. The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam Wednesday, January 20, 2010 - 3A ,w The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, January 20, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING " Lawmakers mull changes to Mich. medical pot law Patients authorized to use marijuana for medical purposes in Michigan would no longer be allowed to grow their own supply under legislation discussed Tues- day in a state Senate committee. The proposal could develop into the first move to change a state law approved by voters in Novem- ber 2008. Republicans who back the new legislation say it's not an attempt to undo the law, but their measures would tighten control " over how the drug is distributed. Under the new proposal, the state would license up to 10 mar- ijuana-growing facilities rather than letting thousands of autho- rized patients or caregivers grow their own. Marijuana would then " be distributed through pharma- cists after patients get a prescrip- tion from a doctor. Critics say that's an unwork- able proposal that would make getting marijuana more difficult for patients who use it to relieve pain and other symptoms. TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. Asian carp DNA found in Lake Michigan A federal official says DNA from Asian carp has been detected in Lake Michigan for the first time - but it's still not certain whether the fish themselves have entered the lake. Gen. John Peabody of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says one sample of genetic material from the invasive carp has been found in Calumet Harbor, which is part of Lake Michigan. He says the Army Corps of Engineers still doesn't intend to close the locks and gates that form the final barrier between water- ways near Chicago and the lake. The Supreme Court had refused yesterday to order their immedi- ate closure. Asian carp have been migrat- ing up the Mississippi and Illinois rivers. Scientists fear if they reach the Great Lakes, they could dis- rupt the food chain and endanger the $7 billion fishery. ATLANTA * Man found guilty for slapping a child in Ga. Walmart A Georgia man has been found guilty of second degree child cru- elty for slapping a crying 2-year- old at a Walmart. Roger Stephens of Stone Moun- tain was convicted yesterday in a Gwinnett County bench trial, which is held without a jury. Stephens, who was 61 when arrested, will spend six months in jail followed by six months of home confinement. Authorities say the girl and her mother were shopping on Aug. 31, when the toddler began crying. The police report says Stephens approached the mother and said, "If you don't shut that baby up, I will shut her up for you." Authorities say Stephens then slapped her four or five times. Accordingto police,Stephens said: "See, I told you I would shut her up." A call to Stephens' court- appointed lawyer was not immedi- ately returned. CAIRO Death toll rises to 7 in Egyptian storms A second day of heavy rains and flooding in Egypt's Sinai Desert killed a woman and destroyed hundreds of homes, raising the toll for two days of storms to seven dead, the government said. Spokesman Magdy Rady said yesterday a woman died and 12 people injured in southern Sinai and 250 homes were damaged. Six people, including a Brit- ish tourist, were killed Monday in Egypt during the storms. One person died in Israel when her car was trapped in a flash flood. Egypt's state news agency said all 75 patients at the El-Arish gen- eral hospital in the Sinai had to be evacuated when the first floor was flooded. Some 300 families were also displaced. In the southern city of Aswan, floods and strong winds disrupted power in several neighborhoods. - Compiled from Daily wire reports San Diego Mayor Sanders defends gay marriage Massachusetts State Sen. Scott Brown (R-Wrentham) celebrates in Boston on Tuesday night after winning a special election held to fill the U.S. Senate seat left vacant by the death of Sen. Edward Kennedy. Brown defeated Democratic Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley and independent Joseph L Kennedy. GOP's, Brown wins Sen. Kenn11edys s eat Victory eliminates Dems' filibuster- proof majority in the Senate BOSTON (AP) - In an epic upset in liberal Massachusetts, Republican Scott Brown rode a wave of voter anger to win the U.S. Senate seat held by the late Edward M. Kennedy for nearly half a century, leaving Presi- dent Barack Obama's health care overhaul in doubt and mar- ring the end of his first year in office. Addressing an exuberant victory celebration last night, Brown declared he was "ready to go to Washington without delay" as the crowd chanted, "Seat him now." Democrats indicated they would, deflat- ing a budding controversy over whether they would try to block Brown long enough to complete congressional passage of the health care plan he has prom- ised to oppose. "The people of Massachu- setts have spoken. We welcome Scott Brown to the Senate and will move to seat him as soon as the proper paperwork has been received," said Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. Massachu- setts Secretary of State Wil- liam Galvin said he would notify the Senate on Wednesday that Brown had been elected. The loss by the once-favored Democrat Martha Coakley in the Democratic stronghold was a stunning embarrassment for the White House after Obama rushed to Boston on Sunday to try to save the foundering can- didate. Her defeat yesterday sig- naled big political problems for The Pr nceton MCAT 10 Point -Avg Score increase 12 Point -Top Quarter Increase 105 hours live instruction 5 expert instructors MCAT COURSES START AS EARLY AS JAN 17! 0MwR ie lPrinoetonReview.corm Corner of S. University& S. Forest the president's party this fall when House, Senate and guber- natorial candidates are on the ballot nationwide. Brown's victory was the third major loss for Democrats in statewide elections since Obama became president. Republicans won governors' seats in Virginia and New Jersey in November. "I have no interest in sugar- coating what happened in Mas- sachusetts," said Sen. Robert Menendez, the head of the Sen- ate Democrats' campaign com- mittee. "There is a lot of anxiety in the country right now. Ameri- cans are understandably impa- tient." Brown will become the 41st Republican in the 100-member Senate, which could allow the GOP to block the president's health care legislation. Demo- crats needed Coakley to win for a 60th vote to thwart Republi- can filibusters. The trouble may go deeper: Democratic lawmak- ers could read the results as a vote against Obama's broader agenda, weakening their sup- port for the president. And the results could scare some Demo- crats from seeking office this fall. The Republican will finish Kennedy's unexpired term, fac- ing re-election in 2012. Brown led by 52 per cent to 47 percent with all but 3 percent of precincts counted. Turnout was exceptional for a special elec- tion in January, with light snow reported in parts of the state. More voters showed up at the polls yesterday than in any non- presidential general election in Massachusetts since 1990. One day shy of the first anni- versary of Obama's swearing- in, the election played out amid a backdrop of animosity and resentment from voters over persistently high unemploy- ment, Wall Street bailouts, exploding federal budget defi- cits and partisan wrangling over health care. "I voted for Obama because I wanted change.... I thought he'd bring it to us, but I just don't like the direction that he's heading," said John Triolo, 38, a regis- tered independent who voted in Fitchburg. He said his frustrations, including what he considered the too-quick pace of health care legislation, led him to vote for Brown. For weeks considered a long shot, Brown seized on voter discontent to overtake Coakley in the campaign's final stretch. His candidacy energized Repub- licans, including backers of the "tea party" protest movement, while attracting disappointed Democrats and independents uneasy with where they felt the nation was heading. A cornerstone of Brown's cam- paign was his promise to vote against the health care plan. Though the president wasn't on the ballot, he was on many voters' minds. Coakley called Brown conced- ing the race, and Obama talked to both Brown and Coakley, con- gratulating them on the race. California trial to overturn Prop. 8 continues SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders opposed gay marriage - until he learned his daughter was a lesbian in a committed relationship. He testified yesterday during a trial on California's same-sex marriage ban that the change was a defining moment in his personal life and his political career. The mayor of California's sec- ond-largest city took the witness stand on behalf of two same-sex couples suing to overturn Propo- sition 8, the state's voter-approved ban. Sanders, a Republican, said he lost support within his party and had to work harder to be re- elected after he opposed the 2008 ballot measure. GOP leaders in San Diego were even thinking of withdrawing their endorsement, he said. "The kickoff forthe campaign, a lot of people weren't there," Sand- ers testified. The trial, in its sixth day, is the first in a federal court to examine whether denying gays and lesbi- ans the right to wed violates their constitutional rights. Throughout the trial, backers of the ban have tried to show the ballot measure was not motivated by deep-seated bias toward gays. Such "animus" would make it more difficult for the measure to pass constitutional muster. Brian Raum, a lawyer for Prop- osition 8 sponsors, cross-exam- ined the mayor about his one-time opposition to gay marriage. "You don't believe that you communicated hatred to the gay and lesbian community, did you?" Raum asked. "I feel like my thoughts were grounded in prejudice, but I don't feel like I communicated hatred," Sanders said. Raum also played a commer- cial produced by the Proposition 8 campaign claiming supporters were subjected to vandalism, slurs and physical violence during the 2008 election. "You would agree that it's wrong for people to suffer violence as a result of their political views, would you not?" Raum asked. "I would," Sanders agreed, add- ing he could not verify that sup- porters of the ban in San Diego experienced widespread harass- ment or if the ad was a campaign tactic. Raum also pressed Sand- ers to acknowledge that people could oppose same-sex marriage because they think it's in the best interests of children to be raised by their biological parents. Sanders replied that such an ideal vision of heterosexual mar- riage is misinformed. "I was a cop for 26 years, and I know there were a lot of children who did not benefit from child abuse and they were being raise by their biological parents," he said. In other testimony, Univer- sity of Massachusetts at Amherst economist Lee Badgett, who also directs research for a gay-related think tank at the University of Cal- ifornia, Los Angeles, said research showed gay couples preferred marriage to taking advantage of domestic partnership laws. "Marriage is an institution that is recognized by many other people outside the couple, so it has that social validation," Badgett said. Charles Cooper, another law- yer for Proposition 8 backers, countered that the same number of couples registered as domes- tic partners in 2009 as 2008, even though same-sex marriage was legal in California during a, four-month window before vot- ers approved Proposition 8 in 2008. "Do youbelievethese California same-sex couples chose domestic partnership over marriage because they felt these California domestic partnerships were second-rate?" Cooper asked Badgett. "I don't know that these same- sex couples who got married also registered as domestic partners to hedge their bets against the elec- tion," Badgett replied. Cooperspent several hours with Badgetttryingto demonstrate that traditional male-female marriages suffered after same-sex marriages became legal in the Netherlands in 2001. He introduced a number of charts showing divorce and single parenthood rates increased while marriage rates fell in the that country. Badgett rejected the compari- son, however, noting those trends- were firmlyestablishedlongbefore gay couples won the right to wed. in the Netherlands and were unre- lated to same-sex marriage. "I don't think we need to wait- any longer to see what the impact. will be. I think we know," Badgett 7: said. "Everything I've looked at leads me to the conclusion that2 there is no impact." Are You Considering a Career in Health? 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