U.S. Air Force, a U.S. Navy F-1TE Super Hornet receives fael from a KC-135 Stratotanker over northern Iraq after conducting airstrikes in Syria as part of U.S. led coalition airstrikes on the Islamic State group and other targets in Syria. U.S. hitsal-Qaida cell planningf terror attacks Magnitude 6.2 quake causes only minor damage ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - A powerful earth- quake shook a large swath of Alaska on Thursday morning, knocking things off shelves and causing peo- ple to take cover but bring- ing no immediate reports of injuries or major damage. The quake had a prelimi- nary magnitude of 6.2, and it hit at 9:51 a.m. The epi- center was about 80 miles northwest of the state's largest city, where it was strongly felt, the Alaska Earthquake Center said. The quake lingered for at least a minute in some areas. The earthquake center is in Fairbanks, 250 miles northeast of the epicenter, but it was felt, even there, said Sara Meyer, a center research technician. "It was about 15 seconds of long-period shaking, sort of like you're on a boat," Meyer said. Staffers at the Nesbett Courthouse in downtown Anchorage felt the shaking in their office on the top floor of the six-story build- ing. "My computer tower fell off my desk," judicial assistant Ellen Bozzini said. Everyone stood in doorways until an evacu- ation was ordered. Then they took the stairs out- side, where they waited for about 20 minutes before being allowed back in the building. There were no immedi- ate reports of major damage or injury, and no tsunami was expected, according to an emergency manage- ment official. The fact that the earthquake's center was, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, about 63 miles underground soft- ened its impact on the state, experts said. Bryan Fisher, incident commander for the state emergency operations center, said the office has received scattered reports of things flying off shelves. But there have been no reports of any infrastruc- ture damage. The Alaska Railroad stopped all trains to check the tracks and bridges for damages, which is a pro- cedure after earthquakes, Fischer said. In the Matanuska- Susitna Borough north of Anchorage, closer to the epicenter, there were reports of books knocked off shelves but no serious damage, borough spokes- woman Patty Sullivan said. "We all felt it," she said, adding she was sitting in her parked minivan when the quake happened. She believed someone was play- ing a joke on her and pur- posely shaking her van. "I got out, expecting to find a laughing face," she said. In Willow, about 40 miles north of Anchorage, a clerk at the town's hard- ware and grocery store said everything shook but noth- ingfell off the shelves. "Everything just rocked around," Anne Holliday said. "It's an old building, just rickety." Debra Pearce, who works for Alaska Auction Company, said she has lived in Alaska for years and this was the strongest quake she felt since a 1964 temblor. That earthquake - a magnitude 9.2 - was the second-highest magni- tude ever recorded, and the quake and resulting tsuna- mis killed 131 people. "This was akin to that, the way it hit real hard and rolled and rolled and rolled and rolled, and you didn't know if it was just going to pick up or not," Pearce said. Sandy Lee, who owns Sandy Espre Cafe in mid- town Anchorage, said she didn't feel the earthquake as she was driving to work. When she got to her busi- ness, she didn't know what had happened. Coffee syrup bottles littered the floor, and dolls had fallen off of shelves. Man stabs and kills Arab states two women before police shoot him An "angry employee" at a food distribution center in sub- urban Oklahoma City stabbed two women, killing one of them, Thursday before an off-duty law enforcement officer shot the sus- pect, police said. MoorePolice Sgt. JeremyLewis told reporters at the scene that the suspect attacked the first two people he encountered at Vaughan Foods in Moore before the off- duty officer who was working at the business shot him. The surviv- ing victim and the suspect, a man, were both hospitalized. The motive for the attack was unclear, but Lewis said the sus- pect and the victims were appar- ently not involved with each other outside of their work at the busi- ness. PLACERVALE4alif. Amid drought, rain treats Northern California wildfire A day of light rain brought big gains against a Northern Cali- fornia wildfire Thursday, dra- matically reducing the number of homes that are threatened by the flames from several thou- sand to just hundreds. In addition, calls for evacu- ation in two communities were reduced from mandatory to vol- untary, leaving just one neigh- borhood under strict evacuation orders, the El Dorado County Sheriff's Department said in a statement. It wasn't immedi- ately clear. how many people remained away from their homes. The rains had brought fears of flooding and dangerous con- ditions in the King Fire's huge burn area east of Sacramento, but they remained light and helpful to the firefight. A flash flood warning in effect for sev- eral hours was called off in early evening. LIMASSOL, Cyprus Syrian refugees refuse to leave ship More than 300 people, apparent refugees fleeing from Syria, refused to leave a cruise ship that rescued them from a small boat stranded off Cyprus, a cruise line official said Thursday. Salamis Cruise Lines Man- aging Director Kikis Vasiliou said that the people are insist- ing that they be taken to Italy instead. "They want us to send them to Italy," Vasiliou told report- ers at the east Mediterranean island's main Limassol port. "The authorities, they have to decide what they want to do." Vasiliou blamed Cypriot authorities for keeping him in the dark about how they intend to resolve the situation. -Compiled from join American coalition in skies over Syria BEIRUT (AP) - When the United States opened its aerial campaign against the Islamic State group in Syria this week, its first salvo also hit an al-Qaida cell it says was planning terror attacks - a move that has injected more chaos into the conflict and could help President Bashar Assad. Amid fears they could be targeted next, two rebel factions already have evacuated their bases, and residents in areas under the control of other Islamic brigades cower at home, wondering whether their districts willbe hit. While al-Qaida's branch in Syria, known as the Nusra Front, is considered a terrorist group by the United States, among the Syrian opposition it has a degree of support and respect because its fighters are on the front lines along- side other rebels battling Assad's forces. To them, the U.S. strikes, which hit several Nusra Front facilities and killed dozens of its fight- ers, appeared to signal an American move to take out any rebel faction that adheres to an Islamic ide- ology - a large segment of the rebellion against Assad. U.S. officials say the strikes were aimed at a cell of hardened jihadis within the Nusra Front called the Khorasan Group, which Washington says poses a direct and imminent threat to U.S. and Western inter- ests. On Thursday, FBI direc- tor James Comey acknowl- edged that the U.S. did not have precise intelligence on where or when the group might attack, adding that there was no indica- tion the airstrikes had dis- rupted the cell's plots. "It's hard to say wheth- er that's tomorrow, three weeks from now or three months from now. But it's the kind of threat you have to operate under the assumption that it is tomor- row," Comey told reporters in Washington. U.S. intelligence offi- cials say the group has been trying to perfect a non-metallic bomb that can get past airport secu- rity and beused to blow up an airplane in flight. Ukrainian leader says' peace is on the horizon KI - U Thur dang has confli sepat east lery rang large In Kiev plan Porn no d my F and t dang is bel Po inclu majo in th dent refor coun ship i by 20 Bu much ence abou east fight ment kille since prop: out s presi foun this President the fighting. The first step was a Poroshenko cease-fire called three weeks ago that in the confident in. Mginning was- repeat- edly violated. In recent reform plan days, reports of violations have decreased notably, EV, Ukraine (AP) although on Thursday the kraine's leader said city council of Donetsk, sday that "the most the largest rebel strong- erous part of the war" hold in the region, said passed and that the that artillery fire and other ict with pro-Russia explosions could be heard ratists in the country's throughout the city during is on the wane. Artil- the day. fire, however, still Poroshenko also said out in the region's he is working to arrange st city. a meeting within the next a news conference in few weeks with Russian outlining a six-year President Vladimir Putin, for Ukraine, Petro but stressed it was contin- shenko said: "I have gent on whether the cease- oubt whatsoever that fire was implemented or eace plan will work not. hat the main and most Poroshenko, who has erous part of the war been at pains to justify hind." striking a deal with the roshenko's plan Russia-backed rebels, spent des reforming all much of the news confer- r government agencies ence defending his decision e country. The presi- to sign a peace agreement said he hoped those with the insurgents and ms would make the said he believed Russian try ready for member- policy toward Ukraine had nthe European Union turned a corner. 20. "At the beginning, Rus- it Poroshenko spent sia's objective was clear," of the news confer- he said. "Certain people in fielding questions the Kremlin administra- t a conflict in the tion thought Ukraine was of the country, where a giant with feet of clay. ing between govern- They thought they could and rebel forces has just push us, and the entire d at least 3,500 people southeast of the country mid-April. His peace would dissipate." osal, which was laid "I would sincerely like ;oon after he became to believe that the relation dent in June, were the of Russia (toward Ukraine) dation for agreements and their plans are chang- month aimed at ending ing - there has been a kind of transformation." Ukraine and Western countries claim that Russia sent troops and equipment into eastern Ukraine to back the separatist rebels, something Russia denies. Russia was a party to peace talks that led to a cease-fire in the region on Sept. S. In another agree- ment signed Saturday, all sides agreed to remove heavy artillery from the front lines, creating a buf- fer zone that would help enforce the cease-fire more effectively. Foreign ministers from the Group of Seven lead- ing industrialized nations praised the cease-fire deal reached in the Belarusian capital, Minsk, and con- demned violations of it in a statement issued Thurs- day. "The cease-fire agree- ment offers an important opportunity to find a dura- ble political solution to the conflict, in full respect of Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity," they said, urging Russiato with- draw all of its forces and weapons from Ukraine. The G-7 added that sanctions 'against Rus- sia "can only be rolled back when Russia meets its commitments related to the cease-fire and the Minsk agreements, and respects Ukraine's sov- ereignty," warning that in case of adverse action its members would stand ready to "further inten- sify the costs on Russia for non-compliance." TANYA BINDRA/AP In this photo taken o Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2014, a healthcare worker sprays disinfectant in the area they found a man suspected of suffering from the Eola virus in Kenema, Sierra Leone, Thursday, Sept. 25,2014. Officials quarantine sick in1 Sierra Leone D c5 FR Leon Leon the d ing more ple l West strug Ebola claim lives. Wi tricts abou Leon are wher are In pa and i ria w have outbi have kets deliv slowE "T ate n respt ed d Leon "The with venti comi numt expo situa )istricts are deteriorate." President Barack ealed off to Obama warned a meeting at the United Nations on )ntrol Ebola Thursday that the world is not doing enough to outbreak stop the outbreak, say- ing there is "a significant ETOWN, Sierra gap between where we e (AP) - Sierra are and where we need e on Thursday took to be." ramatic step of seal- The Ebola outbreak, off districts where the world's largest ever, than 1 million peo- has hit Sierra Leone, ive as it and other Liberia and Guinea hard- African countries est and is believed to gle to control the have sickened more than a outbreak that has 6,200 people. Senegal ted thousands of and Nigeria have also had Ebola cases, but it ith three new dis- appears the disease has under quarantine, been contained in those t one-third of Sierra countries. e's 6 million people U.S. health officials now living in areas warn that the number e their movements of infected people could heavily restricted., explode to 1.4 million by arts of Sierra Leone mid-January, adding that n neighboring Libe- the outbreak could peak rhere these cordons well below that if efforts been used in this to control the outbreak reak, food prices are ramped up. soared, some mar- The outbreak's have shut and the unprecedented scale and ery of goods has geographic spread have ed. pushed governments to here is a desper- impose severe measures ieed to step up our like the cordons, but the, unse to this dread- disease has continued lisease," the Sierra to overwhelm efforts to e government said. contain it. prognosis is that In an address to Sierra out additional inter- Leone on Wednesday ons or changes in night, President Ernest munity behavior, the Bai Koroma put Port bers will increase Loko, Bombali, and Moy- nentially and the amba districts under tion will rapidly isolation with immedi- ate effect, allowing only people delivering essen- tial services to enter and circulate within these areas. The restrictions will remain in place until the chain of transmis- sion is broken, officials said. In other parts of Sierra Leone, including the capital, Freetown, homes will be put under quarantine when cases are identified, according to a government state- ment. Security forces surrounded a house in a Freetown slum on Wednesday, quarantin- ing residents inside, after a popular herbal- ist who lived there died from Ebola. The forces will ensure that no one leaves or enters until it's clear that no one else in the house has been infected. Two districts near the outbreak's epicenter - Kenema and Kailahun - were isolated about two months ago. In all, the movement of more than 2 million people is now restricted in Sierra Leone. A sharp increase of cases in the capital is driving the outbreak's spread in Sierra Leone, the World Health Orga- nization said Thursday, also noting that the three districts newly cordoned off are experiencing increased infections. FOLLOW ME, TWEET ME, IF YOU WANT TO READ ME @michigandaily 4 I I